Two people familiar with the decision said the president was expected to make the statement as part of an official statement on Remembrance Day, which falls on a Saturday. They both said it was possible that he would change his mind sooner, and issue a statement acknowledging only the event without calling it genocide.
U.S. officials have also sent signals to allies outside the administration who have been pushing for it to be officially declared that the president will acknowledge the genocide, a third person familiar with the matter said.
The Turkish government usually records complaints when foreign governments describe the event, which began in 1915, using the word “genocide”. They maintain that it was a time of war and that there were losses on both sides, and put the death toll at 300,000.
Both Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump avoided using the word genocide to avoid angering Ankara.
The White House declined to comment on the decision when asked Wednesday. Press Secretary Jen Psaki said the administration “would have more to say about Remembrance Day on Saturday.”
The United States and its presidents have consistently avoided using “genocide” to describe atrocities. But as a candidate, Biden said that if elected, “I pledge to support a resolution that recognizes the Armenian genocide and will make universal human rights a top priority for my administration.”
But similar commitments have not been met before. When Obama ran for president, he stated in a lengthy statement that he shared “with American Armenians (many of whom are descendants of a genocide survivor) a commitment to principles to commemorate and end genocide.”
Biden has not spoken to Erdoğan since taking office, although the Turkish leader is expected to take part in a climate summit of 40 world leaders that Biden convenes on Thursday and Friday.