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  • U.S. policy stamped in blood

    U.S. policy stamped in blood

    Rocky Mountain News, CO
    April 19 2008

    This Web only Speakout has not been edited.

    Pamela Barsam Brown
    Saturday, April 19, 2008

    With Tibetan, Burmese and Darfurian cultural, religious, and human
    rights in the news, it is appropriate to extend the discussion to
    the political expedient travesty of United States foreign policy on
    the Armenian Genocide.

    In April 2006, I encountered Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in an
    Alexandria, VA restaurant. I approached Dr. Rice who was accompanied
    by First Lady Laura Bush and a secret service cadre. As I shook her
    hand, I broached the subject of genocide by commenting on my family's
    support of action in Darfur. She replied, "I have been there." Moving
    to the topic of the Armenian Genocide, I told her I was in Washington
    to urge my congressional delegation's support of a reaffirmation of
    the Armenian Genocide -- a horrific event every American Armenian
    connects to. She simply stared back at me - and, without further
    comment, departed.

    This February, I was again in Washington to promote Genocide
    reaffirmation. I met with first-term Colorado Congressman, Doug
    Lamborn. Mr. Lamborn, a former Colorado State Representative, had
    cosponsored a state resolution supporting Genocide recognition. As
    CO District 5 Representative, he cosponsored H. Res.106 in February
    2007. However, that October, he withdrew his name. I wanted to
    know why!

    During my meeting with Representative Lamborn, he told me he had
    rejected multiple State Department attempts to persuade him to
    withdraw from H. Res.106 because he understood the historical facts
    of the event. The turn came with an unsolicited call from General
    David Petraeus. He told Representative Lamborn that his support of
    the Armenian Genocide resolution threatened the safety of our troops
    in Iraq because of Turkey's view of this sensitive political issue.

    When I heard Mr. Lamborn's explanation, I was stunned. All I could
    think was how could this happen in America -- a country once viewed
    around the world as a beacon of moral justice. That America had
    actively and officially assisted my great grandmother sue the Ottoman
    Empire for its government directed murder of her husband. My great
    grandfather was an American educated medical doctor, ordained minister,
    and naturalized American citizen who was murdered by Turkish gendarmes
    in his home town of Turkey. In 1897, the U.S. Consulate in Sivas
    completed its investigation of his murder and provided an official
    recounting to the U.S. State Department and my great grandmother.

    This present-day official Genocide denial policy is a legacy
    initiated by President George Herbert Walker Bush. The slippery
    slope was strengthened and reaffirmed by President William Jefferson
    Clinton who personally intervened to subvert passage of a House
    Genocide reaffirmation resolution. President George Walker Bush
    has grown genocide denial into an Administration-wide policy,
    aided by the compliance of our 110th Congress. As my own experience
    confirms, President Bush's denial zeal has permeated into every
    pore of government -- even reaching into the highest levels of our
    traditionally non-partisan military command. Another consequence of his
    proactive denial is the currently diminished Administration-proposed
    financial support package for the blockaded Republic of Armenia.

    While both parties have been complicit in denigrating the first
    Genocide of the 20th Century, a change of course could come with our
    2008 Presidential election. Senators Clinton and Obama have pledged
    to reaffirm the Armenian Genocide (Senator McCain would presumably
    maintain the current policy of denial).

    >>From just this one perspective of honoring and acting on the rights
    of humanity, It is certainly TIME FOR CHANGE!

    Pamela Barsam Brown is a resident of Boulder.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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