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ANKARA: Turkey Loses Jewish Alliance

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Loses Jewish Alliance

    TURKEY LOSES JEWISH ALLIANCE
    Umit Enginsoy

    Turkish Daily News
    Oct 15 2007
    Turkey

    Turkey fails to secure the support of Jewish members in the committee
    that gives the U.S. House the go ahead to vote on a resolution to
    recognize the events of 1915 as 'genocide.

    Last week's congressional panel vote in favor of an "Armenian genocide"
    resolution has also underlined Turkey's failure to win the backing
    of the committee's Jewish members despite Ankara's focused efforts
    to woo those lawmakers and Israel.

    Seven out of eight Jewish lawmakers in the 50-member Foreign Affairs
    Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives, including Tom Lantos,
    the panel's powerful chairman and the only Holocaust survivor in
    Congress, voted in favor of the genocide bill in last Wednesday's
    mark-up. The resolution calls for recognition of World War-I era
    Armenian killings in the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

    Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced late last week that
    she will bring the measure to a House floor vote before Congress'
    current session ends on Thanksgiving Day, which is Nov. 22 this year.

    In such a vote the resolution is expected to pass easily, as it
    already has 226 cosponsors in the 435-member House.

    All eight Jewish representatives in the committee were Democrats,
    most of whom are involved in a major confrontation with the Republican
    administration over President George W. Bush's foreign policy.

    Among them, the only one to vote against the resolution was Robert
    Wexler of Florida, cochairman of the Turkish Caucus in Congress.

    Overall, the measure passed the committee 27-21 - 19 Democrats and
    eight Republicans in favor, and eight Democrats and 13 Republicans
    opposed - despite last-minute warnings from Bush and his top aides
    that the resolution would harm U.S. national interests.

    The Lantos factor

    Top Bush administration officials and Turkish leaders warn that
    Ankara may cut its assistance to the United States' efforts in Iraq
    and Afghanistan in the event the resolution passes on the House floor.

    In addition to Lantos, a representative from California, Gary
    Ackerman and Eliot Engel of New York, Howard Berman and Brad Sherman
    of California, Ron Klein of Florida and Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona
    voted for the bill among the Jewish Congress members.

    For the Turks, the biggest dismay was Lantos' vote. In a long
    introduction at the opening of the mark-up, Lantos said: "We have to
    weigh the desire to express our solidarity with the Armenian people
    and to condemn the historic nightmare through the use of the word
    'genocide,' 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 [in Iraq and Afghanistan] than they are currently paying."

    And when Lantos announced his vote, Turkish parliamentary deputies
    and diplomats present at the mark-up were shocked and angered.

    This was the third time the same panel approved a genocide bill in
    the past seven years. But in 2000, former president Bill Clinton
    personally intervened at the last minute and prevented a House floor
    vote. And in 2005, the bill passed by the committee reached nowhere
    as then House speaker Dennis Hastert, a close ally of Bush, refused
    to bring it to the floor.

    Lantos was the staunchest supporter of Turkey in the 2000 discussions
    of the genocide resolution. But in 2005, angered by the Turkish
    government's rapprochement with Syria and Iran, he voted for the bill
    "to punish Ankara" although he admitted that the Armenian killings
    did not amount to a genocide.

    Jewish lawmakers unimpressed by Turkish lobbying

    Egemen Baðýs, a top foreign policy adviser to Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdoðan and a deputy from the ruling Justice and Development
    Party (AKP), criticized Lantos' stance, saying, "we have seen that
    his understanding of history is changing in time."

    Despite the color of their votes, Lantos and Ackerman also sought to
    appease Turkey. Lantos said that he would soon introduce a resolution
    marking the U.S.-Turkish friendship. Ackerman said: "This has been
    tough for me... I'm a big fan and supporter of Turkey."

    Turkish diplomats had made a major effort to urge the committee's
    Jewish members to vote against the resolution. Turkey also lobbied
    Israel, with Foreign Minister Ali Babacan recently visiting Yad Vashem,
    or the Holocaust museum.

    After the Anti-Defamation League, a leading U.S. Jewish group,
    shifted its position on the controversy in August, recognizing last
    century's Armenian killings as "tantamount to genocide," Turkey said
    the resolution's eventual approval on the House floor could adversely
    affect its close relations with Israel.

    But the panel vote proved that Ankara's warning did not impress the
    committee's Jewish members.

    Among them, Sherman, Ackerman, Berman and Engel have consistently voted
    for genocide resolutions over the past seven years, while Wexler has
    consistently opposed the measures. Klein and Giffords, two junior
    lawmakers who are not among the latest measure's cosponsors, acted
    in line with the majority of their fellow Jewish congressmen.

    The Bush administration strongly lobbied on Turkey's behalf before
    the vote, managing to persuade several Republicans to vote against
    the genocide measure. For instance, Illeana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida,
    the ranking Republican member in the committee and earlier a strong
    supporter of the Armenian cause, voted against the bill.

    In another interesting example, Luis Fortuno, a Republican
    representative from Puerto Rico, said he decided to vote against the
    resolution after Bush personally called him on his cell phone and
    lobbied in Spanish.

    --Boundary_(ID_yjynqWwzSuGAJq+8O5IH8g)--
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