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Turkey Vs. Armenia And Why It Matters To President Obama

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  • Turkey Vs. Armenia And Why It Matters To President Obama

    TURKEY VS. ARMENIA AND WHY IT MATTERS TO PRESIDENT OBAMA

    Fox News
    March 4 2010

    The White House is asking Congress to drop legislation that labels
    a massacre of Armenians by Turkish forces in 1915 as genocide, but
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee is calling for a vote, despite
    pressure that included a phone call from the United States top diplomat
    Secretary of State Clinton to the chairman of the committee.

    Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Representative Howard Berman (D-CA)
    told the committee that even if the Turks as well as the United States
    felt the resolution would have "terrible consequences" for U.S./Turkey
    relations, he urged the members to vote in favor of the legislation.

    "I believe the Turks, however deep their dismay today, fundamentally
    agree that the U.S.-Turkish alliance is simply too important to
    get sidetracked by a non-binding resolution passed by the House of
    Representatives," Berman said in his opening remarks. "At some point,
    every nation must come to terms with its own history. And that is
    all we ask of Turkey."

    The White House says President Obama, who supported the legislation
    when he was a member of the Senate and running for President, has not
    changed his position. "The President's position on the events of 1915
    is well known and his view of that history has not changed," National
    Security Spokesman Mike Hammer said in a statement. "The President
    spoke yesterday with President Gul and expressed appreciation for his
    and Prime Minister Erdogan's efforts on normalization of relations
    between Turkey and Armenia, and pressed for rapid ratification of
    the protocols."

    The resolution on the Armenian genocide was also brought up under the
    administration of President George W. Bush when the House tried to
    pass the non-binding resolution in 2007. At the time, President Bush
    ran into the same problem the Obama administration is now facing,
    recognizing the genocide, but asking the House not to pass the
    resolution so as to maintain good relations between the United States
    and Turkey. The United States maintains the Incirlik military base
    in Turkey which is used as a main hub for training missions for the
    wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. In 2008, then candidate Obama released a
    statement saying he supported the Armenian Genocide Resolution and that
    "as President I will recognize the Armenian genocide." However, that
    statement may come back to haunt the current President who recently
    has used softer language when asked about the use of his wording.

    In April 2009 when Obama visited Turkey he was pointedly asked about
    his 2008 remarks during a joint statement with Turkish President
    Abdullah Gul. Obama danced around his previous comments, choosing
    instead to focus on the future. "What I'd like to do is to encourage
    President Gul to move forward with what have been some very fruitful
    negotiations. And I'm not interested in the United States in any way
    tilting these negotiations one way or another while they are having
    useful discussions." Obama said.

    And on the same trip, the President made sure to mention the genocide,
    thought not by name, at an address to the Turkish Parliament, but asked
    the two countries to work together going forward. "while there's been
    a good deal of commentary about my views, it's really about how the
    Turkish and Armenian people deal with the past," Obama said. "And the
    best way forward for the Turkish and Armenian people is a process that
    works through the past in a way that is honest, open and constructive."

    Meanwhile, the legislation, even if it were to make it out of
    committee, may not be destined for the floor. Nadeam Elshami, the
    spokeswoman for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), who in the past
    has been supportive of the bill, is saying it's a process. "We'll
    look at this one step at a time," Elshami told Fox News.

    http://whitehouse.blogs.foxnews.com/2010/03 /04/turkey-vs-armenia-and-obama/
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