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Turks Rattled By Congress Vote On Armenian Genocide

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  • Turks Rattled By Congress Vote On Armenian Genocide

    TURKS RATTLED BY CONGRESS VOTE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    London Greek News, United Kingdom
    Oct 11 2007

    The Democrat controlled Congress despite intense pressure from the
    White House and the Turkish government has voted on Wednesday to
    condemn the mass killings of Armenians in Turkey in World War I as
    an act of genocide.

    The vote by the House Foreign Relations Committee was a non-binding
    and so largely symbolic, but its consequences could reach far beyond
    bilateral relations and spill into the war in Iraq.

    The New York Times stated "Turkish officials and lawmakers warned that
    if the resolution was approved by the full House, they would reconsider
    supporting the American war effort, which includes permission to ship
    essential supplies through Turkey and northern Iraq."

    President George Bush speaking before the vote on the South Lawn of the
    White House pleaded with the Congress to not pass the resolution saying
    "We all deeply regret the tragic suffering of the Armenian people that
    began in 1915," Mr. Bush said in remarks that, reflecting official
    American policy, carefully avoided the use of the word genocide. "This
    resolution is not the right response to these historic mass killings,
    and its passage would do great harm to our relations with a key ally
    in NATO and in the global war on terror."

    "The resolution, which was introduced early in the current session
    of Congress and which has quietly moved forward over the last few
    weeks, provoked a fierce lobbying fight that pitted the politically
    influential Armenian-American population against the Turkish
    government, which hired equally influential former lawmakers like
    Robert L. Livingston, Republican of Louisiana, and Richard A.

    Gephardt, the former Democratic House majority leader who backed a
    similar resolution when he was in Congress." The New York Times.

    The traditional preferential relationship enjoyed by Turkey in the US
    dating back to the late Turgut Ozal with Ronald Reagan and George Bush,
    agreeing to major US military installations in Turkey at Incirilik
    and Diyakabir.

    Appearing outside the West Wing after that meeting, Defense Secretary
    Robert M. Gates noted that about 70 percent of all air cargo sent to
    Iraq passed through or came from Turkey, as did 30 percent of fuel
    and virtually all the new armored vehicles designed to withstand
    mines and bombs.

    "They believe clearly that 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," Mr. Gates
    said, referring to the remarks of General Petraeus and Mr. Crocker.

    Turkish reactions to the vote in Congress has been a veiled threat,
    that if the vote was passed and made law this would put at risk that
    permission for US fighter planes and re-fuelling flights to take
    place over Turkish airspace. France was "punished" by Turkey after
    its Parliament passed legislation condemning the Armenian genocide
    by pulling all military agreements and contracts with France.

    The Associated Press has reported in Turkey, a fresh wave of violence
    raised the specter of a Turkish raid into northern Iraq, something
    the United States is strongly urging against. A policeman was killed
    and six others were wounded in a bomb attack in the Kurdish city of
    Diyarbakir in southeastern Turkey on Wednesday. In the town of Sirnak
    Turkish warplanes and helicopters were attacking positions along the
    southern border with Iraq that are suspected of belonging to Kurdish
    rebels who have been fighting Turkish forces for years.

    http://www.londongreeknews.co.uk/story.php ?id=373
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