Tag: “Genocide” Resolution

  • Committee vote may have given Turkey a leg up

    Committee vote may have given Turkey a leg up

    By Tülin Daloglu   03/10/10 at 12:00 AM

    Has Congress considered any measure as often over the last four decades as the “Armenian Genocide” resolution? Again and again the bill has returned to Capitol Hill, only to fail each time. The House Foreign Affairs Committee has debated the bill at least four times since 2000, and it has become increasingly clear that each committee member believes that what happened to the Armenians during World War I was indeed a “genocide.” Yet despite that seemingly unanimous position, the resolution passed last week on a 23-22 vote. When it was considered in 2007, the committee passed it by six votes. Given how the gap has closed, the measure doesn’t stand a chance to get a floor vote this time.

    This is indeed a positive development for Turkey, even though Turks are deeply offended that the vote took place at all. They’re sick and tired of the House having this debate, and many would love to see Congress promise never to discuss it again. Of course, that will never happen. Surely, Armenians don’t relish this endless conversation either, but clearly many feel morally obliged to carry on the fight for their loved ones. While I feel strongly that it’s a mistake for Congress to legislate this conflicted bit of history, I fully respect the hard work of the Armenians to keep the issue alive.

    That said, it is important for Turkey not to overplay its hand. Ankara recalled its ambassador to Washington, Namik Tan, soon after the bill passed the committee. I am not even sure as to whether that was the right decision. But Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan is adamant that Ambassador Tan will not be returning to the U.S. until “there is a clear development on this issue.” It’s fair to speculate that Turkey likes to get assurances from President Obama that he will not use the term “Armenian Genocide” in this year’s April 24 statement. While doing that, Erdogan rebuked Berman without fully understanding why he gave extra time for the committee members to finish voting. On Tuesday, he said, “you will call the U.S. an advanced democracy; do every thing that a progressive democracy can not tolerate. This is not the right thing. Yet this is what they do.”

    But for now at least, the resolution is dead. No one in Congress wants to assume the economic and national security risks of a full House vote. They wished Turkey to deal with this issue as plain historical fact and get over with it long time ago. But it isn’t that simple for Turkey, whose citizens remain convinced that accepting the label of “genocide” will touch off a generation of reparations claims. More importantly, many Turks believe that during World War I the Ottomans criminally neglected their own population as well, and that the Armenians were hardly the only ones to suffer. Because of that widespread suffering, they reason, the atrocities that Armenians faced could not be considered a “genocide.” Refusing to acknowledge a Turkish side of the story now only serves to add to the tragedy rather than remedy it.

    Both Turks and Armenians want to reconcile, but they seem to be in it for the wrong reasons. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian signed two protocols five months ago in an attempt to normalize their relationship, with strong U.S. support. But House Foreign Affairs Chairman Howard Berman (D-Calif.) was correct when he said last week that “[T]here is a (strong) likelihood that these protocols will not be ratified (by the respective parliaments) in the near future because the Turkish Prime Minister said he won’t put those into effect until the Nagorno-Karabagh issue is resolved.”

    Turkish leaders will not admit it, but they have begun the process of de-linking the Nagorno-Karabagh issue from the Turkey-Armenia normalization process. The Turkish government misjudged the situation, and did not take into account the influence of Azerbaijan. For Turks, “[m]aking a rapprochement was a play toward the U.S. and Congress (to get rid of the genocide resolutions),” said Thomas Goltz, a political science scholar at Montana State University. “What got sacrificed was the special relationship with Azerbaijan. It was a huge blow.”

    However, Suat Kiniklioglu, the head of the U.S.-Turkey inter-parliamentary friendship caucus, says that such an argument does not hold up. “It writes openly in the protocols that the ‘regional conflicts will be resolved by peaceful means,’” he said. “We’re not talking about the Middle East. This evidently refers to the Karabagkh issue.” But the Armenians could argue that it means Azerbaijan should not use military force against them, and they worry about what will happen as they watch Azerbaijan increase its defense budget.

    In fact, “Armenians are not trying to normalize their relationship with Turkey for the sake of normalization,” Kiniklioglu told me. They are “trying to position themselves in a more advantageous place on the Karabagh issue after opening the borders with Turkey.” Turkey is trying to gain sympathy within the international community and find a new way to fight the genocide claims. Why shouldn’t the Armenians do the same thing with their own issues? If not naïve, Turkish leadership failed to understand why the Armenians were interested in signing the protocols. Afterall, Turkey closed its border with Armenia after a massive attack on Karabagh.

