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US-Turkey Relations Set To Worsen Over Iraq And Armenian 'Genocide'

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  • US-Turkey Relations Set To Worsen Over Iraq And Armenian 'Genocide'

    US-TURKEY RELATIONS SET TO WORSEN OVER IRAQ AND ARMENIAN 'GENOCIDE'
    By Guy Dinmore in Washington and Vincent Boland in Ankara

    FT
    February 9 2007 02:00

    Turkey's strained relationship with the Bush administration is likely
    to worsen after its foreign minister, Abdullah Gul, failed to make
    significant progress on Ankara's main objectives in Washington
    this week.

    Disagreements, centred on Iraq and a resolution proposed in the US
    Congress that would officially recognise the mass killings of Ottoman
    Armenians as genocide, threaten to intensify anti-American sentiment
    in Turkey, while raising concerns in the US about a possible Turkish
    military intervention in northern Iraq.

    ADVERTISEMENT Analysts suggest the disputes could undermine US efforts
    to enlist Turkey's support in isolating Iran, an issue that Dick
    Cheney, US vice-president, is believed to have raised.

    Mr Gul's week-long visit to the US had three main aims: to get a firm
    US commitment to act against anti-Turkish PKK militants in northern
    Iraq; to postpone a referendum due this year on the status of Iraq's
    Kurdish-claimed and oil-rich city of Kirkuk; and to lobby against
    the Armenia resolution.

    "Gul will not leave Washington a very happy man," said Bulent Aliriza,
    analyst with the CSIS think-tank. "Relations will take a hit."

    Mr Gul told reporters that the proposed genocide resolution - which
    is backed by key lawmakers, including Nancy Pelosi, Democratic speaker
    of the House - posed a "real threat" to US-Turkey relations.

    "It really is a nightmare for us and for you. It will overshadow and
    spoil everything between us," he warned.

    Ms Pelosi signalled her position by not being available to meet Mr Gul.

    The White House is also unhappy with the resolution, but it remains
    uncertain how far President George W. Bush will go to lobby against it.

    Several countries, notably France, have already adopted a similar
    stance on recognising the killings of Christian Armenians by
    Ottoman troops as the empire collapsed in 1915. Armenians say it was
    genocide. Turkey denies this and says they, and hundreds of thousands
    of Muslim Turks, died as a result of civil war, displacement, disease
    and hunger.

    Anxiety has been heightened by the murder in Istanbul on January 19 of
    Hrant Dink, a prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist. Mr Dink was well
    known among the Armenian diaspora in the US, especially in California,
    the home state of Ms Pelosi.

    On Kirkuk, US officials say it is for the Iraqi government to decide
    whether to proceed with the referendum to decide its status.
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