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Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs' Joint Letter To Secretary Rice StressesIm

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  • Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs' Joint Letter To Secretary Rice StressesIm

    ARMENIAN CAUCUS CO-CHAIRS' JOINT LETTER TO SECRETARY RICE STRESSES
    IMPORTANCE OF U.S. RECOGNITION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    WASHINGTON, March 22 (Noyan Tapan). Congressional Caucus on Armenian
    Issues Co-Chairs Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ)
    expressed to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice their support
    of recent affirmations of the Armenian Genocide by leading U.S.
    officials. According to the Armenian Assembly of America, in a joint
    letter sent to Secretary Rice on March 18, the Co-Chairs declared
    their support for remarks made by U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans
    who publicly stated, "The Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of
    the twentieth century." The Co-Chairs also noted former Ambassador to
    Armenia Harry Gilmore's comments to the media that the crimes against
    the Armenians do indeed constitute genocide. Knollenberg and Pallone
    explain in their letter that both Evans' and Gilmore's comments are
    in keeping with the past statements of Presidents Ronald Reagan in
    1981 and George Bush, who in 2001 employed the textbook definition
    of the Genocide in his April 24 remarks to the Armenian-American
    community. Additionally, the Co-Chairs reason that the U.S. National
    Archives contain thousands of pages documenting the crimes and that
    over 120 renowned Genocide and Holocaust scholars have proclaimed the
    Armenian Genocide as an "incontestable historical fact." Furthermore,
    the letter also references the findings of a key legal study
    backed by the State Department. That study, by the International
    Center for Transitional Justice, concluded that: "The Events, viewed
    collectively, can thus be said to include all of the elements of the
    crime of genocide as defined in the Convention, and legal scholars
    as well as historians, politicians, journalists and other people
    would be justified in continuing to so describe them." In other news,
    Knollenberg and Pallone are asking their colleagues to sign on to a
    letter urging President Bush to honor the United States' historic
    leadership in defending human rights and to properly characterize
    the Armenian Genocide as such in his remembrance statement next
    month. Over 80 Members of Congress have signed on to this letter,
    however, many more signatures are needed in order to make an impact.
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