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ANKARA: Gul Warns US Congress Against 'Genocide' Move

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  • ANKARA: Gul Warns US Congress Against 'Genocide' Move

    GUL WARNS US CONGRESS AGAINST 'GENOCIDE' MOVE

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 7 2007

    Turkey's foreign minister has warned that strategic ties with the
    United States would be poisoned if Congress passed a resolution
    recognizing the 1915 massacres of Armenians as genocide.

    US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice meets with Turkish Foreign
    Minister Abdullah Gul at the State Department in Washington Abdullah
    Gul, who met US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in Washington on
    Tuesday, said that passage of the resolution would "spoil everything"
    between the long-standing allies.

    "The resolution submitted to Congress is a great threat which could
    poison all our relations," he told reporters in Washington. He noted
    that Turkey had "worked shoulder-to-shoulder" with the United States
    in Iraq and Afghanistan and warned that the resolution was bad "as
    much for Turkey as for the United States."

    In a wide-ranging one-on-one meeting and working lunch, Rice and
    Gul discussed the renewed moves in the US Congress to pass a law
    recognizing the 1915 massacre of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire
    as genocide. US officials are reassuring Gul that they will try to
    quash the proposed resolution in Congress. Before her meeting with
    Gul, Rice called Turkey "a strategic ally, a global partner (that)
    shares our values."

    State Department Spokesman Sean McCormack said, "We understand very
    clearly that this is a sensitive issue not only for the Turkish people
    but for the Armenian people." A number of legislatures around the
    world have recognized the killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians
    in Turkey during World War I as genocide. But while US President
    George W. Bush commemorates the massacres each year in a speech,
    his administration had stopped short of backing the genocide bills.

    Turkey illustrated how seriously it takes the issue in October when
    it said it would suspend military operations with France after French
    lawmakers voted in October to make it a crime to deny the killings
    were genocide. Gul made no such threats against the United States.

    Instead he highlighted the friendship between the two countries. "We
    have strategic issues of our relations based on the values," he said.

    US President Bush will have to persuade the now Democrat-controlled
    congress which does not need presidential approval for such a
    resolution. Members behind the proposed bill have said they expect
    a push by the administration and lobbyists working for the Turkish
    government to keep the resolution from a full vote by the House.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who will decide whether to offer the bill
    for a full vote if, as expected, it is approved by the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee, has expressed support. Gul said they do not plan
    to meet with Pelosi because she is "too engaged" in the issue but
    he will meet with his close aides and friends to make sure Turkey's
    views are heard. Turkey rejects the genocide label and argues that
    300,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife
    when Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and
    sided with Russian troops invading the crumbling Ottoman Empire during
    World War I.

    Meanwhile, a planned visit by a Turkish parliamentary delegation
    to the US has been cancelled upon Gul's request. A part of lobbying
    efforts at the US Congress against a possible genocide resolution,
    the Turkish Parliament's Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Mehmet
    Dulger said Gul had called him from the US to postpone the visit.

    "We informed our counterparts about the postponement of our visit. I
    think the Turkish mission in Washington D.C. would be overwhelmed by
    the Turkish delegations' visits one after another."

    'PKK problem needs to be resolved' In meetings with Rice and other
    officials, Gul also raised US cooperation on preventing Kurdish
    separatists from using northern Iraq as a sanctuary and a base of
    operations against Turkey. The Turkish government has expressed
    frustration with the level of US help in rooting out terrorists of
    the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), holed up in the Kurdish region of
    northern Iraq.

    Retired Gen. Joseph Ralston, a former NATO supreme allied commander,
    has been coordinating US efforts for countering the PKK. Gul warned
    against suggestions in some US political circles that Iraq could
    be split into three autonomous regions, which Turkey fears would
    create an independent Kurdistan in northern Iraq and embolden PKK
    separatists in southeastern Turkey. "A soft partition of Iraq is a
    fantasy," he said. "Iraq does not have internal boundaries."

    McCormack told reporters, "General Ralston is working to decrease
    those tensions on both sides of the border between the Iraqis and the
    Turks. We are engaging in diplomacy so that you don't end up with an
    armed confrontation in northern Iraq. I don't think anybody really
    wants to see that."

    He also noted that the United States wants to try to resolve PKK
    use of Kurdish territory in northern Iraq for attacks on Turkish
    territory. "Innocent people have died as result of the PKK," McCormack
    said, adding that Washington wants a settlement that is acceptable to
    both Turkey and Iraq. He said Rice briefed Gul on Ralston's activities.

    During Tuesday's lunch at the State Department Rice and Gul also
    exchanged views on Lebanon, Iraq, Turkey's relationship with the
    European Union and Kosovo.
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