U.S. Vice President JD Vance's team posted and then deleted a message on social media about the Republican's visit to a memorial paying tribute to early 20th century Armenians killed by the Ottoman Empire.
The issue was the post using the term ''Armenian genocide,'' a designation the U.S. government historically has not used for what happened, with a notable exception by the Biden administration. The White House blamed a staff mistake.
Here are some questions and answers about what that means, what Vance himself did and didn't say, and why it matters.
What did Vance go see in Armenia?
Vance visited a site called the Armenian Genocide Memorial, Armenia's official national monument, remembering its citizens who died under the Ottoman Empire's brutal control during World War I.
The initial post on Vance's official X account stated that he was visiting the memorial ''to honor the victims of the Armenian genocide.'' It was replaced with a second post that showed what he wrote in the guest book as well as a clip of the vice president and Usha Vance laying flowers at the memorial.
Vance, the first U.S. vice president to visit Armenia, was in the country as part of the Trump administration's follow-up to a U.S.-brokered deal aimed at ending a decades-long conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, where Vance traveled later Tuesday.
Why does the word choice matter?