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Armenian Paper Downplays Postponement Of US Genocide Vote

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  • Armenian Paper Downplays Postponement Of US Genocide Vote

    ARMENIAN PAPER DOWNPLAYS POSTPONEMENT OF US GENOCIDE VOTE

    Hayots Ashkharh Daily
    Oct 19 2007
    Armenia

    An Armenian newspaper has cautioned the public against dramatizing the
    obvious postponement of a vote in the full US House of Representatives
    on a draft resolution recognizing mass killings of Armenians in the
    Ottoman empire as genocide. The paper explained the postponement by
    the present state of US-Turkish relations where both sides are trying
    to reach a compromise in the context of a looming Turkish invasion of
    northern Iraq. The paper proposed waiting for an opportune time where
    the passage of the genocide resolution could be guaranteed in the US
    legislature. It also highlighted the long-term interests of parties
    involved in securing the ultimate approval of the resolution. The
    following is the text of an article by Vardan Grigoryan entitled "The
    vote postponement won't be a tragedy" and published in the Armenian
    newspaper Hayots Ashkharh on 19 October:

    The results of discussions between the US legislative and executive
    authorities in recent days suggest that the final approval of
    resolution 106 on the recognition of Armenian genocide in the US
    House of Representatives could be postponed for a while.

    In our previous analyses we predicted the possibility of such
    developments and concluded that the moment of the resolution's final
    approval should absolutely coincide with the developments in Iraq and,
    as a result of this, with the crisis period in worsening Turkey-US
    relations. It was clear from the beginning that by the vote in the
    Foreign Relations Committee [of the US House of Representatives]
    US legislators in fact did not satisfy the demands of the Armenian
    lobby, but took a preventive measure to restrain Turkey, which has
    amassed an army on Iraqi borders.

    About a half-month break has been currently announced in the Turkey-US
    confrontation over northern Iraq. It is natural that under these
    conditions none of the sides will take steps that would aggravate the
    situation. Thus, it is not by chance that the number of those who are
    in favour of the soonest vote on resolution 106 on the recognition
    of Armenian genocide in the House of Representatives, is decreasing.

    Does it mean that we should remain as euphoric we were as right after
    10 October [the vote in the congressional committee] - waiting for
    the victory of the Armenian lobby, or on the opposite - claim that
    the Foreign Relations Committee's approval of resolution 106 on the
    recognition of Armenian genocide does not benefit us in any way and
    that the US legislature has cheated the Armenian people yet again?

    We believe that these two points of view circulating among us
    currently are limited and clearly biased. This could either inspire
    or dash the hopes of only those who believed up to the present time
    that the reason for our success is Armenians' being a serious factor
    in global politics, and those who cannot abandon this point of view,
    or on the contrary those who absolutely deny the inevitable positive
    outcome of the approval of resolution 106.

    Instead of being guided by these superficial and clearly politicized
    assessments, it is necessary to precisely calculate the convenient
    moment when it will be possible to achieve the approval of resolution
    106 in the US House of Representatives. It is clear that the crisis in
    US-Turkey relations has objective reasons, which will not disappear
    even if the [Turkish] Prime Minister [Recep Tayyip] Erdogan visits
    US 100 times. In its turn, the demonstration of Ankara's frank wish
    to move troops into northern Iraq is surely related not only to the
    intention to destroy PKK [Kurdistan Workers' Party] fighters.

    Thus, the problem is whether Turkey, which is threatening a military
    invasion, will manage to postpone the implementation of Iraq's
    federalization programme, already approved by the US Senate, and if
    yes, by what time? On the other hand, will the US, via creating a real
    threat of recognition of Armenian genocide, will manage to gradually
    accommodate the stubborn Turkey to the idea of implementating Iraq's
    federalization programme and as its outcome the prospect of the
    establishment of an independent Kurdish state.

    Temporary "ceasefires" are possible in Turkey-US relations in the
    nearest future, but they will inevitably be followed by a deeper
    crisis. Thus, from the point of view of the super task of ensuring
    the recognition of Armenian genocide there is no need today to be
    discontent or impatient. On the contrary - resolution 106 must be put
    to the vote when 100 per cent support is ensured for its approval in
    the House of Representatives.

    It is clear that the forces which ensured the approval of
    resolution 106 on the recognition of Armenian genocide in Foreign
    Relations Committee of US House of Representatives - primarily, the
    Democratic Party - currently are somewhat cautious to take dramatic
    steps. They could benefit from the game started against the current
    administration. The US Jewish lobby and Israel, which are using it
    to lead things towards the establishment of a Kurdish state, have
    also found themselves in a beneficial situation. Thus, both of them
    need time to ensure a smooth change in US policy and implement the
    expected referendum on the issue of Kirkuk's status.

    Afterwards, when the inevitable new crisis of the US policy in Iraq
    takes place on one side and in Turkish-US relations on the other
    side, it will not be difficult for the Armenian side to again ensure a
    prevailing majority in House of Representatives for the final approval
    of resolution 106.
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