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Genocide resolution clears hurdle amid fierce lobbying

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  • Genocide resolution clears hurdle amid fierce lobbying

    Genocide resolution clears hurdle amid fierce lobbying

    A divided House Foreign Affairs Committee approves the emotionally
    charged measure, despite vocal opposition by Turkey and President
    Bush.

    By Richard Simon
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

    October 11, 2007

    WASHINGTON - The long struggle over formal U.S. recognition that the
    killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks was a genocide reached a
    turning point Wednesday, with a House committee calling on the
    president to "accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate
    annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians as genocide."

    A divided House Foreign Affairs Committee approved the emotionally
    charged measure, despite fierce lobbying by Turkey and President Bush,
    who sternly warned that it would offend an important ally and harm
    U.S. security interests.

    Armenian groups in the United States have pressed for the resolution,
    while Turkish politicians have threatened to retaliate -- which could
    mean cutting off U.S. access to a crucial Turkish air base that is
    used to supply U.S. troops in Iraq.

    The bipartisan 27-21 vote came in a packed room that included four
    survivors of the World War I-era genocide, three in their 90s and one
    who was 102. "Somebody's got to speak for the people I see in front of
    me," Rep. Albio Sires (D-N.J.) said in urging the resolution's
    passage.

    Congress has wrestled for years with the issue, which has been closely
    watched by Armenian Americans, many of whom live in California. This
    year, the resolution, which does not have to be approved by the
    president, appears to stand its best chance of passing.

    The resolution has 225 cosponsors in the House -- more than a majority
    and the most support it has ever received, according to its chief
    sponsor, Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank). Nancy Pelosi (D-San
    Francisco), who became House speaker with the Democratic takeover of
    Congress this year, has long championed the issue.

    The bill faces a tougher time in the Senate. It has the support of
    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Sen. Hillary Rodham
    Clinton (D-N.Y.), but it has drawn just 32 cosponsors, well short of
    the votes needed to pass.

    Schiff called the lobbying by the White House and Turkey the "most
    intensive legislative fight" he had ever been in. Still, he said, "The
    truth sometimes wins, and it won today."

    The Turkish government disputes that a genocide took place, contending
    that during and after the First World War, Armenians as well as Turks
    were casualties of the war, famine and disease. But historical
    evidence and authoritative research support the term, and The Times'
    policy is to refer to the deaths as genocide.

    Opponents of the measure warned that it could threaten U.S. interests
    in the Middle East, endangering U.S. military supplies that pass
    through Incirlik air base near the southern Turkish city of Adana on
    their way to American troops in Iraq. Turkey is one of the United
    States' most important allies in the Muslim world.

    "We're talking about kicking the one ally that's helping us over there
    in the face right now," said Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.). "It just
    doesn't make any sense to me."

    Rep. Robert Wexler (D-Fla.) said that "America can ill-afford to lose
    the support of an ally as important as Turkey at this critical
    juncture."

    But Rep. Christopher H. Smith (R-N.J.) responded, "I consider myself a
    friend of Turkey. But friends don't let friends commit crimes against
    humanity -- genocide -- and then act as witting or unwitting
    accomplices in their denial."

    Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Sherman Oaks) dismissed the threats of reprisals.
    "We will get a few angry words out of Ankara for a few days, and then
    it's over," he said. "We cannot provide genocide denial as one of the
    perks of friendship with the United States."

    The resolution was backed by 19 Democrats, including committee
    Chairman Tom Lantos, a Holocaust survivor from Burlingame; and eight
    Republicans. Eight Democrats and 13 Republicans opposed it. All 10
    Californians on the committee supported the resolution.

    Schiff said he was optimistic that the resolution would pass the
    House, though he predicted another tough fight. Rep. Frank Pallone Jr.
    (D-N.J.), co-chairman of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues,
    said the measure would "move swiftly to the House floor and will be
    passed with overwhelming support." A House vote is expected before
    Thanksgiving.

    Similar resolutions were approved by the House in 1975 and 1984 but
    did not make it through the Senate. In 2000, a genocide resolution was
    headed to the House floor when the vote was abruptly called off at the
    urging of then-President Clinton.

    "This is a historic day," Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the
    Armenian Assembly of America, said after the vote.

