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Schiff continues Genocide battle

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  • Schiff continues Genocide battle

    Glendale News Press
    LATimes.com
    Sept 29 2004

    Schiff continues Genocide battle

    Rep. organizes group asking House leaders to stop opposition to bill
    that references Armenian Genocide.

    By Josh Kleinbaum, News-Press

    WASHINGTON, D.C. - Rep. Adam Schiff and 62 other representatives
    asked Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert to back off his opposition
    to an amendment to the Foreign Operations bill that refers to the
    Armenian Genocide.

    The amendment, proposed by Schiff (D-Glendale) and approved by the
    House in July, prohibits Turkey from using U.S. foreign aid to lobby
    against a House resolution that would recognize the deaths of 1.5
    million Armenians from 1915 to 1923 as a genocide. The amendment is
    largely symbolic, because foreign governments are prohibited from
    using U.S. foreign aid to lobby Congress.

    After the House passed Schiff's amendment in July, Hastert and other
    Republican leaders vowed to prevent the bill from becoming law,
    arguing that it did nothing and could harm America's relationship
    with Turkey. Because the Senate did not include similar language in
    its version of the Foreign Operations bill, the amendment must
    survive a conference committee.

    On Tuesday, Schiff sent Hastert (R-Ill.) a letter signed by 62 other
    members of the House urging Hastert to back off of his opposition.

    Hastert's office did not return messages seeking comment.

    "The underlying issue is very important, that we recognize the facts
    of the Armenian Genocide," Schiff said. "To fail to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide that was responsible for the deaths of 1.5 million
    Armenians sends a terribly conflicted message, that the United States
    Congress will recognize genocide only if political opposition is not
    too great."

    The political opposition comes from Turkey, a strategic military ally
    to America. Turkish officials claim the number of deaths is
    overstated, and that the deaths were not the result of genocide.
    Turkey hired a high-powered lobbyist, former House Appropriations
    Committee chairman Bob Livingston, to take up its cause.

    Schiff's letter includes signatures from 54 Democrats and eight
    Republicans in the House, along with the nonvoting member of the
    House from Washington, D.C.

    Despite those signatures and strong opposition from the Republican
    leadership, the issue does not seem to be partisan. In 2000, Hastert
    promised to bring a genocide resolution bill to the floor in a
    meeting in Glendale, but backed off at the request of President Bill
    Clinton, a Democrat.

    "I don't see it in [partisan] terms," said Justin Stoner, spokesman
    for Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare), one of the eight Republicans to sign
    the letter. "There's other considerations. This comes up year after
    year. Every year, there's reluctance."

    Schiff expects the conference committee, a committee made up of
    members of both the House and the Senate, to determine the fate of
    his amendment within the next few months.

    "I'd say it's very much an uphill [battle]," Schiff said.
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