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ANKARA: Armenians Voice Dismay To Obama

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  • ANKARA: Armenians Voice Dismay To Obama

    ARMENIANS VOICE DISMAY TO OBAMA

    Hurriyet
    May 21 2009
    Turkey

    WASHINGTON - The Armenian National Committee of America sends a letter
    to US President Barack Obama. The committee is upset over his decision
    not to use the word genocide in a recent statement out of concern
    for potentially derailing the Turkey-Armenia reconciliation process.

    In a letter to U.S. President Barack Obama, the head of the largest
    U.S. Armenian group expressed deep disappointment over Obama's not
    recognizing the 1915 killings of Armenians as "genocide," and urged
    him to reverse his position.

    Despite pledging during his election campaign to recognize the World
    War I-era killings of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire as "genocide,"
    Obama decided not to use the word in a written statement issued last
    month on Armenian Remembrance Day. Obama made it clear that he did
    not want to derail the reconciliation process underway between Turkey
    and Armenia, which had a couple of days previously jointly announced
    an agreement in principle to normalize their relations.

    The president instead used the Armenian term "Meds Yeghern," meaning
    "great catastrophe," but his choice of words did not satisfy
    U.S. Armenians as the term lacks the legal ramifications of the
    word genocide.

    Genocide recognition is the top priority for the Armenian National
    Committee of Armenia, or ANCA, which was encouraged by the position
    Obama took as a presidential contender last year.

    "I am writing on behalf of the Armenian National Committee of America
    to voice the Armenian-American community's profound disappointment
    with your decision not to honor your pledge to recognize the Armenian
    genocide," ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian wrote in his May 18 letter
    to Obama.

    'Inexcusable'

    "In breaking your clearly stated and unambiguous commitment, you
    bitterly disappointed all those who believed in your solemn word to
    change a flawed U.S. policy on the Armenian genocide, a policy that
    you yourself, in a letter you sent to your constituents last year,
    sharply criticized as 'inexcusable,'" Hachikian continued.

    "Your broken pledge represents both a grave offense to
    Armenian-Americans and a disservice to all Americans who understand
    that our nation's leadership in confronting genocide should never
    be reduced to a political issue that can be traded away, retreated
    from under pressure, or used to advance a political agenda of any
    kind," he wrote. "The ongoing dialogue between Armenia and Turkey
    should have no bearing on your willingness to speak the truth about
    the Armenian genocide; our stand against all instances of genocide
    should be unconditional."

    Hachikian said the president should reverse his position, writing,
    "I respectfully call upon you to act quickly to correct your stand
    on the Armenian genocide by properly and immediately condemning and
    commemorating this crime, and by working publicly toward the adoption
    of the Armenian genocide resolution before the U.S. Congress."

    The resolution pending in the House of Representatives was introduced
    in March by a group of pro-Armenian lawmakers. It currently has the
    backing of 125 lawmakers in the 435-seat legislative body.
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