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Turkey Cries Foul Over U.S. Genocide Resolution; Warns Congress To D

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  • Turkey Cries Foul Over U.S. Genocide Resolution; Warns Congress To D

    TURKEY CRIES FOUL OVER U.S. GENOCIDE RESOLUTION; WARNS CONGRESS TO DROP BILL

    Asbarez
    Feb 8th, 2010

    ANKARA (Combined Sources)-Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
    denounced a U.S. congressional committee over the weekend for
    scheduling a vote on the Armenian Genocide resolution, saying that its
    passage would seriously harm Turkey's relations with both the United
    States and Armenia, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reported Monday.

    Davutoglu reportedly suggested that Washington is using the prospect
    of the resolution's passage by the U.S. House of Representatives to
    force Turkey to ratify its fence-mending agreements with Armenia. He
    also accused Yerevan of hampering further progress in international
    efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    "Why is that draft included on the [committee] agenda now?" he said,
    according to a "Hurriyet" report cited by the Azerbaijani APA news
    agency on Monday. "Let them not expect from us the ratification of
    protocols by using April 24 as a tool for pressure.

    "The draft's inclusion on the agenda is not in the interests of the
    USA, Turkey and Armenia. This process can lead both our bilateral
    relations with the USA and Turkey's rapprochement with Armenia into
    deadlock."

    ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian Monday commented on the
    Turkish diplomat's most recent warning to Washington. "Davutoglu has
    developed quite a nasty habit of lecturing America," said Hamparian,
    urging Congress and President Obama to look past the foreign pressure
    and stand firm behind US values and principles.

    "It's no more Turkey's place to tell our Congress how it can speak
    about the Armenian Genocide, than it is the Chinese government's
    place to tell our President whether he can meet with the Dalai Lama,"
    Hamparian said. "Just as President Obama has properly taken a stand
    against China's threats, so too should the entire U.S. government
    reject Ankara's gag-rule on the proper commemoration of the Armenian
    Genocide."

    The Armenian Genocide resolution (H.Res.252) which was introduced by
    U.S. lawmakers a year ago, urges President Barack Obama to "ensure
    that the foreign policy of the United States reflects appropriate
    understanding and sensitivity concerning issues related to human
    rights, ethnic cleansing, and genocide documented in the United States
    record relating to the Armenian Genocide and the consequences of the
    failure to realize a just resolution."

    The resolution also "calls upon the President in the President's
    annual message commemorating the Armenian Genocide issued on or about
    April 24, to accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate
    annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians as genocide and to recall the
    proud history of United States intervention in opposition to the
    Armenian Genocide."

    Howard Berman, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee,
    said on Friday that the panel will vote on it early next month.

    The vote will come less than two months before the 95th anniversary of
    the start of Genocide. Turkey, which denies its crime and continues
    to occupy Western Armenian lands, vehemently condemned similar bills
    that were passed by the committee but never put to a full House vote
    in the past. It refers to the crime not as genocide but as killings
    and ethnic strife that occurred on a small scale and were not the
    result of a premeditated government effort to exterminate Ottoman
    Turkey's Armenian population.

    Davutoglu said he raised Ankara's concerns with U.S. Deputy Secretary
    of State James Steinberg at a meeting held on Saturday on the sidelines
    of an international security conference in Munich. Speaking to
    Turkish journalists on his way back from the conference, he claimed
    that Armenia was also behind the scheduling of the congressional
    committee vote.

    "At first, Armenia's Constitutional Court made comments about
    the signed protocols that are unacceptable to us," Davutoglu said,
    according to APA. "Then the Armenian side retreated from a constructive
    position during the [last] meeting between Azerbaijani President
    Ilham Aliyev and Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian. Now such a bill
    is being included on the U.S. Congress agenda."

    "The sequence of these three events is making us think that this is
    not happening by chance," added Davutoglu.

    Official Yerevan, meanwhile, signaled on Monday its satisfaction with
    progress of the genocide bill. When asked by RFE/RL to comment on
    the planned vote on the bill, an Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman
    cited statements on the issue made by President Serzh Sarkisian and
    Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian in recent months.

    Sarkisian said in an October address to the nation that the Armenian
    genocide "must be recognized and condemned by the entire progressive
    humanity." Nalbandian, for his part, told RFE/RL last month that
    Armenia "will never cast doubt on the importance of international
    recognition of the genocide."
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