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  • Armenia: Obscure issue could challenge a President Obama

    McClatchy Washington Bureau, DC
    Sept 14 2008

    Armenia: Obscure issue could challenge a President Obama
    By Michael Doyle | McClatchy Newspapers


    WASHINGTON -- The two major presidential candidates differ sharply
    over an Armenian genocide commemoration, with Republican John McCain
    opposing it and Democrat Barack Obama supporting it.

    The policy clash could make a political difference in California's San
    Joaquin Valley and other regions with sizable Armenian-American
    populations. McCain may have more to lose, in the short term. But in
    the long run, Obama may have more to prove.

    "Support for the genocide resolution is important in the presidential
    race and can have a significant impact," said Barlow Der Mugrdechian,
    coordinator of the Armenian Studies Program at California State
    University, Fresno.

    The potential short-term political cost is readily apparent. Estimates
    of the number of Armenian-Americans range from 385,000, in the 2000
    Census, to more than 1 million. Many track the genocide issue closely.

    By contrast, only 117,000 U.S. residents nationwide claimed Turkish
    ancestry. In comparing grassroots political strength, the
    Armenian-American community wins hands down.

    "There are many Armenians in states such as Michigan and Florida," Der
    Mugrdechian noted. "Since the race is expected to be close in these
    states, and many others, the Armenian vote could prove to be the
    difference."

    The long-term challenge is different. If Obama is elected, he would
    face tremendous pressure from the State Department, the Pentagon,
    other countries -- and maybe even his own advisers -- to back away
    from emphatic Armenian genocide language. That is what other
    presidents have done.

    In 1988, for instance, a campaigning George H.W. Bush declared the
    United States should "acknowledge the attempted genocide of the
    Armenian people." As president, Bush instead stressed "the differing
    views of how the terrible events of 1915-23 should be characterized."

    Bush's son, while campaigning in 2000, similarly referred to a
    "genocidal campaign" against the Armenians. Once elected, he avoided
    the genocide term, and his State Department withdrew a U.S. ambassador
    who dared use it.

    "I think the Armenian community is very leery of any candidate who
    says he will support a genocide resolution, because those promises
    haven't necessarily been kept," said Rep. George Radanovich,
    R-Mariposa. "When push comes to shove, the State Department gets in
    there and has its way."

    Genocide is what Armenian-Americans and many scholars say happened in
    the dying years of the Ottoman Empire, between 1915 and 1923. By this
    account, the slaughter and violent exile of more than 1 million
    Armenians met the legal definition of genocide and should be
    commemorated as such.

    Genocide means the systematic and intentional destruction, in whole or
    in part, of an ethnic, racial, religious or national group.

    "There was a genocide that did take place against the Armenian
    people," Obama said while campaigning earlier this year.

    He hasn't been very active on the issue in his four years in the
    Senate, despite serving on the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee. Obama has not co-sponsored the Senate's Armenian genocide
    resolutions, and he did not attend confirmation hearings for President
    Bush's nominees to serve as U.S. ambassador to Armenia.

    Obama's rhetorical support now for recognizing the genocide
    nonetheless helped secure the endorsement in January of the Armenian
    National Committee of America. It's a view long held publicly by
    Obama's vice presidential candidate, Sen. Joseph Biden, the Delaware
    Democrat who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. It's also
    a position being deployed on the campaign trail.

    Samantha Power, a Pulitzer Prize-winning author and Harvard scholar
    who has advised Obama on foreign policy, posted on YouTube a
    campaign-style video explicitly addressed to the Armenian-American
    community. Power declared that a President Obama would "call a spade a
    spade" and publicly acknowledge the genocide.

    McCain's position is the polar opposite, as he cites the diplomatic
    and strategic risks associated with alienating Turkey.

    "I was disappointed that many in Congress were ready to legislate a
    historical judgment of the Armenian genocide whatever the cost to our
    relations with Turkey," McCain declared in Iowa last October. "Turkey
    is essential to stabilizing Iraq, containing Iranian power, and
    encouraging economic and political reform in the Arab world. We should
    be strengthening our partnership, not erecting new barriers to it."

    One form of recognition would be in the form of a congressional
    resolution. Earlier this year, though, a resolution collapsed in the
    House after appearing to come close. Radanovich said he does not "see
    that coming back anytime soon."

    The alternative path is a presidential proclamation. Each April,
    presidents present a public statement about what happened between 1915
    and 1923. The question thus becomes: Will the statement include the
    word genocide?

    Power, a strong proponent of Armenian-American issues, no longer has a
    formal role advising Obama. One top adviser, Anthony Lake, was
    national security adviser to President Bill Clinton during the period
    that Clinton avoided the genocide word in his annual proclamations.
    Another top Obama adviser, Susan Rice, was Clinton's assistant
    secretary of state when Clinton blocked a genocide resolution authored
    by Radanovich.

    http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/ 52371.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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