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News Feature: US Seeks To Contain Fallout With Turkey

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  • News Feature: US Seeks To Contain Fallout With Turkey

    NEWS FEATURE: US SEEKS TO CONTAIN FALLOUT WITH TURKEY
    Mike McCarthy, dpa

    EUX.TV, Netherlands
    Oct 12 2007

    Washington (dpa) - President George W Bush's administration scrambled
    Thursday to limit diplomatic fallout with Turkey after a congressional
    measure declaring as "genocide" the deaths of more than 1 million
    Armenians at the end of the Ottoman Empire.

    US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice planned phone calls to Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul to
    express the Bush administration's opposition to the bill, and the White
    House urged Congress against holding a final vote on the resolution.

    But Turkey, which had already warned that the declaration would harm
    relations, reacted quickly, sharply criticizing Congress and reportedly
    ordering its ambassador to Washington, Nabi Sensoy, to come home.

    While acknowledging the tragedy of the mass killings of up to 1.5
    million Armenians between 1915 and 1923, Bush argued that the bill
    would damage relations with an important NATO ally providing a transit
    point for equipment and supplies for the US military in Iraq.

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee ignored the warnings and approved
    the measure by a 27-21 tally. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi vowed to
    bring it to the floor for a full vote, but no date has been set.

    Lower-level US diplomats have been in regular contact with their
    Turkish counterparts to convey the Bush administration's opposition
    to the resolution, US State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey
    said. Bush telephoned Erdogan Friday with the same message as a vote
    in favour of the bill appeared inevitable last week.

    Rice intends to tell Erdogan and Gul of "the regret that the
    administration has over the passage of this resolution," Casey said.

    The dialogue between administration and Turkish officials has not
    stopped the heavy criticism coming out of Turkey. Gul in a statement
    posted on the embassy's website accused Congress of using the measure
    to score political points with Armenian-Americans at the cost of good
    relations with Turkey.

    "It's a pity that some politicians in the United States closed their
    ears to calls of common sense," he said.

    Pelosi, who represents a district in California, which has a large
    community of Armenian descent, shrugged off speculation that the US-
    Turkish ties will worsen, saying that the US and Turkey have a "very
    strong relationship" based on common interests.

    "This isn't about ... the Erdogan government. This is about the
    Ottoman Empire," she said.

    The State Department said the recalling of the ambassador will not
    impair the ability of US officials to convey the Bush administration's
    views on the resolution, but that Ankara's decision to withdraw Sensoy
    did not come as a major surprise.

    "The Turkish government has telegraphed for some time, been very vocal
    and very public about its concerns about this and has said that they
    did intend to react in a fairly forceful way," spokesman Casey said.

    The US military is worried that Turkey could take additional steps
    such as curtailing the flow of equipment into Iraq. The US is also
    reliant on Turkish airspace for operations in Iraq.

    "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," Defence Secretary Robert Gates
    said hours before Wednesday's vote.
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