    Berman was right. Turkey’s parliament will not pass the protocols any time soon, and they will surely blame him and his colleagues in Congress for that failure. In the end, the House Foreign Affairs Committee’s vote gave Turkey a bigger victory than it could have realized.

    Based in Washington, D.C., Tulin Daloglu is a correspondent for Turkey’s HABERTÜRK. In the 2002 general election, she ran for a seat in Parliament as a member of the New Turkey Party. Her e-mail is tdaloglu@yahoo.com

  • Washington Still On Fence Over Armenian Genocide Bill

    Washington Still On Fence Over Armenian Genocide Bill

    C9E5D4A0 36FC 43F8 9A5D 8E3E71B24477 w527 sU.S. State Department logo, 26Feb2009

    03.03.2010

    The U.S. State Department has again pointedly refrained from urging U.S. lawmakers not to pass a resolution that terms the World War One-era Armenian massacres in Ottoman Turkey a genocide and is fiercely opposed by Ankara.

    The Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives is expected to discuss and vote on the resolution on Thursday. The administration of President Barack Obama has still not publicly formulated its position on the highly sensitive issue.

    State Department spokesman Philip Crowley declined to clearly state late on Tuesday whether the Obama administration supports or opposes passage of the resolution, pointing instead to the ongoing U.S.-backed efforts to normalize Armenia’s relations with Turkey.

    “And within that process … we think that there is ample room for Turkey and Armenia to evaluate the historical facts as to what happened decades ago,” he told a daily news briefing in Washington. “So we haven’t changed our view, but we continue to engage at a high level with both countries and to encourage them – having worked to reach the agreement in Switzerland last year to see it implemented on both sides.”

    “We understand how difficult this is, how emotional this is,” said Crowley. “There’s not a common understanding of what happened 90 years ago. But we value the courageous steps that both leaders have taken, and we just continue to encourage both countries to move forward and not look backward.”

    When asked whether Washington has made contingency plans for Turkish retaliation against possible genocide recognition, Crowley said, “I think we have a pretty good understanding of how everyone feels on this issue.”

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made similarly ambiguous comments on the issue in congressional testimony last week. This stance was welcomed by the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), one of the two main Armenian-American advocacy groups that have for decades been lobbying Congress to recognize the genocide.

    In a February 26 statement, the ANCA executive director, Aram Hamparian, said: “The current Administration’s conduct, at least to date, stands in stark contrast to past Administrations – both Democratic and Republican – that used every opportunity to score points with Ankara by attacking the broad, bipartisan Congressional majority that has long existed in support of U.S. condemnation and commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.”

    Congressional committees have repeatedly endorsed similar resolutions over the past decade. However, strong pressure from the White House prevented them from reaching the House or Senate floor.

    https://www.azatutyun.am/a/1973489.html
  • Armenia Rejects Turkish Warnings To U.S. Congress

    Armenia Rejects Turkish Warnings To U.S. Congress

    35E86CDE 2CC3 453C 9AF9 549F6ABE1A16 w527 sArmenia — Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian at a news conference on March 2, 2010.

    02.03.2010
    Emil Danielyan

    Official Yerevan dismissed on Tuesday Turkish warnings that a U.S. congressional resolution describing the 1915 massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide would set back the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations. (UPDATED)

    It also emerged that a group of mostly pro-government Armenian parliamentarians is heading to Washington in an apparent effort to facilitate the passage of the resolution introduced by pro-Armenian U.S. legislators a year ago.

    The Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives is scheduled to discuss and vote on the proposed legislation on Thursday. It urges President Barack Obama to “accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians as genocide.”

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry warned on Monday that its approval by the House committee would harm not only U.S.-Turkish relations but also efforts by Turkey and Armenia to normalize bilateral ties. “We would like to believe that the members of the committee are aware of the damage… the endorsement of the resolution will bring and, in this context, act responsibly,” the ministry said in a statement.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan reportedly issued a similar warning over the weekend. He said passage of the genocide resolution to would bring the U.S.-backed Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process to a halt.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian brushed aside the warning, saying that the biggest threat to that process emanates from Ankara’s “preconditions” for the implementation of the Turkish-Armenian normalization agreements which were set by Ankara months before the House panel scheduled a debate on the resolution.

