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Armenian Resolution Support Is Eroding

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  • Armenian Resolution Support Is Eroding

    ARMENIAN RESOLUTION SUPPORT IS ERODING
    By Michael Doyle

    Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX
    McClatchy Newspapers
    Oct 17 2007

    WASHINGTON -- Rep. Wally Herger supported an Armenian genocide
    resolution until Monday. Then he changed his mind.

    The California Republican isn't alone. Amid intense lobbying, 17 House
    members have withdrawn their support for the genocide resolution
    approved last week by a key House committee. The flips are coming
    faster, with seven lawmakers withdrawing their support Monday, and
    it could put the resolution at risk.

    "All of a sudden this is heating up," Herger said Tuesday, "and so
    you start to wonder, is this a wise thing to be doing now?"

    The formal number of genocide resolution co-sponsors has dropped to
    218, potentially a slim majority in a House with 432 voting members and
    three vacancies. More lawmakers could switch positions in coming days.

    "I suspect there will be others," said Rep. Allen Boyd, a Florida
    Democrat who withdrew his support Monday.

    The resolution approved last Wednesday by the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee declares that "the Armenian genocide was conceived and
    carried out by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923." The nonbinding
    resolution further avers that "1,500,000 men, women, and children
    were killed."

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi hasn't yet scheduled a floor vote, although
    she says she will.

    President Bush called Pelosi on Tuesday to ask her not to call for
    a House vote on the resolution.

    "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," Pelosi spokesman Nadeam Elshami said.

    But even the 218 co-sponsors may overstate support for the
    resolution. One co-sponsor still listed Tuesday died in April. One
    is a Puerto Rico delegate whose vote won't count if it affects the
    final outcome.

    The resolution is symbolic, needing neither Senate approval nor the
    president's signature. Nonetheless, it has ignited a diplomatic crisis.

    The Turkish government considers the resolution a historically
    inaccurate insult, contending that "hundreds of thousands" of Turks
    and Armenians died in a complicated war. To protest the House committee
    action, Turkey temporarily withdrew its ambassador to the U.S.

    The government of Turkey has reported paying $300,000 a month for
    lobbyists.

    Pentagon officials warn that deteriorating relations could undermine
    the U.S. occupation of Iraq, which depends heavily on Incirlik Air
    Base in Turkey for supplies.

    Boyd said he signed up to back the resolution June 28, before the
    international controversy escalated. Last week, during a visit to
    Baghdad, he was swayed by Gen. David Petraeus, commander of U.S. forces
    in Iraq.

    "He was pretty adamant that the resolution would harm our interests
    in the Middle East," Boyd said.

    The lawmakers withdrawing support come from both parties.

    None come from regions with large Armenian-American constituencies.

    This report includes material from The Associated Press.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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