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House Foreign Affairs Committee Howard L. Berman (D-CA), Chairman

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  • House Foreign Affairs Committee Howard L. Berman (D-CA), Chairman

    Targeted News Service
    March 4, 2010 Thursday 12:08 AM EST


    House Foreign Affairs Committee Howard L. Berman (D-CA), Chairman

    WASHINGTON


    The House Foreign Affairs Committee issued the following news release:

    Chairman Berman's opening remarks at markup of the Armenian Genocide
    resolution, H. Res. 252

    Turkey is a vital and, in most respects, a loyal ally of the United
    States in a volatile region. We have also been a loyal ally to Turkey,
    and should continue to be so. Be that as it may, nothing justifies
    Turkey's turning a blind eye to the reality of the Armenian Genocide.
    It is regrettable, for example, that Turkey's Nobel-Prize-winning
    novelist, Orhan Pamuk, was essentially hounded out of his native
    country for speaking out on this subject. Now I don't pretend to be a
    professional historian. I haven't scoured the archives in Istanbul
    looking for original documents.

    But the vast majority of experts - the vast majority - academics,
    authorities in international law, and others who have looked at this
    issue for years, agree that the tragic massacres of the Armenians
    constitute genocide.

    In a letter to members of congress two years ago, the International
    Association of Genocide Scholars stated the following, and I quote:

    "The historical record on the Armenian Genocide is unambiguous and
    documented by overwhelming evidence. It is proven by foreign office
    records of the United States, France, Great Britain, Russia, and
    perhaps most importantly, of Turkey's World War I allies, Germany and
    Austria-Hungary, as well as by the records of the Ottoman
    Courts-Martial of 1918-1920, and by decades of scholarship."

    "As crimes of genocide continue to plague the world, Turkey's policy
    of denying the Armenian Genocide gives license to those who perpetrate
    genocide everywhere."

    The Genocide Scholars urged the House to pass a resolution
    acknowledging the Armenian Genocide because, they said, it would
    constitute - and I quote again -- "recognition of a historical turning
    point in the twentieth century, the event that inaugurated the era of
    modern genocide. In spite of its importance, the Armenian Genocide has
    gone unrecognized until recently, and warrants a symbolic act of moral
    commemoration."

    Professor Yehuda Bauer, a highly respected scholar at the Hebrew
    University of Jerusalem, has written that the Armenian Genocide is, in
    his words, "the closest parallel to the Holocaust."

    In a 1985 report, a subcommission of the UN Commission on Human Rights
    found that the massacres of the Armenians qualified as genocide.

    And Raphael Lemkin, the Polish lawyer who coined the word "genocide"
    and drafted the international genocide convention, told an interviewer
    that, quote "I became interested in genocide because it happened to
    the Armenians."

    Nearly two dozen other countries - including France, Canada, Russia,
    Switzerland and Chile - have formally recognized the Armenian
    Genocide. So has the European Parliament.

    As the world leader in promoting human rights, the United States has a
    moral responsibility to join them.

    The Turks say passing this resolution could have terrible consequences
    for our bilateral relationship, and indeed perhaps there will be some
    consequences. But I believe that Turkey values its relations with the
    United States at least as much as we value our relations with Turkey.

    And 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.

    At some point, every nation must come to terms with its own history.
    And that is all we ask of Turkey.

    Germany has accepted responsibility for the Holocaust. South Africa
    set up a Truth Commission to look at Apartheid. And here at home, we
    continue to grapple with the legacies of slavery and our horrendous
    treatment of Native Americans.

    It is now time for Turkey to accept the reality of the Armenian Genocide.

    This will most likely be a difficult and painful process for the
    Turkish people, but at the end of the day, it will strengthen Turkish
    democracy and put the U.S.-Turkey relationship on a better footing.

    I urge my colleagues to support this important resolution.

    Contact: Lynne Weil, 202/225-5021
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