范斯的X账号删除承认亚美尼亚大屠杀的帖子 | 美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)政治版


By Kit Maher
1小时32分钟前
发布于 2026年2月10日,美国东部时间中午12:28

JD Vance 人权 历史揭秘 美国大选

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副总统JD·范斯于2026年2月10日在亚美尼亚埃里温参观亚美尼亚大屠杀纪念馆时,参加了献花圈仪式。

Levin Lamarque/Pool/法新社/盖蒂图片社

副总统JD·范斯的X账号在周二他向该国纪念馆献花致敬后,发布并删除了一条承认亚美尼亚大屠杀的帖子。

副总统账号的原始帖子称,范斯和第二夫人乌莎·范斯参加了一个献花圈仪式,“以纪念1915年亚美尼亚大屠杀的受害者”。这与特朗普政府的政策背道而驰,后者避免使用“大屠杀”一词来描述现在土耳其境内对亚美尼亚人的系统性屠杀和驱逐。

除了前总统乔·拜登外,美国总统们都避免使用这个词,担心损害与土耳其的关系——土耳其是关键的地区盟友,目前正在特朗普政府与伊朗之间发挥调解作用。

副总统办公室的一名官员试图将帖子删除归咎于不随范斯出访的随行人员。

美国亚美尼亚全国委员会称这一删除行为“是一种否认主义行为,与特朗普总统可耻地回避对所有50个州、美国国会、白宫以及我们十几个北约盟友都承认的罪行进行诚实的美国式铭记的做法一致”。

范斯是首位出访该国的现任美国副总统或总统,他告诉记者,亚美尼亚人请求他参观该遗址,称这次大屠杀“是100多年前发生的一件非常可怕的事情”。

范斯的一位发言人告诉CNN:“这个账号由主要负责分享副总统活动照片和视频的工作人员管理。关于副总统对这个问题实质内容的看法,我建议你参考他早些时候在停机坪上对媒体提问的回应。”

范斯说,他参观该遗址“是出于对受害者和亚美尼亚政府的尊重”。

“显然,我是有史以来第一位访问亚美尼亚的副总统。他们邀请我们参观这个地方。显然,这是100多年前发生的一件非常可怕的事情,对他们的文化来说非常非常重要,”范斯补充说,他还计划访问阿塞拜疆的重要遗址。


副总统JD·范斯和第二夫人乌莎·范斯于2026年2月10日在亚美尼亚埃里温的亚美尼亚大屠杀纪念馆向永恒火焰致敬。

Kevin Lamarque/Pool/盖蒂图片社

白宫快速响应的X账号发布了范斯关于参观纪念馆的评论,但随后删除了。CNN已联系白宫寻求置评。

副总统官方账号后来重新发布了范斯新闻秘书泰勒·范·柯克的一条帖子,帖子显示第二夫妇在献花圈,并附上了范斯在留言簿上手写笔记的照片。

副总统写道:“为纪念逝去的生命,我们向亚美尼亚人民的坚韧和不朽精神致敬。”

被杀害的亚美尼亚人数是一个主要争议点。1914年至1923年间的死亡人数估计在30万至200万之间,并非所有受害者都在奥斯曼帝国境内。但大多数估计——包括奥斯曼当局自己提出的1915年至1918年间80万人的数字——都在60万至150万之间。

无论是由于屠杀还是强制驱逐,1914年居住在土耳其的亚美尼亚人数量从200万降至1922年的40万以下。

2021年,拜登成为首位正式承认这一屠杀为种族灭绝的美国总统,他在纪念大屠杀周年纪念日的声明中说:“每年的这一天,我们都会铭记在奥斯曼时代亚美尼亚种族灭绝中死去的所有人的生命,并再次承诺防止此类暴行再次发生。”该声明受到亚美尼亚欢迎,但遭到土耳其谴责,土耳其坚称这些杀戮是战时行为,双方都有损失。

去年,特朗普政府于4月24日发表声明纪念“Meds Yeghern”——一个亚美尼亚术语,但未将其翻译成“种族灭绝”。

声明称:“从1915年开始,150万亚美尼亚人被流放并在奥斯曼帝国的最后几年被押往死亡之路。在这个纪念日,我们再次与美国和世界各地的伟大亚美尼亚社区一起,哀悼失去的众多生命。”

在特朗普政府第一任期内,白宫曾要求共和党参议员阻止一项要求一致同意的决议,该决议承认1915年至1923年间对亚美尼亚人的大规模屠杀是种族灭绝,理由是这可能削弱与土耳其的谈判。该决议于2019年在众议院和参议院通过。

CNN的凯文·利普塔克对此报道有贡献。

JD Vance 人权 历史揭秘 美国大选

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Vance’s X account deletes post recognizing Armenian genocide | CNN Politics

By Kit Maher
1 hr 32 min ago
PUBLISHED Feb 10, 2026, 12:28 PM ET

JD Vance Human rights History uncovered US elections

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Vice President JD Vance takes part in a wreath-laying ceremony during a visit to the Tsitsernakaberd Armenian Genocide Memorial, in Yerevan, Armenia, on February 10, 2026.

