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Congress Debates Armenia Genocide

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  • Congress Debates Armenia Genocide

    CONGRESS DEBATES ARMENIA GENOCIDE
    By Michael Scher

    United Press International
    March 21 2007

    WASHINGTON, DC, United States (UPI) -- In 1896 former U.S. Minister to
    the Ottoman Empire Oscar Straus convinced President Grover Cleveland
    to ignore a controversial resolution passed by both the Senate and
    the House of Representatives that would have called for the Ottoman
    Sultan to stop his killing of ethnic Armenians.

    More than 100 years later the U.S. Congress is at a similar crossroads
    on the very same issue. House and Senate Resolutions 106 call for
    American foreign policy to recognize the killings of Armenians by
    the former Ottoman Empire as 'genocide.' The Republic of Turkey is
    the official successor state to the Ottoman Empire because of the
    Treaty of Lausanne in 1923.

    Being the official successor state is part of the reason for the
    Turkish government wanting to deny that the Armenian killings were
    a genocide, said Brian Kabateck, a senior partner in Kabateck,
    Brown & Keller, a law firm that has represented about a half-dozen
    Armenian-Americans in cases against U.S. insurance companies and
    banks that have denied claims and accounts to relatives of deceased
    Armenians who took out insurance and had accounts before they died in
    the Armenian Genocide. Kabateck said that the Ottoman state seized
    property and businesses and that Turkey would be responsible for
    reparations to Armenians and the nation of Armenia if they admitted
    that what the Ottoman state did was genocide.

    Kabateck`s suits throw into light the fact that there are 1 million
    or so Armenians living in the United States. The main sponsor of
    Resolution 106 in the House is Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., whose
    constituency has a large population of Armenians.

    Schiff is sponsoring this legislation because he believes that the
    U.S. cannot have the moral authority it`s projecting in the current
    Darfur crisis without recognizing a genocide that happened 90 years
    ago. He said it is important for the United States to recognize the
    killings as genocide despite the fact that Turkey is a friend and
    an ally.

    'More often with friends than foes you have to speak candidly,' Schiff
    said. 'I happen to believe ... that the final act of genocide is the
    denial of genocide.'

    In 2004 a similar resolution, also sponsored by Schiff, was met with
    resistance from the Bush administration because it feared it would
    damage relations with Turkey, Schiff said. Schiff said that if the
    current resolution passes it will affect U.S.-Turkey relations, but he
    believes the Bush administration should spend less time appealing to
    Congress not to pass the resolution and work on repairing the damage
    it did to relations with Turkey because of the Iraq war.

    'They keep saying now is not the time,' Schiff said. 'It`s been 90
    years. If this is not the time, when is?'

    A central tenet of this bill is to recognize that what happened was
    genocide, Schiff said. This is something the Bush administration is
    protesting fearing a negative impact on relations with Turkey.

    However, in every letter the administration sends to Congress it
    recognizes what happened was genocide, Schiff said.

    Tuluy Tanc, the minister counselor at Turkey`s Embassy in Washington,
    said that while this resolution will most likely not result in
    restrictions on the U.S. military or hurt cooperation between Turkey
    and the United States over security in Iraq, it will hurt the Turkish
    people.

    'There will be a reaction and Turkey will be deeply hurt,' Tanc said.

    'How the government will react I cannot say, but there will be feelings
    of unfairness towards a friend and an ally. ... This will be like a
    little slap in the face.'

    Tanc said that the Armenian lobby`s presentation of facts to the
    U.S. Congress was one-sided and that Congress was not taking into
    account the Turkish side of the story.

    For instance, Tanc provided Ottoman Empire census documents that showed
    there were only 1.5 million Armenians living in Turkey at the time
    of the killings. Historians claim 1.5 million Armenians were killed,
    which Tanc said was part of the inaccuracies in the current resolution.

    Mehdi Noorbaksh, an associate professor of international affairs at
    the Harrisburg University of Science and Technology in Pennsylvania,
    said that if this resolution passes it will have a negative impact
    on U.S.-Turkey relations.

    'It will be a disaster in a sense for Turkey,' Noorbaksh said. 'I
    really do not think this administration is ready for a resolution
    like this. ... This will not help the United States.'

    It will be necessary for the current Islamist government in power in
    Turkey right now to react strongly to this in order to remain in power,
    Noorbaksh said.

    Some 20 other nations have passed resolutions similar to Resolution
    106 and have gotten similar threats of dissatisfaction from Turkey,
    said Aram Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian National
    Committee of America. When France passed a similar resolution in 2001
    it was met with a stern reaction from the Turkish government, however,
    the very next year trade rose by 22 percent between France and Turkey.

    The United States has a long history of weaker resolutions of the
    genocide dating back to the 1980s that have not hampered relations with
    Turkey, Hamparian said. In 1981 President Ronald Reagan recognized the
    Armenian Genocide in a speech about the Holocaust. In 1984 Congress
    passed a resolution setting April 24 as a day of remembrance of
    the Armenian Genocide. In 1996 and 2004 resolutions were passed
    that limited the usage of U.S. aid to Turkey that was being used to
    fund the Turkish lobby in the United States. Throughout all of these
    resolutions, trade with Turkey has steadily increased Hamparian said.

    'U.S. relations with Turkey will certainly endure this (resolution
    106),' Hamparian said.
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