Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Groups Go After Condoleezza Rice As 'Genocide Denier'

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

  • Armenian Groups Go After Condoleezza Rice As 'Genocide Denier'

    ARMENIAN GROUPS GO AFTER CONDOLEEZZA RICE AS 'GENOCIDE DENIER'

    The Atlantic
    http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/11/armenian-groups-go-after-condoleezza-rice-as-genocide-denier/248350/
    Nov 14 2011

    Some diaspora groups are decrying Rice and her memoir as catering to
    Turkey on the Armenian genocide

    Many ethnic Armenians who read ex-US Secretary of State Condoleezza
    Rice's recently published memoirs ("No Higher Honor: A Memoir of My
    Years in Washington") are spitting fire over her descriptions of her
    battles with the US-based Diaspora Armenian lobby.

    Both in 1991 as a presidential aide (to then US President George Bush)
    and in 2007 as secretary of state (under then President George W.

    Bush), Rice worked to defeat the congressional push for recognizing
    the World-War I-era slaughter of ethnic Armenians by Ottoman Turks
    as genocide.

    While acknowledging the brutality and the scale of the bloodshed,
    Rice writes that US recognition of the act as genocide would have
    antagonized Turkey, a key strategic ally for the US. She argues
    that she was guided by the raison d'etat that labels are best left
    to historians.

    Not in the view of American-Armenian Diaspora groups or many
    Armenian-language news services, who have republished a letter from
    Harut Sassounian, the publisher of Los Angeles' The California Courier,
    a weekly catering to the city's sizable Diaspora Armenian community,
    that advises Stanford University (where Rice now works as a political
    science professor, a political economy professor at Stanford's business
    school and, lastly, a public policy fellow) to inform the 57-year-old
    foreign policy veteran that "genocide deniers are not welcome at one
    of America's most distinguished institutions of higher learning."

    Warming to his task, Sassounian charged that Rice had behaved as
    "a spineless official of a banana republic" by allegedly caving in
    to Turkish interests.

    And Rice? Ever the diplomat, she's keeping quiet.

    This article originally appeared at EurasiaNet.org, an Atlantic
    partner site.

Working...
X