Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Howard Berman: Turks, Once They Come To Terms With Their Past, Will

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Howard Berman: Turks, Once They Come To Terms With Their Past, Will

    HOWARD BERMAN: TURKS, ONCE THEY COME TO TERMS WITH THEIR PAST, WILL DISCOVER THAT THEY HAVE RELIEVED THEMSELVES

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    July 29, 2010 - 12:30 AMT 07:30 GMT

    In his opening statement at today's House Foreign Affairs Committee
    hearing, Chairman Howard Berman stated "it is critical that Turkey
    acknowledge the genocide committed by the Ottoman Empire against the
    Armenian people... I believe that Turks, once they come to terms with
    their past, will discover that they have relieved themselves and their
    children of an immense moral burden," reported the Armenian Assembly
    of America.

    "We commend Chairman Berman's ongoing leadership regarding the
    need to unequivocally affirm the Armenian Genocide," stated the
    Assembly's Grassroots Director Taniel Koushakjian. "As the House of
    Representatives looks to its August district work period, this hearing
    provides a timely review of important issues and lends new impetus on
    the need for Congress to adopt the Armenian Genocide resolution," added
    Koushakjian. Earlier this year, Chairman Berman was instrumental in
    the committee passage of H. Res. 252, the Armenian Genocide Resolution.

    While deterioration of U.S.-Turkey relations served as a focal point
    in today's House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing on "Turkey's New
    Foreign Policy Direction: Implications for U.S.-Turkish Relations,"
    Committee Members also discussed the importance of the Armenian
    Genocide and other human rights issues.

    Congressman Christopher Smith, in a series of questions, recalled the
    words of philosopher George Santayana, who stated "those who cannot
    remember the past are condemned to repeat it." Congressman Smith
    raised concerns about Turkey's denial of the Armenian Genocide, the
    denial of the genocide in Darfur coupled with Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan's defense of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir,
    who has been indicted on charges of genocide by the International
    Criminal Court (ICC). Based on a 2009 interview of Erdogan who stated,
    "No Muslim could perpetrate a genocide," Rep. Smith asked Ambassador
    Ross Wilson "what does this say about his judgment?"

    Congressman Jim Costa pointed out the overwhelming evidence of
    the Armenian Genocide, and also raised the topic of Armenia-Turkey
    rapprochement and the Protocols signed between the two countries in
    2009. Congressman Costa asked about progress in "country to country
    relations." Dr. Michael Rubin, Resident Scholar at the American
    Enterprise Institute, indicated that progress had been made through
    "quiet diplomacy" while Dr. Ian Lesser, Senior Transatlantic Fellow at
    the German Marshall Fund, responded that it will take a "significant
    recommitment" of the political leadership in Turkey. Dr. Lesser
    also indicated that Armenia-Turkey rapprochement is important in
    "its own right" and without being "linked" to other issues such as
    Nagorno Karabakh.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X