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House panel approves Armenia resolution

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  • House panel approves Armenia resolution

    House panel approves Armenia resolution
    Bush administration urges Congress to reject legislation on genocide

    MSNBC
    10/10/2007


    WASHINGTON - A congressional panel has approved a resolution opposed
    by President Bush and Turkey that would recognize the World War I-era
    killings of Armenians as a genocide.

    Bush strongly urged Congress earlier Wednesday to reject the
    legislation, saying it would do great harm to relations with Turkey, a
    key ally in the Iraq war.

    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates
    issued a joint appeal at the White House just hours before the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee was to vote on the measure opposed by Bush
    and which Turkey insists could severely damage U.S. relations with a
    NATO ally that has been a major portal for U.S. military operations in
    the region.

    The passage of this resolution at this time would be very problematic
    for everything we are trying to do in the Middle East, Rice said.

    'Put at risk'
    Gates said that 70 percent of U.S. air cargo headed for Iraq goes
    through Turkey, as does about a third of the fuel used by the
    U.S. military in Iraq.

    Access to air fields and to the roads and so on in Turkey would very
    much be put at risk if this resolution passes and Turkey reacts as
    strongly as we believe they will, Gates said. He also said that 95
    percent of the newly purchased Mine Resistant Ambush Protected
    vehicles are flying through Turkey to get to Iraq.

    Turkey made a final direct appeal to U.S. lawmakers to reject the
    resolution. The U.S. vote comes as Turkeys government was seeking
    parliamentary approval for a cross-border military operation to chase
    separatist Kurdish rebels who operate from bases in northern Iraq. The
    move, opposed by the United States, could open a new war front in the
    most stable part of Iraq.

    I have been trying to warn the (U.S.) lawmakers not to make a historic
    mistake, said Egemen Bagis, a close foreign policy adviser to Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    A measure of the potential problem came in a warning the U.S. Embassy
    in Ankara issued Tuesday to U.S. citizens in Turkey of demonstrations
    and other manifestations of anti-Americanism throughout Turkey if the
    bill passes the committee and gets to the House floor for a vote, the
    embassy statement said.

    Anti-U.S. protests in Turkey
    On Wednesday, hundreds of Turks marched to U.S. missions in Turkey to
    protest the bill. In Ankara, members of the left-wing Workers Party
    chanted anti-American slogans in front of the embassy, the state-run
    Anatolia news agency reported. A group of about 200 people staged a
    similar protest in front of the U.S. Consulate in Istanbul, private
    NTV television said.

    Anatolia quoted a party official as saying that the genocide claim was
    an international, imperialist and a historical lie.

    The basic dispute involves the killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I, an event widely
    viewed by genocide scholars as the first genocide of the 20th
    century. Turkey denies that the deaths constituted genocide, says the
    toll has been inflated, and insists that those killed were victims of
    civil war and unrest.

    PBS documentary showed how touchy topic is

    Interest groups rally supporters
    Armenian-American interest groups also have been rallying supporters
    in the large diaspora community to pressure lawmakers to make sure
    that a successful committee vote leads to consideration by the full
    House.

    The bill seemed to have enough support on the committee for passage,
    but the majority was slight and some backers said they feared that
    Turkish pressure would narrow it. Most Republicans, who are a minority
    on the committee, were expected to vote against the resolution.

    On Tuesday, Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian Assembly
    of America, sought to shore up support in letters to the committees
    chairman, Rep. Tom Lantos, D-Calif., and its ranking Republican
    member, Florida Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen.

    We have a unique opportunity in this Congress, while there are still
    survivors of the Armenian genocide living among us, to irrevocably and
    unequivocally reaffirm this fact of history, he said.

    The head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Catholicos Karekin II, was
    to give the opening invocation to the Houses session ahead of the vote
    Wednesday.

    Erdogan adviser Bagis said the resolution would make it hard for his
    government to continue close cooperation with the United States and
    resist calls from the public to go after the Kurdish rebels after
    deadly attacks on soldiers in recent weeks. Turkey previously has said
    it would prefer that the United States and its Iraqi Kurd allies in
    northern Iraq crack down on the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK.

    The United States reiterated on Tuesday its warnings against an incursion.

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21221278/
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