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ANCA Challenges Obama Administration Attack on Genocide Resolution

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  • ANCA Challenges Obama Administration Attack on Genocide Resolution

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street, NW Washington, DC 20036
    Tel. (202) 775-1918
    Fax. (202) 775-5648
    Email. [email protected]
    Internet www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    March 8, 2010
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    ANCA CHALLENGES OBAMA ADMINISTRATION ATTACK ON GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

    -- Hachikian Voices Moral Outrage over Administration's Complicity
    in Turkey's Genocide Denials

    WASHINGTON, DC - Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
    Chairman Ken Hachikian gave voice to the profound moral outrage of
    Armenian American voters over the decision last week by President
    Obama, who had earlier this year abandoned his own pledge to
    recognize the Armenian Genocide, to launch a White House drive to
    block proper Congressional commemoration of this crime against
    humanity.

    In a letter, sent today to the White House, Hachikian noted: "Mr.
    President, in attempting to enforce Ankara's gag rule on U.S.
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide - both within your
    Administration and now in Congress - you have, very sadly, signaled
    to all the world that our silence on genocide can be bought in
    exchange for perceived geopolitical advantage or compromised under
    threat from a foreign power. Your policy is now fully complicit in
    Turkey's campaign of Genocide denial."

    Despite threats and intimidation from the Turkish Government and a
    last-minute Obama Administration attempt to block the measure, the
    House Foreign Affairs Committee adopted the Armenian Genocide
    Resolution (H.Res.252) on March 4th, paving the way for a vote on
    this genocide-prevention legislation by the full U.S. House of
    Representatives.

    The full text of Hachikian's letter is provided below.

    The letter may be viewed at:
    http://www.anca.org/endthegagrule/pdfs/030810_ ANCA_Letter_to_Pres_Obama.pdf


    #####


    March 8, 2010

    The Honorable Barack Obama
    President of the United States
    The White House
    1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
    Washington, D.C. 20500

    Dear Mr. President:

    I am writing, on behalf of Armenian American voters, friends of the
    Armenian American community, and genocide-prevention advocates from
    across our nation, to share our profound disappointment over your
    recently launched campaign to block Congressional recognition of
    the Armenian Genocide.

    Your Administration's efforts to undermine the adoption of the
    Armenian Genocide Resolution, coming, as they do, in the wake of
    both your broken pledge to recognize the Armenian Genocide and your
    abandoned promise to "strongly support" the Armenian Genocide
    Resolution, represent a stark departure from the commitments you
    made to the American people during your campaign for office.
    Rather than honoring your words, you are, today, using the full
    force of your Administration to attempt to block Members of
    Congress from doing exactly that which you yourself promised,
    namely properly commemorating this crime against humanity.

    As you recall, as a U.S. Senator, you sharply criticized President
    Bush's policy of non-recognition and opposition to Congressional
    commemoration as "inexcusable." In fact, while in Congress you were
    joined by then-Senators Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton in formally
    calling on President Bush to properly mark this crime against
    humanity, noting that full U.S. recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide serves "the best interest of our nation and the entire
    global community." While running for the presidency, as early as
    January of 2008 and as late as four days before the 2008 election,
    when the "soccer diplomacy" between Armenia and Turkey had already
    begun, you assured voters that you both strongly supported passage
    of the Armenian Genocide Resolution and would, as President,
    recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    Compounding your betrayal of your campaign promise to call upon
    Turkey to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide - which you explained
    was "not an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view, but
    rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body
    of historical evidence" - is the intense pressure that your
    Administration has applied to the impoverished, blockaded, and
    land-locked country of Armenia to accepting one-sided, pro-Turkish
    Protocols that call this very crime into question. Your Secretary
    of State, Hillary Clinton, who pledged to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide during her own campaign for the White House, has, in a
    statement that is both profoundly offensive and lacking in any
    moral or historical basis - publicly put your Administration on
    record as supporting the Turkish government's long held position
    that third party nations should not speak about the Armenian
    Genocide.

    Mr. President, in attempting to enforce Ankara's gag rule on U.S.
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide - both within your
    Administration and now in Congress - you have, very sadly, signaled
    to all the world that our silence on genocide can be bought in
    exchange for perceived geopolitical advantage or compromised under
    threat from a foreign power. Your policy is now fully complicit in
    Turkey's campaign of Genocide denial.

    In promising American voters a principled course of action as a
    candidate and then, under foreign pressure, pursuing exactly the
    opposite course as President, you have transformed the broad
    support you enjoyed during your campaign among Armenian American
    voters into outrage and anger toward both you and also, fairly or
    unfairly, the party that you are leading into the November
    elections.

    I would like to take this opportunity, once again, to encourage you
    to honor your as-yet unfulfilled pledge to remain actively engaged
    with Armenian American leaders. As it stands now, more than a year
    into your Administration, despite the considerable personal
    attention you have devoted to Armenian issues and your multiple
    discussions with Turkey's leaders about the Armenian Genocide, you
    have not even once met with the American citizens descended from
    the survivors of this crime. As a first step toward addressing
    this imbalance, I would respectfully recommend that you call a
    meeting, at your first opportunity, with our broad-based community
    leadership.

    Sincerely,


    Kenneth V. Hachikian
    Chairman
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