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U.S. administration to block Armenian genocide bill

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  • U.S. administration to block Armenian genocide bill

    U.S. administration to block Armenian genocide bill

    WASHINGTON, March 6 (RIA Novosti)

    The U.S. government will "work very hard" to block a controversial
    resolution condemning as genocide the mass killings of Armenians by
    Turks during World War I, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said
    on Friday.

    "We are against this decision. Now we believe that the US Congress
    will not take any decision on this subject," the BBC quoted Clinton as
    saying at a news conference in Guatemala.

    She added that the government would "work very hard" to ensure that it
    would not reach the full House floor.

    The U.S. State Department spokesman, Philip J. Crowley, confirmed on
    Friday that the government would seek to block the bill.

    "We don't think any further congressional action is appropriate," he
    said at the department meeting. "We continue to believe that the best
    way for Turkey and Armenia to address their shared past is through
    their ongoing effort to normalize relations."

    The Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives
    voted on Thursday 23-22 in support of the resolution following almost
    six hours of heated debates.

    Ankara condemned the bill and recalled its newly appointed ambassador
    to the United States, Namik Tan, for consultations.

    President Abdullah Gul said Turkey would "not be responsible for the
    negative results of this vote."

    Turkey, which has always refused to recognize the killings of an
    estimated 1.5 million Armenians at the end of the Ottoman period in
    1915 as an act of genocide, earlier warned Washington that this move
    could jeopardize U.S-Turkish cooperation and set back the talks aimed
    at opening the border between Turkey and Armenia, which has been
    closed since 1993 on Ankara's initiative.

    A similar vote in the committee was approved by a wider margin in
    2007, but the U.S. Bush administration, anxious to retain Turkish
    cooperation in Iraq, scuttled a full House vote.

    A number of states have recognized the killings in Armenia as the
    first genocide of the 20th century, including Russia, France, Italy,
    Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and Greece, as well as 42 of the 50
    U.S. states. The Vatican, the European Parliament and the World
    Council of Churches have also denounced the killings as genocide.
    Uruguay was the first to do so in 1965.

    However, on the eve of the vote, the Obama administration urged the
    committee not to approve the resolution, fearing it could alienate
    Washington's NATO ally, whose help the White House considers
    invaluable in solving confrontations in the Middle East and
    Afghanistan.
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