    “It is statements made in Turkey and the return to the language of preconditions that deal a blow to the process of normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations,” Nalbandian told a news conference. “We hope that Turkey will rid itself of artificial complexes created by the Turkish side and that we will be able to move forward in accordance with our understandings.”

    Nalbandian stopped short of explicitly urging U.S. lawmakers to recognize what many historians consider the first genocide of the 20th century. But in a sign of Yerevan’s tacit support for the resolution, four members of Armenia’s parliament will fly to Washington on Wednesday at the invitation of Frank Pallone and Mark Kirk, the two U.S. lawmakers co-chairing the congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues. The bipartisan group, currently numbering 150 House members, has long been pushing for Armenian genocide recognition.

    An official in the National Assembly told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that Pallone and Kirk asked their Armenian colleagues to “present their views on and approaches to issues of mutual interest” to U.S. legislators and foreign policy-makers. The genocide resolution will be the main focus of their meetings in Washington, said the official.

    A similar delegation of Turkish parliamentarians is already in Washington, meeting with U.S. officials and lobbying against the resolution. “My impression is that the (Obama) administration is not fighting against it very effectively,” one of them, Sukru Elekdag, said on Monday, according to Reuters.

    Obama has so far declined to openly endorse or, as past U.S. administrations did, oppose the measure. The Associated Press cited aides to senior Democratic and Republican lawmakers on the House Foreign Affairs Committee as saying last week there has been no pressure against the resolution from the White House yet. According to a spokesman for the pro-Armenian committee chairman, Howard Berman, the Obama administration was informed about Thursday’s vote ahead of time.

    Obama repeatedly pledged to recognize the Armenian genocide when he ran for president, earning the overwhelming backing of the Armenian Americans. However, he has refrained from using the word “genocide” since taking office, implicitly citing the need not to undermine the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement.

    “His view of that history has not changed,” US National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer said last week. “Our interest remains the achievement of a full, frank, and just acknowledgement of the facts.”

    “The best way to advance that goal is for the Armenian and Turkish people to address the facts of the past as a part of their ongoing efforts to normalize relations,” said Hammer. “We will continue to support these efforts vigorously in the months ahead.”

    Some observers have speculated that Washington is using the prospect of U.S. recognition of the genocide to try to get the Turks to ratify the two Turkish-Armenian protocols signed in October. The Turkish ambassador to the United States, Namik Tan, seemed to give weight to this view on Saturday.

    “The greatest lobbyist in Washington is the administration,” Tan said, according to the Associated Press. “We have not seen them around enough on this.”

    Still, Erdogan expressed confidence on Tuesday that Obama will display “common sense” on the matter. Speaking before parliament deputies from his Justice and Development Party, he said he conveyed the Turkish concerns to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at their recent talks in Qatar.

    “I separately discussed with her what would be the cost of an adverse result from that,” “Hurriyet Daily News” quoted the Turkish premier as saying. “I am calling on everyone once more to act with common sense. I’d like to say it would be more accurate to research genocide claims not at the House of Representatives but at universities and archives.”

    https://www.azatutyun.am/a/1972355.html
  • Shukru Elekdag on protocols between Turkey and Armenia

    Shukru Elekdag on protocols between Turkey and Armenia

    [ 26 Feb 2010 17:16 ]
    Baku. Mahbuba Gasimbayli – APA. “The delegation of the members of Turkish parliament’s Foreign Affairs Commission will leave for Washington on Sunday on the eve of the discussion of the resolution on the so-called Armenian genocide in the U.S. Congress on March 5.

    I represent our party in the delegation. We will hold a meeting in the Committee on foreign Affairs and try to impede the discussion of the “Armenian genocide” resolution,” member of Turkish parliament’s Foreign Affairs Commission, former Turkish ambassador to Washington, former undersecretary at the Foreign Ministry, parliamentarian from Republican People’s Party (CHP) Shukru Elekdag told APA.

    To the question “It seems this time the situation is not pleasant” Elekdag said:
    “Armenian Constitutional Court rewrote the protocols signed in Zurich on October 11. It is impossible to explain differently the court’s comments on the protocols. After that it will be difficult for Turkey to say “There was no genocide”. To admit the decision of Armenian Constitutional Court means to admit Armenia’s Declaration of Independence. In that declaration Armenia does not recognize Turkey’s borders and has claims for our eastern territories. We should work hard to bring the Khojaly genocide to the attention of the world, while Armenians try to raise “genocide” claims in the Congress. The most large-scale genocide by Armenians in the past 105 years was committed against our Azerbaijani brothers,” he said.

