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FLASHBACK: In 2000, Candidate Bush Called Armenian Massacre A 'Genoc

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  • FLASHBACK: In 2000, Candidate Bush Called Armenian Massacre A 'Genoc

    FLASHBACK: IN 2000, CANDIDATE BUSH CALLED ARMENIAN MASSACRE A 'GENOCIDAL CAMPAIGN'

    Think Progress, DC
    http://thinkprogress.org/2007/10/10/bush-armenian -genocide/
    Oct 10 2007

    Today, President Bush announced his opposition to a new
    congressional resolution labeling the Ottoman massacres of Armenians a
    "genocide." Between 1915 and 1923, as many as 1.5 million Armenians
    were killed by the Ottoman Turks. From Bush's press briefing today:

    I urge members to oppose the Armenian genocide resolution now being
    considered by the House Foreign Affairs Committee. We all deeply regret
    the tragic suffering of the Armenian people that began in 1915. This
    resolution is not the right response to these historic mass killings,
    and its passage would do great harm to our relations with a key ally
    in NATO and in the global war on terror.

    But when Bush was running for president in 2000, he wrote a letter
    to the Armenian National Committee affirming that the Armenians were
    "subjected to a genocidal campaign." He promised that if "elected
    president," he would make sure that the United States "properly
    recognizes" the tragedy. From his letter:

    The twentieth century was marred by wars of unimaginable brutality,
    mass murder and genocide. History records that the Armenians
    were the first people of the last century to have endured these
    cruelties. The Armenians were subjected to a genocidal campaign that
    defies comprehension and commands all decent people to remember and
    acknowledge the facts and lessons of an awful crime in a century
    of bloody crimes against humanity. If elected President, I would
    ensure that our nation properly recognizes the tragic suffering of
    the Armenian people.

    Iraq war politics may be part of the reason Bush is now opposing
    the resolution. In the White House briefing today, spokeswoman Dana
    Perino said, "[W]e have 160,000 of our troops in harm's way in Iraq,
    and Turkey has been a very valuable ally, and their strong reaction -
    negative reaction about this resolution is what caused the president
    to come out today and ask members of Congress to oppose it."

    Turkey's government is currently considering "a cross-border military
    operation to chase separatist Kurdish rebels who operate from bases
    in northern Iraq." The Bush administration is pressuring Turkey's
    parliament to oppose the move, which "could open a new war front in
    the most stable part of Iraq."

    Perino noted that Bush instead prefers to issue a "presidential
    message" each year to commemorate the tragedy.
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