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Armenian Prime Minister Hopes For Passage Of U.S. Congressional Geno

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  • Armenian Prime Minister Hopes For Passage Of U.S. Congressional Geno

    ARMENIAN PRIME MINISTER HOPES FOR PASSAGE OF U.S. CONGRESSIONAL GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

    International Herald Tribune, France
    The Associated Press
    Oct 23 2007

    WASHINGTON: Armenia's prime minister said that he hopes that the
    U.S. Congress will pass a resolution declaring the World War I-era
    killings of Armenians a genocide, but that his country is not lobbying
    on the issue.

    Serge Sarkisian said that he has had other issues including economic
    and security cooperation to discuss with U.S. officials in meetings
    that began last week. He said that Armenia has tried to stay out of
    a U.S. political debate.

    Turkey has lobbied intensively against the resolution, while
    Armenian-American groups have pressed for its passage.

    The resolution did not come up in talks last week with U.S. officials
    including Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Robert
    Gates or in a meeting with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid,
    Sarkisian said. After a meeting with Secretary of State Condoleezza
    Rice on Tuesday, the State Department said that the two had discussed a
    joint economic task force aimed in part at monitoring economic reform
    in Armenia.

    Sarkisian said that he believes that the resolution is being held up in
    Congress because of Turkish pressure not because there is disagreement
    in the House of Representatives over whether a genocide took place.

    "So there is nothing to discuss," he said in an interview at the
    Armenian embassy. "We are convinced that the genocide occurred and
    that the sooner the Turks admit this, the better for both the Armenians
    and the Turks."

    Sarkisian's trip comes at a time that relations between Washington
    and Ankara have reached a recent low, as Turkey has protested the
    congressional foray into a sensitive historical matter.

    At issue is the killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks around the time of World War I, which many genocide scholars
    consider the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey denies that the
    deaths constituted genocide, contending the toll has been inflated,
    and those killed were victims of civil war and unrest that killed
    Muslims as well as the overwhelmingly Christian Armenians.

    The resolution was approved by a House committee earlier this month,
    but appears stalled by an erosion of support. Some lawmakers have
    removed their names from the sponsorship of the measure amid concern
    that Turkey could retaliate by cutting off important supply routes
    to Iraq or by withdrawing lucrative business deals.

    Turkey has also said that passage of the resolution would undermine
    hopes of improving relations with Armenia. Turkey closed its border
    with Armenia in 1993 during a war between Armenia and Azerbaijan,
    a Muslim ally of Ankara. The countries currently have no diplomatic
    relations.

    "I don't understand what the Turks are saying," Sarkisian said. "We
    have no relations now. We cannot harm something that is non existent."

    But Sarkisian said that resolving the historical dispute over the
    killings of Armenians should not hold up efforts to restore relations.

    "It is not a precondition for re-establishing relations between the
    two states," he said.

    He said that he expected to discuss with Rice efforts to resolve the
    conflict with Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. The area
    been controlled by Armenian and ethnic Armenian forces since a shaky
    1994 cease-fire ended one of the bloodiest conflicts that followed
    the collapse of the Soviet Union.
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