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ANKARA: Chances For Iraq Incursion To Grow If Armenian Bill Passed

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  • ANKARA: Chances For Iraq Incursion To Grow If Armenian Bill Passed

    CHANCES FOR IRAQ INCURSION TO GROW IF ARMENIAN BILL PASSED

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 11 2007

    The possibility for a cross-border operation into Iraq to hunt down
    the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) terrorists would increase if the US
    Congress passes a resolution backing Armenian allegations of genocide
    at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire, officials and analysts said.

    Demonstrators hold Turkish flags and a banner that reads: 'I can't
    stand even American tourists' during a protest against a 'genocide'
    resolution in the US Congress in front of the US Consulate in Ýstanbul.

    Egemen Baðýþ, a senior lawmaker from the ruling Justice and Development
    Party (AK Party) who is having talks in Washington with two other
    lawmakers in the US Congress and the administration against the
    resolution, said the resolution would make it hard for the Turkish
    government to continue close cooperation with the United States and
    resist calls from the public to go after the PKK terrorists who have
    mounted deadly attacks on Turkish soldiers in recent weeks, according
    to The Associated Press.

    "If the Armenian genocide resolution passes, then I think that the
    possibility of a cross-border operation is very high," Ýhsan Daðý,
    a professor of international relations at the Middle East Technical
    University and a regular columnist for Today's Zaman, said.

    Turkey has previously said it would prefer that the US and its Iraqi
    Kurd allies in northern Iraq crack down on the PKK but warned it
    would take the matters into its own hands if no action is taken.

    Supporters of the resolution have been trying to counteract Turkish
    warnings that passage of the resolution would harm bilateral relations
    with arguments that Turkish-American relations were too important to
    Turkey for the government to scuttle.

    But these warnings come amid the Turkish government's ongoing efforts
    to send a motion to Parliament to authorize a cross-border operation
    into northern Iraq, which should it occur could seriously upset
    US efforts to stabilize the country. Many in the US also fear that
    a public backlash in Turkey could lead to restrictions on crucial
    supply routes through Turkey to Iraq and Afghanistan, and the closure
    of Ýncirlik, a strategic air base in Turkey used by the US Air Force.

    Baðýþ underscored that possibility. "Let us not forget that 75
    percent of all supplies to your troops in Iraq go through Turkey,"
    he was quoted as saying by the AP. The resolution calls on the US
    administration to ensure that the alleged genocide is reflected in the
    US foreign policy. Turkey categorically rejects genocide charges and
    says the relations will receive a deep blow if the resolution passes.

    Strong appeal from Bush, Rice, Gates

    Turkish and US officials exerted last-ditch efforts before a planned
    vote of the House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs Committee late
    yesterday. In a statement, President George W. Bush strongly opposed
    the resolution, saying it would do "great harm" to ties with key ally
    Turkey and urging the Committee members to oppose it. Secretary of
    State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates also issued
    a joint appeal at the White House just hours before the committee
    was to vote on the measure.

    "The passage of this resolution at this time would be very problematic
    for everything we are trying to do in the Middle East," Rice said,
    adding that the measure would be "very destabilizing to our efforts
    in Iraq and Afghanistan because Turkey, as an important strategic
    ally, is very critical in supporting the efforts that we are making
    in these crucial areas." Gates said the United States relies heavily
    on Turkey for resupplying US forces in Iraq.

    President George W. Bush was to make a statement later asking Congress
    not to support the resolution.

    On Tuesday, President Abdullah Gul warned of "serious troubles in
    the two countries' relations" if the measure is approved.

    "I have been trying to warn the lawmakers not to make a historic
    mistake," Baðýþ said. A measure of the potential problem came in a
    warning the US Embassy in Ankara issued Tuesday to US citizens in
    Turkey, a key NATO ally.

    "If, despite the administration's concerted efforts against this
    resolution, it passes committee and makes its way to the floor of the
    House for debate and a possible vote, there could be a reaction in the
    form of demonstrations and other manifestations of anti-Americanism
    throughout Turkey," the statement said.

    Armenian-American interest groups also have been rallying supporters
    in the large diaspora community to pressure lawmakers to make sure
    that a successful committee vote leads to consideration by the full
    House. The resolution seemed to have enough support on the committee
    for passage, but the majority was slight and some backers said they
    feared that Turkish pressure would narrow it further. Most Republicans
    were expected to vote against the resolution.

    On Tuesday, Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian Assembly
    of America, sought to shore up support in letters to the committee's
    chairman, Democratic Rep. Tom Lantos of California and its ranking
    Republican member, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida. "We have a unique
    opportunity in this Congress, while there are still survivors of the
    Armenian genocide living among us, to irrevocably and unequivocally
    reaffirm this fact of history," Ardouny claimed.

    --Boundary_(ID_avn+pvjBlAf5RpyD4FKHDg)--
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