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Turkey angered by new ADL stance on Armenian 'genocide'

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  • Turkey angered by new ADL stance on Armenian 'genocide'

    Last update - 16:11 24/08/2007
    Turkey angered by new ADL stance on Armenian 'genocide'
    By Barak Ravid <[email protected]>, Haaretz Correspondent


    The Turkish government is pressuring Israel in an effort to reverse an
    American Jewish organization's decision to recognize Turkey's massacre of
    Armenians during World War I as genocide.

    A meeting between Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul and Israel's
    ambassador to Ankara, Pinhas Avivi, became "shrill," according to Foreign
    Ministry sources in Jerusalem. Gul expressed Ankara's "anger and
    disappointment" over the matter.

    On Tuesday, the Anti-Defamation League announced that it recognizes the
    events in which an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were massacred as
    "genocide." ADL's national director Abraham Foxman, said he made the
    decision after discussing the matter with historians and with Nobel Peace
    Prize laureate and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel.
    According to an Israeli ministry source, Gul told the Israeli ambassador
    that "Turkey knows Israel was not responsible for the Anti-Defamation
    League's announcement, but is disappointed because Israel could have done
    something to prevent it."

    Avivi replied that Jerusalem was not involved in the ADL's decision and that
    "there is no change in Israel's position. We are not taking sides, and
    believe that the parties must hold a dialogue to clarify and investigate the
    matter and determine what really happened."

    A senior Foreign Ministry official told Haaretz Thursday that the main focus
    now is on calming the situation.

    "This is a highly sensitive issue for Turkey, and we have signaled to them
    that there is no change in our position and that we do not wish to harm the
    friendly ties between our countries. We believe that they have understood
    our message," the official said.

    The question of the Armenian genocide is being handled at the highest levels
    of the Turkish leadership, and Foreign Ministry sources noted that President
    Ahmet Necdet Sezer and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan are planning to
    discuss the matter with their Israeli counterparts, Shimon Peres and Ehud
    Olmert.

    Israel is concerned that the matter may lead to a genuine diplomatic crisis
    between the two countries, and it has sent quiet signals to American Jewish
    organizations in an effort to lower the tone. The Foreign Ministry is
    concerned that the strategic relationship between the two countries could be
    harmed and that the Jewish community in Turkey could be affected.

    Source: http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/896880.html
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