Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Genocide resolution advances

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

  • Genocide resolution advances

    Article published Oct 11, 2007

    Genocide resolution advances

    October 11, 2007

    By Jon Ward - A House committee rejected warnings from the Bush
    administration yesterday and approved a resolution condemning Turkey
    for committing genocide against Armenians during World War I, an act
    the White House said could jeopardize military operations in the
    Middle East.

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee voted 27-21 in favor of the
    resolution, which will go to the House floor for a full vote in
    mid-November, Democratic leaders said.

    "I just don't know how many people can be destroyed before that word
    [genocide] can be applied," said Rep. Gary L. Ackerman, New York
    Democrat. "Our friends in Turkey have to understand that they can get
    beyond this."

    But White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said President Bush was
    "very disappointed" with the result. "The president made it clear that
    this resolution could cause grave harm to U.S.-Turkish relations," he
    said. "We will continue to oppose this resolution."

    The White House yesterday used its biggest guns to argue that a
    resolution could provoke Turkey to cut off U.S. access to its Incirlik
    Air Base - a key component of resupply routes for the U.S. military in
    Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Mr. Bush spoke in a hastily arranged statement to reporters. "We all
    deeply regret the tragic suffering of the Armenian people that began
    in 1915," he said. But "this resolution is not the right response to
    these historic mass killings."

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul quickly denounced the resolution as
    "unacceptable."

    "Unfortunately some politicians in the United States of America have
    closed their ears to calls to be reasonable and once again sought to
    sacrifice big problems for small domestic political games," the state
    news agency Anatolian quoted him today as saying.

    Earlier yesterday, Mr. Bush met with Secretary of State Condoleezza
    Rice and Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates, and then sent them to
    speak with reporters.

    "About 70 percent of all air cargo going into Iraq goes through
    Turkey. About a third of the fuel that [U.S. troops] consume comes
    >From Turkey," Mr. Gates said.

    Mr. Gates said U.S. military commanders raised concerns about the
    resolution because "they believe clearly that access to air fields and
    to 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."

    Miss Rice said the military commanders "asked us to do everything we
    could to make sure this does not pass" and said "we are very dependent
    on a good Turkish strategic ally to help with our efforts" in Iraq.

    The Armenian National Institute estimates that about 1.5 million
    Armenians were killed at the hands of the Turks or died from Turkish
    persecution between 1915 and 1923.

    Democrats downplayed concerns about a Turkish reaction to the
    resolution, saying their threats will turn out to be false.

    "We will get a few angry words out of Ankara for a few days, and then
    it's over," said Rep. Brad Sherman, California Democrat.

    House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer, Maryland Democrat, said the
    resolution "was about another government at another time, and should
    not be perceived ... as a reflection on the present government, the
    Turkish people or their present posture."

    Rep. Dan Burton, Indiana Republican, was irate. "I just don't
    understand why we're going to cut our nose off, shoot ourselves in the
    foot at a time when we need this ally," he said.

    The committee hearing drew a standing-room only crowd that included
    Turkish officials and four elderly Armenian women who sat in
    wheelchairs at the front of the room, wearing stickers that read, "I
    am a survivor of the Armenian genocide."

    One of the women Sirarpi Khoyan, 102, who was born in Istanbul, said
    "there's no two ways about" whether the Turkish killings of Armenians
    >From 1915 to 1923 amounted to genocide.

    "Of course it was [genocide]," she said.

    Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/article/20071011/NA TION/110110076
Working...
X