Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Obama marks Armenian tragedy but doesn't say `genocide'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Obama marks Armenian tragedy but doesn't say `genocide'

    Knight Ridder Washington Bureau
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune News Service
    April 24, 2009 Friday



    Obama marks Armenian tragedy but doesn't say `genocide'

    By Michael Doyle, McClatchy Newspapers
    WASHINGTON


    WASHINGTON _ President Barack Obama on Friday broke a campaign pledge
    but mollified Turkey by formally remembering the mass killings of
    Armenians without using the diplomatically loaded term
    quot;genocide.quot;

    In a much-anticipated White House statement, Obama took note of the
    quot;great atrocitiesquot; that occurred in the Ottoman Empire from
    April 24, 1915, until 1923. While saying that 1.5 million Armenians
    were quot;massacred or marched to their death,quot; the president said
    that the most important thing now was to look ahead.

    quot;I strongly support efforts by the Turkish and Armenian people to
    work through this painful history in a way that is honest, open and
    constructive,quot; Obama declared.

    The president also twice used the Armenian phrase quot;meds
    yeghern,quot; which often is translated as quot;great calamity.quot;

    The most important part of his statement, though, was the word that
    was missing. Armenian-American activists and their political allies
    denounced the 389-word statement as a sellout because it didn't
    characterize the events as genocide.

    quot;I am outraged,quot; said Rep. George Radanovich, R-Calif., a
    co-sponsor of a congressional Armenian-genocide resolution. quot;The
    president chose, for political reasons, to abandon his commitment to
    the Armenian people.quot;

    Bryan Ardouny, the executive director of the Armenian Assembly of
    America, charged that Obama's quot;failure ... diminishes
    U.S. credibility with regard to genocide prevention,quot; while
    Armenian National Committee of America Chairman Ken Hachikian voiced
    quot;sharp disappointmentquot; with the president's quot;retreat.quot;

    Obama's carefully calibrated statement was consistent with the
    traditional advice of Pentagon and State Department professionals, who
    warn against alienating Turkey. It reversed the promise he made while
    seeking Armenian-American votes, however.

    quot;As president, I will recognize the Armenian genocide,quot; Obama
    said on his campaign Web site.

    Samantha Power, an Obama adviser and a Pulitzer Prize-winning author,
    accentuated the point with a widely viewed YouTube campaign video
    addressed to Armenian-Americans. Now a member of the National Security
    Council, Power said then that Obama would quot;call a spade a spade
    and speak truthquot; about the historic events.

    Once in the White House, however, Obama became subject to the broader
    diplomatic and military considerations that have prompted presidents
    before him to retreat from similar promises. Turkey is a crucial
    U.S. ally within NATO _ bordering Iraq and Iran _ and Turkish
    officials say the 1915-1923 wartime events remain subject to
    interpretation.

    In a two-day visit to Turkey earlier this month, Obama stressed the
    important ties between the United States and the strategically located
    nation of 78 million people. Turkish officials have warned
    consistently that the United States could lose commercial
    opportunities and military advantages, which include the use of
    Turkey's busy Incirlik Air Base, if an insulting genocide
    commemoration were issued.

    quot;President Obama has sent a clear message to America and the world
    that his administration will not sacrifice long-term strategic allies
    for short-term political gains,quot; said Lincoln McCurdy, the
    president of the Turkish Coalition of America.

    The Turkish and Armenian governments, with Switzerland as a neutral
    mediator, are working to normalize their long-strained
    relations. Diplomats have warned against any incendiary U.S. statement
    that might interfere with these talks, described in a recent joint
    Turkish-Armenian statement as reaching quot;tangible progress and
    mutual understanding.quot;

    quot;I suspect they think they're making real progress on their
    dialogue, and they want to see it completed,quot; said Rep. Jim Costa,
    a California Democrat and genocide-resolution supporter who serves on
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

    Presidents George W. Bush and George H.W. Bush broke similar
    pledges. President Bill Clinton, too, leaned on congressional leaders
    not to pass genocide commemoration measures.

    In 2000, only minutes before debate was set to start in the House of
    Representatives, then-House Speaker Dennis Hastert yielded to
    Clinton's request not to bring the genocide resolution, authored by
    Radanovich, up for a vote.

    Hastert is now a lobbyist with the firm Dickstein Shapiro, one of a
    number that Turkey hired to press its cause on Capitol Hill. Turkey
    pays $35,000 a month for help from Hastert and his team, Justice
    Department foreign-agent filings show. Turkey is paying former House
    Minority Leader Richard Gephardt's firm, DLA Piper, $100,000 a month,
    filings have shown.

    Currently, 107 House members co-sponsor a nonbinding resolution that
    says, quot;The failure of the domestic and international authorities
    to punish those responsible for the Armenian genocide is a reason why
    similar genocides have recurred and may recur in the future.quot;

    A similar resolution fell short in the last Congress, and House
    Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has said she'll bring it to a vote
    only if it attracts at least 218 co-sponsors.
Working...
X