Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

U.S. To Support Armenia-Turkey Reconciliation: Obama

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

  • U.S. To Support Armenia-Turkey Reconciliation: Obama

    U.S. TO SUPPORT ARMENIA-TURKEY RECONCILIATION: OBAMA

    news.am
    Dec 4 2009
    Armenia

    13:09 / 12/04/2009U.S. President stated he would continue to press
    unconditional Armenia-Turkey rapprochement, RFE/RL reads. NEWS.am
    posts the full text of the article of RFE/RL website.

    "Obama hailed the U.S.-backed dialogue between the two nations as
    "historic," in a letter to Hirair Hovnanian, chairman of the Armenian
    Assembly of America,that was publicized by the influential advocacy
    group late on Thursday.

    "I agree that normalization between Armenia and Turkey should move
    forward without preconditions and within a reasonable timeframe,"
    he said, echoing statements by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
    and other U.S. officials.

    "We will continue to vigorously support the normalization effort in
    the months ahead," added Obama.

    The letter dated November 20 came in response to a September
    9 joint appeal to Obama from Hovnanian and the leaders of the
    Armenian General Benevolent Union and two U.S dioceses of the
    Armenian Apostolic Church. The signatories voiced support for the
    fence-mending Turkish-Armenian agreements and said Washington should
    get Ankara to stop linking their implementation with a resolution of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict favored by Azerbaijan.

    The Armenian-American leaders also urged Obama to honor his campaign
    pledges to recognize the 1915 massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire as genocide once in office. "If this normalization process
    is used as a smokescreen for not reaffirming the Armenian Genocide
    and the U.S. record, it will be a blow to the rapprochement process
    and the expectations of people of goodwill everywhere," they said,
    highlighting concerns among many Armenians in the United States and
    elsewhere in the world.

    In his reply, Obama again stopped short using the word 'genocide'
    with respect to "one of the great atrocities of the 20th century,"
    even if he made clear that he stands by his past pronouncements on the
    subject. "My interest remains the achievement of a full, frank and just
    acknowledgement of the facts," he wrote. "I believe that the best way
    to advance that goal is for the Armenian and Turkish people to address
    the facts of the past as part of their efforts to move forward."
Working...
X