Yervant1 Posted September 11, 2014 Report Share Posted September 11, 2014 OBAMA MUST RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE - FRANCE SENATOR01:59, 09.09.2014In connection with the centennial of the Armenian Genocide, the UScan take a step so that Turkey and President Recep Tayyip Erdoganunderstand, first of all, that the Armenian Genocide needs to berecognized.Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) Vice-PresidentRene Rouquet, who is also a French National Assembly member and deputychairman of the French-Armenian Parliamentary Friendship Group atthe Senate of France, told the above-said to Armenian News-NEWS.am.In his words, the objective of the French delegation in Armenia isto do everything possible so that the Turks recognize the ArmenianGenocide."We all are confident that French President Francois Hollande willbe in [Armenia's capital city] Yerevan on April 24, 2015 [that is,on the 100th anniversary of the genocide]. Hollande must convince theUS so that [official] Washington understands that respective stepsneed to be taken in that direction."Turks need to understand that numerous countries have recognizedthe Armenian Genocide. If the US recognizes the Armenian Genocide,this will have a big impact."And, first and foremost, [uS President] Barack Obama should do that,since he promised to recognize the Armenian Genocide and he has notfulfilled his promise," Rouquet stated.At the same time, he stressed that Erdogan knows very well that itwill be very difficult for Obama to recognize the Armenian Genocide.Armenia News - NEWS.am Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted September 11, 2014 Author Report Share Posted September 11, 2014 IS THE US FINALLY CONFRONTING GENOCIDE?September 10, 2014http://www.horizonweekly.ca/news/details/48427The Obama administration has refused to recognize the Armeniangenocide, despite repeated promises by candidate Obama to do so.President Obama's plan to increase military action against ISIS isbased on the fact that ISIS is a "genocidal, territorial-grabbing,caliphate-desiring quasi state," according to Secretary of State JohnKerry, speaking at the September 5 NATO summit talks.If genocidal intention hasindeed become a central criteria for theObama administration in deciding whether to launch military strikesabroad, it represents a significant new direction in U.S. foreignpolicy--and a sharp break from the legacy of the president whom Mr.Obama has always said he admires most.At the time of his first election in 2008, Obama spoke of his desireto govern in the spirit of his favorite predecessor, Franklin D.Roosevelt. A Time magazine cover depicted Obama as an FDR look-alike,and spokesmen for the president-elect said he was currently engrossedin two new Roosevelt biographies. One of the authors commented toreporters: "It's just nice that we're going to have a president thathas a strong sense of history."Having a strong sense of history should include recognizing the flawsof historical figures whom we otherwise admire. Although PresidentObama has not explicitly criticized FDR's abandonment of the Jewsduring the Holocaust, the policies of the Obama administrationincreasingly suggest a repudiation of Roosevelt's view that humanrights crises abroad are none of America's business.In 1933, President Roosevelt told his new ambassador to Nazi Germany,William Dodd, that the persecution of Jews there "is not a [u.S.]governmental affairs." He instructed Dodd to refrain from making anyofficial protests regarding the Jews except in the tiny handful ofcases involving German Jews who happened to be American citizens.That attitude continued throughout the Holocaust years, to the pointof refusing to drop even a few bombs on Auschwitz or the railway linesleading to it, even when U.S. planes were bombing German oil factoriesadjacent to the camp in 1944. Roosevelt administration officials saidthey could not "divert" military resources for non-military purposes.Yet a few months later, they diverted American troops to rescue thefamous Lipizzaner dancing horses near the German-Czech border.Until recently, President Obama's policy concerning genocide wassomething of a roller-coaster.On the one hand, he used military force to bring down the MuammarQaddafi regime in Libya, in 2011, on the grounds that Qaddafi waspreparing the mass murder of his opponents. "Some nations may be ableto turn a blind eye to atrocities in other countries," he said. "TheUnited States of America is different." He cited "preventing genocide"as a legitimate basis for American intervention in Libya.On the other hand, President Obama has never taken any steps tobring about the arrest of Sudanese president Omar Hassan al-Bashir,who was indicted by the International Criminal Court in 2009 forsponsoring the Darfur genocide. In fact, the administration has noteven criticized governments that have hosted visits by Bashir.Moreover, the Obama administration has refused to recognize theArmenian genocide, despite repeated promises by candidate Obama todo so. Turkey, which denies that the genocide took place, would beoffended if the United States told the truth. In deference to theTurks, the administration has even refused to publicly display arug woven by Armenian orphans and given to the White House as a giftin 1925.A major change of U.S. policy on genocide appeared imminent lastSeptember, when President Obama was poised to take military actionagainst Syrian dictator Bashar Assad for using poison gas. Secretary ofState John Kerry, explaining to the Senate Foreign Relations Committeethe importance of not abandoning the persecuted, cited the voyage ofthe St. Louis, "a ship that was turned away from the coast of Florida"(by President Roosevelt), with many of its passengers subsequentlymurdered in the Holocaust. "That's what's at stake here," he said.Although that military action did not take place, the principleof intervention which Kerry articulated regarding Syria may havehelped pave the way for the U.S. air strikes in Iraq last month,which helped save thousands of members of the Yazidi religious groupwho were threatened by ISIS.The U.S. shift from ignoring genocide to pre-emptive action againstthose who are planning genocide is far from complete. It remains tobe seen, for example, whether the administration will act againstothers who have threatened genocide, such as Iran and Hamas.Still, the new American stance regarding ISIS appears to be a stepin the right direction--and a welcome repudiation of that aspect ofFranklin D. Roosevelt's legacy.Israel National News Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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