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Armenian Genocide Resolution In The House Draws Ire From Turkey

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  • Armenian Genocide Resolution In The House Draws Ire From Turkey

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION IN THE HOUSE DRAWS IRE FROM TURKEY
    By Matt Palazzolo

    The Heights, Boston College
    http://www.bcheights.com/marketplace/armen ian-genocide-resolution-in-the-house-draws-ire-fro m-turkey-1.1264550
    March 11 2010
    MA

    The U.S. House of Representatives resurrected a nearly 100-year-old
    genocide controversy with a vote on Thursday.

    The House Foreign Affairs committee passed, by a narrow 23-22 vote,
    a non-binding resolution recognizing the mass killings of Armenians
    by Turkish forces during World War I as genocide. By passing the
    resolution, the committee is calling upon Congress to formally
    recognize the genocide by passing its own binding law.

    The Turkish government harshly condemned the committee's actions.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan claimed the resolution will
    "damage bilateral relations between countries, their interests, and
    their visions for the future." The Turkish government also recalled
    its ambassador to the United States for consultations soon after the
    House committee passed the resolution.

    The Obama administration also denounced the resolution. Secretary
    of State Hillary Clinton stated that the administration "strongly
    opposes the resolution ... and will work very hard to make sure it
    does not go to the House floor." Interestingly, President Obama,
    Vice President Biden, and Clinton, all during their terms as senator,
    urged the Bush administration to recognize the genocide.

    The administration's opposition to the bill is linked to American
    foreign policy interests. The military has a base in Incirlik, Turkey,
    which it has operated since the 1950s. The airbase has been used
    as a launch point for reconnaissance flights when Saddam Hussein
    ruled Iraq, as well as current military actions in Afghanistan and
    the Middle East. Turkey is also a strategic partner with the United
    States in the War on Terror and the present conflicts in Iraq and
    Afghanistan. President Obama has recently prodded Turkey and Armenia
    into signing an agreement to establish diplomatic relations and open
    their respective borders to each other. Ironically, the day before the
    House committee passed the resolution in question, Obama called the
    Turkish prime minister and praised his efforts to normalize relations
    with Armenia.

    The disputed genocide occurred during World War I and in its aftermath,
    when the Ottoman Empire was still in existence and Armenia was not yet
    a sovereign state. The Ottomans entered the war in 1915, joining the
    Central Powers of Germany and Austria-Hungary, and began attacking
    Russia. Armenians living in Turkey sympathized with Russia, due to
    their shared Eastern Orthodox religion and Slavic culture.

    Several volunteer Armenian army battalions actually fought alongside
    Russian soldiers during a counter-offensive against the Ottomans in
    the Caucasus region. In response, the Ottoman government arrested
    Armenian political and intellectual leaders, and in May 1915, it
    ordered the military to forcibly deport all Armenian citizens from
    the country. More than one million Armenians were uprooted from their
    homes and marched into the Arabian desert. The Armenians were treated
    inhumanely by their Turkish escorts, often being denied food, shelter,
    and rest. Soldiers would periodically massacre groups of Armenians
    and leave their bodies behind to rot in the desert. The deportation
    ended with the Central Powers' defeat in World War I and the subsequent
    collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey, the modern successor state to the Ottoman Empire, has
    continuously denied that the Armenian genocide ever occurred.

    According to the Turkish government, Armenian casualties can be linked
    to sectarian violence between Muslim Turks and Christian Armenians,
    unintentional deaths during the forced deportation process, and a
    famine that occurred in Turkey during the war. The government disputes
    the benchmark number of 1.5 million Armenian deaths, claiming that
    roughly 500,000 Armenians reached their destination in Damascus
    and the Euphrates River valley. Under current Turkish law, citizens
    can be arrested and tried for "insulting Turkey" if they recognize
    the genocide.

    The formal definition for genocide, according to a 1948 U.N.

    convention, is "acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or
    in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group." Turkey
    alleges that the Ottoman government only intended to deport the
    Armenians, while its detractors claim that their actions were actually
    extermination disguised as deportation. Twenty countries, as well as
    42 U.S. states, have recognized the Armenian genocide. In the academic
    world, denial of the genocide is the minority view, with few historians
    outside of Turkey refusing to recognize the time of absolute terror. In
    politics, many countries, such as the United States and the United
    Kingdom, acknowledge that atrocities took place but refuse to label
    them as genocide for fear of reprisals from their Turkish allies.

    The recent House committee resolution puts the Obama administration
    in the awkward position of choosing between moral obligations and
    political interests. As a presidential candidate, Obama stated that,
    "America deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian
    genocide and responds forcefully to all genocides."

    However, now Obama is confronted with an enraged Turkish government
    on which the United States relies heavily for support in the War on
    Terror. Obama's idealism has been tested, and he has passed on the
    opportunity to change the Bush administration's official denial of
    the genocide. It seems that in the world of politics, whether one is
    Republican or Democrat, national interest still trumps morality.
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