Jewish Congressmen Fight Genocide Bill

JEWISH CONGRESSMEN FIGHT GENOCIDE BILL

Jewish Telegraphic Agency, NY
Oct 18 2007

Two Jewish congressmen are working to keep the Armenian genocide bill
from reaching the U.S. House of Representatives floor.

U.S. Reps. Robert Wexler (D-Fla.) and Stephen Cohen (D-Tenn.), as
well as three other opponents of the controversial bill memorializing
the killings of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire during World War I,
spoke harshly of its implications for U.S. relations with Turkey at
a news conference Wednesday in Washington.

The bill, which would label the killings as genocide, was approved by
the House Foreign Affairs Committee by a 27-21 vote on Oct. 10. At that
time it had 226 co-sponsors, but support has waned due to threats from
Turkey to withdraw support for American troops in Iraq if it is passed.

More than half of the cargo traveling from the U.S. to Iraq is flown
through Turkey’s Incerlik air base, and Turkish troops are allied
with Americans on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan. President Bush
is fiercely opposed to the resolution.

"The Middle East is a tinderbox," Wexler said. "Our responsibility
is to bring as much stability as is humanly possible."

Cohen added that passage of the bill would cause "real-time harm to
real people."