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Current humanitarian disasters should take priority over resolution

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  • Current humanitarian disasters should take priority over resolution

    South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale)
    October 18, 2007 Thursday



    EDITORIAL: Current humanitarian disasters should take priority over
    Armenian genocide resolution



    Oct. 18--ISSUE: House Committee passes genocide declaration.

    By any reasonable person's definition, what the Ottoman Empire
    practiced during World War I against its Armenian minority was
    genocide. The nations of the world have long acknowledged the
    ruthless massacre in the second decade of the 20th Century, a century
    marked by widespread massacres on numerous continents.

    Now, the U.S. House Foreign Relations Committee has voted to
    officially declare the 1915 attack as genocide. The resolution
    gratifies the Armenian-American community, which has justifiably
    sought such a designation for decades. Well-meaning as it may be,
    however, the resolution would deeply offend Turkey, one of America's
    strongest allies in the Middle East.

    Fortunately, a number of House members are rethinking their original
    positions in favor of the measure, possibly forcing House Speaker
    Nancy Pelosi to table it.

    Proponents of the resolution rightly believe that the way to prevent
    future holocausts is to acknowledge and condemn those that have
    occurred in the past. Nonetheless, the unfortunate fact is that this
    country is currently embroiled in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The
    cooperation of Turkey is essential for the logistics of prosecuting
    those wars.

    U.S. Rep. Robert Wexler, D-Delray Beach, a member of the House
    Foreign Relations Committee, has taken the pragmatic step of voting
    against the measure, a position supported by the White House, to the
    dismay of many of his constituents. He has chosen to focus on the
    broader picture of our nation's present needs, rather than the narrow
    issue of redressing the inhumanities of a near-century ago, however
    worthy that goal might be.

    A better way to make a meaningful statement is for Americans to
    dedicate their efforts to heading off and mitigating unfolding
    humanitarian disasters, like those in Darfur and Myanmar.

    Yes, the world must know how the Armenian people suffered. The best
    way to honor them, however, is to prevent more massacres, and to do
    so in their name.

    BOTTOM LINE: Now is not the time for a genocide measure.
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