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ANCA warns against outsourcing America's moral conscience to Turkey

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  • ANCA warns against outsourcing America's moral conscience to Turkey

    AZG Armenian Daily #177, 29/09/2007


    Genocide Recognition

    ANCA WARNS AGAINST "OUTSOURCING" OF AMERICA'S MORAL CONSCIENCE TO
    TURKEY

    Fearing an imminent vote on the Armenian Genocide Resolution
    (H.Res.106), Turkey's multi-million dollar lobbyists have solicited
    the assistance of eight former U.S. Secretaries of State in seeking to
    derail this human rights legislation, reported the Armenian National
    Committee of America (ANCA.)"Facing a growing bipartisan Congressional
    majority demanding passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution,
    Turkey's lobbyists - out of desperation and a never ending desire to
    squeeze more billing dollars out of Ankara - have turned to the very
    architects of our government's failed policy of appeasing Turkey,"
    said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA. "Sadly,
    successive U.S. administrations have found themselves lacking the
    moral courage to end the cycle of genocide - from Cambodia, to Rwanda
    and, today in Darfur - precisely because of their legacy of caving in
    to, rather than confronting genocidal regimes."

    "We are, as Americans, especially troubled that, in warning Congress
    not to make a simple anti-genocide statement for fear of upsetting
    Turkey, these officials would outsource our nation's moral conscience
    to a foreign government," added Hamparian.

    In their September 25th jointly-signed letter, former Secretaries of
    State Madeleine Albright, James Baker III, Warren Christopher,
    Laurence Eagleburger, Alexander Haig, Jr., Henry Kissinger, Colin
    Powell, and George Schultz, urged Speaker Pelosi to, "prevent the
    resolution from reaching the House Floor," thereby denying House
    Members an opportunity to vote their conscience on the Armenian
    Genocide. The former State Department officials expressed concern that
    passage of the resolution "could endanger our national security
    interests in the region, including our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan,
    and damage efforts to promote reconciliation between Armenia and
    Turkey."
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