    Turkish Ambassador Nabi Sensoy, who was in the audience for the vote,
    vowed to continue to fight, and the Turkish government said it
    "resents and condemns" the vote.

    "It is an irresponsible act for a committee of the House of
    Representatives to pass, in this manner and at an extremely critical
    time, a draft that will not only endanger the relations with a
    friendly and allied nation but also jeopardize a strategic partnership
    that has been cultivated for generations," the Turkish statement said.
    "We still hope that common sense will prevail and that the House of
    Representatives will not move this resolution any further."

    Nadeam Elshami, a spokesman for Pelosi, said that the committee vote
    "demonstrated bipartisan support for a resolution which is consistent
    with long-held concerns of the people of the United States about the
    suffering of the Armenian people."

    Hours before the vote, Bush warned that the resolution's passage would
    have serious consequences for U.S. foreign policy. "Its passage would
    do great harm to our relations with a key ally in NATO and in the
    global war on terror," Bush said on the south lawn of the White House.

    "We all deeply regret the tragic suffering of the Armenian people," he
    said, but added: "This resolution is not the right response to these
    mass killings."

    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert M.
    Gates also spoke out against the measure, as did a slate of past
    secretaries of State from both parties.

    Gates said that 70% of the supplies destined to U.S. forces in Iraq
    were flown through Turkey, including almost all of the new
    mine-resistant armored vehicles. He said access to airfields and roads
    "would very much be put at risk if this resolution passes and Turkey
    reacts as strongly as we believe they will."

    Turkey spent thousands of dollars on lobbyists -- including hiring the
    firm that employs former House Majority Leader Richard A. Gephardt
    (D-Mo.) -- and sent a delegation of high-ranking officials to the U.S.
    Capitol to buttonhole U.S. lawmakers.

    In Turkey, hundreds marched to U.S. consulates to protest the
    resolution, and leftist demonstrators chanted anti-American slogans at
    the U.S. Embassy in Ankara, Turkish media outlets reported.

    The resolution's consideration comes at a tense time, when fighting
    between Kurdish rebels and Turkish troops has escalated. Turkey
    reportedly launched airstrikes into Iraq on Wednesday, targeting
    Kurdish rebel positions.

    Turkish commentators have suggested that there will be reprisals if
    the resolution passes.

    "This decision may be a new turning point -- even the beginning of a
    new departure -- in Turkish-U.S. relations," commentator Sami Kohen
    said in the prominent newspaper Milliyet.

    If Congress passes the resolution, commentator Tamer Korkmaz said this
    week in the conservative newspaper Zaman, "we would not be the real
    losers, the U.S. would be."

    Turkish-U.S. relations have been prickly for some time. Ankara refused
    to allow American forces to use Incirlik to launch one flank in the
    invasion into Iraq in 2003. The U.S. has been reluctant to crack down
    on anti-Turkish Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq for fear of harming
    relations with Kurds, who are the most reliable U.S. allies among the
    Iraqis.

    On the other side, former California Gov. George Deukmejian, a
    Republican of Armenian descent, recorded a message supporting the
    resolution that was posted on the Internet by the Armenian-American
    Political Action Committee. Former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole
    (R-Kan.) urged passage of the resolution, saying that any diplomatic
    fallout would be transient. "Turkey and the United States have a broad
    and deep relationship that will survive our recognition of this
    historic truth," he wrote.

    The head of the worldwide Armenian Apostolic Church, His Holiness
    Karekin II, delivered the invocation in the House chamber earlier
    Wednesday, asking all to "remember the victims of the genocide."

    Both sides are expected to step up lobbying before the House vote. A
    few lawmakers who were once cosponsors have withdrawn their support.

    Rep. Jane Harman (D-Venice) said last week in a letter to the Foreign
    Affairs Committee that "a terrible crime was committed against the
    Armenian people," but, noting that Turkey helps to moderate extremist
    forces in the Middle East, concluded, "I have great concern that this
    is the wrong time for the Congress to consider this measure."

    [email protected]

    Times special correspondent Yesim Borg in Istanbul contributed to this report.

    Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/valley/la-na-gen ocide11oct11,1,6553860.story?ctrack=2&cset=tru e
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