WASHINGTON, DC — Ken Hachikian, Chairman of the Armenian National Committee of America, Wednesday called upon Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to lift the unfair and heavy pressure the U.S. government is using to force Armenia to accept a set of highly controversial Protocols on the normalization of relations with Turkey.
In his letter, dated September 30, 2009, Hachikian expressed the Armenian American community’s concern that “these one-sided agreements, which are being imposed upon a landlocked Republic of Armenia that remains blockaded by Turkey and that is still working to overcome the devastating demographic, economic and geopolitical legacy of the Armenian Genocide, would, if adopted, call into question the reality of the Armenian Genocide, threaten Armenia’s security, jeopardize the freedom of Nagorno Karabagh, and compromise the inalienable rights of all Armenians.”
The complete text of the letter is provided below.
September 30, 2009
The Honorable Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street N.W.
Washington, DC 20520
Dear Secretary Clinton,
I am writing to share with you the growing alarm and outrage among Armenian Americans over the heavy pressure that you, officials of the Department of State, and others in the Obama-Biden Administration are applying to Armenia to accept the Turkey-Armenia Protocols.
These one-sided agreements, which are being imposed upon a landlocked Republic of Armenia that remains blockaded by Turkey and that is still working to overcome the devastating demographic, economic and geopolitical legacy of the Armenian Genocide, would, if adopted, call into question the reality of the Armenian Genocide, threaten Armenia’s security, jeopardize the freedom of Nagorno Karabagh, and compromise the inalienable rights of all Armenians.
As you can imagine, in light of your powerful track record as a U.S. Senator and Presidential candidate in support of recognition of the Armenian Genocide, we are particularly troubled by the role that you have played in pressuring Armenia to accept these Protocols. Rather than keeping faith with your principled stands on this human rights issue, you have, since taking office, aggressively pressured Armenia into a process that effectively provides President Obama with a rationale –morally flawed, but nonetheless politically effective – for failing to honor his clearly stated pledge to recognize the Armenian Genocide.
The starkest evidence of the intense pressure applied on Armenia is that the initial Turkey-Armenia “Roadmap” was announced late on the evening of April 22nd, only hours before the President’s first April 24th remarks, following a marathon 14-hour session in Yerevan between the Foreign Minister of Armenia, Edward Nalbandyan, and Matt Bryza, at the time a Deputy Assistant Secretary. This meeting, and all the intense pressure on Armenia in the days leading up to the President’s reversal on his Armenian Genocide pledge, was plainly intended to serve Turkey’s interest in blocking U.S. recognition of the Armenian Genocide. This coercion has continued through to this day, with headlines in the New York Times and elsewhere reporting your personal “prodding” and “pushing” of the Armenian government to accept the Protocols in the face of broad-based opposition both in Armenia and the Armenian Diaspora.
As you may know, over 10,000 Armenian Americans gathered in Los Angeles over the weekend to protest the one-sided Protocols and to demand full U.S. recognition of the Armenian Genocide. These American citizens and over one and a half million Armenian Americans, rightful stakeholders in our nation’s policies on Armenian issues, have been excluded from any meaningful role in the shaping of our nation’s active diplomacy on the Protocols. When we have formally protested this exclusion to senior officials of the State Department, we have been advised to address our concerns to the Armenian government. This dismissal represents a patent insult to every American of Armenian heritage. We deserve transparency and honesty from our government, a policy-making process that fairly embraces all American stakeholders, and the opportunity to offer our input in a respectful and meaningful manner.
In light of these concerns, I call upon you to lift the pressure being applied to Armenia to accept the Protocols and ask you, once again, to agree to accept our outstanding request to meet to discuss these and other urgent matters of concern to the Armenian American community.
Sincerely,
[signed]
Kenneth V. Hachikian
Chairman
Well written letter..
Hope Clinton unlike Obama takes this call of urgency and listen.. but for some reason i doubt she will..
However, all this that we, the Armerican Armenians are doing for stop the worst agreed protocols from happening, may or may not help.. All I know, those that perished during the Genocide and Karabagh war are turning in their graves… if they had the chance to speak, they will screan and yell instead of talking to this outrage that our government and US government are imposing upon our people and nation.
Its an illusion to think that the Clintons are or have been a friend of Armenia or Armenians in general, their interest has always been with Turkey and big business period, all she is trying to do is fool us with her empty promises, and sadly some have fallen in.
Mihran Keheyian
We hope that this letter brings some attention and the need of being responsible by the Clinton’s and every others involved that we do not see or hear about. Let’s pray and hope that the pressure from the US ends… ASAP.
Erik Zakani
Glendale, CA
I am a concerned american citizen. I have lost half my ancestors during the genocide, was fortunate enough to come to a country where we were taught everyone was treated fairly. I have family in Armenia who is horrified to what tomorrow will bring. They fear for their lives their ability to live freely in their own land. They wake up every morning hoping for a better day, they pray to be able to put food on the table. Stop the pressuring and accept the genocide. we are not of different species. We all hurt the same and we all bleed the same and we all want to protect our families.
WELL SAID Tagui.. WELL SAID..
Clinton thinks we are ayl molorakayin enq… but hopefully she will get off her high horse and do what is right.. the same thing she was preaching before Obama took the throne..
Thanks
G
Do we all agree that peace is what we want …
Then if we all ask ourselves, “how do we attain peace?”
What solutions would we come up with?
Without seeing anything if I was asked war or peace I would choose peace, but if peace means betrayl of the values of mankind, betrayls of the fallen innocent who seek justice from their graves … Is that peace really peace?
I have not seen any copy of the protocols that Armenia and Turkey will sign … where is a copy? Is there any Transparency? or is all that we are entitled to is other peoples opinions?