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ANKARA: Turkey-Israel Damage Control

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  • ANKARA: Turkey-Israel Damage Control

    http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.do?load =detay&link=120271&bolum=102

    Today's Zaman
    08/24/07

    Turkey, Israel in bid to contain damage after ADL move
    Turkish officials voiced "deep disappointment" on Thursday over an
    influential US Jewish group's labeling of the World War I killing of
    Anatolian Armenians as genocide, stressing that calling the 1915
    incidents genocide has neither historical nor legal grounds.

    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoðan expressed concern over the
    Anti-Defamation League's move during a phone conversation with his
    Israeli counterpart, Shimon Peres, Israeli officials said. Erdoðan
    stressed the "futility" of the organization's decision to call the
    events as genocide in the conversation and Peres responded saying that
    Israel's well known position on the issue of genocide claims has not
    changed. The Israeli prime minister also said Israel attached great
    importance to relations with Turkey and promised to "advocate Turkey's
    position on the issue in the US."

    Separately, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gül voiced Ankara's uneasiness
    and disappointment with the ADL move during a meeting with Israel's
    outgoing ambassador to Turkey, Pinhas Aviv, who paid a visit to the
    minister at his office at ministry headquarters on Thursday. Turkish
    diplomats warned that the ADL statement might have negative impacts on
    Turkish-Israeli as well as on Turkey-US relations.

    The New York-based Anti-Defamation League earlier this week reversed
    its longtime policy by calling the World War I killing of Anatolian
    Armenians genocide -- a change that comes days after the ADL fired a
    regional director for taking the same position. ADL Director Abraham
    Foxman's statement that the killings of Armenians by Muslim Turks
    "were indeed tantamount to genocide" came after weeks of controversy
    in which critics questioned whether an organization dedicated to
    remembering Holocaust victims could remain credible without
    acknowledging the Armenian killings as genocide.

    Israeli news reports said yesterday that Turkish Ambassador Namýk Tan
    was cutting short his holiday in Turkey to return to Israel and
    express Turkey's concerns over the ADL decision to Israeli officials.
    But Foreign Ministry officials denied the reports, saying Tan was due
    to return to work since his vacation ended.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died in a
    systematic genocide campaign by Ottoman Turks around the time of World
    War I, but Ankara categorically rejects the label, saying that both
    Armenians and Turks died in civil strife during World War I when the
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
    with Russian troops invading the crumbling Ottoman Empire.

    Late on Wednesday, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Levent Bilman said in
    a statement that there was no "consensus" among scientists and
    historians that events of World War I constituted genocide, contrary
    to the ADL's conviction that there is. "Moreover, it is Turkey who has
    asked Armenia to establish a joint commission and reveal the
    historical realities. No positive response has yet been made to this
    offer. The ADL's attempt to rewrite history via a decision it made is
    constituting a contradiction and its justification cannot be
    understood," Bilman said, referring to the fact that Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan sent a letter to Armenian President
    Robert Kocharian in 2005, inviting him to establish a joint commission
    of historians and experts from both Turkey and Armenia to study the
    events of 1915 in the archives of Turkey, Armenia and other relevant
    countries around the world.

    Bilman recalled that the decision announced by ADL Director Foxman
    also emphasized that they "continue to firmly believe that a
    Congressional resolution on such matters is a counterproductive
    diversion and will not foster reconciliation between Turks and
    Armenians and may put at risk the Turkish Jewish community and the
    important multilateral relationship between Turkey, Israel and the
    United States."

    "On the other hand, the Jewish community in our country is a part of
    our society and there isn't any particularity that they should fear of
    concerning developments related to the Armenian allegations," Bilman
    said. "We consider this statement, which also constitutes fairness to
    the unique position of the Holocaust in the history as well as to
    memories of its [Holocaust's] victims, as a misfortune and expect it
    be corrected," he concluded.

    Meanwhile in Washington, the US administration made clear that its
    policy on the Armenian issue remained unchanged. "Our policy remains.
    It's clear. We mourn the victims of the tragic events of 1915 and call
    on Turks and Armenians to come to terms with the past through candid
    and heartfelt dialogue. We oppose attempts to make political
    determinations on the terminology of this tragedy," Gonzalo R.
    Gallegos, director of the Office of Press Relations at the State
    Department, told reporters on Wednesday.

    Ankara doesn't exclude the probability of pressure on the ADL from
    certain US Congress members. Two separate resolutions are pending in
    the US Senate and House of Representatives urging the administration
    to recognize the killings as genocide. Turkey has warned that passage
    of the resolutions in the US Congress would seriously harm relations
    with Washington and impair cooperation in Iraq and Afghanistan. The US
    administration has said it is opposed to the resolution, but the
    congressional process is an independent one. In his message on April
    24, which Armenians claim marks the anniversary of the beginning of a
    systematic genocide campaign at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire,
    US President George W. Bush adhered to the administration policy of
    not referring to the incident as genocide.
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