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Genocide Bill Seen As U.S. Pressure On Turkey In Yerevan

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  • Genocide Bill Seen As U.S. Pressure On Turkey In Yerevan

    Genocide Bill Seen As U.S. Pressure On Turkey In Yerevan
    http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/19 75827.html

    05.03.2010
    Tigran Avetisian, Irina Hovannisian


    Washington did not prevent a U.S. congressional panel from approving
    the Armenian genocide resolution on Thursday in order to press Turkey
    to ratify its normalization agreements with Armenia, leading
    pro-government politicians in Yerevan speculated on Friday.


    Official Yerevan swiftly hailed the decision by the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee as a `an important step toward the prevention of the
    crimes against humanity.' But senior representatives of Armenia's two
    largest governing parties saw other, more important factors were also
    behind the development.

    Razmik Zohrabian, a deputy chairman of President Serzh Sarkisian's
    Republican Party (HHK), said the U.S. administration is increasingly
    frustrated with Ankara's reluctance to unconditionally ratify the
    Turkish-Armenian protocols. The administration hopes the prospect of
    U.S. recognition of the Armenian genocide will make the Turks drop
    their ratification preconditions, he said.

    `I think those who voted for the resolution ... also felt that they
    should spur the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process that has
    stalled of late,' agreed Aram Safarian, a senior lawmaker from the
    Prosperous Armenia Party, the HHK's junior coalition partner.

    Speaking to RFE/RL's Armenian service, Safarian claimed that the
    Turkish government and parliament will increasingly understand the
    need to take `practical steps towards the ratification of these
    protocols' in the weeks ahead. `Otherwise, U.S., European Union and
    Russian sponsorship of the Turkish-Armenian dialogue prove to be a
    waste of time,' he said.

    U.S. officials have repeatedly called on Ankara and Yerevan to
    implement the agreements `without preconditions and within a
    reasonable timeframe.' The Armenian government has warned that it will
    walk away from the deal if the Turks persist in linking protocol
    ratification with the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    `If Turkey's parliament ratifies the protocols with reservations ...
    that will amount to the abrogation of the agreements,' Zohrabian told
    RFE/RL. `We will definitely not ratify them in that case.'

    Aleksandr Arzumanian, a former foreign minister affiliated with the
    main opposition Armenian National Congress (HAK) also construed the
    genocide bill's approval as U.S. pressure on Ankara. But he said the
    administration of President Barack Obama will prevent the bill from
    reaching the House floor in any case.

    `I'm sure they will use their administrative resources in full to keep
    the [House] speaker from putting the bill to a House vote,' Arzumanian
    told RFE/RL.
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