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Barack Obama Sidesteps Armenian Genocide Row On Trip To Turkey

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  • Barack Obama Sidesteps Armenian Genocide Row On Trip To Turkey

    BARACK OBAMA SIDESTEPS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ROW ON TRIP TO TURKEY
    Philippe Naughton

    Times Online
    April 6, 2009

    Barack Obama found his diplomatic skills tested to the limit today
    when he was forced to address the Turkish slaughter of Armenians during
    the dying days of the Ottoman Empire without using the word "genocide".

    Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed in a
    systematic campaign of extermination during the First World War, and
    during his campaign for the presidency Mr Obama declared that "America
    deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian genocide".

    Today, during a joint press conference in Ankara with his Turkish
    counterpart Abdullah Gul, President Obama said that his views had
    not changed but he took extreme care not to use the word "genocide"
    so as not to inflame his hosts, who have always denied the claims.

    Instead, he expressed the hope that talks between Turkey and Armenia
    could "bear fruit very soon" and he wanted to support that process.

    "Well, my views are on the record and I have not changed views,"
    Mr Obama said in response to a question about the genocide and his
    stance on it.

    "I want to focus not on my views right now, but on the views of the
    Turkish and Armenian people. If they can move forward and deal with
    a difficult and tragic history, then I think the entire world should
    encourage that."

    Responding to the same question, Mr Gul appeared to back Mr Obama
    by declaring that it was "not a legal or political issue, but an
    historical issue" which was being addressed by a joint commission
    of historians.

    Even though he took a swipe at members of the Armenian diaspora
    who use the issue to "cling to their identity", he also appeared to
    suggest that a breakthrough was near.

    "Our view is that we should let the historians, the experts, sit down,"
    Mr Gul said.

    "We are ready to face the reality, the facts. I cannot be the
    politicians who decide what happened when, who lost the most lives
    and who is right and who is wrong."
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