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Armenian-Americans Should Not Allow Obama And Clinton To Bury Genocide Bill

March 11, 2010

ARMENIAN-AMERICANS SHOULD NOT ALLOW OBAMA AND CLINTON TO BURY GENOCIDE BILL

Noyan Tapan
March 10, 2010

LOS ANGELES, MART 10, NOYAN TAPAN-ARMENIANS TODAY. It was bad enough
that Pres. Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had failed
to keep their campaign pledge to reaffirm the facts of the Armenian
Genocide. They sunk to a new low last week, when Mrs. Clinton announced
that she and the President opposed adoption of the Armenian Genocide
resolution by the full House, following its passage by the Foreign
Affairs Committee.

When asked by journalists why she and the President have reversed
course on this issue, Mrs. Clinton unabashedly replied: "Well, I
think circumstances have changed in a very significant way.... We
do not believe that any action by the Congress is appropriate and
we oppose it." She added that the administration does not believe
the full House "will or should" vote on the resolution. How can the
facts of a genocide that took place 95 years ago change overnight? In
reality, nothing has changed except Secretary Clinton's moral compass,
assuming she had one to begin with!

It is shameful that the Obama administration is caving in to threats
from a third world country that needs the U.S. more than the U.S.

needs it. As Aram Hamparian, the Executive Director of the Armenian
National Committee of America said last week: "Turkey does not get a
vote or a veto in the US Congress!" Neither does the U.S. President
nor the Secretary of State, on a non-binding congressional resolution.

A White House spokesman announced last week that the presidents
of Turkey and United States had spoken by phone on the eve of the
Committee vote. Soon after, Mrs. Clinton warned Committee Chairman
Howard Berman that "further congressional action could impede progress
on normalization of relations" between Turkey and Armenia. Strangely,
Mrs. Clinton seems to have appointed herself as supreme arbiter of
what's in Armenia's best interest, while Armenian-Americans and
Armenia's leaders have repeatedly declared that they support the
adoption of the genocide resolution. Indeed, Mrs. Clinton has put
herself in the ridiculous position of knowing better than Armenians
what's good for them!

After claiming for months that the Armenia-Turkey Protocols have
no preconditions and not linked to any other issue, Mrs. Clinton
now asserts that the Protocols pave the way for a commission that is
supposed to study the facts of the Armenian Genocide. "I do not think
it is for any other country to determine how two countries resolve
matters between them," she stated. This confirms the worst fears of
Armenian opponents of the Protocols. Clearly, the Secretary believes
that ratification of the Protocols would prevent consideration of the
Armenian Genocide issue by third parties. This is precisely what the
Turkish side had been stating, to the dismay of most Armenians.

Interestingly, Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu made a
similar announcement last week, expressing his surprise that the
Armenian Genocide resolution is once again on the agenda of the U.S.

Congress. All along, the intent of Turkish leaders has been to stop
third parties from raising the Armenian Genocide issue, as they drag
out the Armenia-Turkey reconciliation process.

It was no accident that almost all Congressmen, who spoke against
the genocide resolution in the Foreign Affairs Committee, used the
lame excuse that their opposition to this bill was prompted by a
desire not to undermine the Protocols which ostensibly would bring
Armenian-Turkish reconciliation. Despite their sugar-coated rhetoric,
those who opposed the resolution and supported the Protocols were
in fact acting against Armenia's best interests on both counts. The
Protocols are now dead and buried anyway, thanks to Turkey's refusal
to ratify them, unless Armenia accepted extraneous preconditions.

While Armenian-American voters cannot settle their score with Pres.

Obama this year, since he is not on the ballot in November, 18 of
22 opponents of the resolution are! Armenian-Americans should do
everything in their power to prevent the re-election of all those
who voted against the genocide resolution on March 4: Russ Carnahan
(D-MO), Gerald Connolly (D-VA), Michael McMahon (D-NY), Mike Ross
(D-AR), Brad Miller (D-NC), David Scott (D-GA), Gregory Meeks (D-NY),
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), Ron Paul (R-TX), Jeff Flake (R-AZ), Mike
Pence (R-IN), Joe Wilson (R-SC), Connie Mack (R-FL), Jeff Fortenberry
(R-NE), Michael McCaul (R-TX), Ted Poe (R-TX), Bob Inglis (R-SC),
and Dan Burton (R-IN). Bill Delahunt (D-MA) and John Tanner (D-TN)
are retiring from Congress. Gresham Barrett (R-SC) is running for
Governor, while John Boozman (R-AR) is a candidate for the U.S.

