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As Armenian date approaches, so does dispute over `genocide'

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  • As Armenian date approaches, so does dispute over `genocide'

    McClatchy Washington Bureau
    April 23, 2010 Friday

    As Armenian date approaches, so does dispute over `genocide'

    By Michael Doyle, McClatchy Newspapers
    WASHINGTON


    WASHINGTON _ Armenian genocide commemorations continue to attract
    political, diplomatic and fraternal grief upon the arrival of another
    April 24 anniversary date.

    On Capitol Hill, an Armenian genocide resolution lacks the votes
    needed for House or Senate passage. In downtown Washington, bitter
    lawsuits ensnare plans for an Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial.
    In the White House and on Embassy Row, the phrase "Armenian genocide"
    still confounds international relations.

    "We always hear 'it's not the right time' to recognize genocide," said
    Rep. Jim Costa, D-Calif., a member of the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee. "There's always something that will come up."

    On Saturday, President Barack Obama is expected to issue the White
    House's annual statement commemorating the tragic events of 1915-1923.
    The statement is typically pegged to April 24, considered the start of
    the Ottoman Empire's assault on Armenian leaders.

    While campaigning, Obama endorsed use of the word "genocide." Last
    April, however, emulating other presidents, Obama studiously avoided
    the term in his 389-word statement.

    "We expect that the president will honor his prior commitment and
    unequivocally affirm the Armenian genocide (this year)," said Bryan
    Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian Assembly of America.

    Obama, though, confronts the same pressures as he did last year.
    Turkey considers the phrase "Armenian genocide" a gross insult, and
    the key NATO ally that borders both Iraq and Iran knows how to make
    its displeasure clear.

    The Turkish ambassador to the U.S. only returned to Washington several
    weeks ago, after he had been recalled to Ankara following a March 5
    vote by the House Foreign Affairs Committee. By a 23-22 margin, the
    committee approved the latest version of an Armenian genocide
    resolution.

    "If we look at what the president has done in the past ... all the
    weathervanes point to a statement that refrains from use of the term
    (genocide)," said Bruce Fein, general counsel for the Turkish American
    Legal Defense Fund.

    Turkish Embassy officials declined to comment. Fein, though, insisted
    it "is still a matter of serious debate" as to whether the Ottoman
    Empire's actions met the legal definition of genocide. Genocide means
    the intentional targeting for destruction of a racial, ethnic,
    religious or national group; it does not cover political groups."

    The stalled congressional genocide resolution is backed by
    representatives from California's San Joaquin Valley and other regions
    with sizable Armenian-American populations. With 140 co-sponsors,
    however, it lacks the 218 votes needed to pass the House of
    Representatives.

    The Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial is hung up on a different
    kind of fight.

    The facility, first proposed in 1996, has already been plotted out, by
    the same firm that designed Washington's popular Spy Museum. Planners
    originally wanted the 35,000-square-foot museum open by 2011.

    For several years, though, the genocide museum's board has been
    entangled in a legal dispute with onetime museum benefactor Gerard L.
    Cafesjian and the Cafesjian Family Foundation.

    Museum board members say Cafesjian tried to delay the project and
    profit from it personally. Cafesjian says he was shut out of key
    planning decisions. A federal judge sums up the dispute as "very
    bitter and very unfortunate."

    Attorneys are wading through some 8,000 pages of documents provided by
    Cafesjian and reviewing depositions that, transcripts show, have
    periodically turned brittle.

    "I am just getting sick and tired of answering these questions,"
    Hirair Hovnanian, the chairman of the Armenian Assembly's board, said
    in a deposition last year, acknowledging his hopes that an unnamed
    "multibillionaire" would fund the museum.

    Museum planners anticipate needing $60 million to build and operate
    the facility.

    "Once the litigation ends, the rest of the museum project will move
    forward quickly," said Van Krikorian, a board member of both the
    museum and the Armenian Assembly.

    Some related work still proceeds.

    On Wednesday, one block from the proposed museum site, the 93-year-old
    grandson of Henry Morgenthau, who was U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman
    Empire, formally donated part of his grandfather's library to the
    research-oriented Armenian National Institute.

    Morgenthau's reporting from the Ottoman Empire provided direct
    evidence of the Armenians' fate, and he's often cited by Armenian
    genocide resolution supporters.

    "I like to call myself an honorary Armenian," Henry Morgenthau III
    said when asked why he donated the family books, "and this seemed like
    the most appropriate place."
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