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ANKARA: Turkish Chief Of Staff Warns Armenian Genocide Bill To Impac

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  • ANKARA: Turkish Chief Of Staff Warns Armenian Genocide Bill To Impac

    TURKISH CHIEF OF STAFF WARNS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL TO IMPACT TIES WITH USA

    Milliyet, Turkey
    Feb 12 2007

    [Report by Barkin Sik in New York: "Acceptance of Genocide Bill Will
    Have Impact on Relations With United States"]

    Complaining that to date Turkey has failed to explain to its
    counterparts its views on the Armenian genocide allegations and
    the Cyprus problem, Chief of Staff General Yasar Buyukanit said:
    "We are unable to put ourselves across. Afterwards we suffer for
    it. While we are in the right we end up having to defend ourselves
    as if we are in the wrong."

    Unlike previous chiefs of staff Gen Buyukanit flew to the United
    States on a scheduled Turkish Airlines flight yesterday. He spoke
    with Milliyet on the plane.

    "What Happened In 1915?"

    Saying that the Armenian Genocide Bill, which is about to be debated
    in the US House of Representatives, had implications for both Turkish
    and US national security, Buyukanit said that if the bill were passed
    it would harm bilateral relations. Buyukanit continued:

    "What happened in 1915? We are unable to put ourselves across.

    Afterwards we suffer for it. Armenians who were our own citizens
    rebelled against their own country together with the Russians. What
    happened on Cyprus? The Greek Cypriots staged a coup. Turkey intervened
    using its rights as a guarantor country. We have trouble in explaining
    ourselves. We find ourselves on the defensive as if we were in the
    wrong even when we are in the right. During my visit to the United
    States I will get together with US lawmakers and explain all this
    as best I can." When asked whether or not a similar embargo would be
    applied to the United States as the one applied to France following
    their genocide bill, Buyukanit replied:

    "Diplomatic relations change from country to country. It is different
    for the United States; it is different for France. Are Turkey's
    relations with the United States exactly the same as they are
    with Libya? Diplomatic relations depend on balance. We went through
    something similar with France before. The French had won the contract
    for an intelligence satellite and the Israelis had lost. But we found
    ourselves compelled to cancel the contract. What happened? They lost
    the contract and we lost time. We reopened the bidding but we ought
    to have a satellite up there now and we do not."
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