OUR COMMENTARY
DeFacto Agency, Armenia
Feb 6 2007
"The adoption of draft law on Armenian Genocide in the U. S. Congress
may seriously harm the U.S. - Turkey relations", Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, U. S. Co-Chair
of the OSCE Minks group Matthew Bryza stated, APA reports.
He noted in case the Congress passed that bill, the relations between
the two countries could be harmed. Bryza also stated the White House
Administration "began to work" with the congressmen to prevent the
adoption of the bill. According to Matthew Bryza, the White House is
doing its best to prevent the Armenian genocide bill from recognition.
DE FACTO IAA COMMENT
There can be only two explanations to this: either APA again spreads,
to say the least of it, unreliable information, or Matthew Bryza
again mixes "the policy of pipelines" with democracy and fundamental
human rights.
The thing is that the adoption of the draft law on Armenian Genocide in
the U. S. Congress, Senate or executive bodies not only cannot hamper
the U.S. - Turkey relations, but, on the contrary, it will help to make
them civilized. Trying to make Ankara stretch some political points,
Washington threats Turkey with the bill's recognition, using it like
the sword of Damocles. However, if the draft law is really adopted,
Turkey will no longer be under moral pressure, which will allow the
country to make political decisions for its own benefit.
However, in case Bryza really made the statement, one should consider
the person's right to be the Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk group. Is
the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, which has built its statehood on the
legal fundament, really in need of such a mediator?
DeFacto Agency, Armenia
Feb 6 2007
"The adoption of draft law on Armenian Genocide in the U. S. Congress
may seriously harm the U.S. - Turkey relations", Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, U. S. Co-Chair
of the OSCE Minks group Matthew Bryza stated, APA reports.
He noted in case the Congress passed that bill, the relations between
the two countries could be harmed. Bryza also stated the White House
Administration "began to work" with the congressmen to prevent the
adoption of the bill. According to Matthew Bryza, the White House is
doing its best to prevent the Armenian genocide bill from recognition.
DE FACTO IAA COMMENT
There can be only two explanations to this: either APA again spreads,
to say the least of it, unreliable information, or Matthew Bryza
again mixes "the policy of pipelines" with democracy and fundamental
human rights.
The thing is that the adoption of the draft law on Armenian Genocide in
the U. S. Congress, Senate or executive bodies not only cannot hamper
the U.S. - Turkey relations, but, on the contrary, it will help to make
them civilized. Trying to make Ankara stretch some political points,
Washington threats Turkey with the bill's recognition, using it like
the sword of Damocles. However, if the draft law is really adopted,
Turkey will no longer be under moral pressure, which will allow the
country to make political decisions for its own benefit.
However, in case Bryza really made the statement, one should consider
the person's right to be the Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk group. Is
the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, which has built its statehood on the
legal fundament, really in need of such a mediator?
