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Jewish-American Groups May Support Armenian Genocide Resolution Pass

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  • Jewish-American Groups May Support Armenian Genocide Resolution Pass

    JEWISH-AMERICAN GROUPS MAY SUPPORT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION PASSAGE IN U.S. CONGRESS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    03.02.2009 19:10 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Jewish-American groups may reconsider their support
    for Turkey against Armenian efforts to pass a resolution in the
    U.S. Congress recognizing the Armenian Genocide during World War I
    in the wake of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's walkout at the
    Davos summit last week, but Turkish officials and analysts expect
    little fallout from decreased Jewish lobby support.

    "The Jewish lobby's influence should not be overestimated," said Sedat
    Laciner, head of the Ankara-based International Strategic Research
    Organization (ISRO/USAK). "Many Jewish-American groups already decided
    to cut support for Turkey in the face of Armenian efforts in 2007,"
    he told.

    A major Jewish-American organization, the Anti-Defamation League
    (ADL), reversed its long-held stance in 2007 and said it recognized the
    Armenian Genocide, although it stood against congressional resolutions
    to the same effect.

    Last week Erdogan stormed off the stage at Davos after an
    angry exchange with Israeli President Shimon Peres over Israel's
    deadly operation in Gaza last month, which killed more than 1,300
    Palestinians, almost half of whom were civilians. The incident sparked
    comments in the Israeli and Armenian media that a genocide resolution,
    shelved twice in the past in the U.S. House of Representatives at
    the initiative of the administration, will this time be inevitable
    because Jewish groups will no longer be lobbying against it.

    Although risks run higher this year for U.S. recognition of the
    Genocide due to the campaign promises made by President Barack Obama
    to Armenian-American voters, few in Ankara believe that the decrease
    in support by the Jewish lobby in the aftermath of the Davos incident
    will have a major impact on whether or not Obama will uphold his
    pre-election promises.

    One reason for this, says former Foreign Minister Ilter Turkmen,
    is that Obama has also committed himself to fewer contacts with the
    lobbying groups in his decision-making processes.

    Secondly, says Laciner, what matters is the position of the
    administration, not the Jewish-American groups. Obama will issue a
    traditional message on April 24. He is more likely than his Republican
    predecessor, George W. Bush, to use the term 'genocide' in his message,
    given his earlier public pledges, but when it comes to a congressional
    resolution, the U.S. will follow its national interests, according
    to Laciner.

    "When a similar resolution was shelved last year at the House of
    Representatives, it was the administration, not Jewish lobbying, that
    made it possible," he said. "The Armenian question is a derivative of
    overall Turkey-U.S. relations. It pops up every time there is a problem
    in the course of their ties. It was on the agenda heavily in the past
    years because of the Iraq crisis in Turkey-U.S. relations and it was
    shelved eventually because the crisis was overcome and cooperation
    took root." But even in the event of an April 24 message by Obama
    mentioning 'genocide,' this may not be devastating for Turks. "The
    public is accustomed to the idea that Obama might do something that
    the previous administrations did not do on the Armenian issue. It's
    been out there since the election campaign," said Laciner, Today's
    Zaman reports.
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