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ANKARA: Congressman Miller: Resolution Won't Accomplish Much

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  • ANKARA: Congressman Miller: Resolution Won't Accomplish Much

    CONGRESSMAN MILLER: RESOLUTION WON'T ACCOMPLISH MUCH

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    Oct 16 2007

    U.S. Representative Brad Miller says "Holocaust" denial is morally
    repugnant but warns that the current genocide resolution passed in
    the committee of which he is a member will only anger Turkey and will
    not accomplish much.

    Miller voted against the genocide resolution.

    He is the only member of North Carolina's congressional delegation on
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee, which voted last week to declare
    the Ottoman-Turkish killings of Armenians in 1915, in which as many
    as 1.5 million people may have died, a "genocide."

    Speaking to the press at the committee room sitting near three
    survivors of the event, all of them women in their 90s, Miller said
    he doesn't think the U.S. has the international standing to offend
    an important ally such as Turkey.

    Miller, a Raleigh Democrat, told congressional committee meeting he
    didn't think the resolution would accomplish much.

    "I wish we had the standing in the world that if we pass that
    resolution, Turkey would stop and examine the history of what happened
    and decide whether they should do something to come to terms with
    it," Miller said. "But the reality is, in Turkey and the Muslim world
    generally, they will simply see the resolution as an insult and will
    be angry about it."

    After the committee's vote, Turkey recalled its ambassador for
    consultations.

    "There is a genocide going on now in Darfur. We need the support
    of Turkey and other Muslim countries to try to bring it to an end,"
    Miller said.

    In the days leading up to the vote, Miller spoke with the Turkish
    ambassador and a deputy U.S. secretary of state. He also heard from
    members of North Carolina's Turkish-American community.

    Miller said he thinks that Holocaust denial is morally repugnant,
    that he was glad Congress apologized for the internment of
    Japanese-Americans in World War II and that he voted for a resolution
    encouraging Japan to apologize for its treatment of "comfort women"
    in the same war.

    Still, he said, it's difficult to know which points in history deserve
    modern action.

    "Over the course of human history, there's been remarkable evil,"
    he said. "And trying to sort through it all, to acknowledge it all,
    I think requires the wisdom of a theologian, not just a politician,"
    he concluded.
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