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Now Is Not The Time

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  • Now Is Not The Time

    NOW IS NOT THE TIME

    Dallas Morning News, TX
    Oct 11 2007

    There's a time for Congress to be idealistic, to stand up for truth
    against the dark forces of ethnic cleansing and historical denial. In
    the case of Turkey and the 1915 Armenian massacres, now is not the
    time. The companion bills now before the House and Senate, nonbinding
    resolutions condemning the killings as "genocide," would be a colossal
    foreign policy blunder that could set off an international crisis.

    To be clear, the fact of the Armenian massacres, deportation
    and starvation are not seriously in dispute, except by Turkish
    nationalists. From 1915 through 1917, the Turkish government forced its
    native Armenians to leave the country, in part because Turkish Muslim
    authorities believed the Christian Armenians sided with neighboring
    Russia in World War I. As many as 1.5 million Armenians perished in
    this systematic ethnic cleansing.

    To this day, Turkey refuses to come to terms with its government's
    crimes and even takes legal measures against Turks - such as novelist
    and Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk - who publicly say Armenians were
    wronged. This is bizarre, despicable and shameful.

    Nevertheless, the issue is extremely emotional for Turkey, a secular
    Islamic democracy and key NATO ally whose government the United
    States can scarcely afford to alienate. Anti-American sentiment is
    overwhelming among the Turkish populace. If this resolution passes,
    Ankara threatens to cut off American access to Incirlik air base,
    a key hub in conducting the Iraq and Afghanistan operations.

    Moreover, Turkey is on the brink of launching a war against Iraqi
    Kurdistan after repeated killings of Turkish soldiers and civilians
    by Kurdish guerrillas based there. The United States is pledged to
    protect Iraqi sovereignty. We could soon be looking at troops from
    two NATO partners shooting at each other.

    It is madness for Congress to throw gasoline on this fire. President
    Bush wisely opposes the bill, as do eight former secretaries of
    state. It would put vital U.S. national security interests at risk,
    for no substantive gain. Idealism has real-world consequences.

    Congress has not fully grasped what taking this morally correct
    but diplomatically imprudent stance could cost this nation and its
    military.

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcon tent/dws/dn/opinion/editorials/stories/DN-armenian _11edi.ART.State.Edition1.41ff4e1.html
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