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  • Wrong time for a resolution on century-old genocide

    Youngstown Vindicator, OHIO
    Oct 18-24 2007


    Wrong time for a resolution on century-old genocide


    In a perfect world, there would be no genocide. In a less perfect
    world, at least people would be able to recognize genocide for what
    it was.

    Alas, we live in a far-from-perfect world. And because we do, it
    would be foolhardy, perhaps even reckless, for the United States
    Congress to pass a resolution that would label as genocide the
    killing of Armenians nearly a century ago by Ottoman Turks.

    It appears that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is coming to see that
    support for the resolution is evaporating. "Whether it will come up
    or not, or what the action will be, remains to be seen," Pelosi told
    reporters.

    This is not a particularly proud moment for Congress. Certainly
    members of Congress should be able to debate the merits of this
    resolution, or any other, and vote their conscience on it - in a
    nearly perfect world.

    Safety issue

    But Congress, sitting safely in Washington, far from the battlefield,
    does not have the luxury of taking the moral high ground on this
    issue if its doing so makes it more difficult for American troops to
    do the job they've been given in Iraq.

    Turkey quite literally holds the key to resupplying and protecting
    our troops in Iraq. About 70 percent of U.S. military cargo flowing
    into Iraq goes through Incirlik Air Base in Turkey. Turkey has made
    it clear that those shipments will be blocked if the resolution were
    to pass.

    The resolution states that "the Armenian genocide was conceived and
    carried out by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923." An estimated
    1.5 million Armenians died, the resolution states, while 500,000 were
    expelled, resulting in "the elimination of the over 2,500-year
    presence of Armenians in their historic homeland."

    Turkey claims that the death toll has been inflated and that those
    who died did so as a result of civil unrest, not genocide.

    Political reality

    The merits of these two points of view have been debated for decades
    and from time to time have driven congressional politics. The
    Associated Press reported that Democrat Adam B. Schiff, whose
    Southern California district contains one of the nation's largest
    ethnic Armenian populations, won his seat in 2000 after then-House
    Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., pulled an Armenia genocide bill
    from the House floor, dooming the re-election chances of Schiff's
    Republican predecessor. Schiff is a co-author of this year's
    resolution.

    But there are worse things for a congressman to have to do than
    explain to a powerful constituency why he wasn't able to deliver on a
    political promise. It's more important in this case to deliver
    materiel to the troops than promises to the voters.

    In letting this resolution die, Congress can take comfort in knowing
    that all eight living former secretaries of state and three former
    defense secretaries are on record as saying the resolution would
    endanger national security in the Middle East.

    If Armenian lives were being lost today, it would be a different
    question. But this is an issue that has been debated for ages, and
    that debate can be picked up again on another day - when vital
    American interests are not so clearly at stake.

    Friday, October 19, 2007
    Wrong time for a resolution on century-old genocide

    In a perfect world, there would be no genocide. In a less perfect
    world, at least people would be able to recognize genocide for what
    it was.

    Alas, we live in a far-from-perfect world. And because we do, it
    would be foolhardy, perhaps even reckless, for the United States
    Congress to pass a resolution that would label as genocide the
    killing of Armenians nearly a century ago by Ottoman Turks.

    It appears that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is coming to see that
    support for the resolution is evaporating. "Whether it will come up
    or not, or what the action will be, remains to be seen," Pelosi told
    reporters.

    This is not a particularly proud moment for Congress. Certainly
    members of Congress should be able to debate the merits of this
    resolution, or any other, and vote their conscience on it - in a
    nearly perfect world.

    Safety issue

    But Congress, sitting safely in Washington, far from the battlefield,
    does not have the luxury of taking the moral high ground on this
    issue if its doing so makes it more difficult for American troops to
    do the job they've been given in Iraq.

    Turkey quite literally holds the key to resupplying and protecting
    our troops in Iraq. About 70 percent of U.S. military cargo flowing
    into Iraq goes through Incirlik Air Base in Turkey. Turkey has made
    it clear that those shipments will be blocked if the resolution were
    to pass.

    The resolution states that "the Armenian genocide was conceived and
    carried out by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923." An estimated
    1.5 million Armenians died, the resolution states, while 500,000 were
    expelled, resulting in "the elimination of the over 2,500-year
    presence of Armenians in their historic homeland."

    Turkey claims that the death toll has been inflated and that those
    who died did so as a result of civil unrest, not genocide.

    Political reality

    The merits of these two points of view have been debated for decades
    and from time to time have driven congressional politics. The
    Associated Press reported that Democrat Adam B. Schiff, whose
    Southern California district contains one of the nation's largest
    ethnic Armenian populations, won his seat in 2000 after then-House
    Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., pulled an Armenia genocide bill
    from the House floor, dooming the re-election chances of Schiff's
    Republican predecessor. Schiff is a co-author of this year's
    resolution.

    But there are worse things for a congressman to have to do than
    explain to a powerful constituency why he wasn't able to deliver on a
    political promise. It's more important in this case to deliver
    materiel to the troops than promises to the voters.

    In letting this resolution die, Congress can take comfort in knowing
    that all eight living former secretaries of state and three former
    defense secretaries are on record as saying the resolution would
    endanger national security in the Middle East.

    If Armenian lives were being lost today, it would be a different
    question. But this is an issue that has been debated for ages, and
    that debate can be picked up again on another day - when vital
    American interests are not so clearly at stake.

    http://www.vindy.com/content/entertainment/poker /297243910079776.php
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