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Turkish PM tells Bush congressional res on genocide will hurt relns

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  • Turkish PM tells Bush congressional res on genocide will hurt relns

    Associated Press
    Oct 5 2007


    Turkish PM tells Bush that congressional resolution on Armenian
    genocide will hurt relations

    © AP
    2007-10-05 18:44:30 -


    ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) - Turkey's prime minister told U.S. President
    George W. Bush on Friday that passage of a resolution in the U.S.
    Congress declaring the World War I-era killings of Armenians was
    genocide will harm Turkey's ties with America, a government official
    said.
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told Bush by telephone that the
    measure _ which is expected to advance in the opposition
    Democrat-controlled U.S. House of Representatives next week _ will
    «harm the strategic partnership» between the two countries, state-run
    media reported. A government official confirmed the report but
    declined to be named because he was not allowed to speak with
    journalists.
    The Bush administration opposes the measure. The U.S. president told
    Erdogan on Friday that he is concerned about it and that his
    administration has been trying to thwart it, the official confirmed.
    The U.S. House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs Committee
    announced on Tuesday that it would consider the resolution, which has
    no binding effect on U.S. foreign policy. Turkish officials have
    repeatedly said it would harm already strained relations among the
    NATO allies.
    Turkey has been a generally reliable partner for Washington in its
    fight against terrorism.
    It supports U.S. operations in Afghanistan and Iraq through the
    Incirlik Air Base in the southern part of the country, one of the
    most important U.S. military bases in the region.
    But bilateral relations soured over Turkish Parliament's refusal to
    station American troops in Turkey before the war in Iraq started.
    Erdogan told Bush that Turkish proposal to establish an international
    commission of experts to examine Armenian and Turkish archives is
    still in effect, the official said.
    Armenians say more than 1.5 million Armenians were killed in a
    systematic genocide before modern Turkey was born in 1923.

    Turkey says the death toll is inflated and that the deaths occurred
    at a time of civil unrest.
    Public opinion polls show that the United States has become widely
    unpopular in Turkey because of opposition to U.S. policy in Iraq.
    After France voted last year to make denial of Armenian genocide a
    crime, the Turkish government ended military ties. A similar move
    with the United States could have drastic repercussions on operations
    in Iraq and Afghanistan, which rely heavily on Turkish support.
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