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Turkey Seethes at the U.S. Over House Genocide Vote

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  • Turkey Seethes at the U.S. Over House Genocide Vote

    The New York Times
    October 12, 2007 Friday
    Late Edition - Final


    Turkey Seethes at the U.S. Over House Genocide Vote

    By SEBNEM ARSU; David Stout contributed reporting from Washington.



    Turkey reacted angrily Thursday to a House committee vote in
    Washington to condemn as genocide the mass killings of Armenians in
    Turkey that began during World War I, recalling its ambassador from
    Washington and threatening to withdraw its support for the Iraq war.

    In uncharacteristically strong language, President Abdullah Gul
    criticized the vote by the House Foreign Relations Committee in a
    statement to the semi-official Anatolian News Agency, and warned that
    the decision could work against the United States.

    ''Unfortunately, some politicians in the United States have once more
    dismissed calls for common sense, and made an attempt to sacrifice
    big issues for minor domestic political games,'' President Gul said.

    The House vote comes at a particularly inopportune time. Washington
    has called on Turkey to show restraint as its military mobilizes on
    the border with Iraq, threatening an incursion against Kurdish
    insurgents. On Thursday, Turkish warplanes were reported to be flying
    close to the border, but not crossing it.

    The possibility of Turkish military intervention in Iraq against
    Kurdish separatists has long worried American officials for its
    potential to ignite a wider war. On Wednesday, the Turkish government
    began the process of gaining parliamentary approval to conduct
    cross-border operations.

    The committee vote in the House, though nonbinding and largely
    symbolic, rebuffed an intense campaign by the White House and earlier
    warnings from Turkey's government that such a vote would gravely
    strain relations with the United States.

    In Washington, the Bush administration tried to ease the hard
    feelings between the countries, and vowed to try to defeat the
    resolution on Capitol Hill.

    ''One of the reasons we opposed the resolution in the House yesterday
    is that the president has expressed on behalf of the American people
    our horror at the tragedy of 1915,'' said Dana Perino, President
    Bush's chief spokeswoman. ''But at the same time, we have national
    security concerns, and many of our troops and supplies go through
    Turkey. They are a very important ally in the war on terror, and we
    are going to continue to try to work with them. And we hope that the
    House does not put forward a full vote.''

    Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the House would definitely take up the
    measure. ''I said if it comes out of committee, it will go to the
    floor,'' she told reporters. ''Now it has come out of committee, and
    it will go to the floor.''

    In Turkey, there was widespread expectation that the House committee
    vote and any further steps would damage relations between the
    countries.

    Turkish officials and lawmakers warned that if the resolution were
    approved by the full House, they would reconsider supporting the
    American war effort in Iraq, which includes permission to ship
    essential supplies through Turkey from a major air base at Incirlik,
    in southern Turkey.

    Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, refused to say what
    effect the resolution might have on American access to the base, but
    he did not exclude the possibility of a policy change. ''This step is
    contrary to the U.S. interests,'' he said on Thursday, ''and is an
    unfortunate decision taken by those who cannot acknowledge Turkey's
    position.''

    Already the top Turkish naval commander, Adm. Metin Atac, canceled a
    trip to the United States for a conference after Wednesday's vote, an
    American Embassy official confirmed. Admiral Atac's office did not
    specify any reasons for the cancellation.

    For his part, Ross Wilson, the United States ambassador to Turkey,
    also tried to calm relations, issuing a statement on Thursday saying
    that the partnership between Turkey and the United States was strong
    and would remain so. He added that he, President Bush and Secretary
    of State Condoleezza Rice regretted the committee decision.

    He was nonetheless later summoned to the Foreign Ministry in Ankara,
    the capital, to be briefed on Turkey's disappointment.

    ''We had a meeting with Mr. Wilson during which we expressed our
    concerns about the developments,'' said a spokesperson for the
    Foreign Ministry. ''We drew attention to bad reflections on our
    bilateral relations and kindly requested his assistance in preventing
    the passage of the bill.''

    The House decision prompted reaction on the streets of Ankara and
    Istanbul. The youth branch of the extreme-leftist Workers' Party laid
    a black wreath at the United States Embassy and spray-painted the
    Turkish flag onto an embassy wall.

    A total of 1.5 million Armenians were killed in the Armenian
    genocide, which began in 1915 as part of a systematic campaign by the
    fraying Ottoman Empire to drive Armenians out of eastern Turkey.
    Turks have vehemently denied the genocide designation, while
    acknowledging that hundreds of thousands of Armenians died. They
    contend that the deaths resulted from the war that ended with the
    creation of modern Turkey in 1923.

    Identifying Armenian killings as genocide is considered an insult
    against Turkish identity, a crime under Article 301 of the Turkish
    penal code.

    In an Istanbul court on Thursday, Sarkis Seropyan and Arat Dink, the
    brother of Hrant Dink, the newspaper editor who was killed by a
    17-year-old gunman in January, received suspended jail sentences for
    one year for violating that law. They reprinted other newspaper
    accounts of Hrant Dink's statement saying that Armenians suffered
    genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Army in the 1910s, their lawyer,
    Fethiye Cetin, said.

    Not only writers of Armenian origin, but also the Nobel laureate
    Orhan Pamuk have been charged under the same law, although his case
    was dropped under heavy international pressure.

    A State Department spokesman, Tom Casey, said that United States
    diplomats were reaching out to their Turkish counterparts to express
    not only their opposition to the resolution but ''our commitment with
    Congress on this to see that the full House, in fact, votes to defeat
    this resolution.''

    Mr. Casey said that State Department and White House officials would
    try to persuade ''various members'' of the House on how to vote.

    Ms. Pelosi said that she did not have a date in mind for bringing the
    issue to the floor, but that it would be brought up this session,
    which is to end around Nov. 16. Whatever happens, she insisted,
    relations between the United States and Turkey will remain strong.
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