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Turkey, GOP Warn Against Vote On Genocide

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  • Turkey, GOP Warn Against Vote On Genocide

    TURKEY, GOP WARN AGAINST VOTE ON GENOCIDE
    By Sean Lengell

    Washington Times, DC
    Oct 15 2007

    House Democratic leaders say they will insist on a floor vote on a
    resolution calling the 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks
    "genocide," despite Turkish leaders saying it will seriously hurt
    relations and Republican warnings that the measure is "the most
    irresponsible" action Congress can take.

    "This resolution is one that is consistent with what our government
    has always said about what ... happened at that time," House Speaker
    Nancy Pelosi said yesterday on ABC's "This Week."

    "I said if it passed the [House Foreign Affairs Committee] that we
    would bring it to the floor," she said.

    But yesterday, Turkey's military chief said the committee's action
    last week had already harmed U.S. ties with Turkey, which grants the
    U.S. use of its airspace and bases in its country to help fight the
    war in Iraq.

    "If this resolution passed in the committee passes the House as well,
    our military ties with the U.S. will never be the same again," Gen.

    Yasar Buyukanit told the daily Milliyet newspaper. "I'm the military
    chief; I deal with security issues. I'm not a politician. [But]
    in this regard, the U.S. shot its own foot."

    The issue is highly sensitive in Turkey, where it is a crime to
    describe the Armenian killings as genocide. Turkey recalled its
    ambassador to the U.S. after the committee vote and has threatened
    further retaliation.

    The top House Republican said the resolution "may be the most
    irresponsible thing I've seen this new Congress do this year."

    "Turkey is a very important ally in our war against the terrorists -
    in a very strategic location in the world," House Minority Leader
    John A. Boehner of Ohio said yesterday on the "Fox News Sunday"
    program. "They are very upset about this resolution."

    Mr. Boehner added that Congress is no place for the issue to be
    debated.

    "Listen, there's no question that the suffering of the Armenian people
    some 90 years ago was extreme," Mr. Boehner said. "But what happened
    90 years ago ought to be a subject for historians to sort out, not
    politicians here in Washington."

    The Bush administration says the resolution could undermine the U.S.

    position in Iraq as it urges Turkey to refrain from any major military
    operations in northern Iraq. The Turkish government is planning
    to seek parliamentary approval for military operations against a
    militant group, the Kurdistan Workers Party, based in the mountains
    of northern Iraq.

    "I don't think the Congress passing this resolution is a good idea at
    any point, but particularly not a good idea when Turkey is cooperating
    with us in many ways, which ensures greater safety for our soldiers,"
    Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, Kentucky Republican, said
    yesterday on "This Week."

    But Mrs. Pelosi denies the measure will permanently weaken diplomatic
    relations with Turkey or put U.S. troops at risk.

    "I think our troops are well-served when we declare who we are as a
    country and increase the respect that people have for us as a nation,"
    she said, dismissing the possibility of Turkish retaliation as
    "hypothetical."

    The California Democrat said the resolution will be brought to the
    House floor for a vote by mid-November.

    House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer said Congress has a moral
    obligation to formally condemn one of the worst atrocities of the
    20th century.

    "If we forget what has happened, if we paper over what has happened,
    then we are at risk of letting it happen again," said the Maryland
    Democrat yesterday on Fox. "The issue of genocide is a very urgent
    and present issue. It's happening in Darfur now. It happened in
    Bosnia not too long ago. And the world sat by and watched." Darfur
    is a region of western Sudan.

    Mr. Hoyer said the resolution would likely pass the House. "It passed
    out of committee 27 to 1, closer than I think it would have been,"
    he said.

    About 70 percent of U.S. air cargo headed for Iraq goes through
    Turkey, as does about one-third of the fuel used by the U.S. military
    there. U.S. bases also get water and other supplies carried in by
    Turkish truckers who cross into Iraq's northern Kurdish region.

    C-17 cargo planes fly military supplies to U.S. soldiers in remote
    areas of Iraq from Turkey, avoiding the use of Iraqi roads vulnerable
    to bomb attacks. U.S. officials say the arrangement helps reduce
    American casualties.

    ~U This article is based in part on wire service reports.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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