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  • Turkey Warns Of 'Repercussions' If Us Armenian Bills Pass

    TURKEY WARNS OF 'REPERCUSSIONS' IF US ARMENIAN BILLS PASS
    By Spencer Swartz

    Dow Jones Newswires
    30 March 07

    ANKARA -(Dow Jones)- The United States will witness "repercussions"
    from Turkey, a key ally, if the U.S. Congress approves proposals to
    categorize the World War I deaths of thousands of Armenians fleeing
    the Ottoman Empire as genocide, the Turkish Foreign Minister told
    Dow Jones Newswires on Friday.

    The Turkish military is also poised to crack down on an armed Kurdish
    rebel group that has been in a decades-long conflict with Turkey
    if Iraq and the U.S. don't do more to protect the Turkish border,
    Gul said in an interview.

    Gul would not say exactly when the Turkish military had entered
    northern Iraq to combat the Kurdistan Workers Party or P.K.K.

    "From time to time we have gone into the area," he said. "It is
    our legitimate right to take all necessary measures to fight this
    terrorist group. They are using weapons against us," he said, adding
    that Turkey respected Iraq's territorial sovereignty.

    Turkey, an important NATO ally and strategic ally of the U.S., has
    urged the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives to drop some draft
    Armenian bills.

    Top U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
    and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, have also asked some Congress
    members to abandon the measures, which Turkey considers insults.

    Legislatures in 15 countries have approved symbolic measures calling
    the Armenian deaths genocide. France passed such a resolution in
    October, which resulted in Turkey canceling many defense contracts
    with that country.

    Gul did not spell out exactly what consequences would follow if
    Congress moves forward on the Armenian measures.

    "How can politicians over there debate something they know little
    about?" he asked. "Do they know the (Ottoman Empire's) foreign
    minister at the time was Armenian, along with many (Ottoman)
    ambassadors? ... that thousands of Turks also died during this time?"

    "If it happens (Congress votes to approve the measure), there will
    be repercussions," Gul said. "We have strategic relations with the U.S.

    I get along with many people there, but it is my duty to talk about the
    consequences of these actions. The measures are an insult to Turkey."

    Gul, who spoke on several matters in a 45-minute interview at his
    office in the Turkish capital, said Turkey was willing to go to Iran
    to mediate a standoff between Iran and Britain after Iran seized
    15 sailors and marines last week, if doing so would help resolve
    the situation.

    "We are in discussions with Iran. We've made our opinions known and
    we hope this will be resolved soon," he said.

    Iran seized the military personnel after, Iranian officials assert,
    British boats entered Iranian waters. The British government roundly
    denies this and says the personnel were in Iraqi waters.

    Gul, who was appointed Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign
    Affairs four years ago, challenged Congress to appoint some members
    as third parties to a panel, along with Armenia, on the sensitive
    historical question. "They can come here. We'll open up all the
    archives. We're ready to face the result," he said.

    Armenians and many international historians insist that thousands of
    Armenians died at the hands of the Turks during the final days of the
    Ottoman Empire. But a chasm has existed for decades between Turkey
    and many historians outside that country over the circumstances under
    which the deaths occurred.

    The Ottoman Empire deported Armenians that led to the deaths of
    around 1.5 million between 1915 and 1923, according to many historical
    estimates.

    Most human rights observers have called the period genocide but Turkey
    rejects the terminology and says the deaths resulted during a time
    of war and followed an Armenian rebellion during which thousands of
    Turks died.

    Although relations between Turkey and the U.S. have thawed in the
    past couple of years, memories are still fresh in Washington of
    Turkey's refusal to approve the Bush Administration's request to
    allow U.S. troops passage from Turkey into Iraq during the 2003
    American-led invasion.

    Turkey has been frustrated with the Iraqi government and the U.S.over
    their refusal to crackdown on the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK,
    which Turkey says has grown stronger in relatively peaceful northern
    Iraq.

    Gul said he believed the U.S.was "shy and embarrassed" by the fact
    that it was not doing more to reduce the PKK threat in the region
    even though it was battling militants in other parts of the world.

    "I've told Vice President Cheney: 'what if there were terrorists in
    Mexico coming over the border into the US. What would you do? What
    do you expect us to do in this situaton with the PKK?' "

    The PKK, branded a terrorist group by Turkey, the European Union and
    the U.S., picked up arms in 1984 to carve out an ethnic homeland in
    Southeast Turkey in a campaign that led to the deaths of more than
    30,000 civilians.

    After the capture of the group's leader in 1999, the insurgents largely
    withdrew from Turkey to neighboring Iran and Syria, but mostly to
    northern Iraq, where Turkey fears the group has regrouped.

    Gul's comments come days after Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi
    warned against a Turkish incursion into northern Iraq and promised
    to prevent cross- border attacks by the rebels.

    The U.S. has also warned against Turkish entry into the region as
    it fears such a move could lead to tension with local non-combative
    Iraqi Kurdish groups -- key U.S. allies -- and to wider conflict in
    a region that has been the only real success story since the U.S.
    removed Saddam Hussein from power.

    Gul, a founding member of the ruling Justice and Development Party,
    said he was optimistic that the restart of discussions this week with
    the European Union over Turkey's decades' long quest to join the EU
    would lead to broader discussions.

    "Two chapters are being discussed now and I think we'll have four
    more in the coming weeks," he said.

    In the near future, the two governments should discuss economic
    and monetary policy issues, culture and education, statistics, and
    financial controls, he said.

    -By Spencer Swartz, Dow Jones Newswires; +44 (0)207 842 9357;
    spencer.swartz@ dowjones.com
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