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Hachikian to Obama: "You failed to
honor your commitment to lift our nation's response to genocide
to the level of our shared American values, choosing, instead,
to allow America's willingness to respond forcefully to this
horrific crime to remain hostage to Turkish threats and
intimidation."
WASHINGTON, DC - Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA) Chairman Ken Hachikian shared with
President Barack Obama today the Armenian American community's
disappointment with his Administration's failure to honor his
campaign pledges to recognize the Armenian Genocide and to
foster the growth and development of Armenia.
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Armenian National Committee of America |
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NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS |
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ANCA EASTERN REGION
6923 47th Avenue
Woodside, NY 11377
ph: 917 428 1918, fax: 718 651 3637
www.anca.org,
ancaer@anca.org |
ANCA WESTERN REGION
104 N Belmont Street, 2nd Floor
Glendale, CA 91204
ph: 818 500 1918, fax: 818 246 7353
www.anca.org,
ancawr@anca.org |
May 18, 2009
The Honorable
Barack Obama
President of the
United States
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C.
20500
Dear Mr. President:
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. 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.”
More broadly,
you failed to honor your commitment to lift our nation’s
response to genocide to the level of our shared American values,
choosing, instead, to allow America’s willingness to respond
forcefully to this horrific crime to remain hostage to Turkish
threats and intimidation. This failure continues the morally
flawed policy of allowing Turkey to veto our stand on human
rights by effectively imposing a “gag” rule on U.S. recognition
of the Armenian Genocide.
Your broken
pledge represents both a grave offense to Armenian American 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.
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.
What is so
particularly disturbing about your reversal is that, in the
course of your service in the United States Senate and your
candidacy for the Presidency, you articulated a thorough
knowledge of the facts of the Armenian Genocide, a firm grasp of
the practical geo-political implications of proper American
recognition of this atrocity, a comprehensive view of the value
of Turkey’s relationship to the United States, and a clear
understanding of the profound moral issues at stake in the
condemnation and commemoration of this crime against humanity.
Nothing has changed since you gave your word except your failure
to uphold it.
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 Armenian
American community is also troubled that, despite your pledge to
maintain aid to Armenia and to foster her growth and
development, you have called for a 38% cut in economic aid to
Armenia.
This represents
the sharpest cut, by a significant margin, among all the
recipient nations of Europe, Eurasia, and South and Central
Asia, and takes place with the context of substantial proposed
increases to each of these three regions and a roughly 9%
overall escalation in international affairs spending. The
singling out of Armenia, which has sent troops to Iraq and
Kosovo, appears set to contribute to our operations in
Afghanistan, and hosted the first NATO exercise in the region
following the Russia-Georgia war, for such a dramatic cut, even
as it endures dual Turkish and Azerbaijani blockades and an
acute economic crisis, is profoundly troubling to our community.
Compounding this
disappointment was your decision to breach the Armenia-
Azerbaijan military aid parity agreement in favor of Baku, a
move that tilts the regional military balance and sends a
dangerous signal to Azerbaijani leaders who have made no secret
of their intent to use force of arms to settle the Nagorno
Karabagh issue.
I appreciate
your attention to the concerns of the Armenian American
community and remain hopeful that you will, consistent with your
campaign commitments, revise the course your Administration has
chosen on issues of special concern to Armenia Americans. We
would, of course, welcome the opportunity to meet with you to
discuss these matters personally and in greater detail.
Sincerely,
Kenneth V.
Hachikian
Chairman
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