On Anniversary For Armenians, Obama Avoids The Word Genocide

ON ANNIVERSARY FOR ARMENIANS, OBAMA AVOIDS THE WORD GENOCIDE
By Michael A. Fletcher

Washington Post
April 24 2009

As a candidate for president, Barack Obama said the "Armenian Genocide"
is not "an allegation, a personal opinion or a point of view, but
rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of
historical evidence."

But as president, he has avoided using the word "genocide" to describe
the mass killings of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Armenians in
Turkey during the fall of the Ottoman Empire. During his recent visit
to Turkey, he refrained from using the term "genocide," and instead
referred to the "terrible events of 1915." And he avoided using the
explosive term again today in an official statement marking the 94th
anniversary of the massacres.

"Each year, we pause to remember the 1.5 million Armenians who were
subsequently massacred or marched to their death in the final days
of the Ottoman Empire," Obama said. He went on to say, "History,
unresolved, can be a heavy weight," also without invoking the word
"genocide."

Obama defended the change in rhetoric, saying it does not reflect
any shift in his views, but rather his desire not to cool warming
relations between Turkey and Armenia. "My view of that history has not
changed," Obama said. "My interest remains the achievement of a full,
frank and just acknowledgment of the facts. The best way to advance
that goal right now is for the Armenian and Turkish people to address
the facts of the past as part of their efforts to move forward."

Earlier this week, Turkey and Armenia announced that they had agreed
in principle to normalize relations, a possible breakthrough in a
bitter dispute over century-old massacres. U.S. officials said the
Obama administration had been quietly working to push the agreement
forward, with the American president meeting privately with leaders
of the two countries during his trip to Istanbul earlier this month,
and Obama acknowledged the progress in his statement. Just yesterday,
Vice President Biden called Armenian President Sargsian to applaud the
progress and reiterate the administration’s support for the process.

While President Ronald Reagan issued a statement recognizing genocide,
Obama has followed the path of other presidents who promised to
describe the killings as a genocide, only to abandon that pledge
once elected.

The issue is sensitive for both Turks and Armenians. Turkey’s position
is that the number of killings have been overstated and that the
Armenians who died were victims of a civil war.

"History is replete with examples of false narratives born from
bigotries that advance a political agenda rather than the truth,"
read a letter sent to Obama by a coalition of 53 Turkish-American
organizations. "The Armenian claim of passive victimhood stands on
such shaky historical footing."

Armenians, meanwhile, say the killings were planned by Turks and they
have long sought formal recognition of what they see as a genocide.

A resolution recognizing the killings as genocide is pending in
Congress. Still, most American leaders have deferred to strategic
interests, since Turkey is a key majority-Muslim ally.

"Political considerations — whether Turkish threats, prospects for
Turkey-Armenia dialogue, or in any other form — should never stand
in the way of America’s willingness to condemn the Armenian Genocide,
or any genocide, and to stand up for the truth," said Aram Hamparian,
executive director of the Armenian National Committee of America.

By contrast, Turkish American leaders were happy with Obama’s
statement.

"We applaud President Obama for deferring to historians to settle the
long-standing debate over the events of 1915-1918. This tragic period
in history led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Muslims and
Christians alike," said Lincoln McCurdy, president of the Turkish
Coalition of America. "President Obama has sent a clear message to
America and the world that his administration will not sacrifice
long-term strategic allies for short-term political gains."