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Armenian Genocide: The Lobbying Behind The Congressional Resolution

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  • Armenian Genocide: The Lobbying Behind The Congressional Resolution

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE: THE LOBBYING BEHIND THE CONGRESSIONAL RESOLUTION
    Guy Taylor

    World Politics Review
    Oct 30 2007

    WASHINGTON -- Much of the controversy surrounding a congressional
    committee's approval of a resolution condemning as genocide the
    massacre of Armenians during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire
    has focused on the action's geopolitical ramifications. But a key
    question remains unanswered: How did the world's most powerful body
    of lawmakers come to feel compelled to register a position on an
    event that happened almost a century ago?

    By some accounts, the answer is simple: lobbying. Others, however,
    contend that the power of the Armenian lobby in the United States has
    been exaggerated and that the genocide resolution has gotten traction
    in Congress on moral grounds alone.

    While Armenian genocide resolutions have been considered at the
    committee level in Congress for decades, the passage of the latest
    one by a 27-21 vote Oct. 10 made international headlines when House
    Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) vowed to push it to a full House
    vote. Congressional support for the measure appears to have waned
    during the weeks since, however, as Turkey, angered by the resolution,
    threatens to launch military operations in Northern Iraq against
    Kurdish Workers Party militants.

    Is the Armenian lobby in the United States so powerful that it
    convinced a group of elected U.S. officials to embrace its policy
    despite the immediately negative impact it could have on U.S. interests
    in the Middle East?

    Many astute Washington observers claim that, animated by the genocide
    issue for decades, the Armenian lobby has developed into one of the
    most formidable foreign lobbies in the United States. For example,
    Zbigniew Brzezinski, Jimmy Carter's national security advisor, in a
    Foreign Affairs article about foreign lobbying of the U.S. government,
    rated "the Israeli-American, Cuban-American, and Armenian-American
    lobbies as the most effective in their assertiveness."

    However, influential Armenian-Americans assert that Congress has
    taken up the issue because of morality, not lobbying. "There's a myth
    that the Armenian lobby is so strong," says Michael O'Hurley-Pitts,
    a prominent Armenian-American author who serves as the spokesman for
    the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of America. "If that were
    true this resolution would have been passed decades ago."

    "The resolution condemns the Ottoman Empire's genocide of the
    Armenians. It's troubling for me to understand why modern Turkey
    fights so hard to defend what should not be theirs to defend,"
    he said. "If U.S. foreign policy efforts require us to abandon our
    morals and values as a just nation, then we as Americans must review
    the foundation upon which our foreign policy is built."

    How Powerful is the Armenian Lobby?

    Measured purely in dollars spent, the Armenian lobby is relatively
    small in the grand scheme of foreign policy lobbying, says Massie
    Ritsch, a spokesman for the Center for Responsive Politics, whose
    Web site, www.opensecrets.org, tracks the spending of lobbying groups
    in Washington.

    "It's possible that every day a thousand Armenians show up on Capitol
    Hill and knock on the doors of Congress," says Ritsch. "But it doesn't
    show up in the reports."

    Over the past nine years, the Armenian Assembly of America, the group
    leading the political charge for the genocide resolution, has spent
    between $140,000 and $260,000 per year on lobbying, with $180,000
    spent last year and $160,000 spent so far in 2007.

    "It looks like they spent almost as much in the first six months
    of 2007 as they spent in all of last year," Ritsch noted. However,
    even with the jump in spending, the Armenian lobby does not measure
    up to Washington's largest influence players.

    For instance, according to Open Secrets data, the American Israeli
    Public Affairs Committee, "the country's most powerful pro-Israel
    political group . . . spend[s] more than $1 million annually on
    lobbying." Open Secrets also indicates that money spent by pro-Armenian
    political groups, such as Political Action Committees (PACs), is
    less than that spent by pro-Turkey PACs, which would ostensibly be
    fighting to block the passage of the genocide resolution.

    How, then, have Armenian groups been successful in bringing the
    resolution to the fore? Ritsch ventures that "the recognition of the
    genocide is of far greater interest and concern to Armenians than not
    having it recognized is to the average Turkish-American. I think it's
    one of these issues where one side is really motivated and the other
    side really doesn't care as much."

