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ANCA: Schiff Slams Turkish Lobby Genocide Denial

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  • ANCA: Schiff Slams Turkish Lobby Genocide Denial

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street, NW Washington, DC 20036
    Tel. (202) 775-1918
    Fax. (202) 775-5648
    Email. [email protected]
    Internet www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    December 18, 2009
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    SCHIFF SLAMS TURKISH LOBBY GENOCIDE DENIAL

    -- Presses Adoption of Armenian Genocide Resolution

    "The best way to ensure that the truth about the Armenian Genocide is
    recognized is for the United States Congress to act to commemorate the
    victims now, while a handful of survivors are still with us." --
    Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA)

    WASHINGTON, DC - House Armenian Genocide Resolution lead sponsor,
    Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), this week, called for the adoption of the
    Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.252) as a necessary step to both
    counter Turkey's campaign of denial and to help lay the foundation for
    a lasting Armenia-Turkey relationship based on truth, reported the
    Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

    Rep. Schiff's actions came in response to a letter from the Assembly
    of Turkish American Associations (ATAA) and Federation of Turkish
    American Associations (FTAA) that cited the historical "commission"
    provision of the recently signed Turkey-Armenia Protocols as
    justification for blocking Congressional condemnation and
    commemoration of the Armenian Genocide. "The Turkey-Armenia
    Protocols, which the United States, Europe and Russia are supporting,
    include the establishment of a historical commission to investigate
    the events of 1915," explain ATAA President Gunay Evinch and FTAA
    President Kaya Boztepe. "This investigation will necessarily probe the
    Armenian Revolt (1885-1919) during which 1.1 million Ottoman Muslims
    and Jews perished, and its consequences for Ottoman Armenian rebels
    and their supporters," they continue, advancing the standard Turkish
    government propaganda denying the Armenian Genocide.

    Rep. Schiff, in a letter made public on December 18th, explained, "I
    received your letter regarding the Armenian Genocide Resolution
    (H.Res.252) and after reading it, I am more certain than ever that the
    best way to ensure that the victims of the Armenian Genocide are not
    forgotten is to pass the resolution." The California legislator also
    stressed his concern that "tiny, landlocked Armenia will be forced to
    accept an historical whitewash in order to end the punitive blockade
    that is stifling its economic development and threatens to condemn
    another generation of Armenian children to poverty."

    Referencing recent statements by U.S government officials that the
    "commission is not intended as a vehicle to review the history of the
    Armenian Genocide," Rep. Schiff described the ATAA/FTAA joint letter
    as "a vehicle to continue Ankara's decades of denial."

    The complete text of Rep. Schiff's letter is provided below, along
    with the text of the ATAA/FTAA letters.

    "Congressman Schiff's powerful response to the ATAA and FTAA clearly
    rejects Turkey's attempts to use the Turkey- Armenia Protocols to
    block U.S. recognition of the Armenian Genocide," said Aram Hamparian,
    Executive Director of the ANCA. "We value, as well, the Congressman's
    strong words, his principled stand, and his tireless efforts to firmly
    establish the fundamental truth that Turkey has spent decades trying
    to avoid - namely that the universal recognition of this crime -
    including by both Washington and Ankara - represents a necessary
    element of any durable Armenia-Turkey relationship."

    H.Res.252, introduced on March 17th of this year by lead sponsors Adam
    Schiff and George Radanovich (R-CA), and Congressional Armenian Caucus
    Co-chairs Frank Pallone (D- NJ) and Mark Kirk (R-IL), currently has
    over 135 cosponsors. Its companion legislation in the Senate
    (S.Res.316), spearheaded by Senators Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and John
    Ensign (R-NV) has 11 cosponsors, including Senate Majority Leader
    Harry Reid (D-NV) and Sen. Carl Levin (D- MI), the most recent
    addition to the cosponsor list. Both bills are identical to
    legislation in the 110th Congress that was adopted by the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee, and publicly endorsed by then-candidate for
    President Barack Obama, current Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary
    of State Hillary Clinton. Since the introduction of the current
    resolution this March, President Obama has broken his pledge to
    recognize the Armenian Genocide, retreating markedly from repeated
    statements and promises he made throughout his service in the Senate
    calling for proper U.S. condemnation and commemoration of this crime
    against humanity.

    #####

    Text of Schiff Letter to Assembly of Turkish American Associations
    (ATAA) and Federation of Turkish American Associations (FTAA)

    December 17, 2009

    Dear [ATAA/FTAA]:

    I received your letter regarding the Armenian Genocide
    Resolution (H.Res.252) and after reading it, I am more
    certain than ever that the best way to ensure that the
    victims of the Armenian Genocide are not forgotten is to
    pass the resolution.

    Ninety-four years ago, the government of the Ottoman
    Empire, launched what is almost universally considered the
    first genocide of the Twentieth Century - the Armenian
    Genocide. By the time the atrocities ended in 1923, 1.5
    million men, women and children had been killed - shot,
    beaten, starved, raped and force-marched through searing
    deserts.

