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Newsweek: A Fight Over An Ugly Past

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  • Newsweek: A Fight Over An Ugly Past

    A FIGHT OVER AN UGLY PAST
    by Michael Isikoff

    Newsweek
    October 22, 2007
    U.S. Edition

    The House Committee vote to label Turkey's mass killing of Armenians
    during World War I as a "genocide" followed one of the most intense,
    and unusual, battles on Capitol Hill in recent memory. The measure
    passed despite a lobbying blitz from the Turkish government, which
    hired an army of K Street lobbyists to fight it. The team included
    former House majority leader Dick Gephardt, who as a congressman had
    cosponsored genocide resolutions but switched sides in March when
    his firm signed a $1.2 million-a-year contract to represent the Turks.

    The flip-flop resulted in some awkward phone calls for Gephardt.

    "Dick, if memory serves me, didn't you used to support this?" New
    York Rep. Eliot Engel says he told Gephardt during a call urging
    him to oppose the measure. (Gephardt did not return calls seeking
    comment.) President George W. Bush and Secretary of Defense Robert
    Gates also made late appeals, fearing that the move would endanger
    diplomatic relations as well as Turkish defense contracts with major
    U.S. firms. Even Gen. David Petraeus, the U.S. commander in Iraq, got
    involved, warning visiting House members in Baghdad that the measure
    would be a "big mistake," according to Tennessee Rep. Steve Cohen,
    because it might disrupt supply lines that run through Turkey.

    But the opposition couldn't overcome a well-organized and emotional
    push by Armenian-American groups to get the U.S. government to
    acknowledge the slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman
    Empire, the precursor to modern Turkey. (Turkish officials call it a
    "tragedy," not a "genocide.") When California Democratic Rep. Jane
    Harman, a cosponsor of the resolution, suggested it was "the wrong
    time" for a vote, she was confronted by protesters in her district
    chanting, "Hypocrite, liar, genocide denier!"

    The Armenian push was also boosted by campaign contributions: Annie
    Totah, co-chair of the Armenian American Political Action Committee,
    told NEWSWEEK she has raised "hundreds of thousands of dollars" for
    Democratic candidates and recently joined Hillary Clinton's finance
    committee. (Clinton is a cosponsor of the resolution in the Senate.)
    Totah, for her part, believes Turkey is overreacting. "They should stop
    acting like this is World War III," she said. But Turkish officials
    are unlikely to be mollified, especially if House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
    follows through on a pledge to bring the measure to the House floor. If
    that happens, Turkey is likely to retaliate, says Egeman Bagis, a top
    adviser to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. How? By sending
    troops, over U.S. objections, into northern Iraq to crack down on
    Kurdish rebels. "You can't insult an entire nation like this," he said.
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