http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/52371.html
Michael Doyle | McClatchy Newspaperslast updated: September 14, 2008 01:26:24 PM
WASHINGTON -- The two major presidential candidates differ sharply over an Armenian genocide commemoration, with Republican John McCain opposing it and Democrat Barack Obama supporting it.
The policy clash could make a political difference in California's San Joaquin Valley and other regions with sizable Armenian-American populations. McCain may have more to lose, in the short term. But in the long run, Obama may have more to prove.
"Support for the genocide resolution is important in the presidential race and can have a significant impact," said Barlow Der Mugrdechian, coordinator of the Armenian Studies Program at California State University, Fresno.
The potential short-term political cost is readily apparent. Estimates of the number of Armenian-Americans range from 385,000, in the 2000 Census, to more than 1 million. Many track the genocide issue closely.
By contrast, only 117,000 U.S. residents nationwide claimed Turkish ancestry. In comparing grassroots political strength, the Armenian-American community wins hands down.
"There are many Armenians in states such as Michigan and Florida," Der Mugrdechian noted. "Since the race is expected to be close in these states, and many others, the Armenian vote could prove to be the difference."
The long-term challenge is different. If Obama is elected, he would face tremendous pressure from the State Department, the Pentagon, other countries -- and maybe even his own advisers -- to back away from emphatic Armenian genocide language. That is what other presidents have done.
In 1988, for instance, a campaigning George H.W. Bush declared the United States should "acknowledge the attempted genocide of the Armenian people." As president, Bush instead stressed "the differing views of how the terrible events of 1915-23 should be characterized."
Bush's son, while campaigning in 2000, similarly referred to a "genocidal campaign" against the Armenians. Once elected, he avoided the genocide term, and his State Department withdrew a U.S. ambassador who dared use it.
"I think the Armenian community is very leery of any candidate who says he will support a genocide resolution, because those promises haven't necessarily been kept," said Rep. George Radanovich, R-Mariposa. "When push comes to shove, the State Department gets in there and has its way."
Genocide is what Armenian-Americans and many scholars say happened in the dying years of the Ottoman Empire, between 1915 and 1923. By this account, the slaughter and violent exile of more than 1 million Armenians met the legal definition of genocide and should be commemorated as such.
Genocide means the systematic and intentional destruction, in whole or in part, of an ethnic, racial, religious or national group.
"There was a genocide that did take place against the Armenian people," Obama said while campaigning earlier this year.
He hasn't been very active on the issue in his four years in the Senate, despite serving on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Obama has not co-sponsored the Senate's Armenian genocide resolutions, and he did not attend confirmation hearings for President Bush's nominees to serve as U.S. ambassador to Armenia.
Obama's rhetorical support now for recognizing the genocide nonetheless helped secure the endorsement in January of the Armenian National Committee of America. It's a view long held publicly by Obama's vice presidential candidate, Sen. Joseph Biden, the Delaware Democrat who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. It's also a position being deployed on the campaign trail.
Samantha Power, a Pulitzer Prize-winning author and Harvard scholar who has advised Obama on foreign policy, posted on YouTube a campaign-style video explicitly addressed to the Armenian-American community. Power declared that a President Obama would "call a spade a spade" and publicly acknowledge the genocide.
McCain's position is the polar opposite, as he cites the diplomatic and strategic risks associated with alienating Turkey.
"I was disappointed that many in Congress were ready to legislate a historical judgment of the Armenian genocide whatever the cost to our relations with Turkey," McCain declared in Iowa last October. "Turkey is essential to stabilizing Iraq, containing Iranian power, and encouraging economic and political reform in the Arab world. We should be strengthening our partnership, not erecting new barriers to it."
One form of recognition would be in the form of a congressional resolution. Earlier this year, though, a resolution collapsed in the House after appearing to come close. Radanovich said he does not "see that coming back anytime soon."
The alternative path is a presidential proclamation. Each April, presidents present a public statement about what happened between 1915 and 1923. The question thus becomes: Will the statement include the word genocide?
Power, a strong proponent of Armenian-American issues, no longer has a formal role advising Obama. One top adviser, Anthony Lake, was national security adviser to President Bill Clinton during the period that Clinton avoided the genocide word in his annual proclamations. Another top Obama adviser, Susan Rice, was Clinton's assistant secretary of state when Clinton blocked a genocide resolution authored by Radanovich.