    He surmises that "a whole lot of grassroots lobbying in the districts
    of the members who've been pushing for this" is behind the genocide
    resolution.

    Armenian Churches vs. Turkish Mosques

    Ritsch's read on the issue dovetails with the perspective of
    Turkish-American analysts and lobbyists, who say the Armenian-American
    community is more organized and politically minded than their own.

    "From an organizational perspective, there are about 500 Armenian
    organizations and about 50 Turkish organizations," says Gunai
    Evinch, a prominent Turkish-American Lawyer in Washington and vice
    president of the leading Turkish lobby organization, the Assembly of
    Turkish-American Associations. "The Turkish organizations are primarily
    dedicated to cultural events, whereas the Armenian organizations do
    not shy away at all from political activities."

    The Armenian church," argues Evinch, "is a major point of congregation
    for . . . Armenian life, both spiritual and political.

    The church's leaders are in a way the political leaders; there has
    never been a distinction."

    "In the Turkish-American community on the other hand, with a strong
    tradition of secular democracy, we do not see politics played in
    mosques," he said. "We don't have a meeting place to go to every week
    to congregate and to plan and strategize on a political issue. We
    don't have the force of God being used to bring us together to do
    political work against a particular ethnic group."

    Evinch claims that tax records of the revenue and donations of all
    Armenian local and national organizations, including academic groups
    and the Armenian Church in the United States, would show that "the
    Armenian side has about a $40 million annual budget for advocating
    Armenian-American interests . . . compared to the Turkish side,
    which has about $400,000 dollars for all of the issues."

    Over the years, he says, Congress has been "bombarded with resolutions
    and gotten to know the thesis of the Armenian side and decided that
    [passing the resolution] was a moral thing to do despite the affect
    on U.S.-Turkey relations and interests in the region."

    Furthermore, Evinch contends that the recent House Foreign Affairs
    Committee vote was heavily influenced in particular by Armenian voters
    and money in California, Massachusetts and New York. Of the estimated
    385,488 people of Armenian ancestry the 2000 U.S. Census counted as
    living in the United States, some 257,686 reside in those three states,
    with 204,641 in California alone, according to Euroamericans.net,
    a Web site that keeps such statistics.

    "Of the 27 votes in favor of the resolution in the Foreign Affairs
    Committee, 10 were from California and eight were from New York,"
    said Evinch. "There is just no way that those congressmen or women
    are going to be voting against this bill, particularly if they're
    going to be re-elected."

    'Truth On Our Side'

    Asked about the role of the church as it relates to the genocide
    resolution, O'Hurley-Pitts, of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian
    Church of America, offered this response: "It's absolutely against the
    law for the church to raise money for political causes. The church does
    raise money for religious, humanitarian and other efforts, but at no
    time has the church ever raised money to support legislations before
    the United States House of Representatives. I would take issue with
    anybody who would suggest that the church is engaged in fundraising
    for political activities."

    O'Hurley-Pitts acknowledged that Catholicos Karekin II, the head of
    the Armenian Apostolic Church -- who is presently visiting the United
    States -- "has repeatedly supported the passage of an Armenian genocide
    recognition throughout the world."

    But "he does not support political activity," said O'Hurley-Pitts,
    adding that "the reason he supports genocide recognition is because
    without recognition there can be no condemnation, and without
    condemnation there can be no prevention."

    According to O'Hurley-Pitts, there are actually 1.5 million Armenians
    in the United States, and "it doesn't take an act of Congress for
    Armenians to see the gaping holes in their family trees."

    Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian Assembly of America,
    describes the community as a "very close-knit, educated and passionate
    constituency."

    "In terms of organization, certainly you have various churches
    throughout the United States," he says. "It's not that the church
    is by any means an arm of the Armenian lobby, but . . . part of the
    consciousness of all Armenians."

