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Belatedly, the House's History Lesson

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  • Belatedly, the House's History Lesson

    Belatedly, the House's History Lesson

    By Dana Milbank
    Thursday, October 11, 2007; A02

    Wondering why Congress can't reach a consensus on the Iraq war? Well,
    consider that our lawmakers are still divided on the Turkish-Armenian
    conflict. Of 1915.

    With bullets flying in Iraq and Afghanistan in 2007, the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee sat down yesterday to resolve a pressing issue:
    whether to pass a resolution declaring that the killing of hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians 92 years ago qualifies as genocide.

    Ankara insists this is nobody's business but the Turks'. But the
    history-minded House knows better.

    "I consider myself a friend of Turkey, but friends don't let friends
    commit crimes against humanity," said Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.) in his
    stinging rebuke of the Ottoman Empire.

    Nor was Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) afraid to call a sultan a sultan.
    He spoke of a need to "speak truth to Turkey" about the 1915
    situation.

    "Genocide is genocide, and there's no way of sugarcoating it," agreed
    Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.).

    Indeed not. Only 92 years late, the intrepid members of the committee
    voted 27 to 21 to condemn the Young Turks of 1915. The Armenians in
    the audience, wearing stickers urging "Stop the Cycle of Genocide,"
    erupted in applause and tears. Among the celebrants: Catholicos
    Karekin II, supreme patriarch of the Armenian Church.

    Amid such fervor, only a minority of lawmakers dared to argue that it
    was hardly worth antagonizing Turkey, a crucial ally in Iraq and a
    rare Muslim friend, over long-ago atrocities perpetrated by long-dead
    rulers of a long-defunct empire.

    "This is crazy," remarked Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.), who once shot a
    watermelon as part of his probes of Bill Clinton. "We're in the middle
    of two wars and we've got troops over there that are at risk, and
    we're talking about kicking the one ally that's helping us over there
    in the face."

    Then there was the statute-of-limitations conundrum. If it's within
    Congress's authority to be the arbiter of the Armenian genocide, will
    it next confront the Romans for the rape of the Sabine women, or the
    Greeks for sacking Troy? And if attacking the Ottomans, why not weigh
    in on the siege of Constantinople in 1453?

    "Whether it is the Ottoman Empire, the Japanese Empire, the
    Austro-Hungarian Empire or, indeed, the Roman Empire, I mean, we could
    go on for a long time condemning the atrocities committed under each,"
    pointed out Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.).

    And maybe they will. Chairman Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) pointed out that
    the committee has already probed the enslavement of "comfort women" by
    imperial Japan. Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.) announced yesterday that
    he will soon introduce legislation on atrocities against American
    Indians.

    Ostensibly, the debate was about morality (many proponents noted that
    Hitler was emboldened by the silence on the Armenian genocide) vs.
    national security (several opponents observed that most U.S. air cargo
    to Iraq goes through Turkish bases).

    While nobody disputed that something very much like genocide happened
    to the Armenians 92 years ago, support for the resolution tended to
    reflect the size of the Armenian population in the lawmakers'
    districts. All 10 committee members from California (where the census
    counts 231,777 Armenians) voted aye, while both members from Indiana
    (total Armenians: 904) voted no. The Californian chairman, Lantos,
    warned that the measure could cause U.S. troops "to pay an even
    heavier price" -- then voted yes.

    Ultimately, the threat to national security couldn't compete with four
    women in wheelchairs in the front row wearing pink stickers announcing
    "I'm a survivor" of the genocide. "I don't like Turkey -- they are
    animals there," reported Perouz Kalousdian, 97. She left Turkey in
    1916 but remembers it clearly; "they came and they took all my
    uncles," she said.

    For lawmakers, the memories were rather less fresh and personal.
    Lantos reached into the history books and pulled out quotes from the
    U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman Empire.

    "Thank you for your outstanding review of history," Sherman told the chairman.

    "Very fair summary of the history," agreed Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-N.Y.).

    Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-Tex.) thought it would be better if
    "everyone opens their historic books."

    "I don't pretend to be a professional historian," demurred Rep. Howard
    Berman (D-Calif.).

    But Rep. Ron Klein (D-Fla.) insisted. "We are all students of
    history," he told colleagues.

    Not all students of logic, however. Sherman, arguing passionately for
    the label of genocide, acknowledged that the measure was "an irritant
    to our relationship with Turkey" but then concluded: "That's the best
    reason to vote for it."

    The debate didn't improve from there. Rep. Albio Sires (D-N.J.)
    complained that "I feel like I have a Turkish sword over my head,"
    while Rep. Joseph Crowley (D-N.Y.) contributed a profound thought:
    "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me."

    Likewise, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.), arguing in favor of the
    resolution, offered some pithy advice to the feuding Turks and
    Armenians. "Move on," he recommended.

    If only Congress could do the same.

    Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2007/10/10/AR2007101002493.html
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