CONGRESSIONAL CONCERN MMOUNTS OVER TURKEY'S REVERSAL ON PROPOSED
armradio.am
22.07.2009 11:13
House Members concerned about Turkey's backtracking on a so-called
"roadmap" to advance Armenia-Turkey dialogue are set to urge President
Obama to separate Armenian Genocide recognition from normalization
of ties between the two countries, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA.)
In a letter to President Obama, initiated by Congressional Armenian
Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Mark Kirk (R-IL) as well
as Armenian Genocide resolution lead sponsors Adam Schiff (D-CA)
and George Radanovich (R-CA), Members of Congress question Turkey's
commitment to talks normalizing relations with Armenia, as stated in
a "roadmap" agreement signed just two days prior to April 24th, the
international day of commemoration of the Armenian Genocide. Turkey
has since added preconditions to continued discussions, which have
led most observers of the process to conclude the effort to be stalled
indefinitely.
"It would appear that Turkey, in an effort to block U.S. recognition
of the Armenian Genocide, agreed to a roadmap it did not intend to
uphold," notes the letter to the President. "Therefore, we urge your
Administration to separate the issues of normalization and genocide
recognition. We hope that renewed efforts and focused resources from
the Administration can be utilized to nurture the Armenia-Turkey
normalization process without preconditions and within a reasonable
timeframe, and continue to remain strongly supportive of your stated
campaign policy to officially recognize the Armenian Genocide."
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
armradio.am
22.07.2009 11:13
House Members concerned about Turkey's backtracking on a so-called
"roadmap" to advance Armenia-Turkey dialogue are set to urge President
Obama to separate Armenian Genocide recognition from normalization
of ties between the two countries, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA.)
In a letter to President Obama, initiated by Congressional Armenian
Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Mark Kirk (R-IL) as well
as Armenian Genocide resolution lead sponsors Adam Schiff (D-CA)
and George Radanovich (R-CA), Members of Congress question Turkey's
commitment to talks normalizing relations with Armenia, as stated in
a "roadmap" agreement signed just two days prior to April 24th, the
international day of commemoration of the Armenian Genocide. Turkey
has since added preconditions to continued discussions, which have
led most observers of the process to conclude the effort to be stalled
indefinitely.
"It would appear that Turkey, in an effort to block U.S. recognition
of the Armenian Genocide, agreed to a roadmap it did not intend to
uphold," notes the letter to the President. "Therefore, we urge your
Administration to separate the issues of normalization and genocide
recognition. We hope that renewed efforts and focused resources from
the Administration can be utilized to nurture the Armenia-Turkey
normalization process without preconditions and within a reasonable
timeframe, and continue to remain strongly supportive of your stated
campaign policy to officially recognize the Armenian Genocide."
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress