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Armenian Genocide Bill Falters In House

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  • Armenian Genocide Bill Falters In House

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL FALTERS IN HOUSE
    Larry Lipman, Cox News Service

    News & Observer, NC
    Oct 18 2007

    WASHINGTON - House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Wednesday that a vote on
    a resolution labeling the World War I-era deaths of about 1.5 million
    Armenians as genocide was in doubt after key Democrats said it would
    harm U.S. relations with Turkey.

    "Whether it will come up or not, or what the action will be, remains
    to be seen," Pelosi, D-Calif., told reporters.

    The speaker made her comments after a news conference organized
    by Rep. Alcee Hastings of Florida, who serves as chairman of the
    Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe.

    "If this resolution is enacted, our relationship with Turkey, a key
    NATO ally, will be severely jeopardized," Hastings said.

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee voted 27-21 this month for the
    resolution. It has been offered repeatedly over the past two decades
    but this year has the strong support of Pelosi.

    Since the committee's vote, Turkey has recalled its ambassador to
    the United States and warned that passage of the resolution by the
    full House would damage relations at a time when the United States
    is highly dependent on Turkey's cooperation in fighting the Iraq war.

    President Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, eight of her
    predecessors and three former secretaries of defense have also urged
    Pelosi not to move forward with the resolution.

    Turkey's geopolitical value

    At the news conference, Hastings noted that more than half of the
    supplies for U.S. troops in Iran and Afghanistan move through air
    bases in Turkey and could be jeopardized by the resolution.

    "Turkey is a moderate, Muslim nation with a secular democracy, and it
    is geographically straddling the bridge between East and West at a time
    of great turmoil and uncertainty for countries in the region," he said.

    Rep. Robert Wexler, D-Fla., the co-chairman of the Congressional
    Turkey Caucus, said, "What we are asking is our own leadership to do
    what is right for the American national and strategic interest."

    "This is an extremely difficult issue," Wexler said. "All of us feel
    extraordinary sympathy with the plight and the catastrophic death
    that the Armenian community suffered in the World War I period, but
    our responsibility -- the bottom line -- is to do what is right for
    our national security and to take care of the security and well-being
    of our troops."

    It is widely accepted that as many as 1.5 million Armenians were
    killed over several years beginning in 1915.

    But Turkey argues that the number was closer to 600,000 and blames
    turmoil and civil war as its predecessor, the Ottoman Empire,
    collapsed.

    Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., a close Pelosi ally in the House, said he
    has been fighting similar resolutions regarding the Armenian massacres
    since 1987.

    "This happened 100 years ago," Murtha said. "We have to deal with
    today's world. We need allies if we are going to win this [Iraq]
    war, and this is not a way to help us in an area where we have very
    few allies."

    http://www.newsobserver.com/politic s/story/740736.html
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