Op-ed urges Trump to explicitly recognize Armenian genocide amid Iran conflict

As Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day approaches on Friday, President Donald Trump faces a choice that an opinion writer argues goes far beyond routine commemoration. Stephan Pechdimaldji contends that the administration’s annual statement on 1915 has become a test of American moral leadership and strategic credibility, amplified by conflict involving Iran and broader Middle East instability.
For decades, Armenian Americans have pressed the White House to formally acknowledge the systematic killing of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire as genocide — a characterization the Turkish government continues to deny.
Pechdimaldji notes that Congress recognized the genocide in 2019 and that a formal presidential acknowledgment followed in 2021, but he argues the current administration has, over the past year, fallen back on vague phrasing such as “great calamity” and “historical tragedy” for this chapter of history.
That rhetorical shift, he writes, is now a liability for a nation under scrutiny for its conduct in what he describes as an Iran war. Citing debates over the proportionality of strikes, including an attack on an Iranian school that killed more than 100 children, Pechdimaldji says the United States is fighting on two fronts: the physical battlefield and the battle for the moral high ground.
Invocations of international norms and human rights, he argues, ring hollow when leaders shy away from applying those standards to documented historical events. Pechdimaldji ties Friday’s wording to the prospects for lasting peace in the South Caucasus — a region he says the administration has highlighted in touting foreign policy achievements.
A durable settlement, he contends, cannot rest on historical denial or strategic silence. Refusing to use the word genocide, he argues, signals to aggressive actors that revisionism is an acceptable diplomatic tool and emboldens those who view Armenian sovereignty as negotiable.
He points to 2023, when more than 120,000 Armenians left Nagorno-Karabakh, describing the exodus as ethnic cleansing and the largest forced displacement of Armenians since the genocide. If Trump seeks to broker regional stability, Pechdimaldji writes, he should first recognize what he calls the region’s foundational crime.
“Recognition is the currency of credibility,” he argues, adding that the administration cannot ask the world to trust its vision for justice and stability while yielding to foreign pressure over past crimes. Pechdimaldji, the grandson of genocide survivors, frames the issue as a test of moral clarity, not semantics.
He concludes that Trump has an opportunity to close a credibility gap — and that using the word genocide would be a decisive step.
