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Cahir: Condemning Turkey Isn't A Wise Idea

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  • Cahir: Condemning Turkey Isn't A Wise Idea

    CAHIR: CONDEMNING TURKEY ISN'T A WISE IDEA
    Bill Cahir

    Penn Live
    http://www.pennlive.com/news/expresstimes/ind ex.ssf?/base/columns-0/1193115532106480.xml&co ll=2
    Oct 23 2007

    U.S. Rep. Charlie Dent ranks among House officials questioning the
    judgment of Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the California Democrat who said she
    was going to allow the full House to vote on a resolution condemning
    the Armenian genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Turks between 1915
    and 1923.

    But blaming Pelosi may be a bit too coy.

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee earlier this month approved the
    genocide resolution, 27-21. The measure would urge President Bush to
    ensure U.S. foreign policy acknowledges the ethnic cleansing campaign
    that claimed the lives of roughly 1.5 million Armenians and resulted
    in the deportation of 500,000 more.

    Locally, Dent and U.S. Rep. Jim Gerlach in Pennsylvania, along with
    U.S. Reps. Mike Ferguson and Rush Holt in New Jersey, have signed on
    as co-sponsors of the House measure, H. Res. 106.

    With Turkish troops and Kurdish rebels nearing a state of war, Dent
    says he does not want to see the bipartisan measure brought to the
    House floor.

    "I support the intent of the resolution on Armenia, because I think
    it's important to recognize that there were terrible atrocities
    committed against the Armenian people," Dent said. "But Speaker
    Pelosi's timing on this legislation is simply terrible, and for a
    few reasons.

    "First, Turkey is a major ally in the war against violent extremism,"
    Dent said. "Second, Turkey has provided tremendous logistical support
    for U.S. operations in the Middle East. And third, Turkey has a problem
    with P.K.K. incursions in northern Iraq, and we do not want the Turks
    invading the region and creating instability."

    The Kurdistan Workers Party, or P.K.K., has killed 40 Turkish
    soldiers in recent weeks. The P.K.K. has killed several thousand
    Turkish security personnel and civilians in a conflict dating back
    more than 20 years.

    Kurdish terrorists took eight Turkish soldiers captive in a raid they
    launched Sunday. Responding to public outrage, the Turkish Parliament
    before Sunday's provocation already had authorized military strikes
    against Kurdish insurgents in Iraq.

    "Political realities dictate that I have to be more concerned right
    now with the events of 2007, as opposed to the horrible circumstances
    that occurred in 1915," Dent said.

    But House officials are a bit late coming to that discovery. The Oct.

    10 vote in the Foreign Affairs Committee, along with the provocative
    behavior of Kurdish militants, has thrown a series of sparks into a
    powder-keg region rife with ethnic and religious tension.

    Kurdish separatists who favor independence -- who seek the creation
    of a Kurdish state that would carve oil-rich Kirkuk from northeastern
    Iraq and other lands from northwestern Iran and southeastern Turkey --
    have their own reasons for favoring a broad regional war.

    Members of the U.S. Congress have little or no justification
    for promoting such a conflict, which would open up the bloodiest
    front yet in the Iraq war and perpetuate the need for large-scale
    U.S. deployments inside that country.

    Turkey is a democratic ally in southwestern Asia and a member of
    NATO. The United States is bound by treaty to defend Turkey if it
    were attacked by a foreign power. Turkey is home to Incirlik Air Base,
    the most important U.S. air installation in the region.

    A sensible House might pass a resolution thanking Turkey for its
    support in the war on terrorism. But is a sensible Congress what we
    have today?

    Bill Cahir covers New Jersey and Pennsylvania issues in Washington,
    D.C., for The Express-Times.
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