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House playing with fire in Turkish resolution

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  • House playing with fire in Turkish resolution

    The Patriot-News - PennLive.com, PA
    Oct 19 2007



    House playing with fire in Turkish resolution that could jeopardize
    American troops in Iraq

    Friday, October 19, 2007


    There's little question that in the waning days of the Ottoman
    Empire, Ottoman Turks slaughtered Armenian refugees in mass numbers
    in one of history's great outrages.

    But 92 years later, with the killers likely all dead, what would be
    the point of a resolution from the U.S. House of Representatives
    condemning the slaughter as "genocide"?

    One effect of such a resolution already has been to aggravate
    officials in the Republic of Turkey, one of America's few longtime
    Middle Eastern allies.

    Another might be to motivate the Turks to invade northern Iraq -- the
    most stable part of that war-torn country -- to quell the Kurdish
    rebellion along its border that has taken thousands of Turkish lives
    over the last few decades. Turkey's parliament on Wednesday
    authorized such action.

    The congressional resolution to condemn Turkey for this long-ago
    outrage is a clear threat to U.S. foreign policy, as well as to our
    fighting men and women, who are dependent on supplies that flow
    through Turkey, including 70 percent of all U.S. air cargo headed for
    Iraq.

    This is in no way intended to downplay the enormity of the crime
    against the Armenians in 1915. But surely those who seek to
    officially condemn it understand that this proposed resolution could
    imperil the U.S. war effort in Iraq, thus putting Americans' lives in
    greater jeopardy.

    Out here in the hinterlands, where even opponents of the war are
    concerned for the safety of our forces in Iraq, this resolution looks
    like more than simple appeasement of a constituency. This looks very
    much like a side-door effort to force the administration's hand on
    withdrawing troops from Iraq.

    Wisely, several influential Democrats, including Pennsylvania's Rep.
    John Murtha of Johnstown, have abandoned support for this resolution
    and are urging that it be put on the shelf. These Democrats, at
    least, understand that playing with fire -- and, realistically, the
    lives of U.S. troops in Iraq -- would be likely to earn their party a
    political reward far different, and far less agreeable, than the one
    they seek.


    http://www.pennlive.com/editorials/patriotnews/ index.ssf?/base/opinion/1192744511223610.xml&c oll=1

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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