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Turkey Orders Envoy Home Amid Controversial Armenian Genocide Bill

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  • Turkey Orders Envoy Home Amid Controversial Armenian Genocide Bill

    AHN - All Headline News
    Oct 11 2007

    Turkey Orders U.S. Envoy To Return Home Amid Controversial Armenian
    Genocide Bill
    October 11, 2007 7:22 p.m. EST

    Jay Olle - AHN News Writer

    Washington, D.C. (AHN) - The Turkish Ambassador to the United States,
    Nabi Sensoy, will return to Ankara as tensions continue to rise
    following the passage of a U.S. House bill calling the killings of
    Armenians during World War I a genocide.

    "We are not withdrawing our ambassador. We have asked him to come to
    Turkey for some consultations," Foreign Ministry spokesman Levent
    Bilman said Thursday. Turkey was quick to say this wasn't the end of
    diplomatic relations between the two countries.

    Orders arrived from Ankara on Wednesday right after the bill passed
    the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. The move, strongly lobbied by
    Armenian-American interest groups, pushed through despite strong
    contradictions from President George Bush and several other
    lawmakers. The House may put it to a general vote on Friday.

    Turkey is an important U.S. ally in the Middle East. Defense
    Secretary Robert Gates noted that Ankara allows American planes and
    vehicles to use its airspace and roads, with 70 percent of all air
    cargo bound for Iraq traveling through Turkey.

    Gates believed that access to airfields and roads would be put at
    risk if the resolution passes the House, if "the Turks react as
    strongly as we believe they will," he said.

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul, in an announcement through the
    government's official website, finds the resolution "unacceptable"
    and "doesn't fit a major power like the United States." He warned
    Bush that "in the case that Armenian allegations are accepted, there
    will be serious problems in the relations between the two countries."


    "We still hope that common sense will prevail and that the House of
    Representatives will not move this resolution any further," Gul said.


    http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/70 08800413
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