Senate. The latter two should be opposed in their new campaigns.

In addition, Armenian-Americans should campaign against the re-election
of Steve Cohen (D-TN), Ed Whitfield (R-KY) and Kay Granger (R-TX),
for sending a joint letter to Foreign Affairs Committee members urging
them to vote against the genocide resolution. All three are members
of the congressional Turkish Caucus.

The next culprits are CEO's of five major American aerospace and
defense companies: Lockheed Martin Corp., Boeing Co., Raytheon Co.,
United Technologies Corp., and Northrop Grumman Corp. They sent a
joint letter to the Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee
urging him to reject the Armenian Genocide resolution, in order not to
jeopardize their sales to Turkey. These CEO's have committed not only
an immoral act by placing a higher premium on profits -- blood money
-- over human rights, but also ignored the fact that Turkey cannot
forego its purchases from their firms, because by doing so it would
only weaken itself. Armenian-Americans should counter these firms by
staging demonstrations in front of their headquarters and factories.

Those employed by these firms should communicate their anger to the
CEO's of these firms. Stockholders should go to the next annual
meeting of these companies to make their concerns known and seek
removal of the CEO's. Similar protest actions should be taken against
the Aerospace Industries Association, which represents more than 270
member companies. The AIA sent a separate letter to Congress against
the Armenian Genocide resolution.

The Congressmen and companies who opposed the resolution on March 4
should pay a heavy price for their immoral act. Ignoring their negative
votes and letters would encourage them to oppose the resolution again,
when it reaches the House floor. If Armenian-Americans could cause
the defeat of just one of these scoundrels in November, the rest of
them will get the message that voting against genocide recognition
can cost them their political careers. They will then think twice
before casting such a vote.

As far as Pres. Obama and Secretary Clinton are concerned,
Armenian-Americans should not allow them to dictate to the U.S.

Congress. Given the fact that most Americans are disillusioned with the
failed policies and unfulfilled promises of the Obama administration,
all elected officials nationwide are seriously worried about their
re-election. This is the perfect time to demand action from politicians
and punish those who do not cooperate.

Armenian-Americans should contact their representatives in every
congressional district throughout the country, even in remote areas,
and tell them that unless they support the genocide resolution, they
will not get their vote in November. Politicians would rather listen
to the voices of their constituents than to Pres. Obama who is the
main cause for their seats being in jeopardy. Therefore, the fate of
the resolution is ultimately in the hands of Armenian-Americans. If
they work hard and get enough congressional supporters, Speaker Pelosi
would have no choice but to bring the resolution to the House floor,
regardless of what the administration tells her to do. Otherwise,
voters who are angry on many other issues could toss out of office
the incumbents, jeopardizing her own speakership!

Armenian-Americans should not forget to express their profound
gratitude to Chairman Howard Berman (D-CA) and 22 other Congressmen
who voted for the resolution on March 4. They are: Gary Ackerman
(D-NY), Eni Faleomavaega (D-American Samoa), Donald Payne (D-NJ), Brad
Sherman (D-CA), Eliot Engel (D-NY), Diane Watson (D-CA), Albio Sires
(D-NJ), Gene Green (D-TX), Lynn Woolsey (D-CA), Barbara Lee (D-CA),
Shelley Berkley (D-NV), Joseph Crowley (D-NY), Jim Costa (D-CA), Keith
Ellison (D-MN), Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ), Christopher Smith (R-NJ),
Gus Bilirakis (R-FL), Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), Donald Manzullo (R-IL),
and Edward Royce (R-CA), Elton Gallegly (R-CA), and Ron Klein (D-FL).

The Armenian community should enthusiastically support their
re-election.

Finally, some Turkish circles are consoling themselves simply because
the resolution was adopted by a difference of one vote. Since House
Committee members who opposed the resolution for unrelated reasons
explicitly stated that they did not dispute the facts of the Armenian
Genocide, the vote could have been 45 to 0, not 23-22, in terms of
genocide acknowledgment -- a great victory for the truth and a major
defeat for Turkish denialists and their backers. No one should be
surprised therefore, if in the coming days Turkish leaders cancel
the multi-million dollar contracts of their failed lobbying firms!

By Harut Sassounian Publisher, The California Courier

resume - cover letter