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ANKARA: Armenian Group Blasts US For 'Genocide Recognition Failure'

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  • ANKARA: Armenian Group Blasts US For 'Genocide Recognition Failure'

    ARMENIAN GROUP BLASTS US FOR 'GENOCIDE RECOGNITION FAILURE'

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Dec 21 2009
    Turkey

    The ANCA's strong criticism of Washington came nearly a few days after
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, right, and U.S. President Barack
    Obama met at the White House.

    The largest and most radical Armenian-American group has criticized
    the United States of failing to formally recognize the World War
    I-era killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as "genocide."

    "It is truly astonishing that the United States has ... pursued
    a policy of complicity in Turkey's state-sponsored denial of the
    Armenian genocide and has even gone to the lengths of assisting Turkey
    in covering up a crime," said Kate Nahapetian, government affairs
    director of the Armenian National Committee of America, or ANCA.

    Nahapetian's remarks came in written testimony she submitted to the
    U.S. Senate's Judiciary Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law for
    a hearing titled "The Law of the Land: U.S. Implementation of Human
    Rights Treaties" late last week.

    "Turkey's success in silencing one of the most powerful countries in
    the world on one of the best documented cases of genocide emboldens
    other states to commit genocide and undermines the ability of the U.S.

    and the international community to prevent crimes against humanity,"
    Nahapetian said, according to an ANCA statement.

    She urged the U.S. administration and Congress to reverse this
    situation.

    The ANCA's strong criticism of Washington came nearly a few days
    after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and U.S. President Barack
    Obama met at the White House. Their agenda included Turkey's relations
    with Armenia.

    Reconciliation process

    The Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers met Oct. 10 and signed a
    set of agreements under which Ankara and Yerevan would reestablish
    diplomatic relations and reopen their land border.

    Obama, who as a candidate pledged to recognize the Armenian killings
    as "genocide," during last year's election campaign, reversed his
    position as president this year and fully backed the Ankara-Yerevan
    normalization process, saying he would refrain from any move that
    would jeopardize this process.

    Presently, two identical "genocide recognition" resolutions introduced
    by pro-Armenian lawmakers are pending in the Senate and the House
    of Representatives, the upper and lower chambers of Congress,
    respectively.

    Analysts suggest that as long as the Turkey-Armenia normalization
    process remains on track, chances for congressional adoption of these
    resolutions remain slim.

    However, there are signs that the reconciliation process is facing
    obstacles on both sides. The Turkey-Armenia accord of Oct. 10 needs to
    be ratified by the parliaments of both countries before implementation,
    and there is no indication of when the two nations may bring the deal
    to their respective parliaments.

    The problem that lies at the root of the problem is the unresolved
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Turkey's
    close ally.

    Turkey first wants to see progress toward the solution of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute before opening its border with Armenia. And
    according to Turkey, Armenia is hinting no sign of this.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mostly Armenian-populated enclave inside Azerbaijan
    as well as other parts of Azerbaijan proper, have been under Armenian
    occupation since a war in the early 1990s. As a result of this war,
    Turkey has kept the land border with Armenia closed since 1993.
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