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ANKARA: US Congress Should End The Recognition Debate

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  • ANKARA: US Congress Should End The Recognition Debate

    US CONGRESS SHOULD END THE RECOGNITION DEBATE

    Hurriyet
    March 2 2009
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL - With a fresh resolution calling on the United States to
    formally recognize the Armenians' claims of "genocide"looming on the
    horizon, the US Congress should not repeat the same cycle of events
    if an Armenian-Turkish rapprochement is desired, according to a
    Newsweek article

    While Washington gears up for another debate on the Armenian claims of
    "genocide", the U.S. Congress should pay attention to rising optimistic
    voices from Ankara and Yerevan toward rapprochement, according to a
    Newsweek article.

    The article "How to End a Genocide Debate" noted that that since 1984,
    the U.S. Armenian lobby pursue the same course of action in what the
    author called the "Armenian Genocide Resolution Spectacular." According
    to this "historical plotline," first the U.S. Armenian lobby convinces
    a few U.S. congressmen to sponsor a resolution recognizing the Armenian
    claims of "genocide". Next the Turkish government steps in saying
    that Turkey is too important to be insulted in this way, followed by
    the U.S. administration "recognizing that Turkey is indeed a critical
    NATO ally whose Incirlik Air Base is vital to the Iraq mission," and
    then "twisting congressional arms to abandon the resolution." In the
    meantime, the Israeli lobby keen to boost Turkish-Israeli relations
    --although not so much this year -- noted the author, works against
    the resolution. Finally Congress "reluctantly shelves the whole thing
    and the curtain falls."

    Progress possible

    The article said this year, however, there was a new twist in the
    plot: diplomatic efforts between Turkey and Armenia. "Progress has
    been possible because the Armenians have focused on the concrete
    issue of opening the Armenian-Turkish border and both sides have
    wisely avoided the genocide dispute surely recognizing it will have
    to be dealt with eventually but that developing economic ties will
    make it easier to do so," the article argued.

    The Armenian diaspora, however, has been insistently lingering in
    the background. As no Turkish government will be able to consider
    opening the Armenian border with the "genocide" claims front and
    center, Congress should realize that such a resolution would block
    any attempt of normalization between the two countries, Newsweek wrote.

    Common ground

    "To those aiming for reconciliation, two questions outrank it: what
    common facts can Turks and Armenians be brought to accept, and is
    the common ground sufficient for both sides to start binding up the
    wounds," said the article, noting that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan's proposal to establish a joint historical commission should
    be pursued.

    The U.S. Congress could help reconciliation "if it is willing to
    deny the Armenian-American lobby the instant gratification of a
    genocide resolution. Doing so would be far better than repeating the
    exercises of the last 25 years over and over again until a resolution
    finally passes and all the House's leverage over Turkey evaporates,
    along with most of the goodwill in the Turkish-American alliance,
    and maybe even the alliance itself," said the article.

    Good relations between Turkey and Armenia would further U.S. objectives
    in the Caucasus, noted Newsweek. "The proposed hydrocarbon corridor
    through the Caucasus looks much more secure in the context of
    Turkish-Armenian friendship and it might give Armenia the confidence
    to break with the status quo in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute."
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