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NYT: Turkey's President Warns Bush Over Armenian Vote

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  • NYT: Turkey's President Warns Bush Over Armenian Vote

    October 9, 2007

    Turkey's President Warns Bush Over Armenian Vote

    By REUTERS

    Filed at 8:52 a.m. ET

    ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey's president has written to U.S. President
    George W. Bush warning of the damage to bilateral ties if Congress
    backs a bill recognizing the 1915 massacres of Armenians as genocide,
    his office said on Tuesday.

    Congress's Foreign Affairs Committee is expected to back a bill on the
    genocide issue on Wednesday and speaker Nancy Pelosi, a known
    supporter of the Armenian cause, could then decide to bring it to the
    House floor for a vote.

    The Bush administration is opposed to the bill, but Congress is now
    dominated by its Democratic opponents.

    "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," President Abdullah Gul's
    office said in a statement. It did not provide further information.

    A senior lawmaker of Turkey's ruling AK Party, Egemen Bagis, was
    quoted this week as saying Ankara might cut logistic support to U.S.
    troops in Iraq if Congress backs the bill. The bulk of supplies for
    troops in Iraq pass via Turkey's Incirlik airbase.

    Turkish media have said U.S. firms could also be blocked from winning
    defense and other contracts if the bill passes.

    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 was on Tuesday considering 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.

    Source: http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/washington/politics -turkey-usa-armenians.html?pagewanted=print
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