Levin Lamarque/Pool/AFP/Getty Images

Vice President JD Vance’s X account posted and then deleted a recognition of the Armenian genocide after he paid his respects at a memorial in the country on Tuesday.

The original post from the vice president’s account — which said Vance and second lady Usha Vance attended a wreath-laying ceremony “to honor the victims of the 1915 Armenian genocide” — broke from Trump administration policy, which does not use the word “genocide” to refer to the systematic killing and deportation of Armenians in what is now Turkey.

Except for former President Joe Biden, US presidents have avoided that term for fear of damaging ties with Turkey, a key regional ally, which is currently playing a mediating role between the Trump administration and Iran.

An official with the vice president sought to blame the post on staff who are not part of the delegation traveling with Vance.

The Armenian National Committee of America called the deletion “a denialist action consistent with President Trump’s shameful retreat from honest American remembrance of a crime recognized by all 50 states, the US Congress, the White House, and more than a dozen of our NATO allies.”

Vance — the first sitting US vice president or president to visit the country — told reporters the Armenians asked him to visit the site, calling the massacre “a very terrible thing that happened a little over 100 years ago.”

A Vance spokesperson told CNN: “This is an account managed by staff that primarily exists to share photos and videos of the Vice President’s activities. For the Vice President’s views on the substance of the question, I refer you to the comments he made earlier on the tarmac in response to the pool’s question.”

Vance said he visited the site “out of a sign of respect, both for the victims, but also for the Armenian government.”

“Obviously, I’m the first vice president to ever visit Armenia. They asked us to visit the site. Obviously, it’s a very terrible thing that happened a little over 100 years ago, and something that was just very, very important to them culturally,” said Vance, who added he also plans to visit important sites in Azerbaijan.

Vice President JD Vance and second lady Usha Vance pay tribute at the eternal flame during a visit to the Tsitsernakaberd Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan, Armenia, on February 10, 2026.

Kevin Lamarque/Pool/Getty Images

The White House’s rapid response X account posted — but later deleted —Vance’s comments on visiting the memorial. CNN has reached out to the White House for comment.

The official VP account later reposted a post from Vance press secretary Taylor Van Kirk that showed the second couple at the wreath-laying and included a photo of Vance’s handwritten note in a guest book.

“In solemn remembrance of the lives lost, we honor the resilience and enduring spirit of the Armenian people,” the vice president wrote.

The number of Armenians killed has been a major point of contention. Estimates range from 300,000 to 2 million deaths between 1914 and 1923, with not all of the victims in the Ottoman Empire. But most estimates — including one of 800,000 between 1915 and 1918, made by Ottoman authorities themselves — fall between 600,000 and 1.5 million.

Whether due to killings or forced deportation, the number of Armenians living in Turkey fell from 2 million in 1914 to under 400,000 by 1922.

In 2021, Biden became the first US president to officially recognize the massacre as a genocide, with a statement marking its anniversary that said, “Each year on this day, we remember the lives of all those who died in the Ottoman-era Armenian genocide and recommit ourselves to preventing such an atrocity from ever again occurring.” The statement was welcomed by Armenia but condemned by Turkey, which maintains the killings were part of war time and that there were losses on both sides.

Last year, the Trump administration issued a statement on April 24 commemorating “Meds Yeghern,” an Armenian term, without translating it into English as genocide.

“Beginning in 1915, one and a half million Armenians were exiled and marched to their deaths in the final years of the Ottoman Empire. On this Day of Remembrance, we again join the Great Armenian Community in America, and around the World, in mourning the many lives that were lost,” the statement said.

During the first Trump administration, the White House asked Republican senators to block the unanimous consent request on a resolution recognizing the mass killings of Armenians from 1915 to 1923 as genocide, on the grounds that it could undercut negotiations with Turkey. The resolution passed the House and Senate in 2019.

CNN’s Kevin Liptak contributed to this report.

JD Vance Human rights History uncovered US elections

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