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The genocide vote: Now is not the time

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  • The genocide vote: Now is not the time

    The genocide vote: Now is not the time

    A congresswoman explains her decision to oppose the Armenian genocide
    bill she co-sponsored.

    By Jane Harman

    October 12, 2007

    As one whose own family was decimated by the Holocaust, I respond very
    personally to charges that I would deny the existence of savage acts
    of inhumanity against a group of people because of ethnic, religious
    or racial differences -- be they Jews, Darfurians, Rwandans or
    Armenians.

    Yet that's exactly what I was accused of last week after I sent a
    letter to Rep. Tom Lantos, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee, urging him to withdrawHR 106, which I had co-sponsored
    earlier in the year. Some Armenian Americans, whose passion I
    appreciate, have misinterpreted my determination that the time is not
    right to vote on such a resolution as "denial" of the Armenian
    genocide. Nothing could be further from the truth.

    No question: The debate raging in Washington over the Armenian
    genocide resolution is personal. Similar resolutions have passed the
    House twice -- in 1975 and 1984 -- and we are poised to pass another
    before Thanksgiving. Whether it will be brought to a vote in the
    Senate remains unclear.

    I originally co-sponsored the resolution because I was convinced that
    the terrible crime against the Armenian people should be recognized
    and condemned. But after a visit in February to Turkey, where I met
    with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Armenian Orthodox
    patriarch and colleagues of murdered Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink, I became convinced that passing this resolution again at this
    time would isolate and embarrass a courageous and moderate Islamic
    government in perhaps the most volatile region in the world.

    So I agree with eight former secretaries of State -- including Los
    Angeles' own Warren Christopher -- who said that passing the
    resolution "could endanger our national security interests in the
    region, including our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, and damage
    efforts to promote reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia."

    Timing matters. I asked a leader in California's Armenian American
    community just days ago why the resolution was being pushed now. "They
    didn't ask me," he said. It wasn't his call, and he probably would not
    have pushed it.

    So what is the endgame? I would hope that, regardless of the outcome
    of the vote, Turkey and Armenia will work toward reconciliation and
    normalization of relations.

    About 70,000 Armenians live in Turkey, and Turkey continues to admit
    more. Yet Article 301 of Turkey's Constitution prohibits insulting
    "Turkishness" -- a disturbing provision that has been used to punish
    Armenians in Turkey who insist the genocide took place. Surely an act
    of reconciliation would be to embrace the Armenian population in
    Turkey and repeal Article 301.

    Further, Turkey and Armenia have held recent talks about normalizing
    relations. They share mutual interests in trade, especially in the
    energy sector. Now is a good time to engage.

    And, of course, there is the need for stability in the region. Turkey
    shares a border with Iraq, and the need for its continued restraint
    with the Kurds and for its leadership in promoting stability and
    resolving the Israel-Palestine issue is obvious. Armenia can help.

    In a democracy, groups have the right to protest, and surely I respect
    the right of California's large Armenian community (and the L.A.
    Times' editorial board) to disagree with my position on the timing of
    yet a third congressional vote on the genocide. But once that vote
    occurs, that fabulously talented community can usefully channel its
    passion and energy into productive next steps toward reconciliation.

    Condemning horror is important. But moving through the anger and
    psychic hurt to positive action is true emancipation.

    Jane Harman (D-Venice) represents California's 36th Congressional District.

    Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/ la-oe-harman12oct12,1,6368819.story?ctrack=3&c set=true
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