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State Dept Says It Cannot Stop Genocide Resolution

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  • State Dept Says It Cannot Stop Genocide Resolution

    STATE DEPT SAYS IT CANNOT STOP GENOCIDE RESOLUTION
    By Desmond Butler

    Associated Press
    03.17.10, 11:54 AM EDT

    WASHINGTON -- A U.S. congressional resolution that would recognize
    World War I-era killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as genocide
    could go forward despite opposition from the Obama administration.

    Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon told reporters there is
    no deal with Democratic congressional leaders to block the resolution.

    That contradicts earlier claims by the State Department.

    Turkey strongly opposes the resolution. It withdrew its ambassador
    to Washington earlier this month after a congressional committee
    approved the measure.

    Gordon acknowledged the congressional committee vote had set back
    relations at a time when the United States is seeking help from
    Turkey to rein in Iran's nuclear ambitions. But he said the United
    States has not seen a deterioration in cooperation with Turkey on a
    wide range of foreign policy matters.

    The Obama administration has urged lawmakers to keep the measure from
    a vote in the full U.S. House. It is not clear whether supporters of
    the resolution have enough support to bring it to the House floor.

    Gordon said the resolution is an obstacle for reconciliation talks
    between Turkey and Armenia. The two countries reached a deal last
    year to normalize relations and open their border, but it has not
    yet been ratified by their governments.

    But Gordon denied the process had stalled.

    "I really think that those two countries' leaderships are committed
    to doing this," he told reporters.

    He said that the Obama administration thinks the historical issues are
    best addressed by the two countries as part of reconciliation talks.

    Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by
    Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I, an event widely viewed by
    scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey, however,
    denies the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been
    inflated and that those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.

    In a speech, Gordon urged Turkey to step up pressure on Iran,
    a neighbor and important trading partner. He criticized Turkey for
    not voting on a resolution at the International Atomic Energy Agency
    demanding that Iran suspend construction of a once-secret nuclear
    facility.

    "With respect to Iran, while the international community has sought
    to present a single, coordinated message to Iran's government, Turkey
    has at times sounded a different note," Gordon said, according to
    prepared text of the speech.
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