Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

US Congressional Committee Approves Armenian Genocide Resolution

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • US Congressional Committee Approves Armenian Genocide Resolution

    US CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE APPROVES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION
    By Dan Robinson

    Voice of America
    http://voanews.com/english/2007-10-10-voa5 0.cfm
    Oct 11 2007

    The House of Representatives foreign affairs committee has approved
    a non-binding resolution calling the massacre of Armenians nearly a
    century ago a genocide. The vote was 27 to 21. VOA's Dan Robinson
    reports from Capitol Hill, President Bush and senior officials in
    his administration strongly oppose the measure, saying it will damage
    relations with Turkey and set back U.S. efforts in Iraq and elsewhere
    in the region.

    Members of House Foreign Affairs Committee 10 Oct. 2007 Members
    of Congress were subjected to two public relations campaigns, one
    financed by the Turkish government, the other by Armenian-American
    and other groups supporting the measure.

    Turkey has long insisted that Armenians killed during World War
    I and the years immediately following perished because of clashes
    stemming from the breakup of the Ottoman Empire rather than from a
    genocide campaign.

    In full page statements published in major U.S. newspapers, the Turkish
    government characterized the resolution, which would be non-binding
    if Congress were to pass it, as a biased interpretation of tragedies
    involving Armenians in the early 20th century.

    Armenian-American groups asserted that the resolution would be an
    important gesture by the U.S. Congress to recognize what they call
    the fact of the Armenian genocide.

    President Bush received a letter from Turkey's president Abdullah Gul
    warning of harm to bilateral relations if the resolution moves forward
    in Congress, a view shared by a number of former U.S. secretaries of
    state and others who appealed to Congress.

    Mr. Bush used a White House statement to say that while Americans
    deeply regret the tragic suffering of the Armenian people, a resolution
    is not the way to address the issue.

    "This resolution is not the right response to these historic mass
    killings, and its passage would do great harm to our relations with
    a key ally in NATO, and the global war on terror," he said.

    Speaking outside the White House, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
    echoed the comments, while Defense Secretary Robert Gates reflected
    concerns of U.S. military commanders about a potential backlash by
    Turkey affecting military supply lines.

    "Passage of this resolution at this time would indeed be very
    problematic for everything that we are trying to do in the Middle
    East because we are very dependent on a good Turkish strategic ally
    to help with our efforts" said Rice.

    "They believe clearly that access to airfield and to the roads and so
    on in Turkey would be very much put at risk if this resolution passes
    and the Turks react as strongly as we believe they will," Gates said.

    Foreign affairs panel chairman Tom Lantos, a California Democrat,
    said lawmakers were faced with a difficult choice in what he called
    a vote of conscience.

    "We have to weigh the desire to express our solidarity with the
    Armenian people and to condemn this historic nightmare through the
    use of the word genocide against the risk that it could cause young
    men and women in the uniform of the U.S. armed services to pay an
    even heavier price than they are now paying," he said.

    Republicans Dan Burton and Chris Smith, took opposite views of
    the issue.

    "The strongest ally in the area, and has been for over 50 years, is
    Turkey, and I just don't understand why we are going to cut our nose
    off and shoot ourselves in the foot at a time when we need this ally,"
    Burton said.

    The issue behind the resolution today is whether any government
    that denies a genocide, whether or not Congress has a responsibility
    to insist that our government at the very least acknowledges it. I
    believe that we do," said Smith.

    There were also divisions among Democrats, such as California's Brad
    Sherman, and Florida's Robert Wexler.

    "We cannot provide genocide-denial as one of the perks of friendship
    with the United States," Sherman said.

    "It is clear that America can ill afford to lose the support of an
    ally as important as Turkey at this critical juncture," said Wexler.

    Armenian genocide resolutions have been approved by the Foreign
    Affairs Committee in the past, but failed to make it to the full
    House and never passed through Congress as a whole.

    The current measure has strong support from Democratic House Speaker
    Nancy Pelosi, who with House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer met Wednesday
    with Turkey's Ambassador to the United States.

    The Democratic leaders sought to assure him that the United States
    remains a strong ally of the Turkey and that the government in
    Ankara should not view the resolution as a reflection of the Turkish
    government or people. Congressman Lantos, meanwhile, says he will
    introduce a resolution next week on U.S.-Turkish friendship.

    Democratic leaders intend to bring the Armenian genocide measure to
    the House floor next month, while a similar measure is pending in
    the Senate.
Working...
X