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US debates 'genocide': Term for Armenian deaths affects diplom. ties

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  • US debates 'genocide': Term for Armenian deaths affects diplom. ties

    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
    February 4, 2007 Sunday
    Main Edition

    U.S. debates 'genocide';
    Term for Armenian deaths affects diplomatic ties



    The touchy subject of the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians at the end
    of World War I is back in the news again, as a bipartisan group of
    lawmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives last week introduced
    the latest version of an Armenian genocide resolution.

    After years of trying, members of Congress and their politically
    active Armenian American allies now think they can prevail over the
    Bush administration's strong opposition to a measure that is
    guaranteed to incite controversy with Turkey, a key U.S. ally.

    The 10-page resolution, whose chief sponsor is Rep. Adam Schiff
    (D-Calif.), is being called the "affirmation of the United States
    record on the Armenian Genocide."

    Essentially, it would put the House on the side of Armenians and many
    historians who have studied the period between 1915 and 1923.

    Some 1.5 million Armenians were killed as part of a policy of
    extermination conducted during the final days of the Ottoman Empire,
    the resolution asserts. The nonbinding resolution further calls upon
    President Bush to use the word "genocide" in his annual April message
    commemorating the horrific events.

    Bush and preceding presidents, attentive to the concerns of Turkey
    and the State Department, have delicately avoided using the term when
    referring to Armenia. Turkey has adamantly denied claims by scholars
    that its predecessor state, the Ottoman government, caused the
    Armenian deaths in a genocide.

    The Turkish government has said the toll is wildly inflated, and
    Armenians were killed or displaced in civil unrest during the
    disarray surrounding the empire's collapse.

    "Armenian Americans have attempted to extricate and isolate their
    history from the complex circumstances in which their ancestors were
    embroiled," the Turkish Embassy declared in a statement last week.
    "In so doing, they describe a world populated only by white-hatted
    heroes and black-hatted villains."

    In Turkey, it is a crime to use the word "genocide" to describe the
    deaths, and people have been prosecuted for it.

    Turkey has no diplomatic relations with Armenia.

    Diplomatically, it's an acutely sensitive issue. The Bush
    administration has warned that even congressional debate on the
    matter could damage relations with Turkey.

    After French lawmakers voted in October to make it a crime to deny
    that the killings were genocide, Turkey said it would suspend
    military relations with France.

    Turkey provides vital support to U.S. military operations. Incirlik
    Air Force Base, a major base in southern Turkey, has been used by the
    United States to launch operations into Iraq and Afghanistan and was
    a center for U.S. fighters that enforced the "no-fly zones" that kept
    the Iraqi air force bottled up after the 1991 Gulf War.

    A member of NATO now hoping to join the European Union, Turkey enjoys
    its own Capitol Hill clout with the assistance of well-placed
    lobbyists, including one-time congressman Bob Livingston.

    "I do think we have the best opportunity in a decade to succeed,"
    said Schiff, "but no one should be under the illusion that this will
    be easy."
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