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CNN: Congress Debates Labeling 1915 Armenian Killings 'Genocide'

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  • CNN: Congress Debates Labeling 1915 Armenian Killings 'Genocide'

    CONGRESS DEBATES LABELING 1915 ARMENIAN KILLINGS 'GENOCIDE'
    By Ivan Watson

    CNN
    March 4 2010

    Resolution would recognize 1915 killings of ethnic Armenians in Ottoman
    Turkey as genocide "It would harm U.S.-Turkish relations," said Burak
    Ozugergin, Turkey's foreign ministry spokesman Turkey officially denies
    a genocide took place in the last days of the crumbling Ottoman Empire
    Previous resolution in 2007 did not make it to the house floor

    Istanbul, Turkey (CNN) -- A key U.S. congressional committee debated
    Thursday whether the 1915 killings of ethnic Armenians in Ottoman
    Turkey should be officially recognized as genocide.

    The nearly century-old issue has placed both Congress and the
    White House in the middle of a political minefield, balancing moral
    considerations with both domestic and international concerns.

    Turkey, among other things, is considered a strong American ally and
    is home to a critical U.S. air base.

    A draft of the resolution being debated by the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee calls on President Obama to "accurately characterize the
    systematic and deliberate annihilation of 1.5 million Armenians
    as genocide."

    A Turkish foreign ministry spokesman recently issued a public warning
    that passage of the resolution "would harm U.S.-Turkish relations."

    Turkish officials also warned the resolution could hurt a historic
    agreement aimed at normalizing relations between Turkey and its
    neighbor Armenia, and on reopening their long-closed border.

    "It would harm the normalization process," Turkish Foreign Ministry
    spokesman Burak Ozugergin said. "And it is wrong. The substance is
    also wrong."

    Turkey officially denies a genocide took place in the last days of
    the crumbling Ottoman Empire. Ankara instead says Muslim Turks and
    Christian Armenians massacred each other on the killing fields of
    World War I.

    But every April 24, Armenians worldwide observe a remembrance day
    for those killed. Historians have extensively documented the Ottoman
    military's forced death-march of hundreds of thousands of ethnic
    Armenians into the Syrian desert in 1915.

    The killings decimated the Armenian population in what is modern-day
    eastern Turkey.

    The Armenian government and influential Armenian diaspora groups have
    urged countries around the world to formally label the events of 1915
    "genocide."

    The dispute over the bloody events of nearly a century ago continues
    to divide Turkey and Armenia, two neighbors who do not share formal
    diplomatic relations.

    "I don't pretend to be a professional historian," said Foreign
    Affairs Committee Chairman Howard Berman, D-California. "But the
    vast majority of experts ... agree that the tragic massacres of the
    Armenians constitute genocide."

    U.S. loyalty to Turkey doesn't justify "turning a blind eye," Berman
    said. It is "now time for Turkey to accept the reality of the Armenian
    genocide."

    Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-New York, acknowledged Turkey is an "important,
    strong [and] necessary ally of the United States." But "overriding all
    of that," he said, "is the issue of justice and the issue of history.

    ... History has to be righted. It has to be confronted. It has to
    be acknowledged."

    Opponents of the resolution expressed sympathy toward the victims
    of the 1915 killings, but said current political concerns have to
    take priority.

    Rep. Mike Pence, R-Indiana, praised the committee's "sincere effort"
    to illuminate "a dark chapter in history," and said he believes the
    killings constitute genocide.

    But "now is not the time for this committee of the American Congress
    to take up the measure that is now before us," he said, adding "I do
    not minimize the horror that took place."

    Turkey is a strategic partner of U.S. efforts in both Iraq and
    Afghanistan, he said. In addition, the logistical support provided by
    the U.S. base in Incirlik, Turkey, is a "staple" of American power
    in the Middle East, he said. "In a time of war," the United States
    should not "take the relationship [with Turkey] for granted."

    Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Virginia, said Congress should not do anything
    to undermine the Turkish government, which is a "secular alternative
    model for the Muslim world."

    "I hate this vote," he said. "The United States has a great deal at
    stake in the Turkish relationship," and passing the resolution would
    jeopardize that relationship in both "little and big" ways. Congress
    shouldn't "pontificate on this issue" and then pretend "there will
    be no consequences," he said.

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned Berman on Wednesday that
    passage of the resolution could "impede progress on normalization
    of relations" between Turkey and Armenia, according to White House
    National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer.

    Last year, the foreign ministers of Turkey and Armenia signed a series
    of protocols aimed at establishing embassies in each other's capital.

    The U.S.-, European- and Russian-backed agreement also called for
    the creation of an international committee of historians to examine
    archives and "restore mutual confidence between the two nations."

    In October 2009, Armenia's president traveled to Turkey to attend a
    historic soccer match between the two countries' national teams.

    Despite this round of "football diplomacy," the diplomatic overture
    has slowed in recent months.

    In a statement on its Web site last January, Armenia's foreign
    minister accused Turkey of "continuously and obviously trying to put
    preconditions: It creates an impression of seeking artificial pretexts
    and threatens the whole process of normalization of Armenian-Turkish
    relations."

    "Turkey is trying to wiggle out of the protocols for now because
    it did not prove politically expedient for [the Turkish government]
    under the circumstances that developed," said Nigar Goksel, a Turkish
    foreign policy analyst with the European Stability Initiative who
    closely monitors Turkish relations with the Caucasus region.

    But Goksel warned that passage of the genocide resolution would also
    hurt U.S. interests in the region.

    "It's a lose-lose for the U.S.," she said. "If the genocide bill
    passes, [the government of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan]
    loses blood to the Turkish opposition and the establishment-segments
    it is battling with, and has less political capital to justify
    collaborating with America on other fronts, such as Iran."

    In 2007, the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed a resolution
    recognizing the Armenian "genocide." The Turkish government protested
    by temporarily recalling its ambassador from Washington.

    The resolution did not make it to the House floor.

    http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/03/04/tur key.armenia/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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