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ANKARA: Countdown Begins For US 'Genocide' Vote

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  • ANKARA: Countdown Begins For US 'Genocide' Vote

    COUNTDOWN BEGINS FOR US 'GENOCIDE' VOTE

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 4 2007

    A resolution upholding Armenian claims of genocide at the hands of
    the Ottoman Empire is expected to advance in the US Congress next
    week amid Turkish warnings that US-Turkey relations will receive a
    serious blow if it passes.

    Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi has previously
    expressed support for genocide claims but it is not clear whether
    she would bring the resolution to a vote.

    The US House of Representatives' Committee on Foreign Affairs announced
    on Tuesday that it would debate the resolution next Wednesday. 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 signals that the
    Democratic leaders who control the House support the measure. With
    this support, the bill stands a good chance of passing in a vote by
    the full House this time around.

    The US administration has said repeatedly that it opposes the
    resolution. Responding to a question posed at a daily press briefing
    on Tuesday, US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the
    administration was "working very closely" with Congress on the
    matter. "As you know, it's -- every time one of these comes up it's
    a very sensitive issue. And we are conveying to members of Congress
    individually and in groups our views on it," he said. In Ankara,
    US Embassy spokesperson Kathy Schalow was quoted as saying that
    both Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Ambassador Ross Wilson
    were in touch with members of Congress to prevent passage of the
    resolution. "We are doing what we can to prevent it," she was quoted
    as saying by private ANKA news agency. 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
    events 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. Recently, eight former
    secretaries of state wrote a letter to Pelosi warning that passage
    of the resolution would harm strategic Turkish-US relations and deal
    a blow to Turkish-Armenian reconciliation efforts.

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

    After France voted last year to make denial of the Armenian genocide
    a crime, the Turkish government suspended its military ties with the
    country. A similar move against the United States could have drastic
    repercussions on its operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, which rely
    heavily on Turkish support. Turkish officials have not elaborated
    on possible consequences of the resolution's eventual passage, but
    observers say such drastic measures as closure of an air base used
    by the US Air Force in Ýncirlik in southern Turkey could be the
    possible outcome.

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

    Turkey categorically rejects charges of genocide, saying Turks as
    well as Armenians died when Armenians in eastern Anatolia took up
    arms against the Ottoman Empire in collaboration with the invading
    Russian army in hope of creating an independent state in part of
    Anatolian lands. The bill's sponsor, Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff,
    says the bill's 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.

    Turkey argues that the US House of Representatives is the wrong
    institution to arbitrate such a sensitive historical dispute. It
    has proposed that an international commission of experts examine
    Armenian and Turkish archives, an offer turned down by Armenia. 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 Þensoy. "We are very grateful for their help." But Þensoy 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.

    ------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------

    Babacan tells Oskanian Turkey open to dialogue Foreign Minister Ali
    Babacan met on Tuesday with his Armenian counterpart, Vartan Oskanian,
    in the first meeting between the two ministers since Babacan was
    appointed to his post after the Turkish general elections held on
    July 22. The meeting at UN headquarters in New York was held at
    the request of Armenia and was mostly a "greeting" aimed at the
    two ministers getting to know each other, the Anatolia news agency
    reported. The general atmosphere was positive, and Babacan's message
    to his Armenian counterpart was that Turkey is open to dialogue with
    Armenia on disputed issues.

    The meeting came as the US House of Representatives' Committee on
    Foreign Affairs prepares to debate and vote on a resolution next week
    declaring that Armenians were subject to genocide at the hands of the
    Ottoman Turks in the beginning of the last century. Babacan said at
    the meeting that history could not be written by votes of politicians
    in parliaments and brought to mind a proposal Turkey made to Armenia
    in 2005 for joint study of that portion of history. The Armenian
    minister, for his part, reiterated Armenia's request for the opening
    of its border gate with Turkey, which has been closed for more than
    a decade. Ýstanbul Today's Zaman

    --Boundary_(ID_mk65Gj3OSUPHQLJrzG2JRA)--
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