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TIME: Turkey Lashes Back At The Genocide Vote

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  • TIME: Turkey Lashes Back At The Genocide Vote

    TURKEY LASHES BACK AT THE GENOCIDE VOTE
    By Pelin Turgut

    TIME Magazine
    Oct 11 2007

    Turkey's government has denounced a resolution approved by a U.S. House
    of Representatives committee that calls the 1915 massacres of Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks a genocide. The measure passed on Wednesday despite
    extraordinary last-minute efforts by Bush administration officials,
    including the President himself, to have it shelved out of concern that
    it could hurt relations with a key NATO ally and affect U.S. troops
    in Iraq. Seventy percent of American air cargo and a third of the
    fuel the U.S. uses in neighboring Iraq passes through the its air
    base in Incirlik in southern Turkey. Prior to the bill's passage,
    Turkish politicians had warned of possible retaliation by blocking
    the use of Incirlik.

    Hundreds of demonstrators picketed the U.S. embassy in Ankara just
    before the vote. "A Bill of Hatred," ran the banner headline on the
    top-selling Turkish newspaper Hurriyet. The non-binding measure,
    which passed the House Foreign Affairs Committee by a vote of 27
    to 21, will now be sent on to the full House. "Unfortunately, some
    politicians in the United States have once again sacrificed important
    matters to petty domestic politics despite all calls to common sense,"
    said Turkish President Abdullah Gul.

    For the Turkish government, "the timing of the vote is catastrophic,"
    says prominent political commentator and columnist for Posta newspaper
    Mehmet Ali Birand. It comes as Washington tries to persuade Turkey not
    to launch a military operation into north Iraq to pursue separatist
    Kurdish guerrillas who are based there and who have been staging
    increasingly violent attacks in southeast Turkey. The U.S. is opposed
    to any such move, fearful that it could disrupt Kurdish-controlled
    north Iraq, the only relatively stable area in the country.

    But the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is under huge
    public pressure after several deadly attacks by Kurdish guerrillas in
    the southeast that have killed 30 people in under two weeks. Members
    of Turkey's parliament are due to vote on allowing a cross-border
    military incursion next week, and the military machine is already
    preparing. "After the U.S. House vote, the Turkish public is going
    to think tit for tat," says Birand. "This is going to strengthen the
    nationalists, including the position of those people who want us to
    invade north Iraq."

    Despite its displeasure, however, Turkey's government is unlikely to
    make good on its threats to take retaliatory action against the U.S.

    even if a resolution clears House. "The government is disinclined to
    consider drastic moves like an embargo, or closing Incirlik," says
    Birand. The real outcome of Wednesday's bill may be to strengthen a
    growing tide of ultra-nationalist isolationism in Turkey, fueled by
    public perceptions of being unwanted by Europe (it is seeking to join
    the E.U.) and ignored by the U.S. One recent victim was high-profile
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was shot to death by
    a teenager with links to nationalist groups. His son, Arat Dink,
    and publisher Serkis Seropyan were sentenced on Friday to one year
    in jail for "insulting Turkishness" by referring to the Armenian
    genocide. They will appeal the verdict.

    http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0 ,8599,1670399,00.html
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