Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANCA: Brent Scowcroft Attacks Armenian Genocide Legislation

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANCA: Brent Scowcroft Attacks Armenian Genocide Legislation

    Armenian National Committee of America
    888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
    Washington, DC 20006
    Tel: (202) 775-1918
    Fax: (202) 775-5648
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Internet: www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    September 12, 2005
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    BRENT SCOWCROFT ATTACKS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE LEGISLATION

    -- American Turkish Council Chairman Sharply
    Criticizes "Careless use of Genocide Language"
    in H.Res.316 and H.Con.Res.195

    WASHINGTON, DC - Only days before Armenian Genocide legislation is
    set to come before a key U.S. House panel, American Turkish Council
    (ATC) Chairman Brent Scowcroft has warned Speaker Dennis Hastert
    that even the discussion of the Armenian Genocide on the floor of
    the U.S. House would be "counter-productive to the interests of the
    United States, reported the Armenian National Committee of America
    (ANCA).

    In his September 12th letter, Scowcroft, speaking on behalf of the
    corporate members of the ATC, accused Congressional supporters of
    Armenian Genocide legislation (H.Res.316 and H.Con.Res.195) of
    trying to "pull Turkey away from the West. He stressed that: "The
    careless use of genocide language provides and excuse to do so,
    delivering a direct blow to American interests in the region."

    "We are outraged that Brent Scowcroft appears to have so
    compromised his own integrity in pursuit of personal business
    interests that he finds himself enlisted by the Turkish government
    in its desperate and patently immoral genocide denial effort," said
    ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. "We are particularly
    troubled by his baseless comment regarding the 'careless use of
    genocide language' - a hateful insult to the victims of this crime,
    a direct offense to the Congressional authors of this legislation,
    and a repudiation of the U.S. archives, the unanimous judgment of
    the International Association of Genocide Scholars, and the
    overwhelming evidence documenting this crime against humanity."

    The ATC has come under scrutiny in recent weeks as the result of a
    10-page story in Vanity Fair detailing FBI whistleblower Sibel
    Edmond's reports that it's officials were involved in illegal
    efforts to defeat Armenian Genocide legislation in the fall of
    2000. According to the article by contributing editor David Rose,
    Edmonds claimed FBI wiretaps - including those of the Turkish
    Embassy and Turkish groups such as the American Turkish Council
    (ATC) and the Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA) -
    reveal that the Turkish government and its allies boasted of
    bribing members of Congress as part of an alleged deal to stop
    consideration of the Armenian Genocide Resolution.

    In a related effort, the Assembly of Turkish American Associations
    has distributed an action alert against both Armenian Genocide
    resolutions - H.Res.316 and H.Con.Res.195. Among the factually
    unfounded and morally bankrupt points raised by the ATAA in the
    space of its one-page alert, are the following:

    * The ATAA warns its members: "Inaction on the part of the Turkish
    American Community will compromise U.S.-Turkish relations,
    encourage more acts of harassment, violence and terrorism against
    people of Turkish and Turkic descent, and could potentially lead to
    territorial and compensations claims against the Republic of
    Turkey."

    * The ATAA urges its members to tell members of Congress that
    H.Res.316 and H.Con.Res.195 "provide a one-sided, misinformed view
    of WWI Ottoman history and would deal a great blow to the Turkish
    American community, and furthermore inflict damage upon the
    partnership between Turkey and the United States."

    * The ATAA stresses that resolutions such as H.Res.316 and
    H.Con.Res.195 "impede dialogue and reconciliation between Armenia
    and Turkey, discouraging the Armenian side from engaging in
    scholarly examination of these complicated historical events."

    * The ATAA notes that, "As the Armenian American lobby acts up
    again, we have only two choices: we can be passive and allow these
    allegations to go on, or we can stand up and defend ourselves, our
    history, and the future of our children here in the United States."

    * The ATAA stresses that its efforts are not "anti-Armenian,"
    explaining that, "Armenians people are held hostage by the agenda
    of their country's ultra-nationalist government and extremists in
    the Armenian American, European and Middle Eastern communities."

    The full text of the Scowcroft letter is provided below:

    #####

    Text of ATC Chairman Brent Scowcroft's Letter to Speaker Hastert


    September 12, 2005

    The Honorable J. Dennis Hastert
    Speaker of the House of Representatives
    The Capitol
    Washington, DC 20515

    Dear Mr. Speaker:

    As Chairman of the American-Turkish Council, I am gravely concerned
    about plans to debate in the House of Representatives H. Con. Res.
    195, a resolution "Commemorating the Armenian Genocide" and urging
    the Government of Turkey to acknowledge the culpability of Ottoman
    Turks for it, and H. Res. 316, a resolution recognizing claims of
    "genocide" of Armenians by Ottoman Turks. Together with ATC's
    members, I strongly urge opposition to these resolutions and
    suggest that floor deliberation of them would be counter-productive
    to the interest of the United States.

    Whatever people individually decide on the merits of these
    resolutions, it is important to note the real world consequences of
    their adoption. When the French Senate passed such a resolution,
    it cost France over $1 billion in cancelled contracts and lost
    business opportunities. Enactment of genocide language would
    jeopardize our ability to achieve strategic interest with Turkey
    and in the region. Furthermore, it is quite likely that the
    business interest of several of our American members would be
    jeopardized by passage of such prejudicial legislation.

    The American-Turkish Council strongly believes that the events
    about which H. Con Res. 195 and H. Res. 316 speak are matters for
    historians to decide-not politicians. Unfortunately, these
    resolutions express, as matters of law and fact, issues that remain
    widely disputed by scholars, historians, and legal experts.
    Accordingly, we strongly urge you to review the attached letter
    that Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan sent Armenian President Robert
    Kocharian on April 10, 2005, seeking to normalize bilateral
    relations as well as address painful long-standing historical
    issues.

    Although Armenian President Kocharian rejected his offer, we are
    encouraged that Prime Minister Erdogan and his government, by
    reaching out to Armenia with an offer for an open dialogue on
    difficult issues involving Turks and Armenians, are taking an
    historic step. Turkish-Armenian rapprochement is in the best
    interests of both nations, and the ATC believes now is the time for
    reconciliation. We sincerely hope that President Kocharian and his
    government will take the opportunity to reciprocate the olive
    branch extended by Prime Minister Erdogan.

    Turkey's strategic location at the crossroads of Europe, the Middle
    East, the Caucasus, and the Balkans places it at the center of
    American's current and long term strategic interest. As Turkey
    stands on the threshold of accession talks with the European Union,
    the U.S. should be doing all it can to encourage positive momentum
    for Turkey. H. Con. Res. 195, while purporting to support Turkey's
    EU accession talks, and H. Res. 316, do exactly the opposite. The
    resolutions encourage those who would pull Turkey away from the
    West. The careless use of genocide language provides and excuse to
    do so, delivering a direct blow to American interests in the
    region.

    The ATC believes that legislators should not attempt to resolve
    historical issues by resolution. Historical commissions, fairly
    staffed, adequately supported, and afforded full access to the
    archives, are better suited to attempting the reconciliation that
    we all support.

    On behalf of the members of the American-Turkish Council, I
    strongly urge you to oppose floor deliberation and adoption of any
    language that would substitute political pronouncements for
    historical analysis of this highly sensitive issue.

    Sincerely,

    Brent Scowcroft
    Chairman of the Board
Working...
X