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DAN K. THOMASSON: Pelosi Stumbles Over Armenian Resolution

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  • DAN K. THOMASSON: Pelosi Stumbles Over Armenian Resolution

    DAN K. THOMASSON: PELOSI STUMBLES OVER ARMENIAN RESOLUTION

    Press of Atlantic City, NJ
    http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/opinion/synd icated/story/3719784p-13164721c.html
    Oct 15 2007

    It is not unusual for members of Congress to put their own political
    welfare above the nation's interests. It happens all the time to
    one degree or another. But every time it occurs, it punctuates the
    fallibility of the system.

    Take the current brouhaha over a congressional resolution that would
    declare 92 years after the fact that the death of a million Armenians
    at the hands of what was then the Ottoman Empire was genocide, as if
    anyone who was aware of the 1915 slaughter had any doubts about it.

    After all, if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it's a
    sure bet it's a duck. But what might seem like a harmless gesture to
    appease Armenian Americans by officially declaring it so all these
    decades later is threatening to cause a serious break in relations
    with Turkey, an ally we can't afford to lose.

    One expects the Speaker of the House to be far more responsible,
    particularly when it comes to dealing with irresponsible, emotional
    demands of constituents. But what Nancy Pelosi seems to have forgotten
    is that her position makes her the next in line to be president of
    the United States after the vice president and that at times that may
    require putting the national interests ahead of political expediency
    no matter how many Armenian Americans are in her district.

    So ignoring the possible consequences of a diplomatic break, which
    both Turkish and U.S. authorities warn is a real possibility, Pelosi
    has allowed the politically mischievous resolution to be voted out
    of committee and has further inflamed the situation by promising
    the issue would be taken up by the full House. The result of this,
    among other things, has been to increase the possibility of a Turkish
    invasion of Northern Iraq to quell Kurdish separatists who Turks
    regard as terrorists and the cutting off of vital supply lines and
    bases for U.S. troops.

    Short of calling for actual reparations to the descendents of the
    1915 victims at the threat of bombing Istanbul and sending a nasty
    letter to every Turk over there and here, Pelosi and the resolution's
    sponsors couldn't have done more to undercut American interests.

    Nothing apparently said by a desperate White House backed up by the
    last nine secretaries of state has so far been able to dissuade the
    speaker who came to the high office promising to quell the incivility
    of a place that often more resembles a juvenile detention center than
    a legislature. Well, how does one spell bipartisanship now that it is
    needed. No wonder the only approval rating lower than Bush's belongs
    to Congress.

    Even if the process were halted now, experts believe, the committee
    vote alone has caused severe harm to relations between the two
    countries. There are, they say, enormous hard feelings among Turks who
    increasingly believe that the United States is a one-way ally. As a
    result U.S. influence over actions that could be devastating to this
    nation's interests has diminished dramatically. Prime Minister Tayyip
    Erdogan already is taking considerable heat from his own military over
    what is seen as acquiescence to Washington over the Kurdish situation
    and now he faces a public that is enormously angry over the genocide
    resolution. A recent poll shows that Turks are more and more hostile
    toward the United States.

    What seems terribly disappointing here is that the speaker's extreme
    partisanship continues to pervade the atmosphere in the House. She
    cut her teeth on the partisan ward politics of Baltimore where her
    father was mayor and has shown that side of her nature throughout her
    congressional career, especially when she was Democratic leader before
    ascending to House Speaker. If ever there were a time to put that
    aside, it is now. She is a smart, capable politician who certainly
    knows the consequences of such an irresponsible action.

    That is why it seems inconceivable that she would allow it to go
    forward. The only explanation seems to be that she is concerned about
    her own reelection in an extremely liberal district where there is
    a strong Armenian American presence. Her inability to change the
    direction of the war in Iraq has been criticized by liberals. Her
    San Francisco opponent is Cindy Sheehan, the antiwar activist whose
    son was killed in Iraq, and whose shrill campaigning has made some
    inroads on Pelosi's popularity.

    Even if that is her worry, it is time for her and those with similar
    concerns to dump this resolution in the Potomac and pray it is not
    too late to put things right with a much -needed ally. Hopefully,
    there are a few statesmen left in Congress.
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