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Robert Fisk: Obama Falls Short On Armenian Pledge

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  • Robert Fisk: Obama Falls Short On Armenian Pledge

    ROBERT FISK: OBAMA FALLS SHORT ON ARMENIAN PLEDGE

    Independent
    Tuesday, 28 April 2009
    UK

    It was clever, crafty - artful, even - but it was not the truth. For in
    the end, Barack Obama dishonoured his promise to his American-Armenian
    voters to call the deliberate mass murder of 1.5 million Armenians
    by the Ottoman Turks in 1915 a genocide. How grateful today's Turkish
    generals must be.

    Genocide is what it was, of course. Mr Obama agreed in January 2008
    that "the Armenian genocide is not an allegation... but rather a
    widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical
    evidence.

    America deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian
    genocide... I intend to be that President." But he was not that
    President on the anniversary of the start of the genocide at the
    weekend. Like Presidents Clinton and George Bush, he called the mass
    killings "great atrocities" and even tried to hedge his bets by using
    the Armenian phrase "Meds Yeghern" which means the same thing - it's a
    phrase that elderly Armenians once used about the Nazi-like slaughter -
    but the Armenian for genocide is "chart". And even that was missing.

    Thus once more - after Hilary Clinton's pitiful response to the
    destruction of Palestinian homes by the Israelis (she called it
    "unhelpful") - Mr Obama has let down those who believed he would
    tell the truth about the truth. He didn't even say that Turkey
    was responsible for the mass slaughter and for sending hundreds of
    thousands of Armenian women and children on death marches into the
    desert. "Each year," he said, "we pause to remember the 1.5 million
    Armenians who were massacred or marched to their death in the final
    days of the Ottoman Empire." Yes, "massacred" and "marched to their
    death". But by whom? The genocide - the deliberate extermination of a
    people - had disappeared, as had the identity of the perpetrators. Mr
    Obama referred only to "those who tried to destroy" the Armenians.

    Instead, he waffled on about "the efforts by Turkey and Armenia to
    normalise their bilateral relations" - a reference to the appeal of
    landlocked Armenia appeal to reopen its border with Turkey thanks to
    Swiss mediation (via another of America's favourite "road maps") -
    and the hope that Turkish and Armenian relations would grow stronger
    "as they acknowledge their common history and recognise their common
    humanity". But the only real improvement in relations has been an
    Armenian-Turkish football match.

    Turkey is still demanding a commission to "investigate" the 1915
    killings, a proposal the poverty-broken Armenian state opposes on the
    grounds (as Obama, of course, agreed before he became President) that
    the genocide was a fact, not a matter in dispute. It doesn't have to be
    "re-proved" with Turkey's permission any more that the Jewish survivors

    of their own genocide have to "re-prove" the crimes of the Nazis in
    the face of a reluctant Germany.

    Armenian historian and academic Peter Balakian - speaking as he
    stood by a 1915 mass grave of Armenians in the Syrian desert - was
    quite frank.

    "What is creating moral outrage," he said, "is that Turkey is claimed
    to be trying to have a commission into what happened - when the
    academic world has already unanimously agreed on the historical
    record." So much, then, for one-and-a-half-million murdered men,
    women and children.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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