    Money for lobbying, says Ardouny, comes "from individual support,
    from individuals who care obviously about what we're doing, who care
    about the U.S.-Armenian relationship, that want to see Armenia make
    the strides it's making in terms of its democratic reforms and its
    independence."

    He adds that "the ongoing denial campaign of the Turkish government"
    helps to bring the Armenian community together.

    The real reason for the genocide resolution's passage by the Foreign
    Affairs Committee, says Ardouny, is that "we have the truth on
    our side."

    There is no debate in Washington over the validity of the resolutions
    claim, he argues. House members worried about supporting it "have
    talked about a timing issue, but the Turkish denial position has no
    defenders on Capitol Hill."

    Another factor, he says, is the current recognition that genocide is
    occurring in Darfur: "With genocide still unfolding in Darfur, the
    consciousness in America has certainly been raised to that issue. If
    you can't affirm the Armenian genocide how are you going to address
    future and current genocide?"

    In July 2004, the House and Senate passed a resolution declaring that
    the atrocities then unfolding in Sudan were genocide and urging the
    Bush administration to refer to them as such.

    Flip-Flopping Lawmakers

    But American "consciousness" of genocide has certainly not reduced
    the controversy surrounding the Armenian resolution, the intensity
    of which is evidenced by the shifting positions of U.S. House members
    on the Foreign Affairs Committee.

    The most prominent example may be that of California Democrat Rep.

    Jane Harman. Harman, who notes that her "own family was decimated
    by the Holocaust," initially cosponsored the latest version of the
    resolution.

    In early October, however, as the resolution came up for a committee
    vote, she suddenly flipped her position. In a subsequent Los Angeles
    Times op-ed, she offered this explanation for her change of heart:

    After a visit in February to Turkey, where I met with Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Armenian Orthodox patriarch and colleagues
    of murdered Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, I became convinced
    that passing this resolution again at this time would isolate and
    embarrass a courageous and moderate Islamic government in perhaps
    the most volatile region in the world.

    While Harman's actions drew media attention -- not to mention the
    attention of young Armenian activists, who reportedly confronted her
    at an early October political rally in California with shouts of
    "genocide denier, hypocrite and liar" -- less attention has been
    given to the actions of another, more influential House member,
    who has long gone back and forth on the issue.

    House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Tom Lantos, also a California
    Democrat, cosponsored and publicly supported one of the first
    Armenian genocide resolutions back in 1984. But Lantos, who like
    Harman is Jewish, and is the only Holocaust survivor ever elected to
    U.S. Congress, changed his stance during the 1990s. When the issue
    was brought to a vote again in 2000, he said he opposed it because
    it would be "counterproductive" for Turkish-Armenian, Turkish-Greek,
    and Turkish-U.S. relations.

    When the resolution came up again in 2005, Lantos again changed his
    position, and began supporting it. Then the Foreign Affairs Committee's
    ranking Democrat, he said he wanted to punish Turkey for refusing to
    allow U.S. forces to invade Iraq through Turkey two years earlier. "Our
    Turkish friends need to understand that support from the United States
    for matters that are important to them is predicated upon their support
    for things that are important to the United States," Lantos said at
    the time, suggesting he saw the issue in terms of a quid pro quo.

    Lantos remained in favor of the resolution this time around,
    a development that "shocked and angered" Turkish diplomats in
    Washington, according to the Turkish Daily News. A week after the vote,
    the pro-Turkey, English-language publication ran with the headline,
    "Turkey Loses Jewish Alliance," and asserted that Jewish-American
    lawmakers such as Lantos had been "unimpressed" by Turkey's efforts to
    lobby against the resolution. Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's
    foreign policy adviser reportedly criticized Lantos' vote, saying,
    "we have seen that his understanding of history is changing with time."

    Evinch, of the Assembly of Turkish-American Associations, says the
    quid-pro-quo reasoning behind Lantos' support for the resolution
    shows just how bluntly political the Armenia issue has become.

    "When [Lantos] said that, I could see then that the level of debate
    around this issue was rapidly descending to a sort of hard politics
    that had nothing to do with the substance of the Armenian claim,"
    said Evinch. "I look at Lantos as a wise person and not a person that
    would stoop to those levels, who would support a resolution as a quid
    pro quo to get back at Turkey."

