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  • A Little Too Late

    A LITTLE TOO LATE

    University of North Carolina The Daily Tar Heel, NC
    Oct 16 2007

    Congress should focus on the present, not the past
    By: Editorial Board
    Issue date: 10/16/07
    Section: Opinion

    In a time of tough Turkish-American relations, it does not make sense
    to create more tension.

    Unfortunately, the House of Representatives potentially could do
    just that.

    Last week the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed a nonbinding
    resolution that would officially recognize the Ottoman Turks'
    deportation and subsequent deaths of 1.5 million Armenians during
    World War I as genocide.

    The Bush administration has condemned the resolution as an
    inappropriate response, and we agree.

    Speaker Nancy Pelosi decided this resolution was necessary now
    because the survivors of this tragedy are elderly and, therefore,
    the legislation must be passed now.

    The biggest problem with the resolution is that it has no implications
    in the present day nor does it change history. The killings began 92
    years ago under a government that no longer exists.

    We are not denying the importance of governments speaking out against
    injustices by applying the term genocide. This issue has definite
    modern applications, especially with the genocide in Sudan. But to
    reclassify a historical event in such retrospect does no good today.

    This legislation literally accomplishes nothing more than inflaming
    a close ally of the U.S.

    This has caused a serious backlash in Turkey, and in a time of war
    such as this, the U.S. needs all the allies it can get, particularly
    allies that border Iraq.

    Turkey's cooperation in the Iraq war has been critical to U.S.

    operations. Turkish airstrips provide a stopover point for 70 percent
    of all air cargo bound for Iraq and 30 percent of the fuel used by
    our troops.

    Tensions are already close to the boiling point between the U.S. and
    Turkey. The Turks believe that Kurdish rebels are using northern
    Iraq as a base for launching offensives into the Kurdish regions of
    Turkey. The U.S. has urged Turkey not to attack the region.

    Congress should not be taking chances in damaging already apprehensive
    relations.

    Instead, members of Congress should focus on getting more important
    legislation, such a comprehensive defense bill, passed.

    We are left at a loss as to how this legislation is at all pressing
    or important enough to possibly jeopardize relations with one of the
    few friendly regimes in the Middle East.

    Turkey probably isn't bluffing, either. Last year it broke military
    ties with France after the lower house of its parliament voted to
    adopt legislation that would have made the denial of the killings as
    genocide a crime.

    It would be a shame if the operations in Iraq were significantly
    hindered because of a nonbinding resolution commenting on something
    that happened 92 years ago.

    Our politicians ought to spend more time passing legislation that is
    actually pertinent to Americans and leave history to the historians.
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