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Turkey Warns US On Armenian Genocide Bill

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  • Turkey Warns US On Armenian Genocide Bill

    TURKEY WARNS US ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL

    The News - International, Pakistan
    Feb 19 2007

    ANKARA: Turkey's prime minister said the US Congress would harm
    bilateral ties if it backs a resolution recognising the 1915 mass
    killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as a genocide, the state
    Anatolian news agency said on Sunday.

    The Democratic-controlled Congress is widely expected to back such
    a resolution in April, but the Bush administration is opposed to it,
    fearing the impact on relations its Nato ally.

    Ankara strongly denies claims by Armenia and others that its forces
    committed a systematic genocide against Armenians during World
    War One. But many parliaments around the world have backed similar
    resolutions recognising the killings as genocide.

    'We do not expect Congress to make such a decision. But if it
    surprises us, I am worried this would cast a shadow over our strategic
    partnership in the future,' Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan was quoted
    as telling American businessmen.

    He did not say what Turkey might do in such a case. In the past,
    it has temporarily frozen trade and other ties with countries that
    backed the genocide claims.

    Ankara was particularly incensed last year when France's parliament
    approved a bill that made it a crime to deny the Armenian genocide.

    The bill did not become law.

    Erdogan accused the Armenian diaspora-especially strong in the
    United States and France-of exploiting the genocide issue to hurt
    Turkey and recalled that Armenian extremists gunned down dozens of
    Turkish diplomats in the past, mostly in the 1980s and early 1990s,
    to 'avenge' the 1915 killings.

    Erdogan also insisted Turkey's small Armenian community was safe
    despite the murder last month of a prominent Turkish Armenian editor
    Hrant Dink by a Turkish nationalist gunman. Dink had urged Turkey to
    own up to its role in the 1915 killings.

    Every spring Congress considers a resolution on the Armenian genocide
    issue but the White House always blocks it. This year it has become
    more worrisome for Turkey because the Armenian lobby has vocal
    supporters among the newly dominant Democrats.

    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul and General Yasar Buyukanit, head of
    the army General Staff, have both lobbied members of Congress and the
    Bush administration on the Armenian issue during separate visits to
    Washington in the past two weeks.

    Armenia says around 1.5 million Armenians perished in the killings.

    Turkey says large numbers of both Christian Armenians and Muslim
    Turks died during World War One as the Ottoman Empire was collapsing.

    It also notes that many Armenians backed Russian troops invading
    eastern Turkey at that time.
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