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Monday, April 23, 2012
The speech Obama should give at the Holocaust Museum

The speech Obama should give at the Holocaust Museum
By RAFAEL MEDOFF Op Ed The Jerusalem Post 04/22/2012 22:24
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=267114

President Barack Obama is scheduled to speak at the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum in Washington on Monday. Here’s what I would like to hear
him say:

“Nineteen years ago this week, my predecessor, president Bill Clinton, stood
on this very spot and recalled that even after the American government knew
that the Holocaust was taking place, ‘doors to liberty were shut’ and ‘rail
lines to the [death] camps within miles of militarily significant targets
were left undisturbed.’ President Clinton was deeply troubled by our nation’s
‘complicity’ in the tragedy, and I am confident he would agree that we must
learn from the mistakes that were made then.

“One major mistake was our government’s hesitancy to acknowledge, loudly and
clearly, that the Jews were being singled out for mass annihilation. During
my years in the United States Senate, I said the US should publicly
recognize that Turkey perpetrated genocide against the Armenians.
Presidents, of course, face a unique array of pressures and considerations,
and during my first years in office, I chose to use the Armenian term ‘Meds
Yeghem,’ rather than ‘genocide,’ out of sensitivity to Turkey’s objections.
But failing to acknowledge genocide paves the way for future genocides. I
cannot be a party to that. From now on, I will not hesitate to state clearly
that what the Armenians suffered was genocide.

“Another major mistake during the Holocaust was our government’s reluctance
to take even minimal steps to rescue Jewish refugees.

During the 2008 presidential campaign, I pledged that when it came to the
genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan, America would not allow mass murder
to take place on my watch. ‘There must be real pressure placed on the
Sudanese government,’ I said.

“But as president, I have often preferred to heed the advice of my more
cautious advisers on this subject.

Ideas such as imposing a no-fly zone over Sudan or forcefully challenging
Sudan’s arms suppliers – Russia and China – were set aside in order to avoid
unpleasant confrontations with Moscow and Beijing.

“We opted to refrain from trying to bring about the arrest of Sudanese
President Omar al-Bashir, who has been indicted by the International
Criminal Court for his role in the Darfur genocide. We held back from
criticizing countries that hosted visits by Bashir, even when those
countries were major recipients of US aid.

“Critics warned that if Bashir remained free, he would continue his
murderous ways. We did not listen.

“We should have. Today, the people of the Nuba mountains are paying a steep
price. In that region at the border between Sudan and South Sudan, Bashir’s
forces are again victimizing innocent men, women, and children.

“So today, the gloves come off. Today, we say to the world: We want regime
change in Sudan. We want Omar al-Bashir behind bars. Our special forces
around the globe will be employed, if necessary, to bring him to justice.
And those who remember how American commandos apprehended the Achille Lauro
hijackers, or Manuel Noriega – not to mention how they dealt with Osama bin
Laden – know we are serious when we say to the Butcher of Darfur: You can
run, but you can’t hide.

“An American ally, Israel, is today threatened with genocide. Iran’s rulers
have vowed to wipe Israel off the map, and they seem determined to build the
weapons of mass destruction needed to achieve that goal. I have urged the
Israelis to refrain from taking military action against Iranian nuclear
facilities so long is there is a chance of stopping Iran’s nuclear
development through pressure, sanctions, and negotiations. Israel is
concerned about the sanctions process dragging on so long that it enables
the Iranians to complete construction of atomic weapons. Israel’s concerns
are valid.

“And so today, I want to make it clear to Tehran that the round of talks
which is now under way will be the last round. These talks must succeed
within 30 days, or we will conclude that Iran was never is not serious about
a negotiated solution. And we and our allies will act accordingly.

“I want to conclude my remarks by announcing a symbolic step that I will be
taking, today, to reaffirm America’s commitment to preventing genocide.
Jonathan Pollard has been incarcerated for the past 27 years for providing
Israel with classified data that, among other things, revealed attempts by
certain extremist regimes to develop weapons with which to destroy Israel. I
am in no way condoning Mr. Pollard’s actions when I acknowledge that he was
motivated by a desire to prevent a second Holocaust. As a small symbol of my
administration’s own commitment to preventing another genocidal assault on
the Jewish people, I have today granted clemency to Mr. Pollard.

“Speaking out against genocide, interrupting mass murder, apprehending the
perpetrators, preventing the development of weapons of genocide – these must
be the hallmarks of American policy around the world in the 21st century.”

The writer is founding director of The David S. Wyman Institute for
Holocaust Studies and coauthor, with Prof. Sonja Schoepf Wentling, of the
new book Herbert Hoover and the Jews: The Origins of the “Jewish Vote” and
Bipartisan Support for Israel. This article originally appeared on
www.theblaze.com.

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