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Obama Stirs Armenian 'Cautious Optimism' On Ankara Visit

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  • Obama Stirs Armenian 'Cautious Optimism' On Ankara Visit

    OBAMA STIRS ARMENIAN 'CAUTIOUS OPTIMISM' ON ANKARA VISIT

    Agence France Presse
    April 6, 2009 Monday 7:09 PM GMT

    US President Barack Obama's comments during his Ankara visit on
    Monday on the status of Turkish-Armenian relations give rise to
    "cautious optimism," a prominent Armenian activist said.

    "He avoided use of the 'G' word in front of his hosts," said American
    Armenian filmmaker and journalist Carla Garapedian, a campaigner for
    the recognition of the killings of Ottoman Armenians nine decades
    ago as genocide.

    "You can say he has been very clever diplomatically. He went to Turkey
    to improve relations with Turkey," said Garapedian, who was in Nicosia
    for a screening of her documentary, "Screamers," on the mass killings.

    "If he had said the 'G' word in front of (Turkey's President Abdullah)
    Gul and the (Turkish) parliament, he would have embarrassed them,"
    she told AFP.

    But Garapedian stressed Obama had referred to the fate of the Native
    Americans, opening the way to a possible face-saving formula for Ankara
    to drop its categoric refusal to recognise the killings as a genocide.

    "He was trying to help them (Turkey) save face by raising this
    issue. It was very interesting ... My interpretation is that one can
    be cautiously optimistic that he is not going to backtrack on his
    position," she said.

    "The fact that Obama mentioned the Native Americans shows a certain
    courage," Garapedian said. "That is a clear signal that Americans
    too have a legacy of genocide in our history."

    Obama signalled he had not changed his view that the killings of
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians amounted to genocide but insisted
    that reconciliation between the two neighbours was of more immediate
    importance.

    "I want to focus not on my views right now, but on the views of the
    Turkish and Armenian people. If they can move forward... the entire
    world should encourage them," said Obama at a joint press conference
    with Gul.

    During his election campaign, Obama pledged to his American Armenian
    supporters to recognise the World War I killings as genocide. Ankara
    has warned Washington such a move could hit bilateral ties and derail
    any reconciliation.

    Yerevan and the Armenians in diaspora say that up to 1.5 million of
    their kin were killed between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire
    fell apart, a stand supported by several countries.

    Turkey rejects the genocide term and argues that 300,000-500,000
    Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
    with invading Russian troops.
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