Tag: Joe Biden

  • Biden pledges to recognize 1915 Armenian genocide

    Biden pledges to recognize 1915 Armenian genocide

    Posted by: “pinar.enis” <pinar.enis>

    Biden pledges to recognize 1915 Armenian genocide

    President Donald Trump and past U.S. presidents have chosen to sidestep the issue.

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    Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden. | Scott Olson/Getty Images

    By RAMSEN SHAMON

    04/24/2020 10:12 PM EDT

    Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden said Friday he would pledge to recognize the Armenian genocide if elected president.

    President Donald Trump and past U.S. presidents have chosen to sidestep the issue.

    “If elected, I pledge to support a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide and will make universal human rights a top priority,” Biden said on Twitter.

    Trump, in a statement issued on Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, did not call the 1915 slaughter genocide, instead referring to it as “one of the worst mass atrocities of the 20th century.”

    In December, the Senate passed a House resolution labeling the 1915 events as genocide. The Trump administration was quick to separate itself from congressional action on the issue by not formally recognizing the event. Such a decision could potentially harm relations with Turkey, a NATO ally and partner in a volatile region.

    When former President Barack Obama was an Illinois senator running for office, he said he would recognize the Armenian genocide if elected.

    “The Armenian Genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view, but rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence,” Obama said at the time. “The facts are undeniable.”

    Ultimately the genocide was not classified as such under his administration.

    Samantha Power, Obama’s ambassador to the U.N., expressed remorse for the administration’s decision to not recognize the genocide in 2018.

    “I’m sorry,” Power said. “I’m sorry that we disappointed so many Armenian Americans.”

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been adamant in not referring to the 1915 events as a genocide.

    Any such recognition would “endanger the future of [U.S.-Turkish] bilateral relations,” Erdogan spokesperson Fahrettin Altun said in 2019. Erdogan in 2014 referred to the 1915 events as “inhumane.”

    Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) on Friday tweeted her support for the genocide resolution, despite voting present for the House’s resolution in October.

    The word “genocide” was coined in 1943 by Polish Jewish lawyer Raphael Lemkin who studied the massacres of Assyrians and Armenians and whose family was affected by the Holocaust.

    Historians estimate 3 million Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks were killed by the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century. One hundred and five years later, Turkey continues to deny a genocide took place.

  • Biden pushes leadership role for Turkey’s Islamist leaders

    Biden pushes leadership role for Turkey’s Islamist leaders

    On Friday Vice President Joe Biden offered Turkey’s Islamist government a leading role in the Middle East, despite its recent crackdown on dissidents, expansion of Islamic culture and education, and regional conflicts with Greece and Israel.

    Palestinians hold a Turkish flag during a Hamas protest against Israel's interception of Gaza-bound ships near the sea port in Gaza City, Monday, May 31, 2010. Israeli naval commandos on Monday stormed a flotilla of ships carrying aid and hundreds of pro-Palestinian activists to the blockaded Gaza Strip, killing at least 10 passengers in a dramatic predawn raid that set off worldwide condemnation and a diplomatic crisis.(AP Photo/Khalil Hamra) Original Filename: Mideast_Israel_Palestinians_JRL134.jpg Read more:

    “We’re looking for Turkish leadership in the rest of that entire region,” Biden declared at a fundraiser attended by roughly 200 people from the Turkish and Azerbaijani communities, according to a White House pool report.

    “It’s a model as to how you can have an Islamic population, an Islamic state and a democracy, something the rest of the region is groping to figure out how to do,” he told the audience, who paid up to $2,500 each to attend the fundraiser.

    Since last June Turkey’s Islamist government, led by Recep Erdogan, “has restricted freedom of expression, association, and assembly with laws that allow authorities to jail its critics for many months or years while they stand trial for alleged terrorism offenses on the basis of flimsy evidence,” according to a January report by the left-wing group Human Rights Watch.

    The Turkish government’s Islamist policies also clash with Biden’s progressive policies, and with American culture and laws in general.

    For example, on April 18 Biden touted the Violence Against Women Act and slammed GOP proposals to upgrade the law.

    However, in Turkey, “violence in the home is endemic, and police and courts regularly fail to protect women who have applied for protection orders under the Family Protection Law [and] reports of spouses and family members killing women rose in 2011,” Human Rights Watch reported.

    via Joe Biden | Turkey Leadership Role | Islamist Leaders | The Daily Caller.

