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CNN: Pelosi Says She'll Press On With Armenian 'Genocide' Resolution

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  • CNN: Pelosi Says She'll Press On With Armenian 'Genocide' Resolution

    PELOSI SAYS SHE'LL PRESS ON WITH ARMENIAN 'GENOCIDE' RESOLUTION

    CNN International
    Oct 15 2007

    WASHINGTON (CNN) -- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Sunday that she
    intends to move ahead with a vote on a resolution that labels the
    deaths of more than a million Armenians during World War I as genocide.

    Members of the Kurdistan Workers Party protest the U.S. resolution
    last week in Istanbul.

    1 of 2 The resolution has strained U.S. relations with Turkey and
    drawn criticism from the Bush administration.

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

    When asked about criticism that it could harm relations with Turkey --
    a key ally in the war in Iraq and a fellow member of NATO -- Pelosi
    said, "There's never been a good time," adding that it is important to
    pass the resolution now "because many of the survivors are very old."

    "When I came to Congress 20 years ago, it wasn't the right time
    because of the Soviet Union. Then that fell, and then it wasn't the
    right time because of the Gulf War One. And then it wasn't the right
    time because of overflights of Iraq. And now it's not the right time
    because of Gulf War Two.

    "And, again, the survivors of the Armenian genocide are not going to
    be with us."

    But White House Spokesman Tony Fratto said bringing the resolution
    to a vote "may do grave harm to U.S.-Turkish relations and to U.S.

    interests in Europe and the Middle East."

    Turkey's top general warned Sunday that ties with the United States
    will be irreversibly damaged if Congress passes the resolution,
    The Associated Press reported.

    Turkey has recalled its ambassador from Washington for consultations
    and warned of cuts in logistical support to the United States over
    the issue. The recall is only for a limited period of time, said a
    U.S. State Department official who talked to the ambassador.

    "If this resolution [that] 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, according to AP

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee voted 27-21 Wednesday to approve
    the nonbinding measure, which declares the deportation of nearly
    2 million Armenians from the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923
    was "systematic" and "deliberate," amounting to "genocide." The
    deportations led to the deaths of an estimated 1.5 million people.

    But Sunday, Pelosi stood by her previous assertion that the measure
    would be taken to a full vote if it passed the committee.

    Newly installed chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Michael
    Mullen, tried to calm tensions by phoning his Turkish counterpart
    shortly after Wednesday's vote.

    Mullen told Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, Turkey's chief of staff, that the
    Pentagon is working hard to inform Congress of what the military
    implications might be if the Turks were to respond by cutting off
    U.S. access to the air base at Incirlik in Turkey.

    Seventy percent of U.S. air cargo bound for Iraq passes over or
    through Turkey.

    The Armenian government and Armenians around the world, including many
    Armenian-Americans, have been pressing for international support for
    their contention that Armenians were the victims of genocide at the
    hands of the Ottoman Turks.

    The Ottoman Empire disintegrated in 1923, replaced by the modern
    republic of Turkey, where the Armenian issue remains sensitive. Turks
    reject the genocide label, insisting there was no organized campaign
    against the Armenians and that many Turks also died in the chaos and
    violence of the period.

    Though predominantly Muslim, Turkey, which borders both Europe and
    Iraq, is secular and pro-Western. In addition to its membership in
    NATO, Ankara is also seeking to become a member of the European Union.

    Speaking later on ABC's "This Week," Senate Minority Leader Mitch
    McConnell denounced the House committee's vote -- despite agreeing
    with the assertion that the killings amounted to genocide.

    "I think it's a really bad idea for the Congress to be condemning
    what happened 100 years ago," the Kentucky Republican said Sunday.

    "We all know it happened. There's a genocide museum, actually, in
    Armenia to commemorate what happened.

    "But 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."

    Republican Sen. Lindsay Graham echoed those comments on CNN's Late
    Edition.

    "I'm not worried about World War I. ... I'm worried about what I think
    is World War III, a war against extremists, and Iraq is the central
    battle front and Turkey has been a very good ally," Graham said Sunday.

    "We've had problems with Turkey, but the problem that Turkey has
    with the northern part of Iraq, if you think it is bad now, let the
    country fail."

    Turkey has engaged in ongoing cross-border skirmishes with rebels from
    the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, which launches raids from northern
    Iraq. The recent killings of Turkish soldiers brought the conflict
    to a boiling point, and Turkey's parliament may consider a motion to
    approve cross-border incursions into northern Iraq as early as this
    week. Watch how the rebels are straining U.S.-Turkish relations "

    The United States and the EU have designated the PKK a terrorist
    organization. The U.S. State Department has urged Iraq to crack down
    on the PKK, though some Turkish officials have said Washington has
    failed to take decisive action. E-mail to a friend
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