    Answering the question “Would you like the Azerbaijani parliamentarians to be with you during your meetings in the Congress?” the diplomat underlined the importance of joint struggle.
    “The only way to achieve peace in the region is the complete withdrawal of Armenians from the occupied Azerbaijani territories. No other way will cause the discussions between Turkey and Armenia and it will become difficult to establish peace in the region,” he said.

  • U.S. Official ‘Praises’ Armenian Stance On Turkey

    U.S. Official ‘Praises’ Armenian Stance On Turkey

    0EAC2289 99CC 4A6B 85E5 9565179E32E4 w527 sArmenia — President Serzh Sarkisian (R) meets with U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon in Kiev on February 25, 2010.

    25.02.2010
    Emil Danielyan

    A top U.S. diplomat was reported to praise Armenia’s position in the stalled normalization process with Turkey at a meeting with President Serzh Sarkisian on Thursday.

    Sarkisian and Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon met in the Ukrainian capital Kiev after attending the inauguration of Ukraine’s newly elected president, Viktor Yanukovich.

    A statement by Sarkisian’s office said the talks focused on the U.S.-backed efforts to normalize relations between Armenia and Turkey. It said the Armenian leader reaffirmed Yerevan’s commitment to an unconditional implementation of the agreements to that effect which were signed by the two governments in October.

    The statement quoted Gordon as describing this position as “constructive” and saying that the Armenian and Turkish parliaments should ratify the two protocols “without linking them to other existing problems.”

    It was a clear reference to Turkish leaders’ statements making Turkish ratification conditional on a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict that would satisfy Azerbaijan. The Armenian government says this “precondition” contradicts the essence of the protocols, which make no reference to the Karabakh dispute.

    Ankara also attributes its reluctance to ratify the protocols to the Armenian Constitutional Court’s recent interpretation of the protocols’ implications which it says ran counter to the letter and spirit of the deal. Gordon, who coordinates U.S. policy on Europe and the former Soviet Union, dismissed the Turkish claims last month.

    U.S. officials have yet to publicly comment on Yerevan’s threats to wake away from the agreements if the Turks continue to drag their feet. Acting on those threats, the Armenian parliament passed on Thursday, in the second and final reading, legal amendments that facilitate such a move.

    Adding a new twist to the normalization process is a decision by a U.S. congressional committee to discuss and possibly vote on March 4 on a resolution describing the 1915 massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide. A Turkish parliamentary delegation is expected to visit Washington this week to lobby U.S. lawmakers to block it.

    The U.S. State Department opposed similar resolutions drafted by pro-Armenian legislators in the past, citing Turkey’s geopolitical significance for the United States. Department officials have so far pointedly refrained from criticizing the latest genocide bill. Some observers believe Washington will use it to press Ankara to ratify the protocols.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu clearly alluded to such possibility when he condemned the bill earlier this month. He said the prospect of U.S. recognition of the Armenian genocide will not force his government to soften its stance on protocol ratification.

    Davutoglu insisted this week that the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement has not reached an impasse. “Negotiations and the process are going on,” he said, according to the Regnum news agency.

    https://www.azatutyun.am/a/1968518.html
  • TURKISH & TURKIC AMERICANS LAUNCH JOINT ACTION ALERTS AGAINST H.RES. 252

    TURKISH & TURKIC AMERICANS LAUNCH JOINT ACTION ALERTS AGAINST H.RES. 252

    Fallacious and devious resolution, penned and rammed through the U.S. Congress by the Armenian lobby, seen as a serious threat that, if passed, can derail amicable Turkey-USA relation and hurt American interests in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Middle East, the Caucasus, the Balkans and Central Asia.

    ***

    The Armenian lobby and its supporters in Congress have introduced another “Armenian Genocide Resolution,” similar to the resolutions in previous years. H.Res.252 has been scheduled for a vote at the House Foreign Affairs Committee on March 4, 2010 .

    Turkish Coalition Of America (TCA), The Assembly Of Turkish American Associations (ATAA), The Federation Of Turkish American Societies (FTAA) and U.S. Azeris Network (USAN) all urged their members to educate their representatives via letters, phone calls, and visits. Two action alerts are launched for this purpose.

    The Hill newspaper today quotes the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) as “very confident” that the so-called Armenian genocide resolution would pass the House Foreign Affairs Committee and that it has “very strong prospects for passage” on the House floor.

