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Pelosi Reiterates Call to Recognize Armenian Genocide

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  • Pelosi Reiterates Call to Recognize Armenian Genocide

    Washington Independent
    April 24, 2009 Friday 3:26 PM EST


    Pelosi Reiterates Call to Recognize Armenian Genocide

    by Mike Lillis


    Apr. 24, 2009 (Center for Independent Media delivered by Newstex) --

    Officially, today marks Å`Armenian Remembrance Day, set aside to
    honor the roughly 1.5 million Armenians killed at the hands of Ottoman
    Turks in 1915. But in the eyes of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
    (D-Calif.), its misnamed. From the statement just out of her office:

    Today, we commemorate the 94th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
    and pay tribute to the victims and survivors. ¦

    International observers and diplomats to the Ottoman Empire, including
    U.S. Ambassador Henry Morgenthau, watched a nightmare unfurl and
    provided detailed accounts about Ë`a campaign of race
    extermination.

    It is long past time for the U.S. Government to formally recognize the
    Armenian Genocide. If we ignore history then we are destined to repeat
    the mistakes of the past. The genocides in Rwanda and Darfur remind us
    that we must do more to prevent this from ever happening again.

    On this anniversary, we must remember the victims and survivors of the
    Armenian Genocide. We must also provide the leadership to ensure that
    this human tragedy is not repeated.

    The topic is a sticky one on Capitol Hill, where a resolution to
    recognize the killings as genocide was passed by a House committee in
    2007, but never brought to the floor for fear of alienating Turkey, a
    strategic ally in the Iraq war.

    Indeed, President Obama today approached the anniversary much more
    carefully, calling the episode Å`one of the great atrocities of the
    20th century, but never uttering the word genocide. Is that an
    inconsistent position? Heres The Associated Press laying out the
    scenario:

    During his election campaign, Obama said in a speech that he had stood
    with the Armenian American community in calling for Turkeys
    acknowledgment of the Å`Armenian Genocide.

    Despite bowing to diplomatic convention, Obama said in his statement
    issued on Friday that he had not changed his mind.

    Å`I have consistently stated my own view of what occurred in 1915,
    and my view of that history has not changed. My interest remains the
    achievement of a full, frank and just acknowledgment of the facts.

    If the I-am-not-backtracking argument sounds familiar, its because the
    president has been offering essentially the same explanation over the
    White House silence on gun control.
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