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  • Support Wanes in House for Genocide Vote

    Support Wanes in House for Genocide Vote

    By CARL HULSE
    The New York Times

    WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 - Worried about antagonizing Turkish leaders,
    House members from both parties have begun to withdraw their support
    from a resolution backed by the Democratic leadership that would
    condemn as genocide the mass killings of Armenians nearly a century
    ago.

    Almost a dozen lawmakers had shifted against the measure in a 24-hour
    period ending Tuesday night, accelerating a sudden exodus that has
    cast deep doubt over the measure's prospects. Some made clear that
    they were heeding warnings from the White House, which has called the
    measure dangerously provocative, and >From the Turkish government,
    which has said House passage would prompt Turkey to reconsider its
    ties to the United States, including logistical support for the Iraq
    war.

    Until Tuesday, the measure appeared on a path to House passage, with
    strong support from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. It was approved last
    week by the House Foreign Affairs Committee. But by Tuesday evening, a
    group of senior House Democrats had made it known that they were
    planning to ask the leadership to drop plans for a vote on the
    measure.

    `Turkey obviously feels they are getting poked in the eye over
    something that happened a century ago and maybe this isn't a good time
    to be doing that,' said Representative Allen Boyd, a Florida Democrat
    who dropped his sponsorship of the resolution on Monday night.

    Others who took the same action said that, while they deplored the
    mass killings of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire, the modern-day
    consequences in the Middle East could not be overlooked.

    `We simply cannot allow the grievances of the past, as real as they
    may be, to in any way derail our efforts to prevent further atrocities
    for future history books,' said Representative Wally Herger,
    Republican of California.

    Representative Mike Ross, Democrat of Arkansas, said, `I think it is a
    good resolution and horrible timing.'

    The Turkish government has lobbied heavily against the resolution,
    which is nonbinding and largely symbolic. But lawmakers attributed
    the erosion in support mainly to fears about a potential Turkish
    decision to deny American access to critical military facilities in
    that nation and its threat to move forces into northern Iraq.

    `This vote came face to face with the reality on the ground in that
    region of the world,' said Representative Rahm Emanuel of Illinois,
    the chairman of the House Democratic Caucus and an opponent of the
    resolution.

    The Bush administration and top American generals have been vocal in
    warning that passage of the resolution could cause great harm to the
    American war effort in Iraq and have put significant pressure on
    Republicans to abandon their support for the measure. President Bush
    called Ms. Pelosi on Tuesday and asked her to prevent a floor vote.

    `The president and the speaker exchanged candid views on the subject
    and the speaker explained the strong bipartisan support in the House
    for the resolution,' said Brendan Daly, a spokesman for Ms. Pelosi.

    The Democratic leadership was examining the exact level of that
    support to gauge its next step, but lawmakers and officials said it
    was now unclear whether the resolution could be approved, given
    Republican resistance and Democratic defections. `We will have to
    determine where everyone is,' said Representative Steny H. Hoyer of
    Maryland, the majority leader.

    Ms. Pelosi, who has promised a vote on the resolution if it cleared
    the committee, said she was leaving it to its chief backers to round
    up votes. `I have never known a count,' she said.

    Backers of the resolution, which has the fervent support of the
    Armenian-American community, described the shift as slight and
    attributed it to the intense lobbying by the Turkish government, the
    administration and their allies. They said they would try to change
    the minds of some of those who were wavering.

    `This is what happens when you are up against a very sophisticated
    multimillion-dollar campaign,' said Representative Brad Sherman,
    Democrat of California, who chided the Turkish government. `Since when
    has it become fashionable for friends to threaten friends?'

    But he acknowledged there was little margin of error for backers of
    the resolution, which had once boasted 225 co-sponsors. `If the vote
    were held today, I would not want to bet my house on the outcome,' he
    said.

    Mr. Sherman and others noted that at the start of the war Turkey had
    refused to let American forces operate >From its territory and that
    its intentions toward the northern border of Iraq clearly captured the
    attention of Congress.

    American military officials in Iraq and in Washington said Tuesday
    they were concerned about possible Turkish military raids into
    northern Iraq against the Kurdish Workers Party, an ethnic separatist
    movement also known as the P.K.K.

    At the moment, they said, they did not see many indications that the
    Turkish military was preparing for a large-scale incursion into the
    insurgents' mountainous strongholds and expressed hope that diplomatic
    efforts under way between Iraqi and Turkish officials would ease the
    crisis, which was sparked by a wave of attacks in eastern Turkey that
    its government has blamed on the separatists.

    `We see no signs that there's anything imminent by Turkey,' said one
    senior military officer, speaking on condition of anonymity because he
    was discussing military contingency planning. `So there's time for the
    diplomacy to work for a few more days, if not weeks.' But, he added,
    the situation could get `ugly' if Turkey sent troops across the border
    and they clashed with Kurdish militias or Iraqi forces.

    The biggest fear, several former officials said, is that Turkish
    forces could push past the border and head for Kirkuk. Such a move
    could force Iraq to respond and the United States to mediate between
    two allies, and decide whether to intervene. Such a crisis could also
    draw in Iran, which has also had growing problems with Kurdish groups
    crossing into its territory from Iraq.

    In addition to the potential movement of Turkish forces, opponents of
    the resolution continued to point to Turkey's role as a staging area
    for moving American military supplies into Iraq.

    `This happened a long time ago and I don't know whether it was a
    massacre or a genocide, that is beside the point,' said Representative
    John P. Murtha, the Pennsylvania Democrat who is urging Ms. Pelosi to
    keep the resolution from the floor. `The point is, we have to deal
    with today's world.'

    While the resolution enjoyed more than enough support to pass earlier
    this year, about two dozen lawmakers have removed their names from the
    official list of sponsors in recent weeks as the vote grew more likely
    and the reservations grew more pronounced.

    `I think there was genocide in Turkey in 1915 but I am gravely
    concerned about the timing,' said Representative Jane Harman, a
    California Democrat. She said she would remain a co-sponsor of the
    resolution but at the moment would oppose it reached the floor.

    Representative Doug Lamborn, a Colorado Republican who dropped his
    backing on Tuesday, said: `Nothing changes the fact that mass killings
    and unspeakable acts of brutality occurred. However, passing this
    nonbinding resolution at this critical time would be a destabilizing
    action when the United States needs the help of its allies, including
    Turkey, in fighting the global war on terror.'

    David S. Cloud contributed reporting.
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