     

  • Biden criticizes EU stance on Turkey

    Biden criticizes EU stance on Turkey

    WASHINGTON — US Vice President Joe Biden criticized the European Union Friday for not fully embracing Turkey, stressing the “inordinate influence” of a country that is a close American ally.

    Biden, at a fund-raising event for President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign, told members of the Turkish-American community that Ankara has been “one of our most valuable and proudest allies.”

    Biden said he and Obama have been “very, very critical of some of our European allies for not fully embracing Turkey in the economic union, for not fully embracing Turkey as part of Europe.

    “The way we look at Turkey is, it’s the gateway, it’s the hinge between the East and West. It has inordinate influence,” he said.

    He said the Obama administration and Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan were “on the same page with respect to Syria.”

    On the Arab democracy movements, Biden said, “No one knows whether that spring will turn to winter tomorrow. Nobody knows exactly how that’s going to go. But with the strong leadership of Turkey we are reassured. There’s nothing we do that we don’t coordinate.”

    Turkey’s minister of European affairs, Egemen Bagis, said on April 5 that European officials were creating difficulties for Turkey’s bid for EU membership but would not succeed.

    “No country faces as many impediments, as many challenges and difficulties as my country” in its bid for EU membership, Bagis said in Bucharest, citing, among others, visa requirements and a slow negotiation process.

    “Those politicians around Europe who think that by making these difficulties they can make Turkey go away are dead wrong,” he said.

    The talks have stalled over problems relating to EU member Cyprus, whose northern third was invaded and occupied by Turkey in 1974, and countries such as Austria, France and Germany that are reluctant to grant full membership.

    via AFP: Biden criticizes EU stance on Turkey.

  • A Reality Check On US-Turkish Relations

    A Reality Check On US-Turkish Relations

    A Reality Check On US-Turkish Relations

    Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 8 Issue: 223
    December 8, 2011
    By: Saban Kardas
    US Vice President, Joe Biden, paid a working visit to Turkey, which provided an opportunity for a reality check of the current condition of US-Turkish bilateral relations. In addition to meeting with Turkish leaders, Biden attended the Global Entrepreneurship summit, which was developed as a new platform by the Obama administration to foster dialogue and cooperation with the Muslim world. Throughout his public appearances, Biden praised Turkey’s economic and political achievements, highlighting its potential to serve as a model for other nations.

    Beyond these words of praise, his contacts largely served to reiterate the growing consensus between the two countries, rather than breaking new ground on any major issue. While seeking to mobilize Ankara’s support for key US strategic interests in the Middle East, Biden at the same time worked to assure his Turkish counterparts about the continuation of US strategic involvement in ensuring regional stability. In charge of the Obama administration’s Iraq portfolio, Biden’s visit to Ankara was preceded by his earlier stopover in Iraq. In many ways, the US experience in Iraq was also a major turning point for Turkish-American relations. Following the disagreements caused by the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, bilateral relations cooled, resulting in serious questioning on both sides concerning the future of the alliance that tied both nations together. Over time, the two countries adjusted their policies in Iraq, as they soon realized that they have major stakes in the stabilization of this country. Their coordinated action in Iraq has been an important development that helped maintain strategic cooperation in recent years. In an environment where the region is in flux in the wake of the Arab Spring and the US military withdrawal is imminent, however, Turkish concerns over the future of Iraq have become even more worrisome. In that regard, Biden largely worked to convey the message to Turkish leaders that the United States will remain committed to that country after the military withdrawal.

    Obviously, another issue of shared concern is the evolving situation in Syria, which runs the risk of destabilizing the region. Despite its initial argument for a controlled transition under Assad’s watch, Turkey has increasingly criticized the Syrian government forces’ brutal crackdown against the opposition and emerged on the frontline of the international efforts to prevent further killing of civilians. As Turkey recently announced a new round of sanctions against the Assad regime in similar fashion with Western powers, the visit provided an opportunity for exchanging information and discussing ways to further coordinate policy on Syria. However, this convergence is putting the Turkish government in a risky situation as Turkey moves to initiate economic sanctions, which might hurt certain constituents and especially local economy. Therefore, although Turkey has followed a policy in tune with the Western and US position, it has to tread a fine line to avoid being seen as too closely aligned with the United States. Most opposition parties and nationalist circles in Turkey view the government as implementing a program in Syria imposed upon it by the United States and interpret Biden’s visit as Ankara’s submission to Washington in its regional policies (Yenicag, December 4).