    The Role of Jewish and Pro-Israel Groups

    Other analysts say Turkey's foreign policy in recent years has
    contributed to the unease among would-be Turkey supporters in the
    U.S. government, including many in the Jewish community who had
    previously supported Turkey as a beacon of Islamic moderation in the
    Middle East. Most notable has been the Turkish government's increased
    diplomatic and economic relations with Middle East actors hostile to
    the United States and Israel.

    In February 2006, Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal was received in Ankara by
    members of Turkish President Erdogan's Justice and Development Party,
    putting Turkey alongside Russia as the world's only non-Arab country
    to open its doors to the Palestinian party. A Voice of America report
    at the time noted that "Western diplomats said the visit would likely
    harm Turkey's strong ties with the Jewish state."

    Turkey has also increased ties with Syria, whose president, Bashar
    al-Assad, was in Ankara in mid-October voicing his support for the
    Turkish Parliament's passage of the measure to allow a Turkish military
    incursion into northern Iraq.

    Soner Cagaptay, a senior fellow and the director of the Turkish
    Research Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy,
    says "the Hamas visit and other things such as the enhancement of
    dialogue between Iran, Turkey and Syria, have worked together to trip
    some people who have been watching with nervousness over Turkey's
    commitment to the West and how that commitment may be coming undone."

    But, Cagaptay added: "I wouldn't say that American Jews have lost
    heart in Turkey, they still see it as an extremely valuable ally in
    the region."

    Evinch shares a similar view, taking issue with assertions, such as
    the one made by the Turkish Daily News, that the Jewish community's
    support for Turkey is waning.

    "In the Jewish-American community, there is a liberal part and a
    conservative part," said Evinch. "The Liberal part has become more and
    more sensitive to the Armenian perspective of World War I history,
    while the conservative part, which is thinking more about what is
    good for Israel, has been less receptive to the Armenian thesis."

    Jewish-American advocacy groups in Washington and nationally appear
    to be carefully managing their public stance on the resolution.

    The Anti-Defamation League, a New York-based Jewish organization,
    has publicly opposed any congressional resolution condemning the
    Armenian genocide. While ADL leaders wrote in an August statement
    that what Armenians went through at the end of World War I was
    "indeed tantamount to genocide," they went on to say "we continue
    to firmly believe that a Congressional resolution on such matters
    is a counterproductive diversion and will not foster reconciliation
    between Turks and Armenians and may put at risk the Turkish Jewish
    community and the important multilateral relationship between Turkey,
    Israel and the United States."

    Meanwhile, a spokeswoman for the American Israeli Public Affairs
    Committee, the leading pro-Israel advocacy and lobbying group in
    Washington, told World Politics Review that AIPAC has "not taken a
    position" on the genocide resolution. Asked why, she said: "It's not
    within the issues we focus on. That particular issue is outside of
    our purview."

    Some Armenian-Americans have expressed frustration that Jewish groups
    have not taken a more aggressive stance in favor of the Armenian
    resolution. "It's certainly been a frustration point in the Armenian
    community here," said one prominent Armenian-American activist,
    who spoke on condition of anonymity.

    Other members of the Armenian community emphasize the support the
    genocide resolution has received from an array of interest groups.

    Ardouny, for instance, said the ADL took "a positive step forward"
    in publicly acknowledging that Armenian suffering was tantamount
    to genocide.

    The Armenian Assembly of America has compiled a list of 53 "third-party
    organizations in support" of the genocide resolution.

    The list includes a variety of ethnic and national advocacy
    organizations, such as the Arab American Institute and the
    Belarusan-American Association.

    However, even with such support, concerns about a genocide resolution's
    consequences for U.S.-Turkey relations seem to be, for the time being
    at least, paramount in the minds of members of Congress. A number of
    Democrats last week pulled their support of the resolution, and in
    statements to the press Pelosi allowed for the possibility that the
    resolution will not come to a full House vote.

    Guy Taylor is World Politics Review senior editor.

    http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articl e.aspx?id=1281
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