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  • ANKARA: US Armenian Resolution 'Indigestible' To Turkey

    US ARMENIAN RESOLUTION 'INDIGESTIBLE' TO TURKEY

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 13 2007

    The Turkish prime minister's foreign policy advisor has said insulting
    the Turkish nation with a genocide that their ancestors did not commit
    would be "indigestible," referring to the Armenian genocide resolution
    pending in the US Congress.

    Speaking to Today's Zaman in Ýstanbul before leaving this weekend for
    the US with a group of Turkish legislators to lobby in Washington
    against the resolution, Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
    deputy Egemen Baðýþ said at a time when Turkey and the US have
    numerous joint projects going on, including Iraq's reconstruction,
    the resolution's passage would be unacceptable for the Turkish public,
    whose support for America's foreign policy has been extremely low.

    "Adding these genocide allegations on top of the current bad situation
    would be like adding insult to injury. It would make things more
    complicated. This is not a threat. It would put the government in an
    awkward situation."

    Baðýþ recalled that 80 percent of the logistical goods that the US
    troops use in Iraq go through Turkey and that 60 percent of them are
    made in Turkey.

    "Turkey is the country with the second-highest casualties in Iraq
    after the US. Although we don't have any troops in Iraq, the Turkish
    truck drivers, engineers, construction workers and contractors who
    lost their lives in the efforts to rebuild Iraq, have reached about
    150," he said, adding that the Turkish government has to take public
    opinion into consideration and take measures if such a resolution
    passed in the US Congress.

    "We're hoping that those lawmakers in the United States understand
    the implications of the resolution, which they think is just a local
    issue to please their local Armenian constituency and has no binding
    effect on Turkey. But it's more than that. It can really inflect
    long-lasting damage to the relationship."

    That's why he and a second parliamentary delegation visited to
    Washington on Sunday, Baðýþ said. He is joined by AK Party deputies
    Reha Denemec and Vahit Erdem, and main opposition Republican People's
    Party (CHP) deputies Ersin Arýoðlu and Bihlun Tamaylýgil.

    Also the chairman of Turkey-USA Interparliamentary Friendship Caucus,
    Baðýþ said the delegation will participate in a meeting of the
    Turkish-American Council today. The delegation will talk with members
    of Jewish organizations and travel to Chicago, which has very strong
    Turkish-American and African-American Muslim communities.

    The Armenian genocide resolution was introduced on Jan. 30 and
    currently has about 170 cosponsors.

    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.

    US President George Bush will have to persuade the new
    Democratic-controlled Congress, which does not need presidential
    approval for such a resolution.

    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 expressed support.

    --Boundary_(ID_D5ImvuOdcAbua8DSIGM3Ug)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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