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ANKARA: `Genocide' Issue Tops Gl's Talks with US Congressmen

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  • ANKARA: `Genocide' Issue Tops Gl's Talks with US Congressmen

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 9 2007

    `Genocide' Issue Tops Gül's Talks with US Congressmen

    Friday , 09 February 2007


    In Washington for talks with senior US officials, Foreign Minister
    Abdullah Gül met with John Murtha, the chairman of the defense
    sub-committee of the House of Representatives Appropriations
    Committee, and House majority leader Congressman Steny Hoyer.

    During both meetings Gül said a resolution proposed to the US House
    of Representatives constitutes a threat to relations between the two
    countries.

    Gül later had talks with Congressman Robert Wexler, co-chairman of
    the Turkish- American Friendship Group, Tom Lantos, the chairman of
    the House Committee on Foreign Relations, and Congressman Roy Blunt.
    Lantos had supported Turkey's position on the "Armenian genocide"
    issue in the past, but after the Turkish Parliament's refusal on
    March 1, 2003 to allow the deployment of 62,000 US troops in Turkish
    territory to launch a northern front in the war with Iraq, Lantos
    said he would shift his position and back the resolution.

    Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Levent Balman said Gül's meetings
    at the US Congress have been positive. US State Department spokesman
    Sean McCormack said, "We understand very clearly that this is a
    sensitive issue not only for the Turkish people but also for the
    Armenian people." McCormack also said that the State Department is
    working with the Congress to pass Turkey's concerns regarding the
    issue. However, he said, "I think Gül and the Turkish government
    understand how our government system work, and that the Congress is a
    separate body."
    US President George Bush will have to persuade the new
    Democratic-controlled congress, which does not need presidential
    approval to pass 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 already
    expressed support.

    Gül said they do not plan to meet with Pelosi because she is "too
    engaged" in the issue but he will meet with her close aides and
    friends to make sure Turkey's views are heard. Turkey rejects the
    "genocide" label and argues that only 300,000 Armenians and at least
    as many Turks died in mutual civil strife.
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