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  • Genocide vote irks Turkey

    Wall Street Journal
    March 5 2010


    Genocide vote irks Turkey


    By JOHN D. MCKINNON in Washington And MARC CHAMPION in Ankara, Turkey

    A U.S. congressional committee approved a resolution condemning the
    1915 slaughter of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide,
    rejecting a last-minute Obama administration effort to derail it and
    putting a chill on relations with Turkey.

    The resolution, approved on a 23-22 vote, faces an uncertain future in
    Congress. But nonetheless it could damage U.S. relations with Turkey,
    a vital ally in the Middle East and Central Asia. Within minutes of
    the vote, Ankara said it was recalling its ambassador from Washington
    for consultations. Turkey took a similar step in 2007, when the
    committee passed a similar resolution.

    Thursday's vote also raised concerns for big U.S. defense firms
    including Lockheed Martin Corp., Boeing Co., Raytheon Co., United
    Technologies Corp. and Northrop Grumman Corp. Turkey is involved in
    several big weapons projects with U.S. firms, and the companies are
    worried about losing business.

    The vote was carried live on most Turkish television and radio news
    channels and was seen as a significant blow to Turkey's attempt at
    rapprochement with Armenia.

    Armenians say as many as 1.5 million ethnic Armenians were killed in
    1915 during the dying days of the Ottoman Empire. Many historians
    agree that the executions and mass deportations into deserts amounted
    to genocide. Turkey argues the death toll was lower, and many Turks
    contend the deaths were a result of civil war stirred up by World War
    I opponents such as Russia, and included atrocities on both sides.

    The Obama administration had lobbied members of the panel to demur.
    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called House Foreign Affairs
    Committee Chairman Howard Berman (D., Calif.) on Wednesday and
    "indicated that further congressional action could impede progress on
    normalization of relations" between Turkey and Armenia, a White House
    spokesman said.

    That undermined a campaign pledge from then-Sen. Barack Obama, when he
    said in January 2008 that "as president I will recognize the Armenian
    genocide." The White House spokesman, Mike Hammer, added Thursday that
    "the president's position on the events of 1915 is well known and his
    view of that history has not changed."

    Until Wednesday, the Obama administration had taken a hands-off
    approach to the vote. Mr. Obama on Wednesday called Turkish President
    Abdullah Gul to thank him for his country's efforts to normalize
    relations with Armenia and pressed for rapid ratification of
    border-opening protocols, the White House said.

    Congress has voted to declare the 1915 killings as genocide before, in
    1975 and 1984. Armenian lobbyists push annually to reaffirm those
    decisions.

    "We can now declare the rapprochement with Armenia dead, the border
    cannot open now," said Husseyin Bagci, professor of international
    relations at the Middle East Technical University in Ankara. He
    predicted anti-Americanism in Turkey, already strong in recent years,
    would rise.

    Turkey's small Armenian community was subdued. "We live with Turks,
    and Turkey is changing for the first time in 100 years," said Etyen
    Mahcupyan, editor in chief of Agos, a bilingual Turkish-Armenian
    newspaper. His predecessor, Hrant Dink, was assassinated by a Turkish
    nationalist in 2007. "Of course 1915 is hugely important to us, but
    not what the U.S. Congress calls it."

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB4000142 4052748704187204575101981018521028.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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