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Proposed Genocide Resolution Naming Turkey Risks Damage To U.S. Secu

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  • Proposed Genocide Resolution Naming Turkey Risks Damage To U.S. Secu

    PROPOSED GENOCIDE RESOLUTION NAMING TURKEY RISKS DAMAGE TO U.S. SECURITY, SAYS RICE, GATES

    The Associated Press
    International Herald Tribune, France
    March 14 2007

    WASHINGTON: The U.S. secretaries of state and defense contend that
    the security of the United States is at risk from proposed legislation
    that would declare up to 1.5 million Armenians victims of a genocide
    on Turkish soil almost a century ago.

    In joint identical letters to the speaker of the House of
    Representatives and two other senior members, Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the resolution
    also could inflict significant damage on U.S. efforts to reconcile
    the long-standing dispute between the West Asian neighbors.

    The appeals went to Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi; Rep. John
    Boehner, leader of the House's Republican minority; and Rep. Tom
    Lantos, the Democrat who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

    The Associated Press obtained a copy of one of the letters Wednesday.

    It was dated March 7, two days after Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan
    Oskanian was in Washington to visit Rice and said afterward that
    "Turkish lobbying at a government level" threatened to scuttle the
    resolution.

    A Democratic aide said Pelosi, who controls the House agenda, has
    no plan to bring the proposal before the House soon. The aide spoke
    anonymously because final plans have not been approved.

    A congressional staff aide, also speaking without attribution,
    said it is understood that Lantos, whose committee would deal with
    the resolution, was awaiting word from Pelosi. Both the speaker and
    Lantos have been supporters of the legislation.

    The dispute involves the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Armenians
    during the waning years of the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of the
    Turkish state. Armenian advocates contend they died in an organized
    genocide; the Turks say they were victims of widespread chaos and
    governmental breakdown as the 600-year-old empire collapsed in the
    years before Turkey was born in 1923.

    The bipartisan resolution was introduced on Jan. 30.

    Passage of the resolution would harm "U.S. efforts to promote
    reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia and to advance recognition
    by Turkey of the tragic events that occurred to ethnic Armenians
    under the Ottoman Empire," the letters said.

    They said the United States is encouraging "our friends in Turkey to
    re-examine their past with honesty and to reconcile with Armenia, as
    well as security and stability in the broader Middle East and Europe."

    Rice and Gates reminded the lawmakers of repercussions from a vote
    in the French National Assembly last October to criminalize denial
    of Armenian genocide. "The Turkish military cut all contacts with the
    French military and terminated defense contracts under negotiation,"
    the letters said.

    Similar reaction against passage of the House resolution "could harm
    American troops in the field, constrain our ability to supply our
    troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and significantly damage our efforts
    to promote reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey at a key turning
    point in their relations."

    Turkey has NATO's second-largest army. The U.S. Air Force has a major
    base in southern Turkey near Iraq, which it has used for operations
    in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars. Between the Persian Gulf War in
    1991 and the Iraq war, warplanes from Incirlik Air Base enforced a
    flight ban in Northern Iraq against the Iraqi air force.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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