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US officials in Turkey to cool genocide row

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  • US officials in Turkey to cool genocide row

    Agence France Presse
    Oct 13 2007

    US officials in Turkey to cool genocide row


    ANKARA (AFP) - Two top US government officials arrived in Turkey on
    Saturday to try to cool a diplomatic row sparked by a US
    congressional vote labelling the mass killings of Armenians by the
    Ottoman Turks an act of genocide.

    "We thought it would be very good idea for two senior officials to
    go," said US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who along with US
    President George W. Bush opposed Wednesday's resolution in the the
    House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee.

    "We are certainly working to try to minimise any concrete steps the
    government might take (such as) restricting the movement of our
    troops," Rice said in Moscow. "I am hopeful we can prevent that."

    The officials -- Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Eric Edelman,
    a former US ambassador to Ankara, and Assistant Secretary of State
    for European Affairs Dan Fried -- were due to have talks later
    Saturday with Turkish foreign ministry under secretary, Ertugrul
    Apakan, a Turkish official said.

    Edelman told reporters as he arrived at Ankara airport that his visit
    was to express regret for the resolution being passed. The two had
    been accompanying Rice in Moscow and their diversion to Turkey was
    unscheduled.

    "Mr Edelman knows Turkey well, he is a friend," said the Turkish
    official on condition of anonymity, adding: "They wanted to come to
    Ankara."

    Turkey's anger over the vote on Wednesday in the US congressional
    committee continued to make itself felt with Minister of State Kursad
    Tuzmen, an influential member of the Turkish government charged with
    external trade, cancelling a visit to a US-Turkish business meeting
    in New York.

    Tuzmen was the second Turkish official to cancel a planned visit to
    the United States after the Turkish Navy commander Admiral Metin Atac
    scrapped a trip in the wake of the Armenia vote.

    Turkey had warned Washington that passing such a resolution could
    seriously damage bilateral ties and after the vote Ankara recalled
    its ambassador to the US.

    According to Armenians, at least 1.5 million Armenians were killed
    from 1915 to 1917 under an Ottoman Empire campaign of deportation and
    murder.

    Ankara acknowledges that 250,000 to 500,000 Armenians and at least as
    many Turks died in the conflict after Armenians took up arms for
    independence but staunchly rejects the tag of genocide.

    Turkey's furious reaction to the congressional vote has fuelled fears
    within the Bush administration that it could lose access to a crucial
    military base in NATO ally Turkey.

    Though the resolution is non-binding, it is likely to come before the
    full House in November although bringing a legislative measure to the
    floor does not guarantee that it will proceed to a full vote.

    Rice said in Moscow that the White House was trying to limit the
    damage to US-Turkish relations and would try to stop a vote going to
    the House floor although she said this would be "tough."

    She added that she had spoken on Friday to Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ali Babacan following the
    vote.

    "They were dismayed," she said.
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