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  • Inviting needless trouble

    Cincinnati Post, OH
    Kentucky Post, KY
    Oct 13 2007


    Inviting needless trouble

    Other than placating their Armenian American constituents, it's hard
    to tell what interest the House Foreign Affairs Committee thought it
    was serving when it approved, 27-21, a nonbinding, wholly symbolic
    resolution condemning as genocide the deaths of over a million
    Armenians when the Ottoman Empire expelled them from eastern Turkey
    between 1915 and 1923.

    Certainly it didn't serve America's geopolitical interests. The
    resolution infuriated modern Turkey, which, as President Bush and
    eight former secretaries of State of both parties pointed out, is a
    vital NATO ally, a necessary partner in the war on terror, site of an
    American airbase critical to supporting the wars in Iraq and
    Afghanistan.

    The Turks immediately summoned their ambassador to Washington home
    for consultations and their Foreign Ministry called in our ambassador
    to express their "unease" over the resolution. These are diplomatic
    ways of displaying extreme pique. And if the Turks are well and truly
    angry they can legitimately cause us a lot of trouble in Iraq. They
    are amassing troops, helicopter gun ships and armor near the border
    of Iraq. So far they have only attacked Kurdish rebels on their own
    side of the border but they are threatening to go after facilities in
    Kurdish Iraq that they say support the rebels. This would destabilize
    the one tranquil part of Iraq.

    The expulsion of the Armenians is a part of its history that Turkey
    has never come to grips with, and even today reconciliation talks
    between Turkey and Armenia are moving very slowly - but nonetheless
    moving unless this resolution impedes them.

    The resolution should be allowed to quietly languish in the clerk's
    office, but House Speaker Nancy Pelosi seems determined to bring it
    to a vote. Told that this was a bad time for the resolution, the
    speaker said she'd been hearing that every year for the last 20.
    Maybe there's a good reason for that.
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