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BY SETO BOYADJIAN,
Esq.
President Barack Obama was so
adamant about his view on the Armenian Genocide. He said, in
Turkey, that he is on the record and he has not changed his
view. On Thursday, April 23, in his Holocaust Remembrance
speech, he asked: “How do we ensure that 'never again' isn't an
empty slogan, or merely an aspiration, but also a call to
action?” He answered, “by bearing witness, by fighting the
silence.”
Armenian Americans felt assured that the next day he will bear
witness to and fight the silence on the Armenian Genocide. We
all believed the President of change was about to bring change
to a White House that for so many years has -- at the last
minute -- traded away the Armenian Genocide. This was the change
we needed.
Then, he failed us. On April 24, in his Armenian Remembrance Day
Statement, he creatively avoided the term genocide -- thus
signaling that he has changed his view, after all. And this is a
change Armenian Americans did not need.
He claimed in his statement, “I have consistently stated my view
of what occurred in 1915, and my view of that history has not
changed,” yet he took every care to bypass the word genocide. He
promised, “My interest remains the achievement of a full, frank
and just acknowledgment of the facts,” but he missed the point
that his statement could have fulfilled his interest for the
acknowledgment by adding genocide to “Meds Yeghern”.
Without excusing the withholding of the term genocide from the
presidential statement, it should be noted that this year the
President -- unlike his predecessors --- encountered an
extremely tough decision. In previous years, it was relatively
easy for the American president to decide against using the word
genocide in his statement. Until Obama's presidency, application
of the genocide terminology to the Armenian case was perceived
in terms of American values and moral principles that were
outweighed by arguments of geopolitical and strategic realities,
coupled with the military-industrial interests of certain U.S.
corporations. As such, the choice was easy -- the so-called
strategic-economic interests trumped the moral principles.
But this year, perception of the Armenian Genocide terminology
underwent a qualitative change in the presidential calculus.
First, there was the President's unequivocal pledge for the
proper characterization of the Armenian Genocide when elected
president -- a pledge that was reiterated over and over again.
Second, during his visit to Turkey at the beginning of this
month, the President's statements elevated the Armenian Genocide
recognition issue to a political level as opposed to Turkish
efforts of confining it to a historical context.
Third, Washington developed a gradual realization of Armenia's
strategic importance in the Caucasus region. Despite numerous
studies lavishly hyping Turkey's strategic importance to the
Omaba administration, Armenia's relative importance was not
going unnoticed. In this respect, it is now becoming discernible
that Armenia's geographic setting complements Turkey's
geopolitical importance. (Hopefully, the Foggy Bottom analysts
would soon arrive at the reckoning that eastern Turkey - which
used to be better known as Western Armenia - constitutes the
natural continuation of the present-day tiny Armenia.)
Amidst this landscape the issue of Armenian Genocide recognition
spread beyond its moral context to acquire political importance
in the eyes of the Obama administration. This issue now opened
new vistas for its use as political leverage for or against a
given country in the region.
It was no surprise that Turkish authorities, led by President
Gul and Prime Minister Erdogan, not only expressed their utter
dissatisfaction at the content of the President's statement;
they were also concerned over the U.S. administration's use of
the recognition issue as political leverage.
In the final analysis the fact remains that as the President was
facing a tough decision over the use of the word genocide, his
administration managed this year to derail the pledge to
recognize the Armenian Genocide.
Editor's Note:
Seto Boyadjian
is an attorney and member of the national board of the Armenian
National Committee.
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