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ANKARA: Armenian Resolution In US Congress

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  • ANKARA: Armenian Resolution In US Congress

    ARMENIAN RESOLUTION IN US CONGRESS
    By Fatma Disli

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 14 2007

    The debates over recognition of the Armenian "genocide" are again
    quite heated both in Turkey and abroad, especially following the murder
    of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink last month. Now there is a
    resolution pending in the US Congress which if adopted will recognize
    the 1915 events as genocide. Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul
    went to Washington last week seeking to prevent the passage of the
    resolution saying, "Turkish-US relations will be shattered if the
    resolution passes." This week Turkey's chief of general staff is also
    paying a visit to the US with the same concerns. Turkey's attempts
    to prevent the Armenian resolution's passage and what will happen if
    the US adopts this resolution are a matter of controversy.

    Milliyet's Hasan Cemal thinks if the US has not lost its mind then
    it should not adopt the Armenian resolution. He says if the US
    wants to lose a friend and ally like Turkey in the Middle East,
    if it wants democracy in Turkey to be harmed, if it wants to help
    the powers aiming to destabilize Turkey, if it does not care about
    Turkey's partnership in policies relating to Iran and Iraq, if it
    does not want the normalization of Turkey-Armenia relations, if it
    is against the establishment of independent discussion platforms
    about the Armenian issue in Turkey, then it should pass the Armenian
    resolution. He recalls Hrant Dink who said: "I am addressing the
    Diaspora Armenians. They should never ask Turkey or any other country
    in the world to accept the Armenian genocide. The important thing is
    Turkey's democratization. Only a democratic country can dare to face
    its history, talk about its problems and empathize." Cemal urges if the
    US wants to ignore Dink's message, it can pass the Armenian resolution.

    Radikal's Gunduz Aktan says the fact that Congress' decisions are
    not binding does not reduce the symbolic importance of this decision
    for Turkey. He also says that the problems between Turkey and the
    US regarding the Armenian genocide allegations are not the fault of
    the Congress but the US administration. Aktan comments on how US
    presidents refer to the 1915 events as genocide without using the
    word genocide. "It is understandable that the US Congress wants to
    use the word genocide with the influence of ethnic Armenian voters
    in a country like the US where politics are more local than any
    other country in the world," he stresses. Aktan blames the Bush
    administration for using the wrong method to prevent the passage
    of the Armenian resolution in the US House of Representatives by
    saying that Turkey is a strategic ally for the US and relations will
    be harmed if the resolution passes. "This is not defending Turkey,"
    he asserts. Aktan thinks that the US administration should show the
    flaws in the draft resolution to Congress. This resolution claims, in
    reference to US archives, that 1.5 million out of 2 million Armenians
    in the Ottoman Empire faced genocide. "I do not think that there is
    any document in the US archives showing the population of Armenians
    as 2 million in the Ottoman Empire. Why doesn't the US administration
    inform the Congress correctly about this," Aktan says. He asserts
    Turkey should announce now that, "We will call on the US to use the
    law if the US adopts this resolution. This scandal should end."

    Posta's Mehmet Ali Birand thinks that Turkey can prevent the
    passage of the resolution if it can take courageous steps other than
    warning the US about the deterioration of Turkey-US relations. He
    suggests that Turkey could have unconditional talks with Armenia,
    establish a commission including historians from both sides,
    open the Turkey-Armenia border for people's crossing at first,
    or controversial Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK) could
    be abolished or amended considerably. "We have ignored the genocide
    allegations for years. We thought they would disappear if we did not
    deal with them. Armenians have had their claim adopted. Only if we
    take courageous steps that surprise the world can we be saved from
    this trap," he asserts.
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