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ANKARA: Turkish Americans Urge Obama To Block 'Genocide' Bill

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  • ANKARA: Turkish Americans Urge Obama To Block 'Genocide' Bill

    TURKISH AMERICANS URGE OBAMA TO BLOCK 'GENOCIDE' BILL

    Today's Zaman
    March 24 2010
    Turkey

    A major Turkish-American group has urged US President Barack Obama to
    discourage the passage of a resolution in the US Congress supporting
    Armenian genocide claims by making a public statement expressing his
    opposition to the resolution.

    The Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA) also called on
    Obama, who will issue an annual message on the Armenian killings in
    the early 20th century on April 24, to "remember and honor" the Ottoman
    Muslims who also perished during an Armenian revolt in the final years
    of the Ottoman Empire, the Anatolia news agency reported on Tuesday.

    Turkey denies claims that 1.5 million Armenians were killed in a
    genocide campaign, saying the death toll is inflated and many Ottoman
    Turks were also killed during the fighting.

    The US House Committee on Foreign Affairs passed a resolution -- by
    23 votes to 22 -- on March 4 endorsing the Armenian version of history.

    It is not clear whether the measure will reach the House floor for a
    vote. The ATAA letter said further consideration by the US Congress
    would both harm US-Turkish ties and the process of reconciliation
    between Turkey and Armenia. Two protocols signed by Turkey and Armenia
    in October to normalize their ties envisage, among other things,
    the establishment of a commission of historians to study the World
    War I events.

    "The United States must speak with one voice on Turkish-Armenian
    reconciliation. We can not simultaneously encourage ratification of the
    protocols while prejudicing the outcomes of one of their elements --
    the envisaged joint historical commission," the letter reads.

    US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reiterated her support for the
    Turkish-Armenian agreement to create the commission of historians. "I
    think that's the right way to go, I think, to have the two countries
    and the two peoples focusing on this themselves. I have said many
    times we cannot change the past we inherit. All we can do is try
    to have a better future," she said in an interview with a Russian
    television channel, the text of which was published by the US State
    Department on Monday.
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