Obama Administration Urges Congress To Wait On Armenian Genocide Res

OBAMA ADMINISTRATION URGES CONGRESS TO WAIT ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

Asbarez
-urges-congress-to-wait-on-armenian-genocide-resol ution/
Mar 4th, 2010

WASHINGTON (AP)- The Obama administration is urging Congress to
hold off on voting to approve a resolution recognizing the Armenian
Genocide.

The House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee was scheduled
to vote on the resolution Thursday, and appeared likely to endorse it.

During remarks in the debate, White House spokesman Mike Hammer
said Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had spoken with the
committee’s chairman, Democratic Rep. Howard Berman, Wednesday evening
and indicated that such a vote would jeopardize reconciliation talks
between Turkey and Armenia.

U.S. National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer also said
President Barack Obama called Turkish President Abdullah Gul on
Wednesday to urge quick ratification of a protocol signed last year
to normalize Turkish-Armenian relations.

"Secretary Clinton called Chairman Berman yesterday and in that
conversation the secretary indicated that further Congressional action
could impede progress on normalization of relations," Hammer said.

Despite Clinton’s appeal, Berman went ahead with a hearing on Thursday
on the issue, calling Turkey a "vital" ally but saying "Be that as
it may, nothing justifies Turkey’s turning a blind eye to the reality
of the Armenian genocide."

NATO-member Turkey has said its ties with the United States would
be damaged and Ankara’s efforts to normalize relations with Armenia
could be endangered if the resolution is passed when U.S. lawmakers
vote on Thursday.

"We are open to all options," said a government official when asked
if Turkey would be willing to recall its ambassador to the United
States should the bill be passed.

Ankara recalled its ambassador in 2007 for consultations after a U.S.

panel approved a similar bill.

"But nobody should forget that the situation is different now than it
was in 2007. We are in the process of normalizing ties with Armenia,
so the stakes are higher," he said.

Turkey and Armenia signed a protocol last year to normalize relations
but the papers are yet to pass through the parliament of either
country.

U.S. President Barack Obama and Turkish President Abdullah Gul held
a phone conversation on Wednesday to discuss Turkey’s position on
the Armenia bill.

Muslim Turkey accepts that many Christian Armenians were killed by
Ottoman forces but denies that up to 1.5 million died and that it
amounted to genocide – a term employed by many Western historians
and some foreign parliaments.

Obama visited Turkey last April. His administration sees Turkey as
a key ally whose help it needs in solving confrontations from Iran
to Afghanistan.

"We are at a stage when U.S.-Turkish ties need maximum cooperation.

Everybody should consider the importance of U.S.-Turkish relations
for regional and global stability," Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet
Davutoglu told a news conference on Thursday.

The non-binding resolution, to be voted by the House Foreign Affairs
Committee, would call on Obama to ensure U.S. policy formally refers
to the massacre as "genocide" and to use that term when he delivers
his annual message on the issue in April – something Obama avoided
doing last year.

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