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FT: US Relations With Armenia At Risk

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  • FT: US Relations With Armenia At Risk

    US RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA AT RISK
    By Daniel Dombey in Washington

    Financial Times, UK
    Oct 8 2007

    The Bush administration has warned that Washington's relations with
    Turkey could be endangered and US troops in Iraq put at risk because
    of congressional legislation that denounces the mass killings of
    Armenians more than 80 years ago as genocide.

    The bill, which will be put to the House of Representatives foreign
    affairs committee on Wednesday, enjoys majority support and comes at
    a time when ties between Washington and Ankara are under severe strain.

    Turkey has launched a concerted effort to prevent passage of the bill,
    warning of serious consequences for bilateral relations. Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, Turkey's prime minister, called President George W. Bush on
    Friday, and a delegation of Turkish MPs is in Washington to muster
    support against the resolution.

    Dan Fried, the state department's top Europe official, said last week:
    "We think it would do grave harm both to US-Turkish relations and to
    US interests. It would hurt our forces deployed in Iraq, which rely
    on passage through Turkey . . . We have to be mindful of how much
    we depend and how much our troops and the Iraqi economy depend on
    shipments from and through Turkey."

    Eight former US secretaries of state - including Colin Powell, Henry
    Kissinger and Madeleine Albright - have written to Nancy Pelosi,
    the speaker of the House of Representatives, to ask her to prevent
    a vote on the issue.

    The bill has 226 co-sponsors. It calls on Mr Bush "to accurately
    characterise the systematic and deliberate annihilation of 1.5m
    Armenians as genocide". The massacres were carried out by Ottoman
    troops beginning in 1915, before the creation of the republic of
    Turkey. Turkey rejects characterisation of the deaths as genocide and
    takes diplomatic and other measures against countries that adopt such
    a stance.

    Last year Ankara restricted military co-operation with France after the
    French national assembly passed a bill that would criminalise denial
    of the Armenian genocide. Turkey has not suggested it would retaliate
    against the US if the bill is approved. But some commentators suggest
    that, in extremis, Ankara could restrict US access to Incirlik air
    base in southern Turkey, which the US uses to supply its military
    forces throughout the Middle East.
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