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NYT: Bush Urges Panel To Reject Armenian Genocide Measure

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  • NYT: Bush Urges Panel To Reject Armenian Genocide Measure

    BUSH URGES PANEL TO REJECT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MEASURE
    By Brian Knowlton

    New York Times, NY
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/10/washington/10 cnd-armenia.html?ref=world
    Oct 10 2007

    WASHINGTON, Oct. 10 - President Bush and two top cabinet members
    urged lawmakers today to reject a resolution describing the deaths
    of hundreds of thousands of Armenians early in the last century as
    genocide - a highly sensitive issue at a time of rising tensions with
    Turkey over northern Iraq.

    "We all deeply regret the tragic suffering of the Armenian people
    that began in 1915," Mr. Bush said in a brief statement from the White
    House. "But this resolution is not the right response to these historic
    mass killings, and its passage would do great harm to relations with
    a key ally in NATO and to the war on terror."

    He spoke hours before the House Foreign Affairs Committee was to vote
    on the resolution. The House speaker, Representative Nancy Pelosi,
    is said to be prepared to forward the matter to the full House,
    where more than half the 435 members are co-sponsors. Passage would
    be symbolic, but the symbolism, the administration asserts, could
    seriously jeopardize the delicate relationship with Turkey.

    Turkey has been a vital way-station for fuel and materiel shipments
    to United States forces in Iraq, and the administration has spared
    little effort to lobby against the resolution. The State Department
    secured the signatures of the eight living former secretaries of
    state on a letter opposing the resolution. And both Secretary of
    State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates have
    been speaking out against it for months.

    Earlier, the Turkish president, Abdullah Gul, wrote to Mr. Bush
    to thank him for his efforts opposing the resolution and to draw
    "attention to the problems it would create in bilateral relations if
    it is accepted," according to a statement from Mr. Gul's office.

    Adding to the tensions are the recent Turkish preparations for
    a possible invasion of northern Iraq in an effort to stop lethal
    incursions by armed Kurdish militants of the Kurdistan Workers Party,
    or PKK.

    The United States strongly opposes such Turkish action, fearing
    troubles in what has been the most stable part of Iraq. But the Turkish
    government is under heavy public pressure to act, and officials in
    Ankara have warned that passage of the genocide resolution would make
    it harder for the government to resist such pressure.

    Turkey has acknowledged Armenian deaths over a period of several
    years beginning in 1915, as the Ottoman Republic was falling apart,
    but it vehemently rejects any effort to classify them as genocide. It
    says that many Turks were also killed at the time.

    Turkey has shown its willingness to react sharply to criticism on
    the Armenian issue. When the French legislature called for criminal
    charges against those who deny that a genocide occurred, the Turkish
    military cut contacts with the French military and withdrew from some
    defense contracts under negotiation.

    When the resolution seemed likely to reach a vote last spring, Ms. Rice
    and Mr. Gates joined in a strongly worded letter to Ms. Pelosi warning
    against passage. They repeated their arguments Wednesday.

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

    The bulk of American air cargo and about one-third of the fuel headed
    for Iraq passes through Turkey, Mr. Gates said, including nearly all
    the newly purchased mine-resistant vehicles.

    "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," Mr. Gates said.

    The debate has left the administration in a difficult position,
    and officials have gone out of their way to emphasize that they are
    not defending what happened. "The president recognizes annually the
    horrendous suffering that ethnic Armenians endured during the final
    years of the Ottoman Empire," Ms. Rice and Mr. Gates wrote in their
    March 7 letter.

    Armenian-American groups have been rallying support for the
    resolution. The Armenian National Committee of America e-mailed
    members today to urge them to watch the Foreign Affairs Committee
    session on-line and phone the offices of any "traditionally friendly
    member of the committee" who is not in attendance.

    In the debate, House lawmakers spoke of facing an "agonizing choice."

    Representative Tom Lantos of California, the committee chairman, said
    that the essential question was not whether thousands of Armenians had
    died under the Ottomans, but whether the deaths - "this enormous blot
    on human history," he called it - constituted genocide, a word implying
    an intent to destroy a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.

    Lantos, who was born to a Jewish family in Budapest and is the only
    Holocaust survivor in the House, laid out this "sobering choice"
    facing lawmakers: whether to express solidarity with Armenians for
    their historic losses or to offend Turkey, with "the risk that it
    could cause young men and women in the uniform of the United States
    armed services to pay an even heavier price."

    "This is a vote of conscience," he said. Some Republicans said they
    would oppose the measure, though others supported it.

    Representative Dan Burton of Indiana said that "stability in the
    entire Middle East could be at risk," and he warned against "kicking
    the one ally that's helping us over there, in the face."

    But Representative Gary L. Ackerman, Democrat of New York, argued
    that a vote for the resolution was not a vote against modern-day
    Turkey. "Turkey is no more the Ottoman Empire than Germany is today's
    Third Reich," he said.

    Earlier in the day, hundreds of Turks marched to United States missions
    in Turkey to protest the bill, The Associated Press reported. And in
    Ankara, leftist protesters chanted anti-American slogans in front of
    the embassy, the state-run Anatolia news agency reported.

    Photo: Turks opposed to the genocide resolution attended a House
    Foreign Affairs Committee hearing on Capitol Hill on Wednesday
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