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Sponsors of genocide res. fear failure, ask leader to delay vote

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  • Sponsors of genocide res. fear failure, ask leader to delay vote

    International Herald Tribune

    House sponsors of Armenian genocide resolution fear failure and ask
    leader to delay vote

    The Associated Press

    Thursday, October 25, 2007

    WASHINGTON: U.S. lawmakers sponsoring a resolution that would label as
    genocide the mass killings near the end of World War I of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks have asked the leader of the House to delay a vote on
    the measure because they feared it would fail.

    Support for the resolution deteriorated this month, after Turkey
    recalled its U.S. ambassador in protest and several lawmakers said
    they feared it would cripple U.S.-Turkey relations.

    "We believe that a large majority of our colleagues want to support a
    resolution recognizing the genocide on the House floor and they will
    do so, provided the timing is more favorable," the lawmakers told the
    House leader, Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a letter on Wednesday.

    The letter was signed by four primary sponsors, all Democrats.

    The group said they would continue to work with leadership "to plan
    for consideration sometime later this year, or in 2008."

    The resolution had inflamed U.S. tensions with Turkey, which says the
    death toll has been inflated and was the result of civil unrest, not
    genocide. A member of NATO, Turkey is considered a rare Muslim ally to
    the United States in its war on terrorism. A U.S.-run air base there
    has facilitated the flow of most cargo to American troops fighting in
    Iraq and Afghanistan.

    The nonbinding measure, approved this month by the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee, also came at a sensitive time. In recent weeks, the
    U.S. has called for Turkey's restraint in dealing with attacks by
    Kurdish fighters in northern Iraq.

    The House resolution "would really damage our relations with a
    Democratic ally who is playing an extremely important strategic role
    in supporting our troops," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told a
    House panel on Thursday.

    Turkey denies the deaths of as many as 1.5 million Armenians
    constituted genocide. It says the toll has been inflated, and those
    killed were victims of civil war and unrest as the Ottoman Empire fell
    into disarray. Many genocide scholars consider the Armenians' deaths
    the first genocide of the 20th century.

    Other critics include many Democrats, including Rep. John Murtha, who
    chairs the subcommittee on military spending. Last week, Murtha, a
    Democrat, said leadership had miscalculated support for the resolution
    and predicted it would fail easily.

    On Thursday, Schiff agreed the votes were not there.

    "I think the Turkish lobby has regrettably earned their money," he
    said in an interview. "I think they were successful in a campaign that
    was persuasion and coercion. Unfortunately it was aided and abetted by
    our own State Department."

    Schiff, who has many Armenian-Americans in his California district,
    said it is hard to say when he will try again.

    "We want to make sure that when the measure is brought to the floor
    we're confident the votes are there," he said. "I think the worse
    thing would be that you take it up and you're not successful, and
    Turkey argues that it's a denial of the genocide."

    A spokesman for Pelosi said the speaker "respects the judgment" of the
    lawmakers.

    Republican Leader John Boehner, who opposes the resolution, called the
    debate a "debacle" by Democratic leaders.

    "This entire situation calls their judgment into question," Boehner said.

    Source: http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/10/25/america/ NA-GEN-US-Armenian-Genocide.php
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