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Jerusalem: House to pass bill on Armenian genocide

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  • Jerusalem: House to pass bill on Armenian genocide

    House to pass bill on Armenian genocide

    Michal Lando, Jerusalem Post Correspondent, THE JERUSALEM POST

    Oct. 9, 2007

    The US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee is expected
    to approve a bipartisan bill on Wednesday that calls on the US to
    recognize the World War I massacres of Armenians as genocide.

    The results of the vote will set the stage for a subsequent full House
    consideration. If approved in the Committee, it will be up to House
    Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a longtime supporter of such recognition, to
    allow for a vote in the House.

    The bill is largely expected to pass both the Committee and the full
    House despite mounting pressure from Turkey. The bipartisan measure
    currently has 226 co-sponsors - more than a majority in the House and
    the most support an Armenian Genocide resolution has ever received.

    "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," said Rep. Adam Schiff, who sponsored the bill, 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?"
    Similar bills have been debated in Congress for decades, but Armenian
    groups have repeatedly been undermined by concerns about damaging
    relations with Turkey.

    Now, in the days preceding the vote, Turkish officials warned that
    approval of the bill may mean that ties between Turkey the US and
    Israel may suffer.

    In a letter to Pelosi, Parliament Speaker Koksal Toptan said that "it
    might take decades to heal negative effects of the bill if it passes,"
    AP reported. And last week eight former secretaries of state,
    Republican and Democrat, urged Pelosi to block it.

    On Friday, efforts by Turkey to intercede came through Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who told US President George W. Bush that the
    measure would "harm the strategic partnership" between the two
    countries. Bush reiterated his opposition to the bill, saying he
    recognized the tragedy, but that the determination over whether the
    events constitute a genocide should be a matter for historical
    inquiry, not legislation.

    "They've done everything in their power to scare members away from
    voting for it, but if those threats scared people five to 10 years
    ago, they don't seem to work today," said Aram Hamparian, Executive
    Director of the Armenian National Committee, an Armenian interest
    group. "I don't think anybody would like to see this adopted by
    Congress over their opposition and be remembered as an organization
    that opposed it." Similar threats to target diplomatic ties have been
    launched against Israel in the last few days.

    The widespread perception in Turkey is that US Jewish organizations
    have linked up with Armenian groups to "defame" and "condemn" Turkey,
    visiting Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan told The Jerusalem Post
    Monday.

    He warned that if a measure characterizing the killing of Armenians as
    an act of genocide was approved by Congress in the coming days, it
    would not only harm Turkey's ties with the US, but also Ankara's ties
    with Jerusalem.

    Morton Klein, president of the Zionist Organization of America, who
    has publicly acknowledged the Armenian genocide, harshly criticized
    the recent threats by the Turkish government. "This is an ugly and
    inappropriate threat by Turkey and it really tells you something about
    them when they blame Israel for something the US is doing," said
    Klein. "This doesn't have to do with Jews because they aren't lobbying
    for it, and I don't think Israel or America or anyone should respond
    to this type of inappropriate threat."

    However, such threats have caused some Jewish organizations to stop
    short of supporting the congressional bills. The issue erupted in
    August, when the Anti-Defamation League reversed its longtime refusal
    to recognize the genocide after a disagreement emerged with its New
    England chapter. Boston Jews, who have close ties with the large
    Armenian community in Boston, widely supported the recognition, and
    stood behind New England Regional director Andrew Tarsy, who was fired
    after telling the media he disagreed with the national position on the
    Armenian genocide. Tarsy was reinstated, but the ADL stopped short of
    supporting the congressional resolution.

    Foxman continues to oppose the bill. "We are opposed in the sense that
    we do not believe this is the place it should be resolved," said
    Foxman. "We may change our minds we may not." ADL's national
    policy-making body is expected to discuss the congressional
    resolutions at its annual meeting on November 1. Foxman has repeatedly
    urged the Turks and the Armenians to resolve the issue between
    themselves. But Armenians have refused offers by the Turkish
    government to establish a joint commission to study historical facts.

    Hamparian compared such a request to calls by Ahmadinejad for more
    research on the Holocaust. "I think it's about as sincere as the
    Iranian government saying they need to revisit the Holocaust," said
    Hamparian. "I think it's a veiled denial put in the guise of academic
    inquiry."

    Source: http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1191257 265241&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
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