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Massacre Denial Hurts Turkey's Ties To West

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  • Massacre Denial Hurts Turkey's Ties To West

    MASSACRE DENIAL HURTS TURKEY'S TIES TO WEST
    By Andrew Borowiec

    The Washington Times
    April 9 2007

    EU's common energy policy threatened

    NICOSIA, Cyprus -- Turkey's persistent denial of the massacres of
    Armenians during World War I is threatening the European Union's
    common energy policy, relations with France and the operations of a
    major U.S. base on Turkish territory.

    In the latest move to block efforts by the French parliament to brand
    the 90-year-old massacres as genocide, Turkey has frozen relations
    with Gaz de France, an energy partner in a consortium planning a major
    pipeline to bring Caspian Sea natural gas to the heart of Europe,
    bypassing Russia.

    Shortly before announcing the freeze last week, the government of
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned that approval by the U.S.
    Congress of a similar bill would cast "a serious shadow" over U.S.
    relations with Turkey, a key NATO ally.

    Diplomats said the Turkish warning might include restriction of U.S.
    military activities at Incirlik Air Base in Turkey, a logistics and
    transportation hub for much of the Middle East. The Bush administration
    has urged congressional leaders to consider the strategic implications
    of the bill.

    Turkey's refusal to accept responsibility for the deaths of an
    estimated 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman empire has dogged its
    relations with U.S. and European partners for many years.

    Now it has affected plans to construct a 2,000-mile, $6 billion
    pipeline project named Nabucco to carry natural gas from Iran and
    the Caspian Sea area across Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary
    to Austria.

    The project, slated to start next year, is described as the European
    Union's first significant effort to forge a joint energy policy in
    the face of Russia's use of gas supplies as a weapon in its diplomacy.

    Growing nationalism affects Turkish politics

    A quarter of natural gas used in Europe comes from Russia, which in
    early 2005 turned off the taps to Ukraine in a pricing dispute. Ever
    since, the diversification of energy supplies has been an EU priority.

    "Turkey knows its value as a major transit country for this project
    and is making the most of it," said one diplomatic source. The Turkish
    Energy Ministry said the freeze on Gaz de France would be reconsidered
    after the French presidential elections in May.

    Turkey's latest move against an EU member country comes at a time
    of increasing nationalism and political fervor before a Turkish
    presidential vote in May and parliamentary elections that must be
    held by November.

    Mr. Erdogan, a potential presidential candidate, is apparently working
    at solidifying his own and his governing Justice and Development
    Party's (AKP) power base.

    Nationalism is growing as a factor in Turkish politics, partly
    because of the slow pace of membership negotiations with the European
    Union. Many Turks think the Europeans don't want them in their midst.

    Strong nationalist feelings are particularly evident when it comes
    to the Armenian massacres. Turkey says the Armenians -- accused of
    cooperating with Russia when it was at war with Turkey -- died during a
    "resettlement march" to Syria.

    Ankara says there were no more than 300,000 victims, as opposed to the
    1.5 million cited in most Western documents dealing with the massacres.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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