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  • Cohen And Albright Grilled On Hypocrisy Of Opposing Armenian Genocid

    COHEN AND ALBRIGHT GRILLED ON HYPOCRISY OF OPPOSING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION WHILE LEADING NEW GENOCIDE PREVENTION EFFORT

    AZG Armenian Daily #210
    15/11/2007

    Armenian Genocide

    WASHINGTON, DC - The credibility of former Secretary of State
    Madeleine Albright and former Secretary of Defense William Cohen in
    leading a newly launched genocide prevention initiative was called
    into question, today, by reporters who cited their ongoing efforts to
    block Congressional reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide (H.Res.106 /
    S.Res.106), reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
    [Ho. He. Dashnaktsutyan Washington-ee Hai Tahd-ee Krasenyag].

    "Sadly, the Genocide Prevention Task Force's worthwhile efforts to
    build consensus for an unconditional stand against genocide as a core
    U.S. foreign policy priority are undermined right out of the box by
    the fact that its leading figures, Madeleine Albright and William
    Cohen, are today actively and publicly working to block American
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide," stated ANCA Executive Director
    Aram Hamparian.

    Secretaries Cohen and Albright were keynote speakers at a National
    Press Club press conference hosted this morning by the U.S.

    Holocaust Museum and Memorial, U.S. Institute for Peace, and American
    Academy of Diplomacy, to announce the formation of the Genocide
    Prevention Task Force, which the two will co-chair.

    In response to questions raised by Hamparian and reporters from
    media outlets including Asbarez, the Armenian Weekly, and the
    Armenian Reporter, the two former secretaries were largely evasive,
    and consistently used euphemistic language to avoid proper reference
    to the Armenian Genocide.

    "There are no absolutes in this," explained Secretary Cohen, referring
    to U.S. action against genocide.

    "There is an element of pragmatism... I think anyone serving in
    public office necessarily has to have a set of balancing factors to
    take into account."

    Secretary Albright stressed that taking action on genocide is a
    difficult decision. "These are issues people have talked about a
    long time and they may come out in statements and then, ultimately,
    when you're in the government (as we both have been) and you have to
    make very tough decisions, you have to look at the overall picture. I
    think we have to admit that.

    Otherwise, we're not going to get off the ground here.

    These are very, very hard issues."

    "Secretaries Albright and Cohen can't have it both ways. Either
    they stand unconditionally against all genocides all the time, or,
    by choosing to only raise their voices when it's convenient, they
    surrender their moral standing on this, the core human rights and
    humanitarian issue of our time," commented Hamparian.

    In a September 25th letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, former
    Secretary of State Madeleine Albright opposed Congressional
    consideration of the Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106). A
    similar letter was sent by former Secretary of Defense William Cohen
    on September 7th.

    H.Res.106, introduced by Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) with lead supporters
    George Radanovich (R-CA), Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs
    Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), Brad Sherman (D-CA)
    and Anna Eshoo (D-CA), currently has over 200 cosponsors.

    On October 10th, the House Foreign Affairs Committee adopted the
    resolution, which calls on U.S. foreign policy to properly reflect
    the genocide of over 1.5 million Armenian men, women and children
    from 1915-1923 in Ottoman Turkey. A similar measure in the Senate,
    led by Deputy Majority Leader Richard Durbin (D-IL) and John Ensign
    (R-NV), has 33 cosponsors. The House measure is expected to come to
    a floor vote later in 2007 or 2008.
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