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  • Turkey Angry Over House Armenian Genocide Vote

    New York Times
    October 12, 2007

    Turkey Angry Over House Armenian Genocide Vote

    By SEBNEM ARSU and STEVEN LEE MYERS

    ISTANBUL, Oct. 11 - Turkey reacted angrily today to a House committee
    vote in Washington on Wednesday to condemn the mass killings of
    Armenians in Turkey in World War I as an act of genocide, calling the
    decision "unacceptable."

    In a rare and uncharacteristically strong condemnation, President
    Abdullah Gul criticized the vote by the House Foreign Relations
    Committee in a statement to the semi-official Anatolian News Agency,
    and warned that the decision could work against the United States.

    "Unfortunately, some politicians in the United States have once more
    dismissed calls for common sense, and made an attempt to sacrifice big
    issues for minor domestic political games," Mr. Gul said. "This is not
    a type of attitude that works to the benefit of, and suits,
    representatives of a great power like the Unites States of America.
    This unacceptable decision of the committee, like similar ones in the
    past, has no validity and is not worth of the respect of the Turkish
    people."

    The Turkish foreign ministry, in a statement today, warned that
    relations with the United States will be made more complicated. "The
    committee's approval of this resolution was an irresponsible move
    which, at a greatly sensitive time, will make relations with a friend
    and ally" more difficult, the Anatolian News Agency quoted the foreign
    ministry statement as saying, according to Reuters.

    The House decision rebuffed an intense campaign by the White House and
    earlier warnings from Turkey's government that the vote would gravely
    strain its relations with the United States.

    The vote was nonbinding and so largely symbolic, but its consequences
    could reach far beyond bilateral relations and spill into the war in
    Iraq.

    Turkish officials and lawmakers warned that if the resolution was
    approved by the full House, they would reconsider supporting the
    American war effort, which includes permission to ship essential
    supplies through Turkey and northern Iraq.

    Before the Wednesday vote, President Bush appeared on the South Lawn
    of the White House and implored the House not to take up the issue,
    only to have a majority of the committee disregard his warning at the
    end of the day, by a vote of 27 to 21.

    "We all deeply regret the tragic suffering of the Armenian people that
    began in 1915," Mr. Bush said in remarks that, reflecting official
    American policy, carefully avoided the use of the word genocide. "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 in the global war on terror."

    A total of 1.5 million Armenians were killed beginning in 1915 in a
    systematic campaign by the fraying Ottoman Empire to drive Armenians
    out of eastern Turkey. Turks acknowledge that hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians died but contend that the deaths, along with thousands of
    others, resulted from the war that ended with the creation of modern
    Turkey in 1923.

    The House resolution was introduced early in the current session of
    Congress and has quietly moved forward over the last few weeks. But it
    provoked a fierce lobbying fight that pitted the politically
    influential Armenian-American population against the Turkish
    government, which hired equally influential former lawmakers like
    Robert L. Livingston, Republican of Louisiana, and Richard A.
    Gephardt, the former Democratic House majority leader, who backed a
    similar resolution when he was in Congress.

    Backers of the resolution said Congressional action was overdue.

    "Despite President George Bush twisting arms and making deals, justice
    prevailed," said Representative Brad Sherman, a Democrat of California
    and a sponsor of the resolution. "For if we hope to stop future
    genocides we need to admit to those horrific acts of the past."

    The issue of the Armenian genocide has perennially transfixed Congress
    and bedeviled presidents of both parties. Ronald Reagan was the only
    president publicly to call the killings genocide, but his successors
    have avoided the term.

    When the issue last arose, in 2000, a similar resolution also won
    approval by a House committee, but President Clinton then succeeded in
    persuading a Republican speaker, J. Dennis Hastert, to withdraw the
    measure before the full House could vote. That time, too, Turkey had
    warned of canceling arms deals and withdrawing support for American
    air forces then patrolling northern Iraq under the auspices of the
    United Nations.

    The new speaker, Nancy Pelosi, faced pressure from Democrats -
    especially colleagues in California, New Jersey and Michigan, with
    their large Armenian populations - to revive the resolution again
    after her party gained control of the House and Senate this year.

    There is Democratic support for the resolution in the Senate, but it
    is unlikely to move in the months ahead because of Republican
    opposition and a shortage of time. Still, the Turkish government has
    made it clear that it would regard House passage alone as a harsh
    American indictment.

