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Turkish MPs: Bush Administration Must Make Goodwill Gesture To Compe

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  • Turkish MPs: Bush Administration Must Make Goodwill Gesture To Compe

    TURKISH MPS: BUSH ADMINISTRATION MUST MAKE GOODWILL GESTURE TO COMPENSATE FOR US HOUSE COMMITTEE VOTE
    Joshua Kucera

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Oct 12 2007

    The US House of Representatives appears set to approve a resolution
    that would officially characterize the World War I-era massacre of
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide. The resolution, though
    lacking any force of law, would mark the culmination of years of
    effort by Armenian-Americans to win such recognition from Congress.

    Turkey has already expressed its anger over developments by recalling
    its ambassador to Washington for consultations.

    On October 10, the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed the
    resolution on a 27-21 vote. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, a
    Democrat from California, has said that the matter will come to a
    full vote before the House by the end of November. The resolution
    currently has 220 co-sponsors, which would represent enough votes
    for the measures adoption.

    The resolution is strongly opposed by the Bush administration, but
    it is not clear whether the White House, which made great efforts
    to defeat the bill in committee, will continue to expend political
    capital on what increasingly appears to be an inevitable defeat.

    President George W. Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
    Secretary of Defense Robert Gates all personally called members of
    the committee to try to persuade them to vote against it.

    Under one scenario, provided the genocide resolution is adopted, the
    Bush administration may attempt to undertake a pro-Turkish initiative
    to mollify Ankara. A delegation of Turkish members of parliament,
    who were in Washington to lobby against the resolution, warned on
    October 11 that the US-Turkish alliance could suffer serious damage
    unless Washington made a goodwill gesture, such as adopting a much
    tougher stance toward the PKK, a Kurdish terrorist organization.

    "The only remedy of yesterday's mistake is concrete cooperation in
    the fight against the PKK," said Egemen Bagis, an MP and foreign
    policy advisor to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. "I
    don't know of any other option that can somehow soften the hearts of
    72 million Turks."

    "Some members of the US Congress yesterday wanted to play hardball,"
    he continued. "I can assure you that Turkey can play hardball. Our
    experience of having a state is 1,000 years old. The ball is in your
    court, and you have to show us that Turkey matters. Show us on the
    PKK, show us on bringing this to the floor or not bringing this to
    the floor, or other issues."

    Asked if the PKK-for-genocide-resolution trade might be the strategy
    before the full House vote, another parliamentarian, Gunduz Aktan,
    said, "We don't know yet, but that is a possibility, that is a real
    possibility." The Turkish MPs declined to speculate on what specific
    action Ankara would seek from Washington regarding the PKK issue.

    Meanwhile, Turkish leaders in Ankara were infuriated by the House
    committee vote. "This unacceptable decision of the committee, like
    similar ones in the past, is not regarded by the Turkish people as
    valid, or of any value," the Anatolia news agency quoted President
    Abdullah Gul as saying. Turkish officials indicated that the
    ambassadorial recall would be temporary.

    Bush administration officials said immediately after the vote that they
    will continue to work to oppose the resolution. "The administration
    continues strongly to oppose this resolution, passage of which may
    do grave harm to US-Turkish relations, and to US interests in Europe
    and the Middle East," said State Department spokesman Sean McCormick
    in a statement.

    "If what we saw before the committee vote was any indication, I think
    the administration will continue to press," said Aram Hamparian,
    executive director of the Armenian National Committee of America.

    "But we have truth and morality on our side."

    For the October 10 hearing, both a large hearing room and an overflow
    room were filled. Dozens of Armenian-Americans, including a handful
    of elderly survivors of the 1915 tragedy, wore stickers reading
    "Stop the Cycle of Genocide." A large Turkish press corps was also
    in attendance, as were a much smaller number of Turks opposing the
    resolution. In the overflow room, where a closed-circuit television
    showed the proceedings, the Armenians and Turks alternately cheered
    or booed the members' statements.

    Several members of Congress described agonizing decisions they had
    to make on the resolution. Most recognized that that the events of
    1915 met the standard of genocide; Many of those who opposed the
    resolution said they did so out of respect for Turkey as a friend,
    or out of fear that Turkey could retaliate by curtailing cooperation
    on Iraq. On the other hand, many who voted for the resolution said
    they resented Turkey's threats

    "There was indeed a genocide of the Armenians and it will not
    be forgotten," said Representative Mike Pence, a Republican from
    Indiana. "But I can't support this resolution. With American troops
    in harm's way, dependent on a critical supply route from Turkey,
    this is not the time for our nation to be speaking about this dark
    moment in history."

    Another Republican, Dana Rohrabacher of California, however, decried
    the "the audacity that some Turks have to threaten to cut logistics
    to US troops... Perhaps they're not as good friends as they profess,"
    he said.

    The hearing was broadcast live in both Armenia and Turkey, and the
    Turkish parliamentarians said that even the tenor of the hearing
    offended them. For example, several congressmen suggested that
    Turkey might be bluffing and that if the resolution passes it will
    be forgotten quickly in Ankara.

    "Those people who claim Turkey is bluffing should not mock Turkey on
    live TV," Bagis said. "I think that was a big mistake. Turks are very
    peculiar about their honor."

    "What was bothering me yesterday was that those [US representatives]
    who were supporting the Turkish case, 21 of them, they said loud and
    clear that the events of 1915 amounted to genocide," Aktam said.

    "Despite this fact, because of the strategic importance of Turkey,
    because of the national interest of the US, they are voting no. This
    was unbearable."
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