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ANKARA: The Obama Factor

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  • ANKARA: The Obama Factor

    Gözlem Gazetesi, Turkey
    June 7 2008


    The Obama Factor

    The democratic candidate Senator Barrack Obama, pledges to accept the
    armenian issue as `Genocide' while his rival republican candidate
    Senator John McCain calls it a `tragedy'.

    Now that Hillary Clinton has ended her historic bid to be the first
    female President, it is certain that Senator Barrack Obama is the sole
    candidate of the Democratic party against John McCain the Republican
    candidate. As both candidates fight vigourously to win the race, their
    strategies on foreign policy will play a key role in determining who
    will become the next United States President. From Turkey's point of
    view, perhaps one of the most important topics is the Armenian issue.




    Obama Takes the Armenian Side

    The Democratic Party's top contender for the up coming Presidential
    elections in November, Illinois Senator Barrack Obama, pledged to
    recognize the killings of Armenians during the World War I era as
    `genocide'. `As president, I will recognize the Armenian genocide',
    said Obama in a statement that was published on his official website.

    After meeting with officials from the Armenian National Committee of
    America (ANCA), Obama said, `As a U.S. senator, I have stood with the
    Armenian-American community in calling for Turkey's acknowledgement of
    the Armenian genocide.' `For those who aren't aware, there was a
    genocide that did take place against the Armenian people. It is one of
    these situations where we have seen a constant denial on the part of
    the Turkish government and others that this occurred. It has become a
    sore spot diplomatically.' said the Democratic senator, while
    speaking to participants from his home State Illinois at at a
    breakfast briefing in Washington, D.C. in January.

    In October the House Bill Passed the Foreign Affairs Committee though,
    it did not reach the House Floor due to President Bush's pressure on
    the Democratic leadership. During the time the President had warned
    that passing such a bill would damage American Turkish relations as
    well as U.S. stategic interests in Iraq and in the Middle East.
    Despite the President's warnings, Senator Obama continued to send out
    messages to the US Congress asking the members to pass the pending
    genocide legislations in both the House of Representitives and in the
    Senate. `As a Senator, I strongly support the passage of the Armenian
    genocide resolution,' he said.

    John McCain: It Is a `Tragedy'

    The Repu±blican frontrunner of the Presidential race Senator John
    McCain coined the death of the Armenians who were killed during World
    War I as a `tragedy', in a letter he wrote to the largest and most
    radical Armenian group in America, the Armenian National Committe of
    America (ANCA). According to an ANCA statement, McCain in his letter
    wrote, `It is fair to say that this tragedy, the brutal murder of as
    many as one and a half million Armenians under the rule of the Ottoman
    Empire, has also been one of the most neglected.'

    Similar to President Bush's remarks in recent years on April 24-the
    commemoration date of the Armenian deaths McCain, pointed out that the
    one and a half million Armenians who suffered during the time
    represented the prologue to what has come to be known as humanity's
    bloodiest century.' Both the President and Senator McCain have been
    sharply critisized by the Armenian communities for refusing to back
    the Armenian genocide resolutions.

    OBAMA'S STRATEGY

    Obama wrote that he had a `firmly held conviction that the Armenian
    Genocide is 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.'According to some U.S. and Turkish officials,
    behind Obama's pledge is the strategy to win the support of the
    Armenian lobby that has strong ties with a large majority of U.S.
    political figures. It is said that the ArmenianAmerican population in
    the US is much higher than the Turkish American population in the
    United States. The Senator has also been frequently critisized for
    having a weak foreign policy throughout his run for the Democratic
    Presidential nomination. His rival John McCain has used Obama's
    weakness as well during his campaign towards becoming the next
    U.S. president.

    The question today is which candidate will be able to maintain strong
    TurkishAmerican relations based on their approach to the Armenian
    issue. On the one hand there is the Republican Senator John McCain who
    describes the incident as a `tragedy' and on the other hand there is
    the Democratic Senator Barack Obama, who has labeled it as a
    `genocide'. Only time will tell the outcome.

    http://www.gozlemgazetesi.com.tr/index.php?option =com_content&task=view&id=2266&Itemid= 115
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