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Bush administration opposes House measure on Turkey

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  • Bush administration opposes House measure on Turkey

    Associated Press Worldstream
    July 16, 2004 Friday 1:53 PM Eastern Time

    Bush administration opposes House measure on Turkey

    by HARRY DUNPHY; Associated Press Writer

    President George W. Bush's administration opposes a measure passed by
    the House of Representatives forbidding Turkey to use U.S. aid to
    lobby against a separate measure that would officially recognize the
    Armenian genocide, a State Department spokesman said Friday.

    "The House has passed it, the Senate has not and the administration
    is opposed to it," Richard Boucher said.

    The House used a voice vote Thursday to approve language by
    Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff of California on Turkey that was added to
    a $19.4 billion foreign aid bill the House approved.

    Tens of thousands of Armenians live in Schiff's district, which
    includes Pasadena and other communities east of Los Angeles.

    Armenians accuse Turks of a genocide of up to 1.5 million Armenians
    between 1915 and 1923. Turks claim the number of deaths is inflated
    and say the victims were killed in civil unrest.

    "We are another step closer to silencing those who would deny the
    murder of 1.5 million Armenians," Schiff said after the vote. "This
    amendment stands true to the memory of the victims."

    House Speaker Dennis Hastert and other House Republican leaders said
    in a statement that they oppose the Schiff amendment and "will insist
    that conferees drop that provision" should the measure pass the
    Senate.

    "Turkey has been a reliable ally of the United States for decades,
    and the deep foundation upon which our mutual economic and security
    relationship rests should not be disrupted by this amendment."

    They said the amendment seems meaningless because by law, foreign
    governments are barred from using U.S. aid to lobby.

    "But we understand the political motivation behind the amendment and
    for that reason we will insist that it be dropped."

    The leaders also said they "have no intention" of scheduling the
    Armenian genocide resolution for a vote for the rest of the year.

    On a related matter, Boucher said Turkey had withdrawn its candidacy
    to chair the Organization for Cooperation and Security in Europe in
    2007 "due to competing obligations by high-level officials.

    "They felt they would be unable to devote the appropriate attention
    to the position. So we respect that decision."

    Last month Armenian Foreign Minister Vadan Oskanian said his country
    would veto Turkey's chairmanship because it thinks the role can only
    be filled by a nation that has diplomatic relations with all the
    OSCE's states.

    Armenia and Turkey do not have diplomatic relations, although the
    Turks recently have expressed a willingness to improve the situation
    between the two countries.

    Besides differing over genocide, the two countries also are at odds
    over Nagorno-Karabakh, a region within Azerbaijan that has been under
    ethnic Armenian control since a war that ended in 1994 without a
    political settlement.

    Turkey, which shares close ethnic ties with Azerbaijan and supported
    that nation in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, has maintained and
    economic blockage of Armenia, hobbling development in the landlocked
    former Soviet republic.
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