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ANKARA: Armenian genocide resolution circulating this week in DC

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  • ANKARA: Armenian genocide resolution circulating this week in DC

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    Jan 18 2007

    Armenian genocide resolution circulating this week in Washington

    The New Anatolian / Washington with agencies
    18 January 2007


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    A draft resolution seeking recognition of the so-called Armenian
    genocide is likely to be approved by the U.S. House of
    Representatives this week, while a top U.S. diplomat in Ankara says
    the Bush administration will oppose the draft.

    U.S. Ambassador to Ankara Ross Wilson told daily Sabah that President
    George W. Bush would strongly oppose any resolution on the so-called
    Armenian genocide, adding that he would also warn members of U.S.
    Congress against the possible negative outcomes of such a move.

    "The Bush administration cannot guarantee that the resolution does
    not get adopted, but I think President Bush would strongly oppose
    such a resolution, just as President Clinton did in the past," Wilson
    said. "The administration will do everything to prevent that
    resolution from coming to the Congress floor."

    With Democrats taking control of the U.S. Congress following their
    election victory late last year, prospects have increased that
    lawmakers will approve a resolution recognizing the World War I-era
    forced deportation and deaths of Armenians as genocide.

    Democratic Congressmen Adam Schiff and Frank Pallone, joined by
    Republican Congressmen George Radanovich and Joe Knollenberg, have
    recently prepared a draft resolution, expecting more than 150 members
    of the House of Representatives to back the draft.

    If accepted on the committee level, the draft will then be submitted
    to the floor of the House for general approval. The powerful Armenian
    lobby is pushing to have a vote occur prior to April 24, which they
    recognize as a day marking the "genocide."

    Nancy Pelosi, the new Democratic speaker of the House, has in the
    past voiced her support for such a resolution.

    The Bush administration fears that even congressional debate on the
    genocide claims could damage relations with Turkey, a moderate Muslim
    nation that is a NATO member and an important strategic ally.

    In Washington, Armenian-American groups have been pressing for years
    for a resolution on the genocide issue. The House of Representatives'
    International Relations Committee last year endorsed two resolutions
    classifying the killings as genocide. But the House leadership,
    controlled by Bush's Republican Party, prevented a vote by the full
    chamber.

    The genocide claim was the key issue as the Senate considered the
    ambassadorial nomination of Hoagland to replace John Evans, who
    reportedly had his tour of duty cut short because, in a social
    setting, he referred to the killings as genocide.

    Senator Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat, blocked the
    nomination over Hoagland's refusal to use the word genocide at his
    confirmation hearing in June. With Democrats taking over the Senate,
    it will be even more difficult now for the Bush administration to
    circumvent Menendez's objections.

    Turkey strongly opposes the claims that its predecessor state, the
    Ottoman government, caused the Armenian deaths in a planned genocide.
    The Turkish government has said the toll is wildly inflated and that
    Armenians were killed or displaced in civil unrest during the
    empire's collapse and the World War I conditions. Ankara's proposal
    to Yerevan to set up a joint commission of historians to study events
    of 1915 is still awaiting a positive response from the Armenian side.
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