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US Secr. of State Rice, administration warn against genocide resol.

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  • US Secr. of State Rice, administration warn against genocide resol.

    Southeast European Times, MD
    March 27 2007


    US Secretary of State Rice, administration officials warn against
    Armenian genocide resolution
    27/03/2007


    Top US officials, including Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, have
    been seeking to convince lawmakers not to pass a resolution that
    defines the World War I killings of Armenians as genocide. Supporters
    say the bill is a moral imperative, but opponents argue that it would
    hurt US interests and damage ties with Ankara.


    The United States should leave Turkey and Armenia to resolve their
    dispute on whether the mass killings of Armenians in the wane of the
    Ottoman Empire constituted genocide, US Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice told a US Congressional committee Wednesday (March
    21st).

    "What we've encouraged the Turks and the Armenians to do is to have
    joint historical commissions that can look at this, to have efforts
    to examine their past, and in examining their past to get over it,"
    the AP quoted her as saying. "I don't think it helps that process of
    reconciliation for the United States to enter this debate at that
    level," Rice added.

    She was responding to Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif), sponsor of a bill
    defining the killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire during World War I as genocide. Supporters say passing such
    legislation is a moral imperative, while opponents argue that the
    cost, in terms of US interests and relations with Ankara, is too
    high.

    In recent weeks, senior US officials have sought to convince
    lawmakers that passage of such legislation might not only damage
    US-Turkish co-operation, but could impede efforts by Turkey's
    Armenian community to persuade the country to come to terms with its
    past.

    "Members of the Armenian-Turkish community tell us that such
    resolutions would stifle the dialogue they seek and would even raise
    popular emotions so dramatically as to threaten the progress they
    have made in Turkey," US Assistant Secretary of State for European
    and Eurasian Affairs Daniel Fried said in a testimony before the
    House Foreign Affairs Committee Subcommittee on Europe on March 15th.


    He also warned that if the legislation were passed, Turkey might
    respond by closing down the Incirlik air base, a key hub for air
    cargo shipments for US troops in Iraq. According to Fried, Ankara
    could also move to slow down traffic at the Habur gate on the border
    with Iraq, or restrict overflight rights for US aircraft.

    "Turkey's contribution to the global war on terrorism and US
    strategic objectives in the region is significant - it would all be
    at risk," Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defence for Europe and NATO
    Daniel Fata told lawmakers at the same hearing on February 15th.
    Similar worries were expressed in joint identical letters sent by
    Rice and US Defence Secretary Robert Gates to House Speaker Nancy
    Pelosi and other senior members of Congress.

    Submitted on January 30th, Resolution 106, co-sponsored by nearly 180
    US lawmakers, is expected to be put to the vote in the 435-member
    House of Representatives in April. A similar bill was introduced in
    the 100-seat Senate last week, with 21 of the body's members backing
    it.

    Rep. Schiff says the legislation is needed in order to protect the
    moral authority of the United States in dealing with human rights
    atrocities, such as the killings in Darfur.

    "More often with friends than foes you have to speak candidly," a UPI
    report quoted him as saying. "I happen to believe ... that the final
    act of genocide is the denial of genocide."

    Both resolutions would be non-binding and have no legal bearing on US
    foreign policy. But their passage would serve as a rebuff to Turkey.
    It has long argued that the killings, rather than constituting
    genocide, were part of a general climate of instability in which
    Turks also died. Analysts say the government of Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan would face strong domestic pressure to respond.

    After France last year passed a bill making it a crime to deny that
    the massacres of Armenians were a genocide, Turkey suspended all
    military ties with the country, suspending also military contracts
    that were already under discussion.

    Recent months have seen increased lobbying efforts by senior Turkish
    officials, including Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul and Chief of the
    General Staff General Yasar Buyukanit.

    A Turkish parliamentary delegation visited the United States last
    week to press Ankara's case against the bill, and representatives of
    the Turkish Industrialists and Businessmen's Association are
    currently in Washington for the same reason.

    sources: (AP, UPI - 21/03/07; The Washington Times - 20/03/07;
    Hurriyet, Middle East Newsline - 19/03/07; Turkish Daily News, The
    New Anatolian, Turkish Press - 17/03/07; Eurasianet, Turkish Daily
    News, Zaman - 16/03/07; AP, Turkish Press, US Department of State -
    15/03/07; AP - 14/03/07)

    http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/x html/en_GB/features/setimes/features/2007/03/27/fe ature-01
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