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ANKARA: WPost: Does Nonbinding Armenian Resolution Matter?

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  • ANKARA: WPost: Does Nonbinding Armenian Resolution Matter?

    WPOST: DOES NONBINDING ARMENIAN RESOLUTION MATTER?

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    March 6 2007

    The New Anatolian / Ankara

    A resolution alleging a so-called Armenian genocide expected to
    face a vote next month in the U.S. House of Representatives has the
    potential to "explode U.S. relations with Turkey," argued Washington
    Post columnist Jackson Diehl yesterday.

    Assessing the possible impact of a vote on the nonbinding House
    resolution describing a "genocide" in the Ottoman Empire beginning
    in 1915, the Post columnist asked whether a nonbinding congressional
    resolution -- one having no legislative effect, unlike measures in
    some other countries -- really matters.

    "The Armenian genocide resolution sponsored by Rep. Adam Schiff
    does matter, logically or not," Diehl stated, underlining that the
    consequences of passage could be deadly serious.

    Diehl argued that one of the most important consequences would be
    a military restriction on the U.S. capacities in the Middle East,
    stating,"Turkey's powerful military has been hinting that U.S. access
    to the Incirlik air base, which plays a key role in the wars in Iraq
    and Afghanistan, could be restricted."

    Telling how Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul spent several days
    in Washington last month lobbying against the resolution, Diehl stated
    that Gul faced powerful opposition in "the well-organized and affluent
    Armenian American community, 1.4 million strong, and some powerful
    friends -- including the new House speaker, Nancy Pelosi."

    Diehl characterized the debate in Washington on the Armenian resolution
    as "a bizarre mix of frivolity and moral seriousness, of constituent
    pandering, far-flung history and front-line foreign policy," stating
    that there is also the painful struggle of a deeply nationalist society
    in Turkey to come to terms with its past, and in the process become
    more of the Western democracy it wants to be.

    Speculating on the odds the resolution will be passed, Diehl stated,
    "If Pelosi allows the resolution to be brought up, as she has
    reportedly pledged to do, it will probably pass."

    "Imagine the 435 members of the House, many of whom still don't know
    the difference between Iraqi Shiites and Sunnis, solemnly weighing
    whether Schiff's version of events 92 years ago in northeastern Turkey
    deserves congressional endorsement."

    Diehl cited that Gul warned that a nationalist tidal wave could sweep
    Turkey and force the government to downgrade its cooperation with the
    United States, which needs Turkey's help this year to stabilize Iraq
    and contain Iran.

    Diehl stated, "No wonder the Bush administration as well as even
    Democratic-leaning foreign policy experts, such as Clinton-era
    ambassador Mark Parris, are trying to stop the resolution."

    Diehl stated that maybe Congress has no business debating Turkish
    history, and maybe it is doing so for the wrong reasons.

    "Yet if Turkey is to become the stable, Western-oriented democracy
    that it aspires to be, its politicians will have to learn, at least,
    to react the way everyone else does to nonbinding House resolutions:
    that is, with a shrug," he concluded.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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