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AAA: Pres. Bush Fails to Properly Characterize The Armenian Genocide

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  • AAA: Pres. Bush Fails to Properly Characterize The Armenian Genocide

    Armenian Assembly of America
    122 C Street, NW, Suite 350
    Washington, DC 20001
    Phone: 202-393-3434
    Fax: 202-638-4904
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.armenianassembly.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    April 25, 2005
    CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
    Email: [email protected]

    PRESIDENT BUSH FAILS TO PROPERLY CHARACTERIZE THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    White House Ignores Congressional, Community Calls to Instead Appease Turkey

    WASHINGTON - While the Armenian Assembly today expressed appreciation
    for President Bush's commitment to seek a "deeper partnership" with
    Yerevan, organizational leaders were disappointed the President did
    not properly characterize the Armenian Genocide in his statement of
    remembrance. In remarks issued yesterday, Bush labeled the Genocide
    of 1915 as the "Great Calamity."

    Earlier this month, in a strong showing of bipartisan support, a
    record number of 210 Members of the U.S. Senate and House of
    Representatives urged President Bush to properly acknowledge the
    Armenian Genocide in his statement of remembrance. Their calls were
    bolstered by 37 American states that are also on record as affirming
    the Genocide as well as 16 countries around the world.

    "The Assembly is extremely dissatisfied with the President's
    characterization of the attempted annihilation of our people by
    Ottoman Turkey," said Assembly Executive Director Bryan Ardouny.
    "This was a missed opportunity by the President to speak the truth
    plainly, to once and for all avoid using evasive terminology which
    only serves to support Turkey's state-sponsored denial campaign."

    "April 24 is not only a solemn day for Armenians but for all victims
    of genocide and other crimes against humanity," Ardouny continued.
    "The U.S. must take a firm stand to squarely reaffirm its own
    historical record, which includes U.S. Ambassador to the Ottoman
    Empire Henry Morgenthau's description of those events as a 'campaign
    of race extermination.'"

    While the President's choice of words were in effect a textbook
    definition of the crime, the statement this year again fell short of
    his 2000 statement when Bush said, "Armenians were subjected to a
    genocidal campaign that defies comprehension."

    Similarly, in a letter to the Armenian Assembly that same year, Bush
    said, "Armenians were subjected to a genocidal campaign that defies
    comprehension. Their travails should lead all decent people to
    remember and acknowledge the facts and lessons of an awful crime in a
    century of bloody crimes against humanity. If elected president, I
    would ensure that our nation properly recognizes the tragic suffering
    of the Armenian people."

    In his statement this year, the President also encouraged recent calls
    by Ankara for a joint Turkish-Armenian study of the crimes. "The
    historical record is clear and does not require a review," Ardouny
    said. "Such an initiative should not have been encouraged by the
    Administration."

    President Robert Kocharian and his administration have publicly stated
    that periodic calls by Turkey for a historical debate simply delay the
    process of reconciling with the truth, since that accounting has
    already been done. In 2000, for example, more than 120 Genocide and
    Holocaust scholars from the U.S., Europe and Israel signed a statement
    affirming the WWI Armenian Genocide as an incontestable historical
    fact and urged the governments of Western democracies to likewise
    recognize it as such. Further, at a September 2000 conference
    co-sponsored by the Library of Congress and the Armenian National
    Institute in cooperation with the United State Holocaust Memorial
    Museum, entitled the "The American Response to the Armenian Genocide,"
    a spokesperson for the Library of Congress stated that "the evidence
    of genocide is incontrovertible."

    In his statement the President also says that the U.S. is grateful for
    Armenia's contributions to the war on terror and that America is
    committed to supporting the country's historic reforms and a peaceful
    settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
    nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
    of Armenian issues. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership
    organization.
    ###

    NR# 2005-045

    Editor's Note: April 24, 2005 Statement from President George W. Bush
    is attached.


    The White House

    For Immediate Release
    Office of the Press Secretary

    April 24, 2005

    STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT

    On Armenian Remembrance Day, we remember the forced exile and mass
    killings of as many as 1.5 million Armenians during the last days of
    the Ottoman Empire. This terrible event is what many Armenian people
    have come to call the "Great Calamity." I join my fellow Americans and
    Armenian people around the world in expressing my deepest condolences
    for this horrible loss of life. Today, as we commemorate the 90th
    anniversary of this human tragedy and reflect on the suffering of the
    Armenian people, we also look toward a promising future for an
    independent Armenian state.

    The United States is grateful for Armenia's contributions to the war
    on terror and to efforts to build a democratic and peaceful Iraq. We
    remain committed to supporting the historic reforms Armenia has
    pursued for over a decade. We call on the Government of Armenia to
    advance democratic freedoms that will further advance the aspirations
    of the Armenian people. We remain committed to a lasting and peaceful
    settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. We also seek a deeper
    partnership with Armenia that includes security cooperation and is
    rooted in the shared values of democratic and market economic
    freedoms.

    I applaud individuals in Armenia and Turkey who have sought to examine
    the historical events of the early 20th century with honesty and
    sensitivity. The recent analysis by the International Center for
    Transitional Justice did not provide the final word, yet marked a
    significant step toward reconciliation and restoration of the spirit
    of tolerance and cultural richness that has connected the people of
    the Caucasus and Anatolia for centuries. We look to a future of
    freedom, peace, and prosperity in Armenia and Turkey and hope that
    Prime Minister Erdogan's recent proposal for a joint Turkish-Armenian
    commission can help advance these processes.

    Millions of Americans proudly trace their ancestry to Armenia. Their
    faith, traditions, and patriotism enrich the cultural, political, and
    economic life of the United States. I appreciate all individuals who
    work to promote peace, tolerance, and reconciliation. On this solemn
    day of remembrance, I send my best wishes and expressions of
    solidarity to Armenian people around the world.

    -END-
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