Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Truth, Progress And Change

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Truth, Progress And Change

    TRUTH, PROGRESS AND CHANGE
    By Aram Suren Hamparian

    www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle= 41142_4/6/2009_1
    Friday, April 3, 2009

    Past U.S. Administrations, at the expense of our national interests
    and commonly-held values, have for close to a century dealt with the
    Armenian Genocide down at the level of Turkey's threats, accepting
    what can only be described as a foreign government's "gag-rule"
    on our nation's defense of human rights.

    America's willingness to stand up against genocide has all too often
    been treated, to our nation's shame, not as a moral imperative, but
    rather as a geo-political commodity that has been either callously
    bartered away or retreated from under threats of retribution.

    We must, as a nation, finally and fundamentally change how we address
    this issue, raising this human rights priority to where it belongs,
    at the level of American values.

    President Obama's strong record of the Armenian Genocide recognition
    reflects his understanding of the need for this change. He has made
    the case for recognition forcefully, publicly, and repeatedly over the
    course of the past five years, stressing that a policy that requires
    U.S. officials to resort to strained reasoning or outright falsehood
    is morally wrong and, as a practical matter, needs to be changed. His
    pledge on this score are remarkably clear and direct:

    "America deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian
    Genocide and responds forcefully to all genocides. I intend to be
    that President."

    The President, in honoring his pledge, will keep faith not only with
    his own values and the trust of the American people, but also with key
    leadership across the U.S. government and the world, including Vice
    President Biden and Secretary of State Clinton, cabinet secretaries
    LaHood, Solis, and Salazar, CIA Director Panetta, House Speaker Pelosi,
    Senate Majority Leader Reid, and leaders in both houses of Congress,
    all of whom have supported Armenian Genocide recognition. Forty-one
    U.S. states have, to date, recognized the Armenian Genocide, as have
    over 20 countries, including 12 NATO allies.

    Michael Crowley's article in The New Republic, appropriately titled
    "Ethics Cleansing", make the point most clearly. "To be sure, Obama's
    high-minded rhetoric has always concealed a deeply rooted pragmatism
    (think of the convenient difference between troops and "combat troops"
    in Iraq). But there is a line between pragmatism and hypocrisy,
    and Obama may be about to cross it."

    The moral case is powerfully compelling; the historical record
    thoroughly documented; the President's record consistently principled,
    and his pledges crystal clear.

    As citizens, we need not today repeat, once again, the case for
    Armenian Genocide recognition, because President Obama, in his own
    words on more than a dozen occasions, has publicly articulated in
    a clear, thoughtful, and forceful manner the urgent need to end
    U.S. complicity in Turkey's denial of the Armenian Genocide. To his
    great credit, he has, before the world, committed, as a matter of
    principle, to full and unequivocal U.S. recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide.

    The path forward for the President is clear. This April, the time
    has come for truth, for progress, for change.

    Editor's Note: Aram Hamparian is the executive director of the Armenian
    Natinoal Committee of America.
Working...
X