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Committee: Armenians Endured Genocide

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  • Committee: Armenians Endured Genocide

    COMMITTEE: ARMENIANS ENDURED GENOCIDE
    By Lisa Friedman, WASHINGTON BUREAU

    The Argus, CA
    Sept 16 2005

    State Department, House speaker fear resolution could hurt
    U.S.-Turkish relations

    WASHINGTON - In a momentous victory for California's sizable Armenian
    communities, the House International Relations Committee voted
    overwhelmingly Thursday to declare the massacre of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire a genocide.

    In a surprise move, Rep. Tom Lantos, D-San Mateo, declared that after
    years of opposing the genocide resolution, he now would support it.

    The only Holocaust survivor in Congress and the founder of the
    Congressional Human Rights Caucus, Lantos had long cited Washington's
    close relationship with Ankara as a key reason for objecting to
    the resolution.

    The separate resolutions by Reps. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, and George
    Radanovich, R-Fresno, still must pass several hurdles. The State
    Department and House Speaker Dennis Hastert fiercely oppose recognition
    of the Armenian genocide, arguing its passage will rupture U.S.-Turkish
    relations. Both are expected to try to block a full House vote.

    Nevertheless, Armenians on Thursday said by voting 35-11 for Schiff's
    bill and 40-7 for Radanovich's, the panel sent a strong message that
    Congress should not equivocate when it comes to recognizing crimes
    against humanity.

    "If the United States does not step up and acknowledge this history
    and show moral backbone and clarity on these sorts of issues, people
    are going to be disappointed in us. We believe in this country because
    it does the right thing," said Armen Carapetian, spokesman for the
    Armenian National Committee of America.

    The panel voted after more than three hours of tense debate, in
    which lawmakers invoked the Holocaust, slavery, Darfur and the fate
    of American Indians.

    Every Californian on the panel voted in favor of the resolutions.

    In 2000, when the issue came before the same committee, Lantos told
    his colleagues, "There is a long list of reasons why our NATO ally,
    at this point, should not be humiliated."

    On Thursday, Lantos said that while he was "profoundly moved and
    anguished by the Armenian people's horrendous suffering" he remained
    unconvinced that the massacres they endured technically constitute
    genocide.

    Instead, he cited Turkey's unwillingness to allow U.S. troops to
    use its territory to launch an invasion into northern Iraq as well
    as the country's growing closeness with Syria even in the wake of
    former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri's assassination.

    "Turkey ignored our interests," Lantos said. "Our allies must
    understand that if they expect the U.S. to support matters of great
    interest to them, we expect them to support the things that are
    important to the United States."

    Armenians estimate more than 1.5 million died and hundreds of thousands
    of others displaced in a planned genocide campaign between 1915 and
    1923. Turkey maintains there was no systematic extermination plan,
    that only about 300,000 Armenians were killed, and that Armenians
    also killed thousands of Turks in the tumultuous last years of the
    Ottoman Empire.
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