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White House And Turkey Fight Bill On Armenia

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  • White House And Turkey Fight Bill On Armenia

    White House And Turkey Fight Bill On Armenia

    Genocide Label for WWI-Era Killings Has House Support

    By Glenn Kessler
    Washington Post Staff Writer

    Wednesday, October 10, 2007; A01

    A proposed House resolution that would label as "genocide" the deaths
    of Armenians more than 90 years ago during the Ottoman Empire has won
    the support of a majority of House members, unleashing a lobbying
    blitz by the Bush administration and other opponents who say it would
    greatly harm relations with Turkey, a key ally in the Iraq war.

    All eight living former secretaries of state have signed a joint
    letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) warning that the
    nonbinding resolution "would endanger our national security
    interests." Three former defense secretaries, in their own letter,
    said Turkey probably would cut off U.S. access to a critical air base.
    The government of Turkey is spending more than $300,000 a month on
    communications specialists and high-powered lobbyists, including
    former congressman Bob Livingston, to defeat the initiative.

    Pelosi, whose congressional district has a large Armenian population,
    has brushed aside such concerns and said she supports bringing the
    resolution, for the first time, to a full vote in the House, where
    more than half of the members have signed on as co-sponsors. The House
    Foreign Affairs Committee, which has passed such a resolution before,
    is set to vote on it today.

    House Resolution 106, officially the Affirmation of the United States
    Record on the Armenian Genocide, has been pushed doggedly by a
    congressman whose Southern California district contains the largest
    concentration of Armenian Americans in the country. Rep. Adam B.
    Schiff (D) won his seat in 2000 after his Republican predecessor was
    sandbagged when then-House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert reneged on a
    pledge and pulled the bill from the floor after a last-minute plea
    >From President Bill Clinton.

    Schiff, who defeated Rep. James Rogan after Hastert killed the floor
    vote, said the deaths so long ago still resonate with Armenians. "It
    is an insight you get when you have lots of Armenian constituents," he
    said, saying it reminded him of conversations he had while growing up
    Jewish. "But imagine losing the entire family and having the successor
    state say it never happened."

    Few people deny that massacres killed hundreds of thousands of
    Armenian men, women and children during and immediately after World
    War I.

    But Turkish officials and some historians say that the deaths resulted
    >From forced relocations and widespread fighting when the 600-year-old
    Ottoman Empire collapsed, not from a campaign of genocide -- and that
    hundreds of thousands of Turks also died in the same region during
    that time.

    "This is the greatest accusation of all against humanity," said
    Turkish Ambassador Nabi Sensoy, referring to genocide. "You cannot
    expect any nation to accept that kind of labeling." He said the
    reaction in the Turkish parliament would be one of fury, noting that
    the Turkish military cut contacts with the French military and
    terminated defense contracts under negotiation after the French
    National Assembly voted in 2006 to criminalize the denial of Armenian
    genocide.

    Pelosi had long been a co-sponsor of the resolution. The Armenian
    National Committee, one of the many Armenian organizations that have
    sought passage of the measure for years, has given her an "A" grade
    for her stance on Armenian issues.

    Now as speaker, Pelosi will face a choice between her role as a
    national leader and her previous campaign pledges as a member of
    Congress. U.S.-Turkish relations are already under some strain because
    Kurdish militant groups have attacked Turkish targets from bases in
    Iraq, with Ankara suggesting it may launch its own attack. Turkey
    plans to hold a "neighbors" conference on Iraq pushed by the United
    States later this month, but a recent poll by the nonpartisan group
    Terror Free Tomorrow found that 83 percent of Turks would oppose
    assisting the United States on Iraq if the Armenia resolution passed.

    It is a problem that has caused other politicians to flinch. As a
    presidential candidate in 2000, George W. Bush pledged to ensure that
    "our nation properly recognizes" what he called "a genocidal campaign
    that defies comprehension." But, angering Armenian groups, Bush
    refused to use the term in the annual presidential statement on the
    subject made on April 24, generally considered the beginning of the
    killings in 1915. President George H.W. Bush and Clinton also refused
    to refer to genocide in their annual statements, for fear of offending
    Turkey.

    Among other things, the resolution calls on the president to use his
    annual message to "accurately characterize the systematic and
    deliberate annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians as genocide."

    In the Senate, where one-third of its members are co-sponsoring the
    resolution, Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) supports the
    measure, as do the two leading candidates for the Democratic
    presidential nomination: Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) and
    Barack Obama (Ill.).

    The State Department, which collected the signatures of the former
    secretaries of state, has lobbied against the resolution, with
    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Undersecretary of State R.
    Nicholas Burns, Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried and U.S.
    Ambassador Ross Wilson calling lawmakers yesterday to "urge them not
    to vote for this," according to an interview Fried gave the Anatolia
    news agency.

    The Turkish Embassy is paying $100,000 a month to lobbying firm DLA
    Piper and $105,000 a month to the Livingston Group, and it recently
    added communications specialists Fleishman-Hillard for nearly $114,000
    a month, according to records filed with the Justice Department.
    Turkish lawmakers were on Capitol Hill yesterday, warning that passage
    would put military cooperation with Turkey at risk.

    Meanwhile, leading the charge for the resolution are grass-roots
    groups such as the Armenian Assembly of America, with 10,000 members,
    a budget of $3.6 million last year and phone banks that are running on
    overtime calling members of Congress. The organization has signed up
    53 non-Armenian ethnic groups, including a number of Jewish groups, to
    support the resolution.

    Some Jewish groups have found themselves in a bind because Turkey is
    one of the few Muslim nations to have diplomatic relations with
    Israel.

    Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2007/10/09/AR2007100902347.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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