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  • Turkey swift to admonish US over vote

    Turkey swift to admonish US over vote

    Envoy recalled after resolution on genocide

    By Farah Stockman, Globe Staff | October 12, 2007

    WASHINGTON - The government of Turkey yesterday ordered its ambassador
    in Washington to return to Ankara for consultations, a swift rebuke to
    a congressional committee's adoption of a resolution that declares
    that the World War I-era massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks was
    genocide.

    Turkey's president, Abdullah Gül, called the resolution approved
    Wednesday by the House Foreign Affairs Committee "unacceptable."

    Turkey's foreign ministry warned in a statement that the nonbinding
    measure will "jeopardize a strategic partnership" between the United
    States and Turkey "that has been cultivated for generations."

    Amid the fallout over the committee's vote, Turkey's prime minister
    announced that he would seek approval from Parliament for a military
    incursion into Northern Iraq to more aggressively pursue Kurdish
    rebels who have attacked Turkish troops. Although Turkey has long
    considered stronger action against cross-border raids from Kurdish
    militants, some saw the timing of the announcement, close to the
    committee vote, as a veiled warning to the United States, which
    opposes the move.

    Yesterday, White House and State Department officials scrambled to
    lobby against the resolution on Capitol Hill while other senior Bush
    administration officials tried to assure the Turkish government that
    they are fighting to defeat it. State Department deputy spokesman Tom
    Casey told reporters yesterday that Rice would make calls to Turkish
    officials.

    "This is an issue that we know has great emotional resonance in Turkey
    and elsewhere," Casey said. "We oppose it, and we're going to continue
    to do so."

    But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat whose district
    is home to a large Armenian-American population, said the Democratic
    leadership was committed to passing the resolution by the end of the
    year. She suggested that she does not believe Turkey will make good on
    its threats to retaliate.

    "So as long as there is genocide, there is need to speak out against
    it," Pelosi said yesterday. "The US and Turkey have a very strong
    relationship. It is based on mutual interest. And I, with all the
    respect in the world for the government of Turkey, believe that our
    continued mutual interest will have us grow that relationship."

    Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns said yesterday that he hopes
    the Turkish government's "disappointment" with the genocide resolution
    "can be limited to statements" and will not prompt further action
    against the United States.

    But Bulent Aliriza, a Turkey analyst at the Center for Strategic and
    International Studies, said Turkey will probably launch its full
    reaction after the House considers the resolution in the coming weeks.
    Repercussions, he said, could include taking away US use of the
    Incirlik Air Base, which supplies US troops in Iraq. He also said that
    Turkey is now more likely to ignore US requests not to enter northern
    Iraq.

    "The US ability to influence the Turks, and to dissuade them, has been
    undermined quite seriously by this," he said, adding that the United
    States is increasingly unpopular in Turkey. "When the US says, 'Please
    don't intervene,' the Turks might be less amenable."

    At a briefing yesterday, White House press secretary Dana Perino said
    that she didn't "know if there's a causation" between the resolution
    and the Turkish prime minister's decision to seek permission for
    cross-border action against the Kurds in Northern Iraq. Perino said
    the US government has been working diligently with Turkey to stop the
    attacks by Kurdish rebels, and has appointed a special envoy to deal
    with the issue.

    Turkish officials said their ambassador would return for a week or 10
    days of consultations. The move, a common diplomatic protest, will
    also allow the ambassador to take part in deliberations over the
    Turkish government's response.

    Introduced earlier this year by Adam Schiff, a California Democrat who
    is outspoken on Armenian issues, the resolution on the Armenian
    genocide has collected 225 cosponsors, suggesting that it would pass a
    possible House vote. But some cosponsors are backing away from their
    support in recent weeks due to Turkey's opposition.

    Representative Jane Harman, a California Democrat who chairs a House
    intelligence subcommittee, was among the cosponsors earlier this year,
    but last week urged her colleagues not to pass it.

    "Following a visit to Turkey earlier this year . . . I have great
    concern that this is the wrong time for Congress to pass this
    measure," she wrote in a Oct. 3 letter to the House Committee on
    Foreign Affairs. "Turkey plays a critically important role in
    moderating extremist forces [in the Middle East]. . . . However valid
    >From a historical perspective, we should avoid taking steps that would
    embarrass or isolate the Turkish leadership."

    Senator Hillary Clinton, a New York Democrat and presidential hopeful,
    said she now has qualms about supporting a similar measure she
    cosponsored in the Senate.

    On Wednesday she told The Boston Globe editorial board that Turkey's
    opposition had been stronger than anticipated and that Congress should
    proceed with caution.

    Though it is nonbinding, the resolution is a symbolic measure that
    establishes for the record an official US version of events that took
    place nearly a century ago.

    It states that the Ottoman Empire - part of which has become
    modern-day Turkey - "conceived and carried out" a systematic campaign
    to eliminate the Armenian minority between 1915 and 1923. Nearly 2
    million men, women, and children were expelled from their historic
    homeland, and as many as 1.5 million people died during that period,
    the resolution says.

    The resolution calls on the US president to refer to the killings as a
    genocide during his annual address commemorating the killings. The
    issue is so explosive in Turkey that describing the Armenian killings
    as genocide is a crime.

    Yesterday, a Turkish court convicted two newspaper editors - including
    the son of murdered Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dink - for insulting
    "Turkishness." The journalists published articles arguing that the
    genocide designation is justified.

    But Turkish officials adamantly reject that version of events. They
    contend the Armenians died in ethnic clashes with the Turks during
    World War I, and that the genocide designation does not apply.

    The US-Turkish relationship has been under strain since 2003, when
    Turkey's Parliament refused to allow US soldiers to use its territory
    to stage the invasion of Iraq. But Turkey did allow use of its air
    base to resupply US troops.

    The base now serves as a transit point for 95 percent of the
    military's heavy vehicles into Iraq, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates
    told reporters in London yesterday.

    Gates said that Turkey's strong reaction to the congressional
    resolution should not be a surprise.

    "I think it's worth noting that the French Parliament passed a similar
    resolution, and there were a number of steps taken by the Turkish
    government to punish, if you will, the French government." Following
    the French vote, Turkey announced it would freeze its military ties
    with France.

    But state Representative Peter Kotoujian, a Waltham Democrat who has
    led the local Armenian-American movement to raise awareness of the
    mass killings, said Turkey's response "should encourage people to
    press on" with the genocide resolution.

    "The United States has to stand up for truth," said Kotoujian, whose
    grandparents survived the massacres. "Unless you stand up for truth,
    you can never lead."

    (c) Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

    Source: http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articl es/2007/10/12/turkey_swift_to_admonish_us_over_vot e/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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