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ANKARA: Passage of Armenian resolution would hurt projects

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  • ANKARA: Passage of Armenian resolution would hurt projects

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 24 2007


    `Passage of Armenian resolution would hurt projects worth billions'


    A Turkish studies expert based in Washington has said if it was
    passed in the House, the Armenian genocide resolution would sever the
    bilateral ties between Washington and Ankara.
    In an article at Washington Times titled "Armenian genocide folly,"
    Soner Çaðaptay, director of the Turkish research program at The
    Washington Institute for Near East Policy, wrote:
    "At this critical juncture of spiraling instability in Iraq and a
    resurgent Taliban in Afghanistan, the United States cannot afford to
    lose Turkey, a major, if underappreciated, partner for U.S.
    operations in Iraq and Afghanistan alike."
    Recalling that America's favorability rating in Turkish opinion polls
    is at an all-time low of 7 percent, Çaðaptay noted, "By passing the
    resolution, the Congress would be passing judgment on Turkish
    history, which the Turks would see as the ultimate insult."
    A majority of Turks say that the 1915 deportation of Armenians from
    Anatolia to Syria in the Ottoman Empire does not constitute genocide,
    yet the House resolution will declares the events of 1915 to be
    considered a genocide.
    Çaðaptay argues that the House resolution would cause a massive
    public outpouring of Turkish resentment against the United States and
    this would inevitably cripple US-Turkish military cooperation.
    "Three-quarters of all air cargo bound for Iraq transits through
    Ýncirlik [air base in southern Turkey], and Turkey provides blanket
    clearance for military over flights supporting Operation Iraqi
    Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan. With its
    proximity to Iraq, Ýncirlik also helps defray the cost of American
    operations there. Six U.S. C-17 cargo aircraft based at Incirlik do
    the job of nine or 10 military aircraft based in Germany, saving the
    United States $160 million per year."
    According to Çaðaptay, the passage of the Armenian resolution would
    also hurt US businesses and consumers since Ankara is engaged in
    several major defense cooperation projects with the United States,
    including the Joint Strike Fighter in which Turkey has $175 million
    invested and an expected purchase of 100 jets, and the upgrading of
    200-plus Turkish F-16 fighters at a cost of $1.6 billion.
    "The Armenian resolution would jeopardize such cooperative projects,
    as well as kill a number of pending Turkish defense purchases from
    the United States, including the Patriot PAC III Air Defense System
    for $1.3 billion, 52 Sikorsky Black Hawks helicopters at a value of
    $800 million, 10 heavy-lift Boeing and Sikorsky helicopters worth
    $500 million and between 30 and 50 Boeing Apache or Bell Cobra
    helicopters worth between $1.5 and $2 billion," Çaðaptay noted.
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