Commentary “Each year on this day,” reads an April 24 statement from the Biden White House, “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.” Readers might wonder who the White House means by “we.” Each year Joe Biden was Vice President and Senator, his statements on the Armenian genocide were hard to find. For their part, presidents Obama, Bush, and Clinton were afraid of offending NATO ally Turkey, which denies the Armenian genocide. By contrast, on April 22, 1981, President Ronald Reagan cited, “the genocide of the Armenians.” As the Biden White House recalls, “beginning on April 24, 1915, with the arrest of Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople by Ottoman authorities, one and a half million Armenians were deported, massacred, or marched to their deaths in a campaign of extermination.” …