Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Reckless Resolution

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Reckless Resolution

    RECKLESS RESOLUTION

    Toledo Blade
    http://toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article ?AID=/20071015/OPINION02/710150311
    Oct 15 2007
    Ohio

    THE United States is in the regrettable position of having a
    92-year-old problem, genocide waged against Armenians in 1915 in the
    old Ottoman Empire, creating a serious foreign policy and defense
    problem with Turkey today.

    The source of the problem is the folly of the House Foreign Relations
    Committee, which voted 27-21 Wednesday to pass a nonbinding resolution
    condemning Turkey for the massacre. It did so under pressure from
    some of the country's 385,000 Armenian-Americans.

    There is no question that the 1915 genocide took place. It included
    ethnically and religiously based killing of civilians and was
    deplorable. At the same time it is important to look at historical
    context. The killing occurred in the dying days of the Ottoman Empire,
    eight years before the Turkish Republic, of which modern Turkey is
    the embodiment, was established in 1923. Describing Armenian-Americans
    lobbying for passage of the resolution as "Armenian genocide survivors"
    is a misuse of words: A person born in 1915 would be 92 now.

    Here is what is at stake in 2007. The Turkish government has deemed
    the congressional resolution "unacceptable." Turkey, a NATO ally since
    the Korean War, permits the delivery of 70 percent of U.S. military
    air cargo and 30 percent of the fuel that goes into Iraq through its
    facilities. Virtually all of the new anti-mine armored vehicles transit
    Turkey. Also, Turkey rarely bluffs; last year it broke all military
    ties with France when the French parliament passed legislation making
    denial of the genocide a crime.

    In addition, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, after
    the holiday at the end of Ramadan, plans to ask his parliament to
    authorize a military incursion into the Kurdish region of Iraq, in
    response to the recent killing by Kurds there of Turkish soldiers
    and officials in Turkey.

    The United States is asking Turkey not to take that action. The United
    States has consistently favored and protected Iraq's Kurds, starting
    in 1991 after the first Gulf War. American oil companies are now also
    seeking to take advantage of the absence of an Iraqi national oil
    law to sign contracts with the Kurdish regional government. Turkish
    military action in Kurdish Iraq would in general upset the U.S. apple
    cart in that part of the country.

    Some anti-war Americans might think Turkey would help end the fighting
    in Iraq if it shut down deliveries of U.S. military equipment through
    its territory to Iraq. That is, however, entirely the wrong reason
    for passing the Armenia resolution.

    Responsible congressional leadership should quietly but effectively
    shut down action on the resolution now. The administration of
    President Bush could then go to the Turks, point to that action,
    pledge to control the Kurds in Iraq who are attacking the Turks,
    and ask Turkey to stay its hand rather than carry out cross-border
    attacks in northern Iraq.

    The House committee's resolution on events in the Ottoman Empire 92
    years ago is a clear case of the tail wagging the dog. It should not
    be allowed to occur.
Working...
X