    Despite a series of convictions of some of the leading
    perpetrator after World War I, the Turkish state has never
    accepted responsibility for the acts of its predecessor
    government and has stubbornly maintained that the genocide
    never took place. Even today, Turks are forbidden to
    discuss openly the Genocide are subject to prosecution if
    they do so. Ankara's failure to acknowledge the truth
    about the vents of 1915-23 has complicated Turkey's
    relationship with the United States and a number of
    European countries and is also an impediment to Turkey's
    efforts to join the European Union.

    The evidence of the Genocide is overwhelming. American
    newspapers, especially the New York Times, chronicled the
    Genocide in great detail. American diplomats throughout
    the crumbling Ottoman Empire transmitted a flood of cables
    and other reports detailing the slaughter of Armenians. In
    1919, Congress passed legislation to aid the victims and
    ordinary Americans contributed money to aid the survivors.
    Our National Archives houses thousands of cables, reports,
    eyewitness testimony, photographs, and other evidence of a
    deliberate campaign of extermination.

    For the past 90 years, the Armenian people have sought
    justice; they have fought to have their suffering, which
    inspired a young Polish Jew to coin the term "genocide,"
    recognized by the international community and especially
    the descendants of those who carried out the slaughter. In
    response, the Turkish government has maintained a decades-
    long policy of fighting any attempt by the American
    government or other nations to recognize what happened to
    the Armenian people for what it was.

    Earlier this year, the governments of Turkey and the modern
    state of Armenia, signed the Protocols that, upon
    ratification by the two countries' respective parliaments,
    will end Turkey's 16-year-old blockade of landlocked
    Armenia. The border will be reopened and the Armenian
    people, who have suffered economic privation and physical
    isolation as a result of Ankara's blockade, will certainly
    benefit. And open border would also help Turkey in its
    quest for EU membership and by removing a significant
    irritant in Ankara's relationship with the international
    community.

    While I strongly support ending Turkey's blockade of
    Armenia and for improving relations between the two
    countries, I share the deep concerns of many Armenians and
    Armenian-Americans about the inclusion in the Protocols of
    an historical commission that will examine the past -
    including the Armenian Genocide. I fear that tiny,
    landlocked Armenia will be forced to accept an historical
    whitewash in order to end the punitive blockade that is
    stifling its economic development and threatens to condemn
    another generation of Armenian children to poverty.

    In recent months, some, including some in our government
    have suggested that the commission is not intended as a
    vehicle to review the history of the Armenian Genocide.
    Your letter honestly characterizes it as a vehicle to
    continue Ankara's decades of denial, supporting my own
    interpretation of the Protocols' commission provision.

    The best way to ensure that the truth about the Armenian
    Genocide is recognized is for the United States Congress to
    act to commemorate the victims now, while a handful of
    survivors are still with us. By speaking now, and on
    behalf of the American people, the House of Representatives
    can forestall any effort by Turkey to force the victims of
    one of history's great crimes to cooperate in denying that
    it ever happened. True reconciliation between Turkey and
    Armenia must be built on a foundation of truth.

    Sincerely,

    [signed]
    Adam B. Schiff
    Member of Congress

    ==================================
    LETTE R FROM ATAA/FTAA LEADERS TO REP. ADAM SCHIFF

    Assembly of Turkish American Associations
    Federation of Turkish American Associations

    December 9, 2009

    The Honorable Representative Adam Schiff
    U.S. House of Representatives
    Washington, DC 20515

    Dear Representative Schiff,

    We, the Presidents of America's largest Turkish-American
    grassroots organizations, The Assembly of Turkish American
    Associations (ATAA) and Federation of Turkish American
    Associations, (FTSS), urge you to support the nascent
    Turkish-Armenian rapprochement. Therefore, the present
    Armenian resolution in the House (H.Res.252) should neither
    advance nor pass.

    Extremists in the Armenian American community have
    contacted you to press for passage of this one-sided
    resolution, which would condemn the Ottoman empire and, by
    implication, Turkey and the people of Turkish heritage, of
    the high crime of genocide. Passage would derail the vital
    and brave steps being taken by the Turkish and Armenian
    people to achieve a fuller relationship that will advance
    peace and security in their region.

    The Turkey-Armenia Protocols, which the United States,
    Europe and Russia are supporting, include the establishment
    of a historical commission to investigate the events of
    1915. This investigation will necessarily probe the
    Armenian Revolt (1885-1919) during which 1.1 million
    Ottoman Muslims and Jews perished, and its consequences for
    Ottoman Armenian rebels and their supporters.

    Further, Congress ought not to sit in judgment of Turkey
    and people of Turkish heritage, because, as the protocols
    imply, legislators are not historians and certainly not
    experts in Ottoman history. Also, as the resolution levels
    the crime of genocide, by international treaty the United
    States acknowledges the sole jurisdiction to hear such
    allegations of the International Court of Justice at the
    Hague.

    Finally, Armenian anti-Turkish resolutions are
    fundamentally unfair and unjust, representing ethnic
    politics at its worst. Turkish Americans are concerned
    about being persecuted by these resolutions and urge
    rapprochement as a productive approach.

    Sincerely,

    Gunay Evinch
    President
    ATAA
    1526 18th St NW
    Washington DC 20036
    (202) 483-9090

    Kaya Boztepe
    President
    FTAA
    821 United Nations Plaza
    New York, NY 10017
    (212) 682-7688
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