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  • Turkey calls US envoy back home

    Turkey calls US envoy back home

    By Vincent Boland in Ankara, Demetri Sevastopulo in London and Daniel
    Dombey in Washington

    Published: October 11 2007 17:44 | Last updated: October 12 2007 00:13

    Turkey summoned back its ambassador from Washington on Thursday night
    in reaction to the US congressional vote labelling the mass killings
    of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

    The move comes amid warnings that the issue could mark a turning point
    in relations between Washington and Ankara and jeopardise US troops in
    Iraq.

    The non-binding resolution was adopted by the House of Representatives
    foreign affairs committee in a 27-21 vote on Wednesday.

    It is now set to go to the full House in coming weeks despite intense
    opposition from Turkey and the Bush administration, which fears the
    measure will further damage an already strained relationship.

    "We are not withdrawing our ambassador. We have asked him to come to
    Turkey for some consultations,'' Levent Bilman, a Turkish foreign
    ministry spokesman, said.

    He added that the ambassador would stay in Turkey for a week or 10
    days for discussions on the vote.

    "We look forward to his swift return and will continue to work to
    maintain strong US-Turkish relations," the White House said.

    Turkey accepts that hundreds of thousands of Ottoman Armenians were
    killed from 1915 to 1917 as the empire collapsed and before the
    Republic of Turkey was created. But it rejects the idea of genocide
    and insists that the victims died because of war, hunger, and
    displacement.

    Several countries have endorsed the genocide verdict, but for the US
    to be on the brink of now doing the same - as seems likely if the
    whole House of Representatives votes on it - is especially dismaying
    to many Turks.

    Some see it as a symbol of a growing disengagement between two
    military allies who enjoyed a long and largely pragmatic relationship
    until the US invasion of Iraq.

    "When we look back in 20 years we might see this as a milestone in the
    way Turkey and the US have drifted apart," said Suat Kiniklioglu, an
    MP for the ruling Justice and Development party.

    Others say that Turkey has backed itself irrevocably into a corner on
    the Armenian issue by refusing to engage with its critics and by
    silencing domestic debate. Cengiz Aktar, an academic and commentator
    in Istanbul, said: "Turkey has made this a question of honour but it
    has no other policy. We were more flexible on this issue 20 years ago
    than we are today."

    The House resolution comes at a delicate time in US relations.
    Ankara's parliament is expected next week to approve a military
    operation into northern Iraq in pursuit of Kurdish PKK separatist
    rebels who have staged bloody attacks inside Turkey in recent weeks.

    Such a move is fiercely opposed by the US, which fears that Iraq's
    most stable region could be engulfed in a new conflict.

    Such an authorisation might not be acted on immediately. But the
    Turkish authorities appear determined to rout the PKK in the face of a
    wave of outrage at recent killings of civilians and soldiers. "The
    prime minister feels that our policy of restraint [on the PKK] has to
    end," Mr Kiniklioglu said.

    But threats of retaliation against the US if the House adopted the
    resolution, made by some Turkish politicians, may be premature.
    Several diplomats pointed out on Thursday that the Bush administration
    and much of the US foreign policy establishment took Ankara's side in
    opposing the resolution, a fact that could influence any official
    Turkish response.

    Robert Gates, the US defence secretary, said there could be "enormous
    present-day implications" for US operations in Iraq if Turkey took
    retaliatory action.

    Nicholas Burns, the undersecretary of state, said the administration
    would contact the Turkish government to convey its "deep
    disappointment" at the adoption of the resolution.

    Additional reporting by agencies

    Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007

    Source: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/aa041e3a-7816-11dc-8e4c- 0000779fd2ac.html
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