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  • House 'genocide' resolution sparks controversy

    examiner.com
    March 5 2010


    House 'genocide' resolution sparks controversy

    March 5, 10:25 AMNY Military Headlines Examiner John Signoriello

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee approved a resolution Thursday
    that labeled Turkey's early 20th-century atrocities against the
    Armenian people as 'genocide.'

    The measure passed by a 23-22 vote.

    Minutes after the vote, Turkey withdrew its ambassador to the U.S.

    HR 252 states in part:

    "The Armenian Genocide was conceived and carried out by the Ottoman
    Empire from 1915 to 1923, resulting in the deportation of nearly
    2,000,000 Armenians...1,500,000 men, women, and children were killed
    and 14,500,000 survivors were expelled from their homes."

    Turkey's Foreign Minister warned the Obama administration to impede
    the resolution or "the picture ahead will not be a positive one,"
    according to AFP.

    Foreign Minister Davutoglu said the Obama administration had not put
    sufficient weight behind efforts to block the vote and called on
    Washington to do more to prevent the measure from now going to the
    full House.

    He complained of a lack of 'strategic vision' in Washington, adding
    that the issue was a matter of 'honor' for his country.

    The Wall Street Journal reported that the Obama administration had
    lobbied members of the committee to oppose the resolution.

    According to WSJ, a White House spokesman said Secretary of State
    Hillary Clinton had called House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman
    Howard Berman (D-CA) prior to the vote to indicate that "further
    congressional action could impede progress on normalization of
    relations" between Turkey and Armenia.

    Some commentators, particularly those with a pro-resolution bent,
    mentioned that opposition to the proposal was 'softer' than in years
    past.


    ------------------------------------ --------------------------------------------

    Turm oil in Turkey

    The House resolution comes at a particularly bad time for Turkey,
    which finds itself embroiled in a military coup controversy.

    Seven high-ranking Turkish military officers were charged last
    Wednesday with plotting a coup against the country's Islamist-leaning
    government, two days after as many as 50 officers were arrested and
    accused of belonging to the plot, according to the Christian Science
    Monitor.

    Reuters reports that four admirals, a retired brigadier-general and
    two retired colonels were jailed....

    < Click here for an article about that topic >


    ------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------

    A WSJ article pointed out the President Obama's opposition to the
    genocide proposal actually undermined a campaign pledge he made in
    January 2008 when he said "as president I will recognize the Armenian
    genocide."

    White House spokesman, Mike Hammer, said Thursday , according to WSJ:

    "The president's position on the events of 1915 is well known and his
    view of that history has not changed."

    Eighteen NY and NJ legislators co-sponsored the resolution, including
    NY Reps Charles Rangel and Anthony Weiner.

    A similar resolution is pending in the Senate, where NY Senator
    Charles Schumer is a co-sponsor.

    Committee approval of the resolution is the first step in the
    legislative process.

    Introduced bills and resolutions first go to committees that
    deliberate, investigate, and revise them before they go to general
    debate.

    A similar resolution languished in committee during the last
    administration because President Bush opposed it.

    NY Congressman, Michael McMahon, a member of the committee, opposed
    the resolution.

    < Click here for an article on that topic >

    "If HR 252 is passed and Turkey decides to close its border to our
    troops in Iraq or remove its $100 million investment in Afghanistan,
    our Armed Forces will be forced to take longer, more dangerous routes
    to and from Iraq, exposing them to a greater possibility of attack and
    longer deployments," Rep. McMahon stated.

    Turkey is the critical passageway for our troops to Iraq, he said,
    shortening travel time and reducing the risk of an IED attack.

    "Furthermore, as a critical Muslim NATO ally and partner in
    Afghanistan, we rely on Turkey to protect our troops as part of the
    broader Afghan reconstruction effort."

    Former Presidents Jimmy Carter, George Bush I, Bill Clinton and George
    Bush II have all opposed a similar resolution based on similar
    arguments, according to Rep. McMahon, while Secretary of Defense
    Robert Gates, under both the Bush and Obama Administrations, has
    warned against the passage of the resolution.

    "If Turkey decides to withdraw its support for the US mission in Iraq
    and Afghanistan, I know that my visits to Walter Reed and Arlington
    will only increase," Rep McMahon stated. "Even with my profound
    sympathy for the families of those who perished during the Ottoman
    Empire, I cannot responsibly risk such a possibility."

    Rep. McMahon represents the 13th Congressional District, which
    includes all of Staten Island and parts of Brooklyn.

    He faces re-election in November.

    Michael Allegretti, a possible GOP opponent, announced he was in favor
    of the resolution.

    `I urge the members of the House Foreign Relations to stand-up and
    recognize the genocide which took place between 1915-1923," Mr.
    Allegretti stated."It is unspeakable that one and a half million
    Armenians lost their lives in an effort to erase them from their
    homeland. Passage of this resolution would be a positive step for the
    region."

    Rep. McMahon called Allegretti's position "reckless, irresponsible and
    a serious threat to US national security and the safety of our Armed
    Forces."

    Many analysts have pointed out that passage of the resolution comes at
    a time the US is seeking Turkey's support for sanctions against Iran.

    An article in the Jerusalem Post quoted an anonymous diplomatic source
    as saying Turkey did not ask Israel's help to lobby against the
    resolution, as it has in years past, because of deteriorating
    relations between the two countries.

    That article mentions that Israeli official Haim Oron has called on
    the Knesset to recognize the Armenian genocide.

    "It is incumbent upon Israel's Knesset, in particular, to conduct a
    thorough debate and reach a resolution recognizing the Armenian
    genocide that occurred nearly 100 years ago," said Oron, warning that
    "the attempt to deny it and erase it from history is part of a
    campaign that has consequences for other denials."

    The Jerusalem Post article mentions that, in 2007, Anti-Defamation
    League national director Abe Foxman incurred Turkish wrath when he
    issued a statement saying that the Turkish actions toward the
    Armenians from 1915-1918 were "tantamount to genocide."

    Relations between Israel and Turkey have showed signs of breaking down
    lately, the Jerusalem Post article states; however, Israel has avoided
    recognizing the Armenian genocide at all costs, and the government has
    in the past thwarted all attempts to promote such an official
    recognition.

    A similar 'genocide' dispute is one of several issues bogging down
    negotiations between Turkey and Armenia.

    Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols in October of 2009 to
    establish diplomatic ties and reopen their shared border in a deal
    hailed as a historic step toward ending decades of hostility, yet the
    parliaments of both countries have not ratified the measures

    Turkey's refusal stems, in part, from (Armenian President) Yerevan's
    attempts to have the massacres internationally recognized as genocide,
    according an AFP article written earlier this year.

    There is another sticking point.

    Turkish officials have repeatedly said the agreements will not be
    ratified without progress in the dispute over Nagorny-Karabakh,
    according to Mariam Harutunian of AFP.

    Backed by Armenian President Yerevan, ethnic Armenian separatists
    seized control of Karabakh and seven surrounding districts from
    Azerbaijan during a war in the early 1990s that claimed an estimated
    30,000 lives, she explained, adding that Turkey closed its border with
    Armenia in 1993 in a show of solidarity with Azerbaijan--with which it
    has strong ethnic, trade and energy links--against Yerevan's support
    for the enclave's separatists.

    The Jerusalem Post article quoted the head of Armenia's parliament as
    saying that it will not ratify the deal before the Turkish parliament
    does.

    http://www.examiner.com/x-36464- NY-Military-Headlines-Examiner~y2010m3d5-House-gen ocide-resolution-sparks-controversy
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