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  • ANKARA: US Armenians See 'Favorable Position' For Turkish Genocide R

    US ARMENIANS SEE 'FAVORABLE POSITION' FOR TURKISH GENOCIDE RECOGNITION IN CONGRESS

    Hurriyet
    March 1 2010
    Armenia

    With just days until the first round of US congressional voting on
    the Armenian 'genocide' bill, US Armenians say the latest response
    from a member of the Obama administration, this time Secretary of
    State Hillary Clinton, has further enforced the image of the current
    government's 'favorable position'

    'We are working very hard to assist Armenia and Turkey in their
    (reconciliation) efforts and, you know, we would like to continue to
    support that effort and not be diverted in any way at all,' says US
    Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.

    Pushing for the passage of an Armenian "genocide" resolution in a U.S.

    House panel vote later this week, the largest U.S. Armenian group
    has said the State Department's position on this matter is now more
    favorable than that of the earlier U.S. administrations.

    During a speech at a House subcommittee last week, Secretary of State
    Hillary Clinton used only weak diplomatic language to oppose the
    "genocide" measure. "We are working very hard to assist Armenia and
    Turkey in their (reconciliation) efforts and, you know, we would like
    to continue to support that effort and not be diverted in any way at
    all," Clinton said last Thursday.

    By saying "not be diverted in any way," Clinton was apparently
    referring to Turkey's position that any U.S. congressional endorsement
    of the "genocide" bill would effectively kill the Washington-backed
    normalization process with Armenia.

    But she made no reference to the U.S. national security argument. Over
    the past 10 years, the administrations of former presidents Bill
    Clinton and George W. Bush had strongly opposed other Armenian
    "genocide" bills, saying their congressional passage would deeply
    hurt U.S. national security interests.

    US Armenians happy

    "Secretary Clinton's remarks represent the third time in just the past
    few weeks that a senior (Barack) Obama administration official - in
    response to pointed questions about the Armenian genocide resolution
    - has chosen not to voice ... opposition to the adoption of this
    genocide-prevention measure," said Aram Hamparian, executive director
    of the Armenian National Committee of America.

    "The current administration's conduct, at least to date, stands in
    stark contrast to past administrations - both Democratic and Republican
    - that used every opportunity to score points with Ankara by attacking
    the broad, bipartisan Congressional majority that has long existed
    in support of U.S. condemnation and commemoration of the Armenian
    genocide," Hamparian said in a weekend statement.

    Howard Berman, the Democratic chairman of the House of Representatives'
    Foreign Affairs Committee, announced in early February that his
    panel would vote on the resolution this Thursday. If the bill passes
    the committee, it will be heading for a final vote on the House
    floor. Similar "genocide" resolutions passed the committee in 2000,
    2005 and 2007, but could never reach a House floor vote because of
    extensive pressure from former presidents Clinton and Bush.

    The non-binding resolution would call on Obama to ensure that U.S.

    policy formally refers to the Armenian killings as "genocide" and to
    use that term when he delivers his annual message on the issue in April
    - something Obama avoided doing last year. Turkey has been warning that
    any House or Senate adoption of an Armenian "genocide" bill will lead
    to a major and lasting worsening in relations with the United States.

    A recent Hurriyet Daily News analysis based on the positions and voting
    trends of the House Foreign Affairs Committee's 46 members suggested
    that the resolution would likely pass the panel's March 4 vote.

    Reconciliation process faltering

    U.S. diplomats in recent weeks have been urging the Turkish government
    to implement the reconciliation process without any preconditions,
    saying that in the absence of this action, "genocide" bills in Congress
    may be unstoppable.

    The Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers signed in October a
    set of agreements under which Ankara and Yerevan would set up
    normal diplomatic relations and reopen their land border. But the
    normalization process is now faltering.

    The Turkey-Armenia accord needs to be ratified by the parliaments of
    the two neighbors before implementation, but there is no indication
    of when either nation would bring the deal to a parliament vote.

    The problem that lies at the root of the issue is the unresolved
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Turkey's
    close friend and ally. Turkey first wants to see progress toward a
    resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict before opening its border
    with Armenia. And the Armenians are hinting no sign of this.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mostly Armenian-populated enclave inside
    Azerbaijan, and parts of Azerbaijan proper have been under Armenian
    occupation since a war in the early 1990s. As a result of this war,
    Turkey has refused to establish normal diplomatic relations with
    Yerevan and has kept the land border with Armenia closed since 1993.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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