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ANKARA: Gates: Armenian 'Genocide' Resolution, PKK Damage Ties

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  • ANKARA: Gates: Armenian 'Genocide' Resolution, PKK Damage Ties

    GATES: ARMENIAN 'GENOCIDE' RESOLUTION, PKK DAMAGE TIES

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 29 2007

    Turkish-American relations are strong, but more work is needed to keep
    them that way and more has to be done to fight the terrorist Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK), and to prevent passage of the Armenian genocide
    resolution pending at the US Congress the US defense secretary said
    in Washington, D.C.

    US Defense Secretary Robert Gates

    "We recognize that every Turkish citizen killed by the PKK is a
    setback for success in Iraq and a setback in our relationship with
    Turkey," said US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, adding: "The United
    States has appointed one of our most distinguished military officers,
    Gen. Joseph Ralston -- a former NATO commander -- as special envoy
    for countering the PKK. But we know more needs to be done."

    Speaking at the annual conference on US-Turkish relations organized
    by various business associations and led by the American-Turkish
    Council to promote commercial and cultural relations between the
    two countries, Gates indicated that Turkey and the US have a strong
    strategic relationship despite some "turbulence."

    "It is no secret that the strategic relationship between the United
    States and Turkey has undergone some turbulence in recent years.

    Even so, our military, economic, political, and personal ties remain
    strong. Turkey is, for example, one of the major allied partners on the
    Joint Strike Fighter, and 16 US Navy ships called on Turkish ports last
    year." In his first public speech after becoming defense secretary,
    it was not by accident that he spoke at a Turkish-American event,
    Gates said, adding that Turkey and the United States should avoid
    damaging attitudes, such as the Armenian genocide resolution pending
    at the US Congress and the worsening anti-American stance in Turkey.

    The US defense secretary, together with US Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice, had sent a letter to senior members of the US
    Congress indicating the damage that Turkish-US ties could suffer if
    the pending resolution on Armenian claims of genocide at the hands
    of the Ottoman Turks is passed.

    The resolution was presented to the US House of Representatives
    earlier this year, though the timing of the vote has yet to be
    decided. Turkey has warned that passage of the resolution would harm
    strategic relations with the United States and undermine cooperation
    in key regions across the world; in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere.

    'Both sides should see sensitivities'

    Both the US and Turkey should be sensitive toward the issues that
    carry importance for them, said retired Gen. James Jones, who was the
    NATO supreme allied commander of the United States European Command
    from 2003 to 2006.

    After receiving the "distinguished defense award" at the ATC meeting
    in Washington, Jones praised Turkey's contribution to NATO forces in
    Afghanistan, Kosovo and the Black Sea.

    Babacan expects developments

    Returning from the ATC meetings in Washington, Turkish Economy Minister
    Ali Babacan said in Ýstanbul that he reiterated the Turkish stance
    on the Armenian genocide allegations to the US business circles with
    which he had contact.

    "We told American business circles that if they can do anything about
    communicating how Turkey sees the issue to the US Congress and the
    administration, those efforts would benefit our bilateral relations."

    --Boundary_(ID_36/IXHzyAbXOvr7i6 Qja/w)--
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