Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Ottoman Empire of Evil

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

  • The Ottoman Empire of Evil

    Kommersant, Russia
    Oct 12 2007

    The Ottoman Empire of Evil
    // U.S.-Turkish relations may be badly strained by the recognition of
    the genocide of Armenians

    by Sergey Strokan

    Tensions are mounting between the United States and its strategic
    partner Turkey after Congress's committee passed a resolution to
    officially recognize the massacre of Armenians under the Turkish
    Ottoman Empire as a genocide. Democrats dealt a severe blow on
    America's position in the region in an effort to do President Bush a
    bad turn. Ankara may now refuse the United States the access to a
    military base which plays the key part in operations in Iraq and
    Afghanistan and launch an offensive against Kurdish militants in
    northern Iraq. The region is also in for a powerful wave of
    anti-American sentiment.
    Stop Congress!

    Reports that the House of Representatives' foreign affairs committee
    is going to consider a draft resolution on Wednesday to recognize the
    genocide of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire came as shock news for
    the White House. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan promptly
    rang up President Bush last Friday and warned him of unavoidable
    negative consequences for U.S.-Turkish relations in case the
    resolution is adopted. Turkish President Abdullah Gul also sent a
    warning to the U.S. administration.

    The White House was extremely concerned but not by the appearance of
    the resolution in the House of Representatives which declares the
    early 20th century killings of Armenians as a genocide. U.S. Congress
    has repeatedly tried to pass this initiative including votes under
    the Clinton administration but always fell flat. This time, 226
    representatives signed on the resolution as co-sponsors, which meant
    that an idea to recognize the genocide of Armenians for the first
    time received support of more than one half of the chamber. The
    resolution had a chance to be adopted in case it was put to vote in
    the full House.

    The Bush administration was aware of the irreparable damage and tried
    all tools at its disposal to turn off emergency braking and block the
    adoption. Secretary of State Condoleezza and Secretary Defense Robert
    Gates were called to rescue as they addressed Congress. They warned
    that the resolution on the genocide of Armenians `will endanger
    America's national security interests'. The U.S. Department of State
    also gathered signatures of American diplomatic pundits who sent
    another appeal to Congress. The joint letter with a plea not to pass
    the resolution was signed by eight former U.S. secretaries of state
    including Republicans and Democrats Henry Kissinger, Colin Powell,
    Madeleine Albright and James Baker.

    Those who tried to stop Congress representatives in Washington were
    joined by Commander of U.S. troops in Iraq Gen. David Petraeus and
    U.S. Ambassador in Baghdad Ryan Crocker. In a televised address they
    reminded the lawmakers that 70 percent of air cargo for Iraq goes
    through Turkey. Overall, infrastructure in Iraq-neighboring Turkey is
    critically important for the continuation of the operation in Iraq,
    David Petraeus and Ryan Crocker underscored.

    Finally, the last tool to convince the lawmakers was an appeal of
    President Bush which was voiced three hours before the session of the
    foreign affairs committee. Mr. Bush said he `deeply regret the tragic
    suffering of the Armenian people' but warned Congress from the move
    that could have far-reaching consequences for the United States.
    `This resolution is not the right response to these historic mass
    killings, and its passage would do great harm to our relations with a
    key ally in NATO and the global war non terror,' President Bush said.

    After all ways of torpedoing the controversial resolution were
    exhausted the White House only had to wait for the decision of the
    legislators.

    Following Russia's Example

    Meanwhile, the Capitol on Wednesday was full of sentiment and
    arguments quite different from those cited by Mr. Bush's team. It is
    symbolical that the session of the U.S. House of Representatives was
    opened by a prayer of the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church,
    Garegin II who was on a three-day in Washington in this decisive
    moment.

    Blunt Democrat Tom Lantos, head of the foreign affairs committee,
    sent the tone for the debate. He said the George Bush Jnr.
    administration as well as administration of George Bush Snr. and Bill
    Clinton did not venture to restore historic justice in line with
    Democratic values which America professes because of geopolitical
    interests in the Middle East. `We have to weigh the desire to express
    our solidarity with the Armenian people and to condemn this historic
    nightmare through the use of the word `genocide',' Mr. Lantos told
    the House.

    Congressman Lantos, who traditionally emphasizes America's special
    mission, got support from another Democrat, Brad Sherman. `It is
    right for Congress to recognize this genocide, we must do it,' he
    said. `Genocide denial is not just the last step of a genocide, it is
    the first step in the next genocide.'

    It is worth noting that co-sponsors of the resolution cited Russia as
    an example to prove that the draft must be passed. Unlike the United
    States, Russia recognized the genocide of Armenians. Another
    Democrat, Rep. James Costa called on his colleagues not to be afraid
    of Ankara's threats saying there will be no `serious consequences'
    for the bilateral ties. `After Russia recognized in 1995 the
    Genocide, its trade turnover with Turkey increased by 351 percent,'
    he said.

    The House of Representatives' foreign affairs committee voted 27-21
    to pass the resolution calling to take into account in U.S. foreign
    policy the genocide of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. The document
    reminds that `on May 24, 1915, the Allied Powers, England, France,
    and Russia, jointly issued a statement explicitly charging for the
    first time ever another government of committing `a crime against
    humanity'. The resolutions calls on the U.S. president in his `annual
    message commemorating the Armenian Genocide issued on April 24 to
    accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate annihilation of
    1,500,000 Armenians as genocide.'

    What Ankara May Say

    After the House of Representatives ignored the Bush administration's
    warning Washington observers ask what will happen to the resolution
    and what long-term consequences it many have for the United States
    and its interests in the region. The House of Representatives'
    speaker Nancy Pelosi, an active advocate of recognizing the genocide
    of Armenians, has promised to put the resolution on vote in the full
    House during the current session of Congress.

    The resolution has no binding force, and President Bush can ignore it
    just like his opponents ignored the White House's appeals not to
    tease Turkey. However, the document has become a symbolic gesture
    which really affected Ankara in a very sensitive issue. It is quite
    possible that Turkish authorities will not limit themselves to
    statements which condemn the decision of American lawmakers and take
    more radical measures in reply.

    In one of these moves Turkey make decide to restrict or close the
    access to the strategically important Turkish air force base in
    Ircilink for American aviation which takes part in operations in Iraq
    and Afghanistan. The Washington Post daily reported this possibility
    on Wednesday citing high-placed Turkish sources.

    In addition, Turkish Parliament may sanction an operation in northern
    Iraq to fight Kurdish separatists. The vote on the Armenian genocide
    resolution in the U.S. House of Representatives happened at a very
    inconvenient moment for the Bush administration when the Turkish
    government addressed Parliament to endorse a military operation in
    neighboring Iraq against militants of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers
    Party. Washington vehemently opposes Turkey's plan to invade northern
    Iraq. But advocates of the operation in Ankara have just got a
    serious argument in the favor of the military move.

    Finally, the decision of American lawmakers may bring a new wave of
    anti-Americanism in Turkey and allied countries in the East which are
    unhappy about what they call `an attempt to rewrite the history'. The
    U.S. Embassy to Turkey has already warned American citizens in the
    country of a pending threat due to the passage of the controversial
    resolution.




    http://www.kommersan t.com/p813926/r_527/Congress_Armenians_Genocide_Tu rkey/
Working...
X