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  • Patience Required

    PATIENCE REQUIRED

    Winston-Salem Journal, NC
    Oct 18 2007

    Winston-Salem Journal

    There are good reasons that the Founding Fathers gave control of
    foreign diplomacy to the executive branch, not the legislative. The
    situation regarding a U.S. House resolution condemning Turkey for
    "genocide" against the Armenian people in 1915 is an example of one
    of those good reasons.

    Diplomacy is a gentle art, one not always deftly performed by the
    current administration. In officially branding the deaths of 1.5
    million Armenians during World War I as genocide, however, a House
    committee has landed at a delicate spot with all of the grace of
    an elephant.

    This matter requires gentle, patient hands. Turkey is sensitive on
    this issue and makes it a crime to openly describe the 1915 events
    as genocide. But the country is slowly moving toward openness on
    the matter. A commission is in place to study it, and long-sealed
    records have been opened, The New York Times reports. Turkish reform
    advocates now fear that the House action has excited Turkish passions
    to the point where Turkey will retreat from these advances.

    The United States should be doing nothing to disturb the gradual
    opening of Turkish society. The administration was letting the Turks
    handle this on their own. Now, the House committee has injected itself
    and confronted all representatives with a difficult dilemma:

    They can support the resolution, label as genocide what was a horrible
    slaughter of innocent people, and both anger our allies in Turkey
    and put our troops in Iraq at risk. Or they can reject that label -
    either through a floor vote or by letting the measure die quietly -
    and make it appear that the United States is callous to the deaths.

    The third and most sensible option, quietly working with Turkey to
    open its society to a full discussion of these deaths, has been taken
    off the table, at least temporarily.

    In the wake of the administration's appeals to common sense, a good
    many House members have withdrawn support for the measure, and it
    may never come to a floor vote. That's the least distasteful option
    available right now.

    This episode should teach us a lesson: Congress has a role in
    overseeing foreign diplomacy, not in conducting it.
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