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Politics drive US Armenia resolution

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  • Politics drive US Armenia resolution

    Agence France Presse
    Oct 12 2007


    Politics drive US Armenia resolution


    WASHINGTON (AFP) - An explosive mix of political opportunism, moral
    crusading and a bitter feud with President George W. Bush is driving
    Democrats to ignore Turkey's ire and label massacres of Armenians as
    genocide.

    In a case steeped in history, riven with domestic politics but with
    major international implications, the House of Representatives is set
    to debate a measure on the killings in World War I of up to 1.5
    million Ottoman Armenians.

    Though it is non-binding, the bill, likely to come up in the full
    House in November, has enraged Turkey, which recalled its ambassador
    to Washington and stoked fears here it will cut vital logistical
    support for US Iraq operations.

    Democrats argue that by refusing to condemn the Armenian massacres as
    "genocide" the United States will encourage impunity for current and
    future crimes against humanity, for example the killings of civilians
    in Darfur.

    One of the faces of the Democratic effort is Democratic Congressman
    Tom Lantos, chairman of the House Foreign Relations Committe and a
    Holocaust survivor known for infusing his politics with a strong
    moral tone.

    The committee this week passed the bill to the full House floor after
    Lantos had called a vote of "conscience" and argued the United States
    had a moral duty to describe the killings as "genocide" despite the
    consequences.

    It was a reminder of the consequences when domestic US politics erupt
    onto the international stage from a system where the legislature and
    the executive (presidential) branches are equal and often at odds.

    Democratic determination on the issue also appears partly born of
    intense frustration at past failures to ram the genocide bill through
    Congress while it was controlled by Republicans.

    "For 25 years I have been told -- because I have sponsored a single
    resolution for a quarter of a century -- I have been told that this
    was not the right time to pass this," said House Democratic majority
    leader Steny Hoyer.

    In 2000, it was pressure by the Democratic administration of
    president Bill Clinton, concerned about damage to relations with a
    key political ally, which thwarted the measure.

    The same committee passed a similar resolution in 2005, but the
    Republican leadership stopped it from being brought to the full House
    floor in order to spare Bush embarrassment.

    No such sentiment applies to Democrats, who are locked in a tense
    political showdown with the White House, on issues as diverse as
    Iraq, children's health care and a 'war on terror' wiretap program.

    Democratic Speaker Nancy Pelosi is determined that will not happen
    again, despite unusual and outspoken public entreaties from Bush,
    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert
    Gates.

    "I said, if it comes out of committee, it will go to the floor. Now,
    it has come out of committee, and it will go to the floor," she said
    Thursday.

    Frustrated by years in the political wilderness, Democrats give every
    sign that they plan to wield the power granted to them when they
    routed Republicans in last November's congressional elections.

    George Harris, a former State Department analyst now at the Middle
    East Institute, said the machinations of domestic politics were
    playing a key role in the affair -- one year out from the next
    presidential elections.

    "The Democrats won control of Congress and they have to show they can
    do something," he said, adding that Pelosi, like many others who
    support the bill have powerful constituents in the Armenian
    community.

    The issue has also seen a fierce lobbying effort on Capitol Hill,
    where senior Turkish officials meeting top Democrats and high-priced
    lobbyists employed by the Turks and the Armenian exile community
    here.

    Pelosi, who represents a liberal district in San Francisco has long
    been a supporter of the Armenian genocide measure, and it would have
    been hard for politically to turn her back on it, as the leader of
    her party.

    The Armenian National Committee of America, an exile group, gives
    Pelosi an 'A' rating on its report card on various issues important
    to the community.

    Michael Rubin, a scholar with the American Enterprise Institute in
    Washington, named this week as an advisor to former New York
    Repubican mayor Rudolph Giuliani's campaign, also saw political
    motives at play.

    "We're in election season right now. Unfortunately, many people in
    Congress are more concerned with posturing than consequences," he
    said.
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