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Anti-Turkey Bill Could Cause Needless Harm

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  • Anti-Turkey Bill Could Cause Needless Harm

    ANTI-TURKEY BILL COULD CAUSE NEEDLESS HARM

    Detroit News, MI
    http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AI D=/20071012/OPINION01/710120332/1008
    Oct 12 2007

    U.S. House considers resolution condemning WWI 'genocide'

    The decision by a committee of the U.S. House to pass a resolution
    branding Turkey's 1915-1916 massacre of Armenians a genocide has
    needlessly inflamed U.S. relations with Turkey at a sensitive time.

    Whether the move was a gesture resulting from domestic political
    imperatives or an attempt at mischief-making against the Bush
    administration's Iraq War policy or a combination of both, it risks
    damaging America's standing with a Muslim power in the region and a
    solid U.S. ally.

    Turkey until recently has been a strictly secularist Muslim country,
    but the election as president of Abdullah Gul, a politician with
    political roots as an Islamist, has caused concern about Turkey's
    future direction.

    In addition, Turkey and the United States have clashed over Turkey's
    continuing skirmishes with its separatist Kurdish population, which
    Turkey contends is abetted by the Kurds in northern Iraq who are
    supported by America.

    After the decision by the House Foreign Affairs Committee to send the
    genocide resolution to the floor, Turkey recalled its ambassador to the
    United States for "consultations." Earlier, the American ambassador to
    Turkey was summoned to the Turkish foreign ministry so the government
    could express its unease over this matter.

    The Turkish prime minister phoned President George W. Bush and former
    President Bill Clinton to object to the resolution. There is no reason
    that the resolution has to be passed now, but plenty of reasons to
    shelve it.

    Cargo flights and other goods destined for the U.S. military in Iraq
    now pass through Turkey. That arrangement could be threatened by the
    genocide resolution.

    Representatives of some Armenians who remain in Turkey, such as the
    Armenian Orthodox patriarch, have expressed worries that they could
    face harsh repercussions.

    The Bush administration has pleaded with Congress not to adopt the
    resolution, as have the eight living former secretaries of state.

    We have little doubt that the slaughter of Armenians by the Turks
    during World War I would qualify as a genocide.

    Not a single victim of the violence against the Armenians by the Turks,
    however, would be helped by this resolution. But a lot of damage
    could be done to the interests of living Americans and possibly even
    Armenians in Turkey.

    That's a high price to pay for a symbolic gesture.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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