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  • Turkey condemns US 'genocide' vote

    Financial Tiems

    Turkey condemns US 'genocide' vote

    By Daniel Dombey in Washington and Reuters

    Published: October 11 2007 04:46 | Last updated: October 11 2007 04:46

    Turkey warned on Thursday that relations with its Nato ally the US
    would be harmed by a US House committee's approval of a resolution
    calling the 1915 massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks "genocide".

    The move came as Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan prepared to ask
    parliament, which his party controls, to authorise a military
    incursion into northern Iraq to fight Kurdish Turkish rebels using the
    region as a base.

    "The committee's approval of this resolution was an irresponsible
    move, which at a greatly sensitive time will make relations with a
    friend and ally, and a strategic partnership nurtured over
    generations, more difficult," the centre-right government said in a
    statement.

    "Our government regrets and condemns this decision. It is unacceptable
    that the Turkish nation has been accused of something that never
    happened in history," the government said.

    US legislators on Wednesday defied the Bush administration when they
    voted to describe the mass killings of Armenians more than eight
    decades ago as genocide.

    The 27-21 decision by the House of Representatives foreign affairs
    committee, which paves the way for a vote in the full House in coming
    weeks, came in spite of a warning from George W. Bush, president, and
    his top officials that co-operation with Turkey and the fate of US
    troops in Iraq could be at stake.

    It also comes as the US seeks to convince Turkey not to carry out the
    incursion into northern Iraq .

    Proponents of the measure, which has vigorous support from the
    Armenian-American population, argue that its call for Mr Bush to
    "accurately characterise the systematic and deliberate annihilation of
    1.5m Armenians as genocide" is essential to putting the historical
    record straight.

    "The sad truth is that the modern government of Turkey refuses to come
    to terms with this genocide," said Representative Christopher Smith of
    New Jersey, at an emotionally charged session attended by four
    survivors of the mass killings that began in 1915.

    "Let us do this and be done with it," said Representative Brad Sherman
    of California. "We will get a few angry words out of Ankara for a few
    days, and then it's over."

    But only hours before the committee voted Mr Bush warned that passage
    of the resolution "would do great harm to our relations with a key
    ally in Nato and in the global war on terror".

    According to US commanders in Iraq, including Gen David Petraeus,
    Robert Gates, defence secretary, said: "Access to airfields and to the
    roads and so on in Turkey would be very much put at risk if this
    resolution passes and the Turks react as strongly as we believe they
    will." He added that about 70 per cent of US air cargo going into Iraq
    went through Turkey.

    US officials say passage of the resolution by the full House will make
    Washington's bid to convince Turkey not to launch a military incursion
    into Iraq much harder. Public outrage against the Kurdish separatist
    PKK has flared in the wake of an attack in which 13 soldiers were
    killed on Sunday.

    Washington's push for Turkey take a more collaborative approach on
    combating PKK has also been complicated by the resignation of Joseph
    Ralston, the retired US general who had been seeking to increase
    Washington-Ankara co-operation against the militant group.

    "For his own reasons he decided that he was going to be moving on,"
    said Sean McCormack, state department spokesman, this week. "Any
    continuing presence of the PKK or the continuing activities of the PKK
    is not because what he did or did not do." He added that he was not
    yet aware of a possible replacement for Gen Ralston.

    Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007

    Source: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e1200834-7785-11dc-9de8- 0000779fd2ac.html?nclick_check=1
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