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  • House, Not Historian

    HOUSE, NOT HISTORIAN

    Indiana Daily Student
    http://www.idsnews.com/news/story.aspx?id= 74407
    March 11 2010

    The House Foreign Relations Committee's recent vote to approve a
    resolution recognizing the systematic slaughter of 1.5 million ethnic
    Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1923 was
    inappropriate and unproductive.

    Although few Western historians dispute the fact that this slaughter
    constituted genocide, we disagree with the notion that the United
    States House of Representatives should be the final arbiter of
    historical fact.

    Not only is doing so obviously outside the scope of Congress' duties,
    but it is also both a distraction from the tangible actions Congress
    can and should take to combat genocide and a detriment to U.S. efforts
    in the Middle East and Afghanistan.

    Instead of issuing non-binding resolutions defining historical events
    that happened more than 90 years ago, the House (and the federal
    government as a whole) would do better to take concrete actions toward
    stopping ongoing events of this kind and adopting policies that would
    better prevent such events from happening in the future.

    Regarding concerns about this resolution's effects on U.S.-Turkey
    relations, fortunately prospects for the resolution's passage in the
    House as a whole appear dim. If that were not the case, U.S. diplomats
    would have even more of a problem on their hands.

    Given that Turkey has already recalled its ambassador from Washington,
    we can only hope that the House realizes the folly of passing such
    an ineffectual resolution.

    If it does not, it risks jeopardizing one of the United States'
    most important relationships in the region.

    Turkey allows the United States to operate air bases essential to
    ongoing efforts in Iraq and is leading operations in Kabul in its
    capacity as one of the few members of the North Atlantic Treaty
    Organization to provide meaningful support to operations there.

    Maintaining amicable relations with Turkey is thus vital to U.S.

    military goals in the Middle East and Afghanistan.

    For the House to tell the world something it already knows at the price
    of harming our relationship with a major ally strikes us as foolish.

    DISSENT The House Foreign Affairs Committee was right to recognize
    genocide.

    Language is key in the way history is recorded and sets a precedent
    for what will be tolerated. For this reason, the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee's recognition of the Armenian Genocide at the hands of
    Ottoman Turks during World War I is a vital factor in the way we deal
    with genocide.

    Some argue that because Congress never declared the Holocaust to be
    genocide, the Armenian Genocide does not need recognition either.

    While Congress has never passed a resolution labeling the Holocaust
    as genocide, the United Nations has designated Jan. 27 to be the
    International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the
    Holocaust. There are also 25 Holocaust memorial centers across the
    United States, but there is only one Armenian Genocide museum, which
    is not yet completed.

    Others argue that the committee's resolution will strain our relations
    with Turkey and damage our ability to retain our military presence
    there. In reality, U.S.-Turkey relations will not be significantly
    damaged unless the resolution is passed by the full House, which is
    deemed unlikely by analysts.

    Twenty nations have already declared the Armenian Genocide as such.

    The U.S. has already forgone several opportunities to stop genocide
    throughout the past century -- so they should do what they can now. .

    -- Pooja Kansal
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