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ABC Australia: Rift between US and Turkey over Armenian massacre

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  • ABC Australia: Rift between US and Turkey over Armenian massacre

    ABC Transcripts (Australia)
    October 11, 2007 Thursday 8:16 AM AEST
    SHOW: AM 8:16 AM AEST ABC



    Rift between US and Turkey over Armenian massacre

    Michael Rowland


    TONY EASTLEY: A massacre more than 90 years ago is emerging as the
    latest challenge to American efforts to win the war in Iraq.

    The US Congress plans to pass a resolution declaring Turkey's mass
    killings of Armenians, between 1915 and 1917, was genocide.

    That has incensed Turkey, an important strategic ally in the Iraq
    war, and so now the Bush administration is furiously trying to get
    the Democrat controlled Congress to drop the resolution.

    Washington Correspondent Michael Rowland reports.

    MICHAEL ROWLAND: What exactly happened during the collapse of the
    Ottoman Empire, 90 years ago, has long been the subject of bitter
    dispute.

    Armenia claims that up to 1.5 million of its countrymen were murdered
    as part of an organised campaign to force them out of what is now
    eastern Turkey.

    Turkey maintains there were no systematic killings and says many
    Muslim Turks as well as Christian Armenians died in fierce sectarian
    conflict.

    Many Democrats in the US House of Representatives are siding with the
    Armenians and are poised to pass a resolution calling the massacres
    genocide.

    Turkey is now making dark warnings to the US about the consequences
    if the resolution goes through.

    US Defence Secretary, Robert Gates, says US commanders in Iraq are
    getting very nervous for obvious reasons.

    ROBERT GATES: About 70 per cent of all air cargo going into Iraq goes
    through Turkey. About a third of the fuel that they consume goes
    through Turkey, or comes from Turkey. 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.

    MICHAEL ROWLAND: Turkish officials are in Washington, vigorously
    lobbying law makers to drop the resolution but even Republicans, like
    Congressman Chris Smith, are determined to push ahead.

    CHRIS SMITH: The sad truth is that the modern government of Turkey
    refuses to come to terms with this genocide. The Turkish Government
    consistently and aggressively refuses to acknowledge the Armenian
    genocide. For Armenians everywhere, the Turkish Government's denial
    is yet another slap in the face.

    MICHAEL ROWLAND: Turkey itself is about to cause big headaches for
    the US in Iraq, if it goes ahead with a planned incursion into
    northern Iraq to pursue the Kurdish separatist group, PKK.

    The PKK has been mounting increasingly deadly attacks in Turkey and
    the Turkish Government appears determined to respond through a
    cross-border raid, much to the horror of the US and its allies, such
    as Australia.

    Any such move would throw one of the few calm areas of Iraq into
    turmoil.

    VOX POP (translated): "We don't want war", says this Kurd, "all the
    people here are suffering because of that".

    MICHAEL ROWLAND: Passage of the Armenian genocide resolution in
    Washington is unlikely to make the Turks any more receptive to US
    calls for restraint.

    In Washington, this is Michael Rowland, reporting for AM.
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