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Israel Worried By Turk-Armenian Debate

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  • Israel Worried By Turk-Armenian Debate

    ISRAEL WORRIED BY TURK-ARMENIAN DEBATE
    By Mark Lavie

    The Associated Press
    MLive.com, MI
    Oct 12 2007

    JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel's government expressed concern Thursday over
    the U.S. congressional debate on the mass killings of ethnic Armenians
    in Turkey 90 years ago, but tried to deflect pressure from Turkey to
    take its side in the dispute.

    During a visit to Israel this week, Turkish Foreign Minister Ali
    Babacan pressed Israel to use its influence in Washington to help
    kill a congressional effort to label the bloodshed as genocide.

    Babacan warned that Turkey's friendly relations with Israel and the
    United States could suffer if the genocide resolution was approved.

    President Bush is urging Congress to defeat it, pointing to the
    importance of Turkey as an ally in the Middle East.

    Armenian groups say hundreds of thousands of Armenians were slain
    during 1915-17 in what they argue was a genocide campaign by the
    Ottoman Empire. Turkey contends the killings were not genocide,
    but the result of widespread chaos and political upheaval as the
    600-year-old empire collapsed.

    Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev confirmed on Thursday
    that Babacan raised the issue during talks with Israeli Foreign
    Minister Tzipi Livni.

    "We take the Turkish concerns very seriously. We have an excellent
    relationship with Turkey," Regev said.

    He declined to discuss Israel's response or say whether Israel
    would ask its allies in Washington to intervene. In recent months
    a leading Jewish group, the Anti-Defamation League, changed its
    policy and declared the Armenian killings "tantamount to genocide,"
    angering Turks.

    The debate in Washington puts Israel in an uncomfortable position.

    Turkey is one of the Jewish state's few friends in the Muslim world,
    but genocide is an extremely sensitive topic in Israel, which was
    built in the aftermath of the Nazi Holocaust.

    Alon Liel, a former director of Israel's foreign ministry and an
    expert in Israel-Turkey relations, said the U.S. debate could hurt
    ties between the two countries.

    "We tried all these years not to get into it," he said. But because
    of the Anti-Defamation League's new position, "Turkey will blame the
    Jewish organizations, and then this could bounce back to us."

    Israel's government has said previously that massacres were perpetrated
    against Armenians and expressed sympathy for their suffering. But it
    stopped short of calling it genocide.

    Regev said Thursday that "there is no change" in Israel's policy.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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