Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenians question Udall's opposition to genocide bill

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenians question Udall's opposition to genocide bill

    Aspen Daily News, CO
    May 15 2010

    Armenians question Udall's opposition to genocide bill


    by David Frey, Aspen Daily News Correspondent
    Saturday, May 15, 2010

    Colorado Armenians are criticizing Sen. Mark Udall for backing away
    from his past support for a resolution that would acknowledge as
    genocide the 95-year-old massacre of ethnic Armenians living in
    Turkey.

    Udall had supported similar resolutions in the past ' a stance that
    won him endorsements and campaign contributions from Armenian
    political groups. But as senator, he has refused to co-sponsor or vote
    for the latest version.

    `That's a double standard from our perspective,' said Stephan
    Isberian, owner of Isberian Rugs, and a vocal member of a sizeable
    Roaring Fork Valley Armenian community. About 20 local Armenian
    families took out an ad in area newspapers calling on Congress to
    recognize the killings as a genocide.

    Udall said he still believes the atrocity amounted to genocide, but he
    worries Turkey, which staunchly opposes the resolution, would block
    U.S. access to a Turkish airbase, putting at risk troops in
    Afghanistan who may need access to the base.

    `So many of us did support him,' said Boulder resident Pamela Barsam
    Brown, who is editor of a newsletter that serves the Colorado Armenian
    community. `It feels like we've been stabbed in the back. He's taking
    positions now as senator against issues that he had taken strong
    stands on as a congressman.'

    On the 95th anniversary of the World War I-era massacres in Turkey on
    April 24, Udall issued a statement `commemorating the anniversary of
    the Armenian Genocide,' but it fell short of endorsing the resolution.

    `As a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, I have a special
    responsibility to listen to those in our armed forces and the national
    security community who have raised concerns about threats ' however
    irrational and unreasonable you and I may find them ' from the Turkish
    government to close our airbase at Incirlik or retaliate in other
    irresponsible ways should this resolution move forward,' Udall wrote
    in a Feb. 4 letter to Barsam Brown.

    Udall, a Democrat, said losing the airbase could jeopardize supply
    routes for troops in Afghanistan.

    Udall is among several legislators who have been reluctant to vote for
    the resolution out of fear of alienating Turkey, which has actively
    lobbied against it and similar resolutions.

    When a House committee voted in March to approve a nonbinding
    resolution calling the killings genocide, Turkey removed its U.S.
    ambassador for a month.

    President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, both of
    whom called the killings genocide as senators, pushed to quash the
    resolution.

    Others though, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, have
    supported the resolution, but Udall said he couldn't, `given the
    national security implications for our soldiers in Iraq and
    Afghanistan of any reckless Turkish retaliation.'

    Local Armenians said they are disappointed in Udall's stance. Six
    years ago, he was the only member of Colorado's congressional
    delegation to support an Armenian genocide resolution. In 2008, it got
    support from every member.

    The current bill is stalled because of a lack of co-sponsors.

    Historians estimate as many as 1.5 million Armenians were killed
    between 1915 and 1923 amid the collapsing Ottoman Empire, in what some
    say was the first genocide of the 20th century.

    `Our families are calling from the graves,' said Isberian, whose
    grandparents were among those killed. `They're saying, `what did you
    do about this?' A long time has passed.'


    http://www.aspendailynews.com/section/h ome/140612
Working...
X