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  • ANKARA: Armenian 'Guerrilla Attack' In US Congress Meets Its Waterlo

    ARMENIAN 'GUERRILLA ATTACK' IN US CONGRESS MEETS ITS WATERLOO

    Hurriyet
    Dec 23 2010
    Turkey

    Despite the backing of outgoing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi,
    Armenian-Americans lack the firepower needed to make the House endorse
    the Armenian 'genocide' bill. AFP photo

    Backed by influential politicians and a major media campaign, the
    pro-Armenian lobby's defeat by its conventionally powerful rival in
    the "genocide resolution" debate shows both the strengths and limits
    of guerrilla tactics in political battles.

    In their campaign to get the U.S. House of Representatives to
    recognize World War I-era killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
    as "genocide," U.S. Armenians artfully utilized some of the classic
    strategies of "guerilla warfare," capitalizing on the elements of
    surprise and mobility to harass a larger, traditional "army" - in
    this case, Turkey.

    But the strong effort to get such a resolution passed before the
    last day of the current House term - and with it, the leadership
    of Armenian advocate Nancy Pelosi - was, in the end, unsuccessful,
    as the lower house of the U.S. Congress wrapped up its two-year term
    Wednesday without taking up the topic.

    The nature of many such political, and military, confrontations can
    be illuminated by considering the famous words of former U.S. Defense
    Secretary Donald Rumsfeld: "You go to war with the army you have,
    not the army you might want." In Rumsfeldian terms, the Armenians
    were equipped with the backing of outgoing House Speaker Pelosi,
    most of the Democratic big shots in the House and a full-fledge media
    campaign, but lacked the strong firepower needed to counter their
    conventionally powerful rival.

    That the duration between the initiative and the outcome is inversely
    proportional to the success of the operation is another key tenet
    of guerrilla warfare, and one that proved crucial in this case. The
    Armenians decided to launch their "genocide" recognition effort at a
    time when their ally, Pelosi, had lost midterm congressional elections
    against the Republicans and would cede her post in early 2011. The
    latest push was a last-ditch chance to win before the Republican
    takeover takes place.

    Celebrity-led campaign

    The pro-resolution media assault began with a brilliant high-tech
    attempt by reality-TV star Kim Kardashian and rock musician
    Serj Tankian, both Armenian-American celebrities, to use the
    social-networking websites Twitter and Facebook to urge their millions
    of followers to demand that Pelosi schedule a vote before the year's
    end on the "genocide resolution" bill pending in the House. Then last
    week, the Armenian National Committee of America, the largest and
    most influential U.S. Armenian group, structuralized and finalized
    the Armenian demand for a House floor vote.

    Armenia claims up to 1.5 million Armenians were systematically killed
    in 1915 under the rule of the Ottoman Empire. Turkey denies this,
    saying that any deaths were the result of civil strife that erupted
    when Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    Initially the Turks were confused; they were unable to grasp
    whether this was a serious and well-planned last-minute effort to
    get recognition for the Armenian claims of genocide or simply a way
    to raise funds for ANCA at the end of the year. The seriousness of
    the situation became clear Dec. 17, when ANCA announced that a House
    floor vote on the bill could be imminent.

    At this point, the disadvantages of the Armenian guerrilla attack
    became apparent. Turkey immediately mobilized its allies in Washington,
    mainly President Barack Obama's White House, the State Department and
    large defense companies. As regional power Turkey put its full weight
    to bear on the issue, the fight began to transform from a guerrilla
    attack into conventional warfare, giving Ankara the advantage.

    In this way, a vote was averted Dec. 17, and the Armenians began
    to lose their strength. This, too, follows the guerrilla-warfare
    principle that as the length of time between the guerrilla initiative
    and the intended result increases, the guerrillas' chances of success
    fade. Eventually the Armenian effort formally was defeated when
    Pelosi declined to schedule a vote on the "genocide" bill Wednesday,
    the last day of the outgoing House.

    Throughout the later phases of the battle, Turkey and the Obama
    administration did play their parts well. Turkey refrained from blatant
    threats against the United States, and the White House declined to put
    public pressure on Pelosi. The pressure was of the behind-the-scenes
    variety. "Obama and his people deliberately stayed away from actions
    that would be seen as undermining Pelosi and the House's sovereignty,"
    said one analyst in Washington.

    One prime concern within the U.S. administration was that the passage
    of the Armenian "genocide" bill might prompt Turkey - already a
    self-confident and independently acting power seeking to make its own
    policies in the Middle East and confronting Israel - to speed up a
    "paradigm shift" in its foreign policy, a fear one U.S. official
    privately confirmed.

    Reactions from Turkey, Armenia

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Thursday expressed
    pleasure that a resolution on recognizing Armenian claims of genocide
    had not been included in the official daily agenda of the U.S. House
    of Representatives.

    "We are pleased that a development that would strike a blow to balances
    in the Caucasus and Turkish-American and Turkish-Armenian relations
    did not happen in the U.S. Congress. Common sense prevailed yesterday,"
    Davutoglu told reporters. "We thank the U.S.

    administration for their efforts. This incident once again proved
    that assessment of historical incidents by political authorities is
    principally wrong."

    The Armenians were furious by the House's failure to vote, but pledged
    to fight back in the new Congress. "Armenian-Americans are angered and
    disappointed by the failure of Speaker Pelosi and the House Democratic
    leadership to honor their commitment to allow a bipartisan majority
    to vote for passage of the Armenian genocide resolution," said ANCA
    chairman Ken Hachikian. "Speaker Pelosi clearly had the majority,
    the authority and the opportunity to pass the Armenian genocide
    resolution, yet refused to allow a vote on this human-rights measure."

    "I am happy that reason and common sense have prevailed," said Namik
    Tan, Turkey's ambassador to Washington.

    "We now know that a majority of Congress agrees with President
    Obama about the importance of the U.S.-Turkey relationship, and
    expect this wisdom to carry over into the next Congress so that we
    can avoid yet another needless round of bashing our ally Turkey,"
    said Lincoln McCurdy, president of the Turkish Coalition of America,
    a U.S. Turkish group.




    From: A. Papazian
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