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  • BAKU: US Azerbaijanis regret over US Congress decision

    news.az, Azerbaijan
    March 6 2010


    US Azerbaijanis regret over US Congress decision
    Sat 06 March 2010 | 06:33 GMT Text size:


    US Congress Azerbaijani-American organizations express regret over the
    US Congressional Committee's attempt to legislate history.

    On March 4, 2010, the Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of
    Representatives voted to endorse the resolution H252, calling for the
    recognition of the World War I killings in Eastern Anatolia as
    "Armenian genocide". The resolution adopted in the committee by a
    narrow margin vote of 23-22 attempts to legislate history and impose a
    one-sided interpretation of it under the influence of ethnic special
    interest groups.

    The House Resolution H252 unfairly accuses Turkish nation of carrying
    out a premeditated genocide against the Armenian population of Ottoman
    Empire during the World War I. Article Two of the 1948 UN Convention
    on Genocide, adopted some three decades after World War I and
    non-retroactive in its application, describes genocide as carrying out
    acts intended "to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic,
    racial or religious group". According to a prominent genocide scholar
    Guenter Lewy, the Ottoman government's decision to relocate Armenians
    away from Eastern Anatolian front lines was due to the organized
    warfare launched by Armenian forces fighting on Russian side against
    Ottoman Empire, and did not constitute a premeditated program of
    extermination. The alleged intent of Ottoman Turkish government to
    eliminate Armenian population cannot be established due to
    non-deportation of Armenian communities of major Ottoman cities like
    Istanbul, Izmir and Aleppo. Furthermore, hundreds of thousands of
    Turks and Kurds, for whom no recognition was ever extended, also
    perished in Eastern Anatolia at the hands of Russian army and Armenian
    forces during the same period of time. Other experts on the regional
    history, including Bernard Lewis, Stanford Shaw and Justin McCarthy,
    also rejected the deliberate and one-sided labeling of these
    historical events as "Armenian genocide".

    The H. Res. 252 also derails the Turkish-Armenian rappochement as well
    as the related Armenian-Azerbaijani peace process in the Caucasus
    region. Since 1993, Armenia forcibly occupies 20% of the territory of
    neighboring Azerbaijan and nearly 1 million Azeri Turks, displaced by
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, are unable to return to their homes.
    Furthermore, Armenia refrains from recognizing the 1921 Kars Treaty
    thus refusing to respect the territorial integrity of its neighbors,
    Turkey and Azerbaijan. The historical revisionism embodied in H.Res.
    252 under the pressure of ethnic-interest lobby is not only wasteful
    at a time when numerous other challenges are facing our nation
    requiring the attention of U.S. Congress. It also bring damage to the
    U.S. foreign policy in the volatile Middle East and serves to reward
    the counter productive and non-compromising position assumed by the
    Republic of Armenia against a key U.S. ally, Turkey.

    AAC and ASA join Azeri- and Turkic-Americans in thanking the 22 House
    Representatives who voted against H. Res. 252 in the Foreign Affairs
    Committee. We call upon all U.S. legislators and foreign policy
    experts to help the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement by letting the two
    sides resolve their historical woes without interference, and instead
    focus their efforts on speedy and peaceful resolution of conflicts in
    the Caucasus region.

    News.Az

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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