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US Administration regrets House panel resolution

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  • US Administration regrets House panel resolution

    Indian Muslims, CA
    Oct 12 2007


    US Administration regrets House panel resolution, approved despite
    cautioning on Turkish ties


    Fri, 10/12/2007 - 02:38. International

    WASHINGTON, Oct 11 (APP): The US administration has regretted a House
    of Representative panel's approval of a resolution that declares the
    early 20th century deaths of Armenians as genocide, a move which it
    said risked harming relations with Turkey, a key ally in the Iraq
    war.

    The US administration had Wednesday made an emphatic appeal to
    Congress to discard legislation but the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee defied all calls and voted Wednesday evening to approve the
    non-binding measure, calling the mass deaths of Armenians that began
    in 1915 genocide.

    Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has promised she will bring the
    resolution to the full House for a vote. `We regret that the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee has approved House Resolution 106 and sent
    it on for consideration by the full House. The administration
    continues strongly to oppose this resolution, passage of which may do
    grave harm to U.S.-Turkish relations and to U.S. interests in Europe
    and the Middle East,' the State Department spokesman said.

    The State Department also observed that the move will not `improve
    Turkish-Armenian relations or advance reconciliation among Turks and
    Armenians over the terrible events of 1915.'

    The United States, it said, `recognizes the immense suffering of the
    Armenian people due to mass killings' and added it supports `a full
    and fair accounting of the atrocities that befell as many as 1.5
    million Armenians during World War I,' which the passed resolution
    `does not do.'

    Turkey lobbied hard to kill the measure, launching a multimillion
    dollar campaign and threatening to curtail its cooperation in the
    Iraq war. President Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
    Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates were joined by eight former
    secretaries of state and three former defense secretaries in
    condemning the proposal.

    `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 in the global war on terror,' Bush said
    Wednesday. According to The Washington Post, the committee's
    chairman, Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Calif.), said, `We have to weigh the
    desire to express our solidarity with the Armenian people . . .
    against the risk that it could cause young men and women in the
    uniform of the United States armed services to pay an even heavier
    price.' Lantos supported the measure, as did most lawmakers from
    California, whose large and influential Armenian American community
    has pursued similar proposals for decades.

    Nabi Sensoy, Turkey's ambassador to the United States said Ankara
    would continue its fight against the resolution.

    `Why is Armenia not taking this to an international court? They are
    trying to win this on political grounds, and they will never let go,'
    he said. Armenian-American groups rejoiced over the resolution
    approval.

    Turkish officials and some historians say that the deaths more than
    90 years ago resulted from forced relocations and widespread fighting
    when the Ottoman Empire collapsed, not from a campaign of genocide -
    and that hundreds of thousands of Turks also died in the same region
    during that time.
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