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Turkey angry with US over Armenian genocide bill

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  • Turkey angry with US over Armenian genocide bill

    New Europe, Belgium
    Oct 13 2007


    Turkey angry with US over Armenian genocide bill
    13 October 2007 - Issue : 751

    Photo: Turkish Workers Party, IP, leader Dogu Perincek speaks with
    journalists in front of the Palais de Justice during a break of his
    trial on denial of the Armenian genocide, in Lausanne, Switzerland,
    March 6, 2007 after several public appearances

    ANA/EPA/LAURENT GILLIERON

    A US congressional panel approval of a resolution calling the
    slaughter of more than one million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire
    `genocide,' a move President George W Bush warned could jeopardize
    US-Turkish relations, and which immediately drew the wrath of Turkish
    leaders.
    The House Committee on Foreign Affairs voted 27-21 in favour of the
    bill despite Bush's strong opposition over concerns its will
    undermine US policies in the Middle East and the war effort in Iraq,
    where US troops depend on the shipment of equipment and supplies
    through Turkey.
    `This resolution is not the right response to these historic mass
    killings and its passage would do great harm to our relations with a
    key ally in NATO and in the global war on terror,' Bush said.
    `We all deeply regret the tragic suffering of the Armenian people
    that began in 1915,' Bush said, Deutsche-Presse-Agentur (dpa)
    reported. Bush has previously called the slaughter `forced exile and
    murder' but has not used the term `genocide.'
    He called past events in Turkey one of the greatest tragedies of the
    20th century. However, historic scholarship had to show whether or
    not the term genocide was appropriate, he said.
    Turkish President Abdullah Gul sharply criticised the resolution, the
    Anadolu news agency reported Thursday. The resolution was not
    acceptable, Gul was quoted as saying by Anadolu. Gul said politicians
    in the United States had sacrificed important issues for internal
    political games. Turkey vehemently denies the genocide accusation.
    Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the top US lawmaker, plans on bringing the
    resolution for a full vote before the House of Representatives, but
    no date has been set, a spokesman from her office said. The Senate is
    considering a similar resolution to label as genocide the killing of
    up to 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1923.
    Representative Adam Schiff, a Democrat from California whose district
    includes a large number of Armenian-Americans, introduced the bill.
    `How can we take effective action against the genocide in Darfur if
    we lack the will to condemn genocide whenever and wherever it
    occurs?' he said.
    The Bush administration made a late push to defeat the resolution. US
    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defence Secretary Robert
    Gates privately met with lawmakers to urge them to drop the measure,
    and spoke to reporters hours before the vote.
    The bill also comes as the United States seeks to prevent Turkey from
    taking military action in Iraq against Kurdish rebels responsible for
    a recent ambush on a convoy that left 13 Turkish soldiers dead.
    `The passage of this resolution at this time would, indeed, be very
    problematic for everything that we're trying to do in the Middle East
    because we are very dependent on a good Turkish strategic ally,' Rice
    said.
    Gates said the bill would undermine the US war effort in Iraq because
    Turkey is a transit point for most of the military equipment and
    supplies shipped into Iraq.
    `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,' Gates said. About 70 percent of
    air cargo into Iraq and 30 percent of the fuel used by the US
    military goes through Turkey, Gates said.
    The bill has enjoyed broad support in the House. Lawmakers believe
    the United States has an obligation to speak truthfully and condemn
    acts against humanity.
    `The sad truth is that the modern government of Turkey refuses to
    come to terms with this genocide,' Representative Christopher Smith,
    a Republican from New Jersey said. `The Turkish government
    consistently and aggressively refuses to acknowledge the Armenian
    genocide.'
    Representative Robert Wexler said there is no dispute that the
    massacre was one of the `darkest chapters' of the last century but
    said a resolution labeling it genocide could complicate the
    reconciliation process between Turkey and Armenia.
    `I strongly believe this resolution will further divide these two
    nations and these two peoples ... and will inflame a region of the
    world already under great duress,' he said.
    Bush telephoned Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan earlier
    to express his strong opposition to the bill. At the same time, Bush
    administration officials have emphasised their opposition to the bill
    does not deny the tragedy of the mass murders.

    http://www.neurope.eu/articles/78819.php
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