http://mediamatters.org/items/200710150005?src=item200710150005">Wash.Post quoted White House saying not for Congress to "work out" whether Armenians suffered "genocide"-- but Bush himself did in 2000
Mon, Oct 15, 2007 12:45pm ET
Summary: A Washington Post column discussing a congressional resolution that would label the killing of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire from 1915-1923 as genocide quoted White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe saying, "What happened nearly 100 years ago in Turkey and Armenia is tragic, but is an historical issue that needs to be worked out by those two countries, not the United States Congress." But the column did not mention that as a presidential candidate in 2000 Bush sent a letter to the Armenian National Committee of America declaring that "he Armenians were subjected to a genocidal campaign that defies comprehension." According to an excerpt of the letter, Bush also said that if elected president, he "would ensure that our nation properly recognizes the tragic suffering of the Armenian people."In the October 15 Washington Post
http://mediamatters.org/rd?http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/14/AR2007101401168.html">"In the Loop" column by staff writers Michael Abramowitz and Peter Baker about a resolution approved by the House Foreign Affairs Committee on October 10 -- labeling the killing of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire from 1915-1923 as genocide -- the authors reported that "President Bush has found himself in a morally and politically ambiguous position on what may be one of the most vexing questions that can face an occupant of the White House: When does carnage rise to the level of 'genocide'?" The article further quoted White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe saying, "What happened nearly 100 years ago in Turkey and Armenia is tragic, but is an historical issue that needs to be worked out by those two countries, not the United States Congress."
But the column did not mention that as a presidential candidate in 2000, Bush sent a letter to the Armenian National Committee of America, in which, according to a http://mediamatters.org/rd?http://www.anca.org/press_releases/press_releases.php?prid=60">press release on the organization's website, he wrote that "the Armenians were subjected to a genocidal campaign that defies comprehension." According to the excerpt of the letter posted on the website, Bush also said that if elected president, he "would ensure that our nation properly recognizes the tragic suffering of the Armenian people," as Media Matters for America documented. Similarly, October 15 articles by The New York Times, the Associated Press, and The Washington Times, reported the Bush administration's objections to the resolution but did not note Bush's pledge in 2000.On October 10, the blog Think Progress highlighted the Armenian National Committee of America's press release.
Despite Bush's reported characterization of the Turkish killing of Armenians a "genocidal campaign" and his reported pledge as a candidate that he would "ensure" that the United States would "properly recognize[]" the event, as president, he does not appear to have used the term "genocide" -- or any variant thereof -- to describe the killings, according to a search of the White House website. From the "partial text" of Bush's letter on the Armenian National Committee of America website:
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What a stinking hypocrite.