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ANKARA: Report: Armenian resolution damaging to US-Turkey ties

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  • ANKARA: Report: Armenian resolution damaging to US-Turkey ties

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 16 2007

    Report: Armenian resolution damaging to US-Turkey ties


    A leading publisher of economic and political intelligence on Eastern
    Europe, the Middle East and Asia has reported that the Armenian
    resolution pending in the US Congress is an extremely emotional issue
    for Turkey and damaging to the US-Turkish relations.
    Based in London, the Oxford Business Group (OBG), in a report titled
    "Turkey: Tough Demands," highlights three issues concerning
    Turkish-US relations: "...Turkey's political heavyweights are doing
    their rounds in Washington this month, lobbying and pressuring
    members of the US elite over three particularly explosive issues --
    the Kurdistan Workers' Party's (PKK) continued and undeterred
    presence in Northern Iraq, a destabilising referendum in Iraq's
    oil-rich city of Kirkuk and the controversial Armenian resolution
    that threatens to pass through the House of Representatives this
    year."
    Published Feb. 15, the OBG report indicates "the most emotive -- if
    not provocative -- for the Turks" is the Armenian genocide resolution
    pending in the US Congress.
    "The Bush administration needs little convincing of how damaging a
    resolution would be, with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
    urging Congress to drop the issue, or risk poising [sic] relations
    with an essential Muslim ally bordering Iraq, Iran and Syria. Yet,
    the White House has only limited leverage over a Congress dominated
    by Democrats and led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who is adamant to
    pursue the issue with the backing of the Armenian lobby in her
    Congressional district. Pelosi's unwillingness to meet [with Turkish
    Foreign Minister Abdullah] Gul during his visit was duly noted by
    Ankara."
    The Armenian genocide resolution was introduced on Jan. 30 by Rep.
    Adam Schiff along with Reps. George Radanovich, Frank Pallone, Joe
    Knollenberg, Brad Sherman and Thaddeus McCotter and currently has 170
    co-sponsors.
    The resolution would urge the president to properly characterize the
    Armenian sufferings during the World War I as genocide.
    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 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, the continued presence of the PKK in Northern Iraq
    remains an itching sore for the Turks, with Ankara determined that
    the organisation be flushed out from its safe-haven across the
    border," the report said. "But the Turks have long been nonplussed by
    the US stance, with no concerted effort by the Americans to respond
    to Turkish security concerns next door. ... Yet, the US administration
    has not sent any public signals to suggest that it would tolerate a
    cross-border incursion by the Turkish military to eradicate the PKK."
    The OBG report indicated that turbulence and instability in the
    Middle East has made the US-Turkish relationship more important than
    ever, and Turkey has been pressing Washington to demonstrate the
    importance of the relationship more clearly, "if not, relations will
    suffer."
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