Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Secretary of State Pelosi

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

  • Secretary of State Pelosi

    Wall Street Journal
    http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/fe ature.html?id=110010738

    REVIEW & OUTLOOK

    Secretary of State Pelosi
    The Armenian genocide doesn't belong in U.S. foreign policy right now.

    Tuesday, October 16, 2007 12:01 a.m.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, famous for donning a head scarf earlier this
    year to commune for peace with the Syrians, has now concluded that this
    is the perfect moment to pass a Congressional resolution condemning
    Turkey for the Armenian genocide of 1915. Problem is, Turkey in 2007 has
    it within its power to damage the growing success of the U.S. effort in
    Iraq. We would like to assume this is not Speaker Pelosi's goal.

    To be clear: We write that we would like to assume, rather than that we
    do assume, because we are no longer able to discern whether the
    Speaker's foreign-policy intrusions are merely misguided or are
    consciously intended to cause a U.S. policy failure in Iraq.

    Where is the upside in October 2007 to this Armenian resolution?

    The bill is opposed by eight former U.S. Secretaries of State, including
    Madeleine Albright. After Tom Lantos's House Foreign Affairs Committee
    voted out the resolution last week, Turkey recalled its ambassador from
    Washington. Turkey serves as a primary transit hub for U.S. equipment
    going into both Iraq and Afghanistan. After the Kurdish terrorist group
    PKK killed 13 Turkish conscripts last week near the border with Iraq,
    Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, asked the parliament to
    approve a huge deployment of the army along the border, threatening an
    incursion into Kurdish-controlled Iraq. This of course is the one
    manifestly successful region of post-Saddam Iraq. In a situation
    teetering on a knife-edge, President Bush has been asking Mr. Erdogan to
    show restraint on the Iraq border.

    Somehow, none of this is allowed to penetrate Speaker Pelosi's world.
    She is offering various explanations for bringing the genocide
    resolution to the House floor. "This isn't about the Erdogan
    government," she says. "This is about the Ottoman Empire," last seen
    more than 85 years ago. "Genocide still exists," insists Ms. Pelosi. "We
    saw it in Rwanda; we see it now in Darfur."

    Yes, but why now, with Turkey crucial to an Iraq policy that now has the
    prospect of a positive outcome? The answer may be found in the
    compulsive parochialism of the House's current edition of politicians,
    mostly Democrats. California is home to the country's largest number of
    politically active Armenians. Speaker Pelosi has many in her own
    district. Mr. Lantos represents the San Francisco suburbs. The bill's
    leading sponsors include Representatives Adam Schiff, George Radanovich
    and Anna Eshoo, all from California.

    Pointedly, Jane Harman, the Southern California Democrat who Speaker
    Pelosi passed over for chair of the intelligence committee, wrote an
    op-ed for the Los Angeles Times Friday, questioning the "timing" of the
    resolution and asking why it is necessary to embarrass a "moderate
    Islamic government in perhaps the most volatile region in the world."

    Why indeed? Perhaps some intrepid reporter could put that question to
    the three leading Democratic Presidential candidates, who are seeking to
    inherit hands-on responsibility for U.S. policy in this cauldron.
    Hillary Clinton has been a co-sponsor of the anti-Turk genocide
    resolution, but would she choose to vote for it this week?

    Back when Bill Clinton was President, Mr. Lantos took a different view.
    "This legislation at this moment in U.S.-Turkish relations is singularly
    counterproductive to our national interest," he said in September 2000,
    when there was much less at stake in the Middle East. According to
    Reuters, he added that the resolution would "humiliate and insult"
    Turkey and that the "unintended results would be devastating."
    If Nancy Pelosi and Tom Lantos want to take down U.S. policy in Iraq to
    tag George Bush with the failure, they should have the courage to walk
    through the front door to do it. Bringing the genocide resolution to the
    House floor this week would put a terrible event of Armenia's past in
    the service of America's bitter partisanship today. It is mischievous at
    best, catastrophic at worst, and should be tabled.

    Copyright (c) 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Working...
X