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Ankara: Obama Reaffirms Commitment To 'Genocide Recognition

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  • Ankara: Obama Reaffirms Commitment To 'Genocide Recognition

    OBAMA REAFFIRMS COMMITMENT TO 'GENOCIDE' RECOGNITION

    Today's Zaman
    June 19 2008
    Turkey

    US Democratic presidential presumptive nominee Barack Obama has once
    again voiced commitment to the official recognition of an alleged
    genocide of Armenians in the final years of the Ottoman Empire.

    In a letter sent to an influential lobbying group of the Armenian
    diaspora, Obama said he shared the group's view that Washington "must
    recognize the events of 1915 to 1923, carried out by the Ottoman
    Empire, as genocide."

    "We must recognize this tragic reality. The Bush administration's
    refusal to do so is inexcusable, and I will continue to speak out
    in an effort to move the administration to change its position,"
    Obama said in the letter, addressed to Ken Hachikian, chairman of
    the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA.) The letter was
    published on ANCA's Web page on Tuesday.

    "I was deeply disturbed two years ago when the US ambassador to
    Armenia was fired after he used the term 'genocide' to describe the
    mass slaughter of Armenians. In a letter to the Department of State,
    I called for Secretary Rice to closely examine what I believe is an
    untenable position taken by the US government. A copy of that letter is
    enclosed for your review," Obama also said, referring to the fact that
    back in 2006, then-US Ambassador to Armenia John Evan reportedly had
    his tour of duty in Armenia cut short by the administration because,
    in a social setting, he referred to the killings as "genocide."

    In August the White House withdrew its nomination of a career diplomat,
    Richard Hoagland, after Democratic Senator Robert Menendez held up
    confirmation hearings because of his refusal to call World War I-era
    killings of Armenians a genocide.

    Late in March, President George W. Bush nominated another career
    diplomat, Marie Yovanovitch, who is currently ambassador to the Kyrgyz
    Republic, to be US ambassador to Armenia.

    "The ANCA has spoken to committee members about the value of carefully
    questioning Ambassador Yovanovitch on the many issues she will face as
    the US envoy in Yerevan, among them the recognition of the Armenian
    genocide, Turkey and Azerbaijan's ongoing blockades of Armenia, and
    the need for a balanced US role in helping forge a democratic and
    peaceful resolution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict," ANCA said in
    its report on Tuesday.

    Yovanovitch's confirmation hearing before the US Senate Foreign
    Relations Committee is scheduled to take place on Thursday.
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