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U.S. House Resolution On Armenian Genocide An "Historical" Mistake?

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  • U.S. House Resolution On Armenian Genocide An "Historical" Mistake?

    U.S. HOUSE RESOLUTION ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AN "HISTORICAL" MISTAKE?

    RIA Novosti
    Oct 15 2007
    Russia

    MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti commentator Maria Appakova) - This week the
    Turkish parliament will have to decide whether or not its government
    should approve a cross-border military operation to chase separatist
    Kurdish rebels who operate from bases in northern Iraq. The Turkish
    parliament will most likely vote in favor of the operation.

    The decision will be made at a time when Turkey's relations with the
    United States are worsening. On October 10, the House Committee on
    Foreign Affairs passed a measure calling the massacre of Armenians
    in World War I by Ottoman Turks genocide by a 27-21 margin.

    This measure will prevent Washington, at least in the short term,
    from stopping Ankara's attempt to unleash one more conflict in the
    Middle East.

    Discussions of Turkey's military operation in Iraq and the vote in
    U.S. Congress on the Armenian genocide coincided in time, but it could
    just be a coincidence. The two issues have been on the respective
    agendas for a long time, and the decisions were long due.

    Turkey's parliament is ready to act because the military arm of
    the Kurdistan Workers Party attacked the Turkish military again,
    killing 13.

    The Justice and Development Party, which won the summer elections
    in Turkey, cannot disappoint its voters by leaving the matter
    unattended. This would play into the hands of its political rivals,
    primarily the military, who were against selecting the country's
    president from among members of the party.

    The current Turkish leadership should avoid quarrelling with the
    military, especially because it intends to carry out political reforms
    in the country.

    Likewise, the approval of the measure on Armenian genocide in the
    U.S was a political decision made before the upcoming elections. The
    Democrats, who initiated the measure, needed a bold political move, as
    well as the support of the numerous and influential Armenian diaspora.

    Although it is true that Armenians were massacred in 1915, we must
    admit that current decisions on the genocide and infringements on the
    rights of nations were made exclusively for political reasons. The
    issues of human rights and freedom of religion have become win-win
    topics.

    All countries are doing this, but Washington is the loudest advocate
    of political morals and human rights. Unfortunately, its actions do
    not always support its words, as exemplified by disputes over the
    Armenian genocide resolution.

    President George W. Bush said several hours before the voting:
    "Its passage would do great harm to our relations with a key ally
    in NATO and in the global war on terror." He said that Turkey is a
    moderately Muslim country and a NATO member crucial for the transit
    of U.S. shipments to Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Did he mean that his administration would not protest against such
    a resolution if it were passed about a non-moderate Islamic country
    that is not an ally-and especially not a strategic ally-of the
    United States?

    Bush has said more than once that genocide is a subject for historians,
    not lawmakers. But what about Serbia, Iraq and Sudan, where the issue
    was-and still is, in the case of Sudan-not yet decided by historians?

    His press service has expressed surprise that lawmakers concern
    themselves with history when there are so many current acute problems
    awaiting solution. This brings to mind what House Minority Leader
    Nancy Pelosi, the first woman to serve as Speaker of the U.S. House
    of Representatives, has said on the issue of Armenian genocide.

    Pelosi told reporters at her weekly news conference that congressional
    resolutions on Armenian genocide have been put off, with various
    justifications, over the past 20 years.

    There is never a good time to acknowledge that genocide has taken
    place, Pelosi added, whether in the distant past or the present.

    Turkey is vital for U.S. strategic interests in the Middle East
    and the Black Sea region. Therefore it is believed that the House's
    resolution has harmed U.S. foreign policy interests.

    The planned Turkish operation in Iraq is not the most harmful aspect of
    the situation, but rather Turkey's possible refusal to allow American
    military planes to fly in its air space and use the Turkish air force
    base. Overall, the honest decision made by the U.S. House may curtail
    bilateral military relations.

    The United States and Turkey will not sever relations, of course,
    but the resolution may prevent Washington from convincing Turkey to
    abandon its plans of a cross-border military operation in Iraq.

    Yet the resolution is not the only stumbling block in bilateral
    relations. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said that
    Ankara does not need anyone to tell it what to do in Iraq, because
    the United States did not ask anyone's advice when it deployed its
    troops there in 2003.

    The Turkish government has asked parliament for a 12-month permit to
    launch a military operation in Iraq. This means that it can send its
    troops to Iraq any time within a year, or not at all, using the permit
    to put pressure on Washington, Baghdad and leaders of Iraqi Kurdistan.

    Also, in late September Turkey and Iraq signed an agreement on
    cooperation in the war on terror and agreed to remove from its text the
    clause about the "right of hot pursuit." If Ankara wants to maintain
    good relations with Baghdad, it should give Iraq a chance to fulfill
    the agreement before taking such drastic decisions.

    The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not
    necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.
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