    Iran was another major item on Biden’s agenda. Biden reportedly sought to convey the message that the US policy of isolating Tehran through coercive measures was effective and they needed to be pursued vigilantly (Hurriyet, December 3). Yet another source of friction in the bilateral relationship once, the recent change in Turkey’s policy on Iran has pulled Ankara and Washington together, also leading to a series of threatening statements coming from Tehran. Granted, Turkey remains reluctant to impose new sanctions against Iran, in an effort to avoid putting further strain on its relations with Iran.

    In return for Ankara’s more cooperative position on issues of interest to the United States, Washington has been more forthcoming in its support for Turkey’s fight against the terrorist campaign by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has seen escalation in recent years. Biden reiterated recent steps undertaken by the United States, including the stationing of Predator drones in Incirlik to increase Turkey’s information gathering capacity, and selling three Super Cobra helicopters to Turkey. Moreover, Turkish President Abdullah Gul seemed content with Biden’s statements that even after the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq, Turkey would continue to receive support from not only the United States, but also Iraqi groups in its fight against the PKK , December 2). Though such statements obviously are important signs of commitment from a symbolic and political point of view, the level of military contribution is unlikely to bolster Turkey’s operational ability against the PKK and change the situation on the ground decisively in favor of the Turkish army.

    Granted, the accelerating pace of the US-Turkey security partnership has been an issue of concern in terms of the ongoing process of domestic transformation inside Turkey. Some commentators who have grown critical of the AK Party government’s democratic credentials and its commitment to fundamental rights have been expecting the West and the United States to act as a restraint against the “authoritarian tendencies” of the government. Troubled by the new realignment between Ankara and Washington, they have expressed concern that the US might turn a blind eye to the government’s conduct in domestic politics. One commentator argues that “the Turkish government takes it as carte blanche to be careless about political freedoms, to limit free speech and to crush the Kurdish opposition in return of its ‘great’ role in regional politics” (Hurriyet Daily News, November 15).

    Partly in an effort to allay such concerns, US delegations visiting Turkey and US diplomats based in Ankara often emphasize the importance of respecting basic rights. Maintaining the same tradition, Biden highlighted the need for a free political climate, and urged Turkey to maintain the momentum for rewriting a more civilian and democratic constitution (Anadolu Ajansi, December 4). It remains to be seen if such statements will be followed by deeds in the coming months and whether the US will observe the AK Party’s domestic conduct in a manner to satisfy its critics.

    https://jamestown.org/program/a-reality-check-on-us-turkish-relations/
  • Biden: Turkey has a serious potential in talent and entrepreneurship

    Biden: Turkey has a serious potential in talent and entrepreneurship

    Balkan Business News Correspondent – 06.12.2011

    Zaman – Turkey’s much touted entrepreneurial spirit, combined with the benefits of a high performing economy, is set to place the country among the world’s top economies by 2023. “The next Steve Jobs may well be a Turk,” according to US Vice President Joe Biden.

    On a visit to Turkey, the US Vice President addressed a group of businesspeople at the second Global Entrepreneurship Summit in Istanbul, praising Turkey’s economic achievements in the last decade, such as tripling the size of the economy, record breaking exports, and increasing per capita income.

    Biden referred to Apple’s founder Steve Jobs, giving a striking example of Turkey’s innovation potential: “I was not surprised to hear our Ambassador to Ankara saying that the next Steve Jobs may be from Turkey. He might even be among us here. Turkey has a serious potential in talent and entrepreneurship,” Biden told the audience at the forum’s opening speech. Turkey is one of the key economies of the world, and is in the position to realize its potential, Biden added, speaking of Turkey’s goal to enter the top 10 economies of the world by 2023, the centennial of the Republic.

    The US Vice President stressed the importance of supporting innovative ideas in order to flourish, noting the success of companies like Apple and Google. Source: IIT

    via Balkans.com Business News : Biden: Turkey has a serious potential in talent and entrepreneurship.