Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Armenians Reiterate Claims To Obama

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

  • ANKARA: Armenians Reiterate Claims To Obama

    ARMENIANS REITERATE CLAIMS TO OBAMA

    Hurriyet
    Jan 20 2009
    Turkey

    WASHINGTON - Major U.S.-Armenian organizations sent a joint letter to
    President-elect Barack Obama, who formally takes over presidency today,
    urging him to keep his promise from last year's election campaign to
    recognize Armenian claims of "genocide."

    The 20 advocacy, civic, religious, charitable and educational groups
    congratulated Obama for his planned inauguration, but their three-page
    letter sent over the weekend mostly included Armenian demands for
    the new administration.

    The U.S.-Armenian community of about 1.5 million solidly backed
    Democrat Obama, who it saw as the candidate sensitive to Armenian
    matters, against Republican John McCain in last November's presidential
    election.

    "As a community, we have been proud that you have stood with us
    as we have worked toward congressional commemoration, presidential
    recognition and Turkish acknowledgement of the Armenian 'genocide,'"
    the Armenian organizations said. "As you have stated so eloquently
    and repeatedly, the facts of this crime are undeniable."

    Obama pledged at least twice last year that he would recognize the 1915
    incident as "genocide", if he became president . "Our government must
    clearly and unequivocally condemn the 1915 crime of race extermination
    by Ottoman Turkey that, during the course of eight years, killed one
    and a half million Armenians," the organizations said. "As you have
    stated on several occasions, America deserves a leader who speaks
    truthfully about the Armenian genocide and responds forcefully to
    all genocides," they said.

    Sensitive matter Turkey says that both Armenians and Muslims died in
    the unrest during the Ottoman Empire's disintegration and that the
    events did not constitute genocide.

    Ankara has warned that formal U.S. recognition of the deaths as
    "genocide" would hurt bilateral relations in a major and lasting way.

    Outgoing President George W. Bush's administration has declined to
    utter the word genocide and successfully prevented genocide resolutions
    from passing through the U.S. congress over the past eight years in an
    effort not to alienate Turkey, a critical ally in the Middle East, the
    Caucasus and the Balkans. But with Obama as president and many other
    similar-minded officials in top positions in the new administration and
    in congress now, the Armenians hope that this time they will win formal
    U.S. "genocide" recognition. Analysts also agree that this is highly
    probable. The Armenians have counted Vice President-elect Joe Biden,
    future Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and several other Obama
    cabinet members among the officials seeking "genocide" recognition.

    The Armenian organizations also urged Obama to boost economic and
    other relations with Armenia and effectively back ethnic Armenians
    in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

    Previously Turkey's foreign minister has warned Obama's incoming
    administration that any U.S. recognition of Armenian claims regarding
    the 1915 incidents could derail reconciliation efforts between the
    two neighbors. "It would not be very rational for a third country to
    take a position on this issue... A wrong step by the United States
    will harm the process," Ali Babacan said last week.

    Babacan said the dispute was among the issues that Ankara and Yereven
    had been discussing since reconciliation efforts gathered steam in
    September when Turkish President Abdullah Gul paid a landmark visit
    to Armenia.
Working...
X