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  • U.S. Armenia Genocide Vote Looms, Angering Turkey

    U.S. ARMENIA GENOCIDE VOTE LOOMS, ANGERING TURKEY
    Susan Cornwell and Arshad Mohammed

    Reuters
    March 4 2010
    UK

    Tue, Mar 2 2010WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. congressional panel headed
    on Thursday toward a vote on calling a 1915 massacre of Armenians by
    Ottoman forces genocide despite a plea from the Obama administration
    to drop the matter and defuse a dispute with Turkey.

    The issue puts President Barack Obama between NATO ally Turkey,
    which rejects calling the events genocide, and an important U.S.

    Armenian-American constituency and their backers in Congress ahead
    of a November congressional election.

    Turkey has said its ties with the United States would be damaged and
    that Ankara's efforts to normalize relations with Armenia could be
    endangered if the resolution is passed when the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee votes on Thursday.

    One Turkish government official said Turkey was open to all options
    -- including the recall of its ambassador to Washington -- if the
    congressional panel approves the legislation.

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton telephoned House Foreign Affairs
    Committee Chairman Howard Berman, a Democrat, on Wednesday to argue
    that the legislation could harm efforts to normalize Turkish-Armenian
    relations, the White House said.

    "Secretary Clinton called Chairman Berman ... and in that conversation
    the secretary indicated that further congressional action could
    impede progress on normalization of relations," said National Security
    Council spokesman Mike Hammer.

    Turkey and Armenia signed a protocol last year to normalize relations
    but the papers are yet to pass through the parliament of either
    country.

    Turkey is an important ally whose help the United States needs to
    solve confrontations from Iran to Afghanistan.

    Despite Clinton's appeal, Berman went ahead with a hearing on the
    issue.

    "Turkey is a vital and, in most respects, a loyal ally of the United
    States in a volatile region," Berman, an influential member of Congress
    because of his chairmanship of the foreign affairs committee, said
    at the start of the hearing.

    "Be that as it may, nothing justifies Turkey's turning a blind eye
    to the reality of the Armenian genocide," he added.

    "Germany has accepted responsibility for the Holocaust. South Africa
    set up a Truth Commission to look at Apartheid. And here at home, we
    continue to grapple with the legacies of slavery and our horrendous
    treatment of Native Americans," he added.

    "It is now time for Turkey to accept the reality of the Armenian
    genocide."

    FRIENDS IN THE AREA

    Muslim Turkey accepts that many Christian Armenians were killed by
    Ottoman forces but denies that up to 1.5 million died and that it
    amounted to genocide -- a term employed by many Western historians
    and some foreign parliaments.

    Rep. Dan Burton, an Indiana Republican, said there was "no question
    horrible things happened," but urged voting against the resolution.

    "We need to have as many friends in that part of the world as
    possible. And Turkey has been a friend," Burton said.

    The non-binding resolution, to be voted on by the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee, would call on Obama to ensure U.S. policy formally refers
    to the massacre as "genocide" and to use that term when he delivers
    his annual message on the issue in April -- something Obama avoided
    doing last year.

    The panel approved a similar bill in 2007 but it was never put to a
    full House vote amid fears it would alienate Turkey.

    Similar resolutions have been introduced in many past sessions of
    Congress but have never passed both houses. Ronald Reagan was the
    only U.S. president to publicly call the killings genocide.

    (Additional reporting by Zerin Elci in Ankara, Writing by Thomas
    Grove and Arshad Mohammed; Editing by Doina Chiacu)
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