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ANKARA: US To Vote On Armenian Allegations

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  • ANKARA: US To Vote On Armenian Allegations

    US TO VOTE ON ARMENIAN ALLEGATIONS

    WorldBulletin.net
    March 4 2010
    Turkey

    The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs will
    vote a draft resolution on Armenian allegations on Thursday.

    The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs will
    vote a draft resolution on Armenian allegations on Thursday, outcome
    of which is critical for not only Turkey-U.S. relations but also the
    recent rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia.

    The draft which will be voted at the House Committee on Foreign Affairs
    with 46 members chaired by Californian legislator Howard Berman calls
    on U.S. President Barack Obama to recognise the tragic events of 1915
    --which took place shortly before the fall of the Ottoman Sate-- as
    "genocide".

    The draft resolution was proposed by Democrats Adam Schiff and Frank
    Pallone and Republicans George Radanovich and Mark Kirk, all important
    figures for the Armenian lobby in the U.S.

    Turkey strongly rejects the genocide allegations and regards the
    events as civil strife in wartime which claimed lives of many Turks
    and Armenians.

    Every year between March 4 and April 24 alarm bells ring for relations
    between Turkey and U.S., two close allies for decades.

    The Armenian lobbies in the U.S. pressure the U.S. legislators to
    pass a resolution urging the President to recognise the events as
    "genocide".

    Turkish legislators and officials pay visits to U.S. House and hold
    meetings with senior U.S. officials and businessmen to prevent the
    resolution from being adopted.

    If the resolution is adopted then it is sent to the House of
    Representatives.

    A similar resolution was adopted with 27 seven votes against 21 in
    2007 but as a result of former President George W. Bush's intervention,
    the resolution was not brought to the House floor.

    Even if the resolution is adopted both in the Committee on Foreign
    Affairs and the House floor, it is not binding for the Obama
    administration, however it will show that legislators are sensitive
    about the issue.

    Delegation of Turkish legislators who are lobbying against the
    resolution say it will be a close call. They say the resolution will
    be adopted or rejected with only a few votes.

    With only a couple of hours left before the voting, the Obama
    administration has not taken a clear stance regarding the resolution.

    U.S. Department of State spokesman, Philip Crowley, urged the two
    countries to look forward to the future rather than dwelling in the
    past while Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Turkey and Armenia
    should review their own history together as part of their efforts to
    normalise relations.

    Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan drew attention to the promising
    process of normalisation of relations between Turkey and Armenia which
    began with the signing of two protocols in Switzerland, warning that
    adoption of the resolution on March 4, or a statement by U.S.

    President Obama on April 24 that will please the Armenian lobby would
    cast a serious blow to the normalisation process.

    Murat Mercan, chair of the Turkish Parliament's Foreign Relations
    Committee, who has been lobbying in the U.S. Congress against the
    resolution, said neither Turkey, the U.S. nor Armenia would benefit
    from adoption of the resolution, noting that it would only satisfy
    the ego of the Armenian lobby.
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