    The sharply worded Turkish warnings against the resolution, especially
    the threats to cut off support for the American war in Iraq, seemed to
    embolden some of the resolution's supporters. "If they use this to
    destabilize our solders in Iraq, well, then shame on them," said
    Representative Joseph Crowley, a Democrat from New York who voted for
    it.

    The Democratic leadership, however, appeared divided. Representative
    Rahm Emanuel, the fourth-ranking Democrat in the House, who worked in
    the Clinton White House when the issue came up in 2000, opposes the
    resolution.

    In what appeared to be an effort to temper the anger caused by the
    issue, Democrats said they were considering a parallel resolution that
    would praise Turkey's close relations with the United States even as
    the full House prepares to consider a resolution that blames the
    forerunner of modern Turkey for one of the worst crimes in history.

    "Neither of these resolutions is necessary," a White House spokesman,
    Gordon D. Johndroe, said Wednesday evening. He said that Mr. Bush was
    "very disappointed" with the vote.

    Mr. Bush discussed the resolution in the White House on Wednesday with
    his senior national security aides. Speaking by secure video from
    Baghdad, the senior American officials in Iraq, Gen. David H. Petraeus
    and Ambassador Ryan C. Crocker, raised the resolution and warned that
    its passage could harm the war effort in Iraq, senior Bush aides said.

    Appearing outside the West Wing after that meeting, Defense Secretary
    Robert M. Gates noted that about 70 percent of all air cargo sent to
    Iraq passed through or came from Turkey, as did 30 percent of fuel and
    virtually all the new armored vehicles designed to withstand mines and
    bombs.

    "They believe clearly that access to airfields 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," Mr. Gates
    said, referring to the remarks of General Petraeus and Mr. Crocker.

    Turkey severed military ties with France after its Parliament voted in
    2006 to make the denial of the Armenian genocide a crime.

    As the committee prepared to vote Wednesday, Mr. Bush, the American
    ambassador to Turkey, Ross Wilson, and other officials cajoled
    lawmakers by phone.

    Representative Mike Pence, a conservative Republican from Indiana who
    has backed the resolution in the past, said Mr. Bush persuaded him to
    change his position and vote no. He described the decision as
    gut-wrenching, underscoring the emotions stirred in American politics
    by a 92-year-old question.

    "While this is still the right position," Mr. Pence said, referring to
    the use of the term genocide, "it is not the right time."

    The House Democratic leadership met Wednesday morning with Turkey's
    ambassador to Washington, Nabi Sensoy, and other Turkish officials,
    who argued against moving ahead with a vote. But Representative Steny
    H. Hoyer of Maryland, who now holds Mr. Gephardt's old job as majority
    leader, said he and Ms. Pelosi would bring the resolution to the floor
    before Congress adjourned this year.

    In Turkey, a fresh wave of violence raised the specter of a Turkish
    raid into northern Iraq, something the United States is strongly
    urging against. A policeman was killed and six others were wounded in
    a bomb attack in the Kurdish city of Diyarbakir in southeastern Turkey
    on Wednesday, the state-run Anatolian News Agency reported.

    The Associated Press reported from the town of Sirnak that Turkish
    warplanes and helicopters were attacking positions along the southern
    border with Iraq that are suspected of belonging to Kurdish rebels who
    have been fighting Turkish forces for years.

    The Turkish government continued to prepare to request Parliament's
    permission for an offensive into Iraq, with Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan suggesting that a vote could be held after the end of
    Ramadan. Parliamentary approval would bring Turkey the closest it has
    been since 2003 to a full-scale military offensive into Iraq.

    Sedat Laciner, from the International Strategic Research Institution,
    said that the Turkish public felt betrayed by what was perceived as a
    lack of American support for Turkey in its battle against the Kurds.

    "American officials could think that Turkish people would ultimately
    forget about the lack of U.S. support in this struggle," Mr. Laciner
    said, using words that could apply equally to views about the Armenian
    genocide. "Memories of Turks, however, are not that easy to erase once
    it hits sensitive spots."

    Sebnem Arsu reported from Istanbul and Steven Lee Myers from
    Washington. Carl Hulse contributed reporting from Washington and
    Sabrina Tavernise from Baghdad.

    Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/12/world/europe/12t urkey.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
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