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Change In U.S. Congress Boosts Prospects For Armenian Genocide Resol

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  • Change In U.S. Congress Boosts Prospects For Armenian Genocide Resol

    CHANGE IN U.S. CONGRESS BOOSTS PROSPECTS FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

    International Herald Tribune, France
    The Associated Press
    Dec 26 2006

    WASHINGTON: With Democrats taking control of the U.S. Congress,
    prospects have increased that lawmakers will approve a resolution
    recognizing the World War I-era killings of Armenians as genocide -
    despite the objections of President George W. Bush.

    The shift in Congress also dims the likelihood that the Bush
    administration can break a deadlock over the president'ss nominee
    for ambassador to Armenia, Richard Hoagland. Senate Democrats have
    blocked Hoagland's nomination because of his refusal to call the
    killings a genocide.

    The matters before Congress highlight how the deaths of the 1.5 million
    Armenians almost a century ago remain a sensitive international issue
    today. The Bush administration has warned that even congressional
    debate on the genocide question could damage relations with Turkey,
    a moderate Muslim nation that is a NATO member and an important
    strategic ally.

    Turkey has adamantly denied claims by scholars that its predecessor
    state, the Ottoman government, caused the Armenian deaths in a planned
    genocide. The Turkish government has said the toll is wildly inflated
    and that Armenians were killed or displaced in civil unrest during
    the empire's collapse.

    After French lawmakers voted in October to make it a crime to deny
    that the killings were a genocide, Turkey said it would suspend
    military relations with France.

    In Washington, Armenian-American groups have been pressing for years
    for a resolution on the genocide issue. The House of Representatives'
    International Relations Committee last year endorsed two resolutions
    classifying the killings as genocide. But the House leadership,
    controlled by Bush's Republican Party, prevented a vote by the full
    chamber.

    With Democrats taking over the House, the top leader will be Nancy
    Pelosi, who has supported the genocide legislation. A spokesman for
    Pelosi, Drew Hamill, says she'll continue to support the resolutions.

    "I think we have the best chance probably in a decade to get an
    Armenian genocide resolution passed," said Democratic Congressman
    Adam Schiff, a top advocate of the resolutions.

    The genocide question was the key issue as the Senate considered
    the ambassadorial nomination of Hoagland to replace John Evans,
    who reportedly had his tour of duty cut short because, in a social
    setting, he referred to the killings as genocide.

    Senator Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat, blocked the nomination
    over Hoagland's refusal to use the word genocide at his confirmation
    hearing in June. With Democrats taking over the Senate, it will be
    even more difficult now for the Bush administration to circumvent
    Menendez's objections.

    Early this month, Menendez and the Senate's top Democrat, Harry Reid
    of Nevada, wrote a letter to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
    asking the Bush administration to withdraw the nomination.

    But an administration official responded in a letter to Menendez that
    it was continuing to back Hoagland.

    "Despite some claims to the contrary, neither Ambassador-designate
    Hoagland nor the administration has ever minimized or denied the fact
    or the extent of the annihilation and forced exile of as many as 1.5.

    million ethnic Armenians in the final years of the Ottoman Empire,"
    Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns wrote. The letter was provided
    to The Associated Press by a congressional aide, who requested
    anonymity because the administration had not agreed to its release.

    "It would be a shame for the entire Foreign Service should
    Ambassador-designate Hoagland, an experienced diplomat with a
    distinguished record of service, be denied confirmation due to past
    disagreements over Ambassador Evans."
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