    ANCA, which has been lobbying Congress for the Resolution’s passage, is the same organization whose recent National Chairman Mourad Topalian was indicted and sentenced to over three years in prison by a Ohio Federal Court for being part of a terrorist network that organized the bombing of the Turkish Center in New York and other violent attacks against Turks. ANCA awarded the convicted terrorist the “Freedom Award” for his “unique brand of leadership in driving forward and promoting Armenian history and the cause of the Armenian nation.”

    TCA invitation to action reminds concerned citizens to “…tell your member of Congress: ‘Enough is Enough.’ Write to your member of Congress TODAY to urge him or her to stand for reconciliation, fairness and truth and vote “No” on H.Res.252…”

    To send a pre-written letter to one’s representative, one is urged to visit the TURKISH COALITION OF AMERICA (TCA) ACTION ALERT page:

    U.S. Azeris Network (USAN) also launched an action alert. One is urged to log in and send a message by clicking the link:

    In addition to sending a letter to one’s representative, one is also encouraged to organize visits with one’s member of Congress and staff at his/her district office and raise one’s concerns and objections on the issue in person. For further information, one can visit

    TCA: www.turkishcoalitionofamerica.org (action alert)

    ATAA: www.ataa.org (articles by historians and experts)

    FTAA : www.ftaa.org (community initiatives)

    USAN: www.USAzeris.org (action alert)

    www.ethocide.com : For photos of armed-to-the-teeth Armenian murderers during WWI and their Turkish victims to demolish the myth of “poor, helpless, unarmed Armenian” myth

    www.turkla.com and www.historyoftruth.com , www.tallarmeniantale.com : for articles elucidating malicious mass deception for political gain (ETHOCIDE) by the Armenian lobby since WWI

    https://armenians-1915.blogspot.com/2010/01/2993-second-open-letter-to-president.html : for the U.S. Congress’ own records refuting the Armenian deception and distortions

    And many other websites for which links are provided at these sites. Below is a typical letter that can be presented to one’s representative at the U.S. Congress.

    ***

    SUBJECT: VOTE FOR AMERICA, NOT ARMENIA! VOTE “NO” ON H.RES. 252 !

    Dear Congressman/woman,

    H.Res. 252 has been scheduled for a vote in at the House Foreign Affairs Committee on March 4, 2010. This Resolution is seeking to validate the Armenian allegation of genocide against Turkey. I strongly urge you NOT to become a co-sponsor of this resolution and to vote AGAINST it, should it come to a vote.

    Similar resolutions have been introduced in the past and have caused nothing but harm to US interests, while deeply offending Americans of Turkish descent. H.Res. 252 will be no different.

    THE RESOLUTION WILL SEVERELY UNDERMINE PROTOCOLS AND PEACE EFFORTS

    The Resolution will severely undermine ongoing bilateral efforts between Turkey and Armenia to establish diplomatic relations, as well as economic and political ties. The recently signed protocols between the two countries also include the forming of a joint historical commission to study the tragic events during World War I and reach a common understanding. Turkish Americans overwhelmingly support this rapprochement.

    WORLD-RENOWN HISTORIANS REJECT ARMENIANS CLAIMS EMBODIED IN H.RES. 252

    The proponents of these resolutions frequently allege a consensus among scholars that the events of 1915 in the Ottoman Empire were genocide. The fact is that there is no consensus on this issue and many historians do not accept the genocide thesis. They include internationally acclaimed scholars of World War I and the Middle East, such as Bernard Lewis, Norman Stone, Andrew Mango, David Fromkin, Guenter Lewy, Pierre Nora, Malcolm Yapp and Justin McCarthy, to name a few.

    H.RES. 252 IS FALLACIOUS AND DECEPTIVE

    The resolution seeks to legislate history based on incomplete, partisan and falsified information. While portrayed as “non-binding,” the Resolution will create high emotions among Turks and Armenians and prejudice the continued study and understanding of the Ottoman Armenian tragedy by endorsing a one-sided narrative.

    More menacingly, Armenian lobbyists openly proclaim that these resolutions are but a stepping stone to eventual reparations and land claims against the Republic of Turkey, which did not even exist at the time. Thus, passing these resolutions will hardly end this contentious debate.

