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  • Foreign policy a local affair in diverse Valley

    Foreign policy a local affair in diverse Valley
    By Michael Doyle
    Bee Washington Bureau
    01/15/07

    WASHINGTON - Foreign relations can become acutely local, particularly in the
    San Joaquin Valley.

    Armenians in Fresno care about genocide resolutions. Sikhs in Stockton care
    about Indian affairs. Assyrians in Ceres care about Iraq and Hmong
    everywhere care about Laos.

    All of which helps explain why Rep. Jim Costa, D-Fresno, cared about joining
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Despite its name, it's a panel that can
    become surprisingly parochial.

    "It's something I've been interested in for a long time," said Costa, who
    has been appointed to the committee. "In part, it's because of the
    incredible diversity of the Valley, with my constituents coming from all
    over the world."

    Throughout California, 8.8million residents counted in the 2000 census were
    born in foreign countries. Nearly half came from Mexico, and one-third from
    Asia.

    Wherever they come from, the foreign-born can have a direct stake in what
    Congress does. Sometimes, their voices can drown out U.S. diplomats.

    California, for instance, was home to 57,482 natives of Armenia as of the
    2000 census. Tens of thousands of other Americans of Armenian descent live
    in the Fresno and Southern California areas.

    Consequently, California lawmakers invariably lead in pushing Armenian
    genocide resolutions.

    Introduced by Rep. George Radanovich, R-Mariposa, the latest resolution
    urged the White House to "accurately characterize the systematic and
    deliberate annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians as genocide." The events
    occurred between 1915 and 1923.

    "It is inexplicable to me how you do not denounce evil and the evil of
    genocide on every occasion when it becomes known to you," Rep. Dennis
    Cardoza, D-Merced, said during the last congressional debate on the subject
    in September 2005.

    Presidents of both parties, though, have steadfastly resisted the Armenian
    genocide resolutions, and Turkish government representatives have denounced
    them as pandering to Armenian-American interest groups.

    "These resolutions could undermine efforts to rebuild a partnership between
    the United States and Turkey in pursuit of our country's broad national
    security interests," Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Reynolds cautioned
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

    Another committee member, Arizona Republican Jeff Flake, worried the panel
    was bogged down passing so many symbolic resolutions of ethnic interest.

    "That committee has a lot more potential than we as members utilize," Flake
    said Friday.

    With Democrats now in charge, the committee already is tangling with the
    White House. The new chairman, Rep. Tom Lantos, D-San Mateo, promised a
    "top-down review of what our country is doing in Iraq" in a series of
    hearings.

    "Obviously, we're in a very troubled world," Costa said, "and I hope to be a
    very active participant in the deliberations of the committee."

    Other Valley lawmakers have preceded Costa on the foreign affairs panel,
    formerly called the House International Relations Committee.

    Two years ago, Cardoza secured a spot on the panel even though he already
    had a full plate of other assignments.

    "The Valley is home to many ethnic groups that have a strong interest in key
    areas throughout the world," Cardoza explained at the time.

    Cardoza has since stepped off the Foreign Affairs Committee, with his
    appointment to an exclusive leadership post. Likewise, for several years
    starting in the 1990s, Radanovich did a tour on the Foreign Affairs
    Committee.

    Radanovich used the committee, for instance, to push legislation chastising
    the socialist government of Laos over the fate of former Fresno resident
    Michael Vang. Vang disappeared in 1999 while traveling along the border of
    Laos and Thailand.

    "This keeps much-needed pressure on the State Department and the Lao
    government," Radanovich said at the time.

    There were 68,306 natives of Laos living in California as of the 2000
    census. Historically, the most politically vocal have harshly opposed the
    existing Lao government.

    State Department officials, though, cautioned that Vang's unsolved
    disappearance was far more complicated than the good-vs.-evil narrative
    constructed by the Hmong activists. Congress eventually overcame resistance
    and granted Laos normal trade relations.

    The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or(202) 383-0006.

    http://www.fresnobee.com/263/story/2418 7.html
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