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Lawmakers Introduce Armenian Genocide Resolution

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  • Lawmakers Introduce Armenian Genocide Resolution

    LAWMAKERS INTRODUCE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

    PR-Inside.com
    March 17 2009

    WASHINGTON (AP) - In a move that could complicate relations with
    Turkey, U.S. lawmakers introduced a resolution Tuesday that would
    call killings by Ottoman Turks almost a century ago genocide.

    The resolution, if passed, could undermine efforts by the Obama
    administration to win help on key foreign policy goals from NATO
    ally Turkey.

    But it was unclear whether the resolution has sufficient support
    to pass in the House of Representatives. Lawmakers almost passed a
    similar resolution two years ago, but congressional leaders did not
    bring it up for a vote after intense pressure from then-President
    George W. Bush and top members of his administration.

    President Barack Obama, who called the killings genocide while running
    for office, has not said whether he will support the resolution. Its
    introduction comes as he is reaching out to Turkey for help on Middle
    East peace, ending Iran's nuclear ambitions and other top foreign
    policy goals. The issue will be awkward when he travels to Turkey
    early next month as part of his overture.

    Sponsors of the resolution argue that the United States has a moral
    obligation to speak plainly on the issue regardless of the foreign
    policy implications.

    "The facts of history are clear, well documented, and nonnegotiable,"
    said Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, one of the sponsors of the
    resolution. "It has never served our national interest to become
    complicit in the denial of genocide, and it never will.

    Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by
    Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I, an event widely viewed
    by genocide scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey
    denies that the deaths constituted genocide, however, contending the
    toll has been inflated, and the casualties were victims of civil war
    and unrest.
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