Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Bryza Opposed To Armenian Genocide House Resolution - WikiLeaks

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

  • Bryza Opposed To Armenian Genocide House Resolution - WikiLeaks

    BRYZA OPPOSED TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE HOUSE RESOLUTION - WIKILEAKS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    May 26, 2011 - 10:14 AMT

    On Mar. 15, 2007, a classified cable was sent from the U.S. Embassy
    in Turkey to the U.S. Department of State, which was published May
    24 on the whistle-blowing site WikiLeaks, Asbarez reported.

    This particular cable refers to a meeting on Mar. 9, 2007, between
    then U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary Matthew Bryza and Istanbul
    Deputy Governor for minority affairs Fikret Kasapoglu, in which the
    parties discuss the Armenian Genocide Resolution (referred to as AGR
    in the cable) being debated in the U.S. House of Representatives and
    the Senate.

    "Bryza stressed that the Administration is working hard to convince
    Congress not to pass AGRs currently being contemplated in both
    the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate. The Administration's
    position remains that a candid discussion about Turkish-Armenian
    history should take place within civil society," he said. Kasapoglu
    believes the case against AGRs should stress four points:

    -Istanbul's tradition of tolerance for different cultures dating back
    to the beginning of the Ottoman Empire.

    -Despite historical and present political tensions between Turkey and
    Armenia, more than 40,000 economic migrants from Armenia still choose
    to live in Turkey illegally (we regularly hear the number 70,000 from
    GOT officials)

    -The positive, spontaneous, mass public condemnation of Hrant Dink's
    assassination was a sign of the respect people have for each other
    and for different cultures.

    -Turkey's mostly young population find it hard to comprehend what
    happened during World War I and politicizing 'genocide' allegations
    will only inspire hatred."

    Istanbul's deputy governor also raised the issue of Turkish-Armenians,
    saying they were "increasingly seen as part of society but that
    certain events (e.g., AGRs) 'just make things worse'."

    "The Deputy Governor agreed that arguing against congressional
    Armenian 'genocide' resolutions by focusing on a potential increase
    in ultra-nationalism and risks to the Turkish-Armenian community's
    security is not constructive. Rather, Kasapoglu suggested focusing on
    Turkey's tradition of tolerance for religious minorities and the fact
    that Armenians still choose to immigrate illegally by the thousands
    to Turkey," reads the cable, in part.

Working...
X