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  • Turkey Threatens Repercussions For U.S.

    TURKEY THREATENS REPERCUSSIONS FOR U.S.
    By Christopher Torchia - Associated Press Writer

    Houston Chronicle, TX
    The Associated Press
    Oct 12 2007

    ANKARA, Turkey - Turkey, which is a key supply route to U.S. troops in
    Iraq, recalled its ambassador to Washington on Wednesday and warned
    of serious repercussions if Congress labels the killing of Armenians
    by Turks a century ago as genocide.

    Ordered after a House committee endorsed the genocide measure, the
    summons of the ambassador for consultations was a further sign of the
    deteriorating relations between two longtime allies and the potential
    for new turmoil in an already troubled region.

    Egeman Bagis, an aide to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, told
    Turkish media that Turkey - a conduit for many of the supplies shipped
    to American bases in both Iraq and Afghanistan - might have to "cut
    logistical support to the U.S."

    Analysts also have speculated the resolution could make Turkey more
    inclined to send troops into northern Iraq to hunt Turkish Kurd rebels,
    a move opposed by the U.S. because it would disrupt one of the few
    relatively stable and peaceful Iraqi areas.

    "There are steps that we will take," Turkey's prime minister told
    reporters, but without elaboration. It also wasn't clear if he meant
    his government would act immediately or wait to see what happens to
    the resolution in Congress.

    He declined to answer questions about whether Turkey might shut down
    Incirlik air base in southern Turkey, a major cargo hub for U.S. and
    allied military forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. Turkey's Mediterranean
    port of Iskenderun is also used to ferry goods to American troops.

    "You don't talk about such things, you just do them," Erdogan said.

    The measure before Congress is just a nonbinding resolution without
    the force of law, but the debate has incensed Turkey's government.

    The relationship between the two NATO allies, whose troops fought
    together in the Korean War in 1950-53, have stumbled in the past.

    They hit a low in 2003, when Turkey's parliament refused to allow
    U.S. forces use their country as a staging ground for the invasion
    that toppled Saddam Hussein.

    But while the threat of repercussions against the U.S. is appealing
    for many Turks, the country's leaders know such a move could hurt
    Turkey's standing as a reliable ally of the West and its ambitions
    to be a mediator on the international stage.

    The Turks did suspend military ties with France last year after
    parliament's lower house approved a bill that would have made it
    a crime to deny the mass killings of Armenians in Turkey amounted
    to genocide. But Turkey has much more to lose from cutting ties to
    the U.S.

    The United States is one of its major business partners, with $11
    billion in trade last year, and the U.S. defense industry provides
    much of the Turkish military's equipment.

    Turkey's ambassador in Washington, Nabi Sensoy, was ordered home
    for discussions with the Turkish leadership about what is happening
    in Congress, Foreign Minister spokesman Levent Bilman said. He said
    Sensoy would go back after seven to 10 days.

    "We are not withdrawing our ambassador. We have asked him to come to
    Turkey for some consultations," Bilman said. "The ambassador was given
    instructions to return and will come at his earliest convenience."

    The Bush administration, which is lobbying strongly in hopes of
    persuading Congress to reject the resolution, stressed the need for
    good relations with Turkey.

    "We look forward to his quick return and will continue to work to
    maintain strong U.S.-Turkish relations," said Gordon Johndroe, a
    spokesman for the National Security Council. "We remain opposed to
    House Resolution 106 because of the grave harm it could bring to the
    national security of the United States."

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the measure is damaging relations
    at a time when U.S. forces in Iraq rely heavily on Turkish permission
    to use their airspace for cargo flights.

    About 70 percent of U.S. air cargo headed for Iraq goes through
    Turkey as does about one-third of the fuel used by the U.S. military
    there. U.S. bases also get water and other supplies carried in overland
    by Turkish truckers who cross into Iraq's northern Kurdish region.

    In addition, C-17 cargo planes fly military supplies to U.S. soldiers
    in remote areas of Iraq from Incirlik, avoiding the use of Iraqi roads
    vulnerable to bomb attacks. U.S. officials say the arrangement helps
    reduce American casualties.

    U.S.-Turkish ties already had been strained by Turkey's complaint
    the U.S. hasn't done enough to stop Turkish Kurd rebels from using
    bases in northern Iraq to stage attacks in southeastern Turkey,
    a predominantly Kurdish region where tens of thousands have died in
    fighting since 1984.

    Turkish warplanes and helicopter gunships attacked suspected positions
    of Kurdish rebels on the border this week and Turkey's parliament
    was expected to vote next week on a proposal to allow the military
    to pursue a large-scale offensive in northern Iraq.

    The U.S. ambassador to Turkey, Ross Wilson, was invited to the Foreign
    Ministry, where officials conveyed their "unease" over the resolution
    in Congress and asked the Bush administration do all in its power to
    stop passage by the full House, a Foreign Ministry official said. He
    spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to make
    press statements.

    Historians estimate up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by
    Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I. Turkey denies the
    deaths constituted genocide, saying the killings didn't come from
    a coordinated campaign but rather during unrest accompanying the
    Ottoman Empire's collapse.

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee passed the resolution Wednesday
    despite intense lobbying by Turkish officials and the opposition
    from President Bush. The vote was a triumph for well-organized
    Armenian-American interest groups that have lobbied Congress for
    decades to pass a resolution.

    The administration will now try to pressure Democratic leaders in
    Congress not to schedule a vote, but House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
    indicated they were committed to going forward.

    "Why do it now? Because there's never a good time and all of us in
    the Democratic leadership have supported" it, she said.

    Turkish officials said the House had no business to get involved in
    writing history.

    "It is not possible to accept such an accusation of a crime which
    was never committed by the Turkish nation," Turkey's government said
    after the committee adopted the measure.

    Associated Press writers C. Onur Ant in Istanbul and Suzan Fraser in
    Ankara contributed to this report.
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