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100 years for America to recognize the Genocide
Armik 16 weeks 1 day ago
So, we have the Armenian Diaspora working within almost 100 years for America to recognize the Genocide, and Serzh Sarkissian is in Armenia agreeing with Turkey for the commission to solve whether there was a Genocide. It is correct?
who cares anymore
ace 15 weeks 5 days ago
the diaspora has proved its irrelevance. these are Americans with little genuine interest in Armenia, just a loose cultural identity. the problem is that they get in the way of real progress and solutions in the country. walking outside the yerevan marriot with those stupid 'Yes Hay Em' t-shirts...
besides, the US claims of genocide will be history in a month - right after the border is open and SS agrees to a 'commission' to figure it all out. the diaspora sure was vocal in February about how LTP was a turkophile, etc....where are they now? i guess we'll see them April 24th.
http://ascc.artsci.wustl.edu/~anthro/courses/306/nigeria_counterpoint.ht...
Looks like nobody cares
Anonymous 15 weeks 5 days ago
It looks like you are right - nobody cares.
Five years ago it was a joke, that Azerbaijan was afraid of attacking 150,000 people in Karabakh because they had seen how two Karabakhis had conquered a Republic of 3 million, and they only needed to kill 17 people.
Today it is no longer a joke, it is reality, because for the past ten years nobody has cared - most importantly the Diaspora.
Armenia will soon have to get used to living without Genocide
Not quite... You can't treat
nazarian 15 weeks 5 days ago
Not quite... You can't treat the Diaspora as one homogeneous group. It varies from country to country, and within each country there are different ideologies at play, too.
If you think that the Armenian-Americans are what legacy organizations, such as ANCA or AAA, are, you are mistaken. Even as these organizations, together with the Apostolic Church, endorsed the bloodbath of March 1 and the subsequent repressions, there were large demonstrations in LA in support of democracy in Armenia.
Bill Clinton--Special Envoy to the South Caucasus under Obama?
Ani 15 weeks 1 day ago
This article at A1plus (admittedly, it's pretty incoherent) includes that nugget. The question is whether it's a real possibility or a pipe dream of this professor.
http://www.a1plus.am/en/?page=issue&id=64266
“No matter who becomes U.S. next president, Barack Obama or John McCain, no developments are expected in the U.S. policy in regard to South Caucasus,” says Dr. Dennis Sandole, Professor of Conflict Resolution and International Relations from George Mason University (USA). Mr. Sandole was in Armenia last week.
He says the USA is more interested in the Balkan States than in South Caucasus.
We foresee positive developments in the region in case Democrat Barack Obama is elected the U.S President. The President might appoint a special envoy /most likely ex President Bill Clinton/ to deal with the conflicts of South Caucasus.
“In case Republican John McCain wins the election, nothing will change in the region,” says the American political scientist.
“A new gap has emerged between the West and East,” Dennis Sandole said with regard to the Russian-Georgian conflict. When attacking South Ossetia Georgia’s President Michael Saakashvili was sure that he would lose the war. And yet, he wanted to draw the attention of the international community and make them accept frozen conflicts before the escalation of the situation.
Saakashvili’s attack was an attempt to waken the USA, Turkey, NATO and the EU. It meant that the governments of Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan couldn’t use the frozen conflicts to solve their interior problems.
Saakashvili’s steps were aimed at supporting McCain during the presidential race.
The recent developments in South Caucasus aim to ensure the stability of Turkey and Russia. Currently they need the support of their regional neighbours. The platform of stability and cooperation in Caucasus proposed by Turkey suggests a new wave in the Russian-Georgian war and a new mechanism of governance in the region.
Atlantic Monthly article pursues this further
Ani 12 weeks 6 days ago
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200810u/armenian-american-vote
McCain's Armenia Problem
Eight years ago, George W. Bush was battling an unexpectedly competitive John McCain for the GOP’s presidential nomination. Scheduled to vote just days after South Carolina, Michigan suddenly looked decisive—and its substantial Armenian-American population became an attractive voting block.
Three days before the vote, Governor Bush sent a letter to two Armenian-American businessmen addressing the Armenian community’s biggest demand—recognition that the 1915 extermination of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire was an act of genocide. The Turkish government to this day denies that any genocide occurred, and no president since Ronald Reagan has used that term while in office. Bush pledged to correct that. “The Armenians were subjected to a genocidal campaign,” he wrote. “If elected President, I would ensure that our nation properly recognizes the tragic suffering of the Armenian people.” Bush lost in Michigan, won the presidency … and then bailed on his pledge. Last fall, the House of Representatives looked set to adopt a resolution affirming the Armenian genocide. But as Turkey threatened to disrupt its commercial ties with the United States and to invade Iraq, President Bush warned that America could not afford to alienate Turkey and pushed Congress to drop the measure.
Today, Edgar Hagopian, one of the letter’s two recipients, acknowledges his disappointment. “I have written to President Bush many times but have not gotten a response,” he said, reeling at the remarkable turnaround that transformed Bush into the biggest obstacle to an official recognition.
[...]
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