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Bush And Congress Dispute Armenian 'Genocide' Status

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  • Bush And Congress Dispute Armenian 'Genocide' Status

    BUSH AND CONGRESS DISPUTE ARMENIAN 'GENOCIDE' STATUS
    By Rupert Cornwell in Washington

    The Independent, UK
    Oct 11 2007

    A Congressional committee last night defied George Bush, voting through
    a resolution describing the 1915 slaughter of Armenians as a genocide
    - a move the White House says would severely damage relations with
    Turkey, a vital ally in the Iraq war.

    "This resolution is not the right response to these historic mass
    killings," the President told reporters, hours before the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee met to consider the measure. Instead,
    the majority-Democrat panel passed it by 27 votes to 21. Barring an
    abrupt about-face by Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has long backed the
    resolution, it will now come to a vote by the full House. There, 226
    members, more than a majority, have already signed up as co-sponsors.

    In one sense, the showdown is a re-run of an argument that has
    periodically endangered ties between Washington and Ankara. But as
    joint letters to Ms Pelosi from all eight living former secretaries
    of state and three former defense secretaries testify, rarely have
    the diplomatic stakes been higher, and never have the prospects of
    passage been greater.

    The confrontation between the White House and Congress comes at the
    worst possible moment, just as the government of Prime Minister Tayyip
    Erdogan is close to authorising a major incursion into northern Iraq
    to strike Kurdish rebels, after 15 Turkish soldiers were killed in
    fighting in recent days.

    Last week, Mr Erdogan telephoned Mr Bush to complain about the Armenian
    resolution, and warn that, if it passed, Turkey would take retaliatory
    action. Reprisals could bring a slowdown or even halt to supplies to
    US forces in Iraq that currently transit through Incirlik airbase
    in eastern Turkey, and possibly see the withdrawal of thousands of
    Turkish workers and support staff in Iraq.

    "This is a choice between condemning genocide and endangering our
    soldiers in Iraq," was how Tom Lantos, Democratic chairman of the
    House committee and himself a Jewish Holocaust survivor, summed
    up the dilemma. For its part, the White House is pleading with Mr
    Erdogan not to send troops into mainly Kurdish northern Iraq, and
    risk destabilising the country's most peaceful region.

    Passage of the resolution would inflict "great harm to our relations
    with a key ally in Nato and in the global war on terror," Mr Bush
    stressed yesterday. In their letter, the former secretaries of state
    warned that, although the resolution is non-binding, its passage would
    " endanger our national security interests".

    Ankara has spared no effort either. A high-level delegation from its
    parliament has been on Capitol Hill this week, warning that military
    co-operation would be jeopardised. The Turkish embassy is paying more
    than $300,000 (£150,000) a month to top lobbying firms to achieve
    that end.

    The crucial language in the resolution - officially titled the
    Affirmation of the United States Record on the Armenian Genocide -
    calls on Mr Bush, in his traditional annual presidential message
    delivered every 24 April on the events of 90 years ago, to "accurately
    characterise the systematic and deliberate annihilation of 1.5 million
    Armenians as genocide."

    The Turks flatly reject such a description, claiming instead that,
    although hundreds of thousands of Armenians may have perished, the
    deaths resulted from forced movements of population and fighting as
    the Ottoman Empire collapsed during the First World War. Vast numbers
    of Turks also died, they say.

    Genocide, says Nabi Sensoy, the ambassador to the US, "is the greatest
    accusation of all against humanity. You cannot expect any nation to
    accept that label."

    No one is in a trickier position than Ms Pelosi. Her San Francisco
    district has a large Armenian population, and she has long called
    for passage of a resolution specifically condemning genocide. Now
    she faces a choice between defying the White House, and backing down.

    --Boundary_(ID_DFSVVHg8JH53MpodWa0lPQ)--
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