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  • Support Fading For Armenian Resolution

    SUPPORT FADING FOR ARMENIAN RESOLUTION

    RTT News, NY
    Oct 17 2007

    10/17/2007 7:44:44 AM A number of House Democrats have withdrawn
    their support for a resolution that would characterize the killings
    of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks during World
    War I as a genocide, due to concerns that the measure could strain
    U.S.-Turkish relations.

    Last week, the House Foreign Affairs Committee approved the
    controversial measure 27-21 amid lobbying by the Turkish government
    and even President Bush, who said the resolution could compromise
    American interests in the Middle East.

    "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 Rep. Allen Boyd, D-Fla.

    Although the Turks acknowledge that hundreds of thousands of Armenians
    died, they contend that the deaths were not a systemic massacre but
    resulted from the war that ended with the creation of Turkey in 1923.

    Opponents fear specifically that this resolution could compromise
    the U.S. military's access to Incirlik air base near the southern
    city of Adana, where goods pass through on their way to Iraq.

    "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 Rep. Wally Herger, R- Calif.

    Rep. Jack Murtha, a Pennsylvania Democrat and chairman of the House
    Defense Appropriations Committee, said the resolution "could harm
    our relations with Turkey and therefore our strategic interests in
    the region."

    Still, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California has promised that the
    resolution will move forward, resisting calls from the White House
    to jettison the measure.

    Similar resolutions were approved by the House in 1975 and 1984 but
    foundered in the Senate. In 2000, a similar resolution was headed
    to the House floor when the vote was abruptly called off by then
    House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, a Republican, at the urging of
    then-President Bill Clinton.

    "This issue has been around the Congress long before I got here
    and I got here 17 year ago," House Minority Leader John Boehner,
    R-Ohio, said.

    "There has been a lot of discussion about this issue, there has been
    a lot of lobbying about this issue, and there is no question that
    the Armenian people suffered tragically during that period, but this
    is something that historians ought to sort out and not members of
    Congress," he said.

    Nobel Peace Prize Winner Al Gore Rules Out Second Run At US Presidency
    []

    10/17/2007 6:23:35 AM Former US Vice President Al Gore said winning
    the Nobel Peace Prize had not enthused him for a second run at the
    2008 presidential race.

    Gore told Norwegian state broadcaster NRK in an interview broadcast
    Wednesday that sharing the award with the UN climate panel was a
    'great honor' but said he didn't any have plans to be a candidate
    again, so he doesn't really see it in that context at all.

    At a press conference last Friday in Palo Alto, California, Gore
    skirted the issue of a US presidential run, saying then that he wanted
    to "get back to business" on "a planetary emergency."

    Opinion polls indicated that winning the prize has not altered
    Gore's standing in the United States. The Gallup Poll revealed 48%
    of people said they wanted Gore to run for the presidency in 2008,
    with 43% against.
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