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ANKARA: Turkey To US: Don't Jeopardize Ties Over Armenian Bill

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  • ANKARA: Turkey To US: Don't Jeopardize Ties Over Armenian Bill

    TURKEY TO US: DON'T JEOPARDIZE TIES OVER ARMENIAN BILL

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 8 2007

    Senior Turkish officials have warned the US capital over probable
    calamitous consequences of the US Congress' passage of a resolution
    supporting Armenian allegations of genocide at the hands of the
    Ottoman Empire, saying that such a move would lead to irreparable
    damage in bilateral relations between the two NATO allies.

    The US House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs will vote
    tomorrow on Resolution 106, which calls on the US president to ensure
    that the "Armenian genocide" is reflected in US foreign policy. The
    measure is widely expected to clear the committee, which will pave
    the way for its introduction onto the House floor. House Speaker
    Nancy Pelosi can, in theory, block the measure, but few expect she
    will do so, given her open support for the genocide allegations and
    pre-election pledges to work for congressional acknowledgement of
    the charges.

    Defense Minister Vecdi Gonul, in a letter sent to US Secretary of
    Defense Robert Gates, urged the US administration to prevent adoption
    of the resolution, the Defense Ministry Secretariat-General announced
    on Monday in a written statement. "Deeply rooted relations between
    the two countries, which are being conducted within the framework of
    friendship and cooperation, will be taken hostage by the adoption of
    the resolution," Gonul told Gates in his letter.

    "It will be difficult to keep under control dynamics that will be
    triggered by the Turkish people's reactions, thus adoption of the
    resolution will serve the interest of neither Turkey nor the US,"
    Gonul also said.

    Meanwhile, a senior member of the ruling Justice and Development
    Party (AK Party) was quoted on Monday as saying that Turkey might
    cut logistics support to US troops in Iraq if the US Congress backed
    the resolution. "Don't accept this resolution. If you do, we will
    be obliged to do many things we do not want to do," AK Party deputy
    leader Egemen Baðýþ was quoted as saying by the mainstream Hurriyet
    daily on Monday. "For example, the Americans depend on Turkey for a
    large part of their logistical support in Iraq. We would be obliged
    to cut this support," he was also quoted as saying.

    Baðýþ leads a group of Turkish lawmakers who on Monday headed
    to the United States for talks with members of Congress about the
    resolution. The group includes the main opposition Republican People
    Party's (CHP) Þukru Elekdað and the Nationalist Movement Party's
    (MHP) Gunduz Aktan, who are both retired ambassadors.

    Ahead of their departure from Ýstanbul, Baðýþ, nevertheless, clarified
    his remarks and said: "Needless to say, there are a lot of options
    before Turkey. But to make a decision on which one is to be chosen is
    not my responsibility or duty. The Hurriyet daily illustrated some
    of the possible scenarios." The Turkish government has many times
    urged foreign countries, including the United States, not to pass
    such resolutions, saying historians, not politicians, should judge
    historical events.

    Last year, Turkey froze military and some commercial cooperation
    with France after the French National Assembly backed a bill that
    would make it a crime to deny the Armenian genocide, although the
    bill never became law.

    US forces in both Iraq and Afghanistan get many of their supplies
    via the Ýncirlik military base in southern Turkey.

    Meanwhile, the Defense Ministry announced also on Monday that the
    ministry sent letters to US defense sector companies with which
    the ministry has been conducting joint projects and urged them to
    contribute to efforts for preventing adoption of the resolution.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan had already raised Turkey's
    concerns with US President George W. Bush in a telephone conversation
    last Friday. The Bush administration is opposed to the bill, but
    Congress is now dominated by its Democratic opponents.

    --Boundary_(ID_ygwiTEJzgesbi4yqfFBwVQ) --

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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