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U.S. House Panel To Vote On Armenia Genocide Resolution

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  • U.S. House Panel To Vote On Armenia Genocide Resolution

    U.S. HOUSE PANEL TO VOTE ON ARMENIA GENOCIDE RESOLUTION
    By Desmond Butler, The Associated Press

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 3 2007

    A measure to declare that the World War I-era killings of Armenians
    was genocide is expected to advance in the U.S. Congress next week,
    despite opposition from the Bush administration and Turkey's warning
    that its relations with Washington could be badly damaged.

    Similar measures have been debated in Congress for decades, but have
    repeatedly been thwarted amid concerns about damaging relations with
    Turkey, an important NATO ally. Tuesday's announcement by the House
    of Representatives' Foreign Affairs Committee that it would consider
    the resolution next Wednesday signals that the Democratic leaders,
    who control the House, support the measure. With that support, the bill
    stands a good chance of passing in a vote by the full House this time.

    If the resolution is approved by the committee, it would be up to
    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to decide whether to bring it to the House
    floor for a vote. While Pelosi has previously expressed support for
    recognizing the killings as genocide, it is not clear whether she
    would bring the resolution to a vote.

    But according to two congressional aides, who spoke on condition of
    anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, the committee would
    not have taken up the resolution without Pelosi's support. The measure
    is expected to pass in the committee and has widespread support in
    the full House, should Pelosi allow a vote.

    Though the largely symbolic measure would have no binding effect on
    U.S. foreign policy, it could nonetheless damage an already strained
    relationship with Turkey.

    The dispute involves the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Armenians
    during the waning years of the Ottoman Empire. Armenian advocates,
    backed by many historians, contend the Armenians died in an organized
    genocide. The Turks say the Armenians 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 bill's sponsor, Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, says passage is
    overdue and urgent, with time running out for the remaining survivors
    of the killings. "The United States has a compelling historical and
    moral reason to recognize the Armenian Genocide, which cost a million
    and a half people their lives," Schiff said in a statement. "But we
    also have a powerful contemporary reason as well: how can we take
    effective action against the genocide in Darfur if we lack the will
    to condemn genocide whenever and wherever it occurs?"

    Turkey argues that the U.S. House of Representatives is the wrong
    institution to arbitrate a sensitive historical dispute. It has
    proposed that an international commission of experts examine Armenian
    and Turkish archives.

    In the meantime, Turkey has been lobbying intensively in Congress
    with support from the Bush administration to quash the resolution.

    "The administration is very much against this resolution and has
    been very active in trying to stop it," said Turkey's ambassador to
    Washington, Nabi Sensoy. "We are very grateful for their help."

    But Sensoy said that Turkey's government may have to respond should
    the resolution pass. "We are not in the business of threatening,
    but nobody is going to win if this is passed," he said.

    The measure comes at a time when public opinion polls show that
    the United States has become widely unpopular in Turkey because of
    opposition to U.S. policy in Iraq. A recent poll by the Pew Research
    Center found the United States had only a 9 percent favorable rating
    in Turkey.

    After France voted last year to make denial of Armenian genocide
    a crime, the Turkish government ended military ties. A similar move
    with the United States could have drastic repercussions on operations
    in Iraq and Afghanistan, which rely heavily on Turkish support.
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