In a welcome move, four members of the U.S. House of Representatives
have introduced a resolution that advocates a new approach for the
pursuit of Armenian rights in Congress, going beyond genocide
recognition.
This new bipartisan initiative, introduced by Congressmen David
Valadao (R-Calif.), Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), Michael Grimm (R-N.Y.), and
Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), is appropriately titled, “Armenian Genocide
Truth and Justice Act.”
It is well known that the U.S. government has recognized the Armenian
Genocide on several occasions, starting in 1951 by the submission of an
official document to the International Court of Justice (World Court),
followed by President Ronald Reagan’s Presidential Proclamation of April
22, 1981, and through two House resolutions in 1975 and 1984.
The proposed measure calls on President Obama “to work toward
equitable, constructive, and durable Armenian-Turkish relations based
upon the Republic of Turkey’s full acknowledgement of the facts and
ongoing consequences of the Armenian Genocide, and a fair, just, and
comprehensive international resolution of this crime against humanity,”
the Armenian National Committee of America reported.
It is high time that Armenian Americans support congressional efforts
that go beyond the mere repetition of the acknowledged facts of the
Armenian Genocide and seek the more meaningful goal of justice, which
entails the restitution and recovery of the substantial losses suffered
as a consequence of the genocide, including personal and community
properties, and the occupied territories of Western Armenia. It is
hardly conceivable that anyone would dare to oppose the universally
accepted concept of justice, not even Rejep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime
minister of Turkey, who heads the ruling “Justice and Development
Party.”
It is understandable that for many years, it was necessary to seek
genocide recognition, as most of the world was unaware of the Armenian
Genocide. However, as a result of the relentless efforts by the Armenian
Diaspora and the Republic of Armenia, there is no longer a need to
continue pursuing recognition—having largely prevailed over persistent
Turkish denialism. By declaring victory and moving forward to reclaim
their just demands, Armenians would avoid falling in the Turkish trap of
trying to reconfirm the facts of the genocide ad nauseam! Meanwhile,
the Turkish government would continue its shameful refusal to
acknowledge the Armenian Genocide or might engage in the deceptive game
of issuing partial and meaningless apologies in order to mislead the
international community on the eve of the genocide’s centennial.
The new House resolution also seeks to shift the U.S. government’s
efforts away from the ill-fated Armenia-Turkey protocols and refocus the
Obama Administration’s attention on Armenia’s just demands from Turkey.
The congressional resolution reminds Obama of his April 24, 2012
statement, in which he advocated that “a full, frank, and just
acknowledgement of the facts is in all of our interests. Moving forward
with the future cannot be done without reckoning with the facts of the
past.”
The resolution points out that the Republic of Turkey, rather than
“reckoning with the facts of the past,” has instead “escalated its
international campaign of Armenian Genocide denial, maintained its
blockade of Armenia, and increased its pressure on the small but growing
Turkish civil society movement acknowledging the Armenian Genocide and
seeking justice from this systematic campaign of destruction of millions
of Armenian, Greek, Assyrian, Pontian, Syriac, and other Christians
upon their biblical-era homelands.”
The congressional resolution further declares that U.S. “national
interests in the establishment of equitable, constructive, stable, and
durable relations between Armenians and Turks cannot be meaningfully
advanced by circumventing or otherwise seeking to avoid materially
addressing the central political, legal, security, and moral issue
between these two nations: Turkey’s denial of truth and justice for the
Armenian Genocide.”
The newly introduced resolution makes it clear that Armenians, rather
than being satisfied by merely regurgitating the well-known facts of
the genocide, demand a just resolution through full and comprehensive
restitution.
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