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Turkish Official: U.S.-Turkey Ties in Danger

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  • Turkish Official: U.S.-Turkey Ties in Danger

    DefenseNews.com
    Oct 12 2007


    Turkish Official: U.S.-Turkey Ties in Danger

    By UMIT ENGINSOY, WASHINGTON


    The U.S.-Turkish relationship is on the brink of a crisis because of
    a U.S. congressional panel's move to recognize World War I-era
    killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide, and because
    of attacks by northern Iraq-based separatist Kurdish militants on
    Turkish targets, Turkey's prime minister said Oct. 12.
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in Ankara that Turkey was ready to pay the
    price of a serious worsening of ties with the U.S., implying that the
    country may send its army to northern Iraq to fight the Kurdish
    militants and would retaliate strongly to the congressional panel's
    Armenian genocide recognition decision.
    The Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives
    Oct. 10 voted 27-21 in favor of the genocide measure despite heavy
    lobbying by President George W. Bush's Republican administration to
    stop the resolution.
    With the Democratic Party involved in a fight against Bush's
    policies, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced Oct. 11
    that she would bring the bill to a full House floor vote before
    Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 22. Backers of the genocide resolution have
    enough votes to pass the resolution in a floor vote.
    Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary
    Robert Gates have warned that the measure's passage will hurt the
    wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and Washington's efforts in the Middle
    East, where Turkey is a major player. More than 70 percent of
    logistical support to U.S. forces in Iraq goes through Turkey.
    Separately, the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which Turkey, the
    United States and the European Union view as a terrorist group, has
    killed more than 30 people since late September, including Turkish
    troops and civilians, in attacks from bases in neighboring northern
    Iraq, prompting Turkey to raise warnings of an incursion. Washington
    is against any Turkish military intervention on Iraqi territory.
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