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NYT: Turkey Warns United States Over Armenian Vote

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  • NYT: Turkey Warns United States Over Armenian Vote

    October 9, 2007

    Turkey Warns United States Over Armenian Vote

    By REUTERS

    Filed at 6:30 p.m. ET

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Turkish lawmakers visited Capitol Hill on
    Tuesday and their president has written to President George W. Bush,
    warning of damage to bilateral ties if Congress backs a bill
    recognizing the 1915 massacres of Armenians as genocide.

    The House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs Committee is to consider
    the bill on genocide Wednesday. If it passes the committee, House
    Speaker Nancy Pelosi could then decide to bring it to the House floor
    for a vote. She has been a long-time supporter of the resolution.

    The Republican president is opposed to the bill, but Congress is
    dominated by Democrats, many of whom back the measure. It has 226
    co-sponsors, over half the House of Representatives.

    In Ankara, President Abdullah Gul's office said in a statement: "In
    his letter, our president thanked President Bush for his efforts (to
    stop the bill) and drew attention to the problems it would create in
    bilateral relations if it is accepted."

    A senior lawmaker of Turkey's ruling AK Party, Egemen Bagis, led a
    delegation to Capitol Hill to warn that passage of the resolution
    would put military cooperation with Turkey at risk and endanger U.S.
    troops in Iraq.

    The bulk of supplies for troops in Iraq pass via Turkey's Incirlik
    airbase. In an interview with Reuters, Bagis noted that thousands of
    Turkish truck drivers, construction workers, engineers and contractors
    have been risking their lives to help the U.S. effort in Iraq.

    "This resolution will put your (U.S.) troops in harm's way," he said.
    "We will not be able to extend the current cooperation we are
    providing to you."

    "If our allies are insulting us with crimes we have not committed, we
    will start questioning the merits of that endeavor," Bagis said,
    speaking in English.

    NATO ALLY

    In addition to military cooperation, defense contracts and energy
    cooperation would also be put at risk, he said.

    Turkey, a NATO ally of Washington, strongly rejects the Armenian
    position, backed by many Western historians and a growing number of
    foreign parliaments, that up to 1.5 million Armenians suffered
    genocide at the hands of Ottoman Turks during World War One.

    Ankara says many Muslim Turks as well as Christian Armenians died in
    inter-ethnic conflict as the Ottoman Empire collapsed.

    The bill comes at a delicate time for Turkey-U.S. relations. Turkish
    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, who telephoned Bush last week about the
    Armenian resolution, was considering Tuesday whether to allow a
    cross-border incursion into northern Iraq to strike Kurdish rebels
    there after 15 Turkish soldiers were killed in attacks in recent days.

    Washington has urged Turkey not to send troops into mainly Kurdish
    northern Iraq for fear of destabilizing the country's most peaceful
    region.

    Would Turkey listen to Washington's urgings?

    "Tomorrow's vote (on the Armenian resolution) definitely will have an
    effect on that," Bagis said.

    Bagis said Washington should pressure the leaders of the Kurdish
    region of Iraq to hand over Kurdish rebels who he said had taken
    refuge there.

    Source: http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/news/news-turkey-us a-armenians.html
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