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Turkey Lobbies US On Armenian Genocide

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  • Turkey Lobbies US On Armenian Genocide

    TURKEY LOBBIES US ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Sami Kohen, Ankara

    Jewish Chronicle , UK
    Oct 19 2007

    The Jewish community of Turkey is actively campaigning to block a
    US House of Representatives a draft resolution labelling the mass
    Ottoman-era killings of Armenians as "genocide".

    Turkey has threatened to take action that would seriously damage
    US-Turkish relations if the resolution was to pass. The Bush
    administration has also striven to dissuade Congress from approving
    the draft.

    Despite all these efforts, the House Foreign Affairs Committee voted
    through the resolution last week. The draft goes now to the House
    floor, where it is likely to be passed unless lobbyists succeed in
    blocking it.

    The controversy relates to the killing of 1.5 million Armenians
    between 1915 and 1922. Turkey insists that both Armenians and Turks
    died in the context of ethnic conflict.

    Ankara has asked Israel and US Jewish organisations for support,
    and last month Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan met Jewish leaders and
    lobbyists in New York to get their backing.

    Turkish Jews, uneasy about the consequences that the bill might have
    on attitudes towards them, have contacted US Jewish groups and placed
    advertisements in the media.

    "We have been trying to convince congressmen that it is not right nor
    wise to pass such a resolution," said Lina Filiba, vice-president of
    the Jewish community. "We have been in close touch with the ADL and
    other Jewish organisations. We hope that, at the end of the day, the
    resolution will not be passed. It is hard to predict the implications
    and effects if the House passes the resolution, but it may create
    problems for everybody."

    Levent Bilman, a Foreign Ministry spokesman, said: "We highly
    appreciate all these efforts.

    "The leaders, businessmen and associations of the Jewish community in
    Turkey - being an integral part of our society - have been active to
    prevent the passage of the resolution. They have been holding meetings
    with the relevant people abroad and publishing letters and statements
    in the media."

    However, Jewish bodies in the US are divided on the issue.

    In August, the ADL faced a split when a regional director was fired
    because of his campaign to support the Armenian case. An uneasy
    compromise was finally reached when Abraham Foxman, the national
    director, stated the ADL accepted the genocide label but rejected
    the congressional action.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan last week met President Shimon
    Peres in Israel, after which Mr Peres reportedly urged leading
    congressmen to consider the ill effects the resolution would have on
    Turkey's relations with the US.

    "We oppose the controversial resolution not only because of our
    friendship with Turkey but also as a matter of principle," said
    Israeli ambassador Gaby Levy. "It is for historians and not for
    parliamentarians to investigate [genocide]."

    However, he added: "Israel cannot be held responsible if the resolution
    is passed. This is the decision of the US Congress and not of Israel or
    the Jews. Our relations should not be affected by such a resolution."

    http://www.thejc.com/home.aspx? ParentId=m11s19&SecId=19&AId=56125&ATy peId=1
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