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ANKARA: Rice: US Should Not Be Involved In 'Genocide' Dispute

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  • ANKARA: Rice: US Should Not Be Involved In 'Genocide' Dispute

    RICE: US SHOULD NOT BE INVOLVED IN 'GENOCIDE' DISPUTE

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 22 2007

    US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said yesterday that the United
    States should not be involved in a dispute between Turkey and Armenia
    over whether the killing of Armenians almost a century ago constituted
    genocide.

    Under intense questioning from Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, the sponsor
    of a resolution that would declare that Turkey's Ottoman predecessor
    state committed genocide, Rice repeatedly avoided answering whether she
    believed there was any basis for historical debate on the matter. "What
    we've encouraged the Turks and the Armenians to do is to have joint
    historical commissions that can look at this, to have efforts to
    examine their past, and in examining their past to get over it,"
    she said. "I don't think it helps that process of reconciliation for
    the United States to enter this debate at that level."

    Turkey categorically dismisses charges that Armenians were victims
    of genocide at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire during World War
    I and says the killings took place when the Ottoman authorities were
    trying to quell an Armenian revolt in collaboration with the Russian
    army invading eastern Anatolia.

    A delegation from Turkey's leading business group, the Turkish
    Industrialists and Businessmen's Association (TUSÝAD), is currently
    in Washington as part of lobbying efforts to prevent passage in the
    US Congress of a resolution that urges the US administration to label
    the World War I events as genocide.

    Arzuhan Yalcýndað, the TUSÝAD chairwoman, said Tuesday that the
    prospects for Turkey preventing the passage of the resolution were
    better now than they were two months ago, although the risk that it
    could be passed was still in place.

    Yalcýndað likened the resolution to a "dark cloud" over US-Turkey
    relationship; she said, however, initiatives on behalf of Turkey to
    prevent the resolution's success have been successful so far.

    Answering questions at a news conference after the TUSÝAD delegation's
    meetings at the US State Department and think tanks, she said relations
    with Armenia could be improved and that TUSÝAD has been developing
    ideas in that regard but the present situation does not allow it.

    "First, the dark clouds should be dispersed, then the Turkish Foreign
    Ministry will evaluate the circumstances," she added.

    --Boundary_(ID_TVAk2yLlMk3+NGHr+FtdTQ)--
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