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Acknowledge The Genocide

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  • Acknowledge The Genocide

    Hartford Courant
    Oct 11 2007

    Acknowledge The Genocide
    October 12, 2007


    Imagine a president opposing a congressional resolution condemning
    the Holocaust. Imagine today's Germany denying there was a Holocaust
    and warning of retaliation if Congress approved a nonbinding
    statement denouncing Nazi atrocities against Jews in World War II.

    Such denial at the highest level of government would be unbelievable
    and grotesque. Yet it's happening today with the first genocide of
    the 20th century.

    The Bush administration has denounced a resolution approved Wednesday
    by the House Foreign Affairs Committee that calls the massacre of
    Armenians in Turkey during World War I "genocide."

    Turkey's government vehemently protests the claim that the Ottoman
    Empire adopted a policy of eradicating Christian Armenians beginning
    in 1915, before modern Turkey was born in 1923.

    Armenians constituted one of the largest minorities in the empire at
    the time. Even bringing up the subject is considered a crime in
    Turkey punishable by a long prison sentence.

    President Bush acknowledges the "immense suffering" of Armenians and
    supports "a full and fair accounting of the atrocities that befell as
    many as 1.5 million Armenians," but he opposes the House resolution.

    The president of the United States fears that passage of such a
    statement in Congress would damage relations with Turkey, whose
    government has threatened unspecified retaliation. So much for the
    self-described "Decider" sticking to high principle.

    Acknowledging genocide shouldn't be controversial, given the
    extensive State Department archives and voluminous news accounts
    during that dark period. President Theodore Roosevelt called the
    Armenian slaughter "the greatest crime of the war." President Ronald
    Reagan described the killings as "genocide."

    Twenty countries and organizations, including the European Parliament
    and the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity, recognize the Armenian
    genocide.

    Modern Turkey's refusal to acknowledge the obvious reflects an
    insecurity that doesn't suit a nation that calls itself great. Why
    the Bush administration is being held hostage by the government in
    Ankara is worse than puzzling. It's immoral.


    http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/edi torials/hc-armenia.artoct12,0,4522396.story
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