    GENOCIDE VERDICTS RESERVED FOR COMPETENT TRIBUNALS, NOT POLITICIANS

    If pronouncing convictions of the high crime of genocide was to have been left to politicians, the United Nations would not have given authority exclusively to the International Court of Justice. However, it is precisely because of the grave implications of a genocide charge that a special legal process has been established to prosecute it, and the United States adopted this process when it ratified the U.N. Genocide Convention in 1987. With resolutions of this nature, Congress is usurping its power and creating a dangerous precedent.

    To quarrel with a genocide characterization — the crime of crimes – is not to deny lesser crimes or atrocities. In fact, the Ottoman government itself prosecuted and convicted nearly 1,400 individuals, executing scores, including a provincial governor, for crimes committed against Armenians.

    HALF A MILLION MUSLIM DEATHS CAUSED BY ARMENIANS SIMPLY IGNORED

    One of my key objections to H.Res. 252 is its lack of reference to the nearly 2.5 million Muslims of the Ottoman Empire who perished during the same period of time. Among them are about half a million Ottoman Muslims in Eastern Anatolia whose tragic ends had come in the well documented massacres and ethnic cleansing committed directly or assisted by Armenian rebels. Muslim losses and suffering are ignored or outright denied by the proponents of this legislation. This is selective morality bordering on racism.

    PASSING H.RES. 252 WOULD MAKE A MOCKERY OF THE U.S. CONGRESS’ OWN RECORDS

    What is perhaps most ironic of all is the fact that if the fallacy and deception in H.Res. 252 is approved, then the U.S. Congress would be denying its own reports, resolution, and records dating back to 1920 and 1922 refuting Armenian claims of systematic annihilation (since the term genocide did not exit back then and invented decades later.) US recognition of a bogus genocide and thus legislating falsified version of history into law, to appease the arrogant Armenian lobby would be a travesty scholarship, critical thinking, and free speech, making a mockery of the U.S. Congress’ own records, as the following among many other such documents, clearly refute Armenian claims once and for all:

    a- “American Military Mission to Armenia” (General Harbord) Report 1920 and the Annex Report Nat. Archives 184.021/175 –which does not mention any “race extermination” but, on the contrary, refers to “…refinements of cruelty by Armenians to Muslims…”

    b- Joint U.S. CONGRESS RESOLUTION NO. 192, APRIL 22, 1922 relative to the activities of Near East Relief ending 31 December 1921 which has unanimously resolved that a total of 1,414,000 Armenians were alive (which makes killing of 1.5 million Armenians an impossibility, since the total Armenian population was around 1.5 million at the time.)

    c- George Montgomery, a member of the U.S. delegation at the Paris Conference, had presented a detailed tabulation in 1919, showing a total of 1,104,000 Armenians alive, apart from those who had already immigrated to other countries.

    ARMENIAN NARRATIVES: THE ONLY CASE IN THE WORLD WHERE THE DEAD MULTIPLY OVER THE YEARS

    d- 29 March 1919 report of the Paris Conference subcommittee on atrocities, chaired by the U.S. secretary of State Lansing, lists Armenian losses as “…more than 200,000…” Even this number is exaggerated as they got their information from the Armenian church, not exactly an impartial source. The Turkish Historical Society documented the deaths of 54,000 Armenians using Ottoman police reports field on site, of which number only about 8,400 are reported as victims of massacres based on police reports in Ottoman archives. The paragraphs a, b, and c jointly point to the THS number being closer to reality.

    Who, then may have jacked this number of Armenian casualties from the original 54,000 first to 200,000 in March 1919, and then to 600,000 in May 1919 (in a poster created by Armenians soliciting aid from American donors), and finally to the current 1.5 million even higher? Take a guess!

    H.RES 252 UNDERMINES AMERICAN NATIONAL INTERESTS AND SECURITY

    H.Res 252 undermines American national interests and security, as it will damage US-Turkish relations. Turkey is a key ally of the United States and an indispensable partner to the Unites States efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan, helping the United States and the international community to combat terrorism and build security in the region. At a time when the United States is seeking to improve relations with the world, H. Res. 252 singles out a genuine historical controversy and turns it into an affront against our valued ally Turkey.

    H.Res. 252 serves no contemporary US policy purpose, dispenses dubiously selective morality in response to special interest lobbying, hurts American national interests, and the principles of fairness and justice. Today, America is fighting two wars, faces an economic crisis of historical proportions and depends on the good-will and support of nations like Turkey. I urge you to put national interest ahead of special interest and respectfully ask you NOT to support and…

    VOTE FOR AMERICA, NOT ARMENIA!

    VOTE “NO” on H.Res. 252 !