Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Genocide Issue Trips Politicians Again

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian Genocide Issue Trips Politicians Again

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ISSUE TRIPS POLITICIANS AGAIN
    By Michael Doyle
    McClatchy Newspapers

    Kansas City Star, MO
    Oct 28 2007

    Pelosi WASHINGTON | Armenian genocide resolutions such as the one that
    collapsed last week confound congressional leaders and presidential
    candidates alike.

    Promises come easily and are politically alluring. Delivery is
    difficult, as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat,
    now has learned the hard way. Failure brings second-guessing and no
    guarantee of when the resolution might return.

    "We'll continue to stay focused on this," said Rep. Jim Costa,
    a California Democrat who is a member of the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee. "We'll await our time."

    The resolution declares that "the Armenian genocide was conceived and
    carried out by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923" and "1,500,000
    men, women and children were killed."

    Turkish officials say the resolution twists history, and they spent
    $300,000 a month lobbying against it. Bush administration officials
    say the resolution undermines relations with a country that borders
    Iraq and Iran.

    Late Thursday, resolution supporters asked Pelosi to put it off until
    a "more favorable" time. Translated: They lack the votes. Publicly,
    supporters say they can still win before the 110th Congress ends
    next year.

    "We're going to be working this really hard," Rep. Adam Schiff, a
    California Democrat, said Friday. "When we bring it up, we want to
    be absolutely confident we have the votes."

    Skeptics - some of them resolution co-sponsors - are doubtful. One,
    Rep. Devin Nunes, a California Republican, said Friday that there was
    "zero" chance of reviving the measure next year.

    "Democrats aren't going to bring it up," Nunes said. "They've got
    shaky feet."

    Nunes speculated that the letter sent by Schiff and others to Pelosi
    late Thursday afternoon amounted to political cover, a concession of
    defeat also designed to shield the Democratic leader from criticism
    about letting the bill die.

    Undeniably, the genocide resolution puts lawmakers in a bind, and
    Pelosi wasn't the first leader to get entangled in it.

    As candidates, George W. Bush and his father, George H.W. Bush,
    endorsed the Armenian genocide characterization. They did so in
    statements to Armenian-American voters, who are a political force in
    certain regions.

    As presidents, both subsequently repudiated the term "genocide."

    Neither used it in annual commemorations of the 1915-23 Ottoman
    Empire horrors.

    http://www.kansascity.com/news/politics/ story/336223.html
Working...
X