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White House Hopes to Avert Major Rift With Turkey

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  • White House Hopes to Avert Major Rift With Turkey

    Antiwar.com, CA
    Oct 13 2007


    White House Hopes to Avert Major Rift With Turkey

    by Khody Akhavi

    A resolution recognizing as "genocide" the deaths of 1.5 million
    Armenians in the former Ottoman Empire nearly a century ago has
    gained the sponsorship of a majority of members in the US House of
    Representatives. But it has also drawn heavy criticism from George W.
    Bush administration officials, who argue that the non-binding and
    largely symbolic legislation could harm relations with Turkey at a
    particularly crucial time.

    The influential House Foreign Affairs Committee, chaired by
    Congressman Tom Lantos, voted 27-21 to endorse the legislation
    Wednesday despite the pleas of President Bush, who said it threatened
    to undermine US foreign policy in the Middle East.

    "We all deeply regret the tragic suffering of the Armenian people
    that began in 1915, but this resolution is not the right response to
    these historic mass killings," said Bush. "Its passage would do great
    harm to our relations with a key ally in NATO and in the global war
    on terror."

    Armenia and Turkey have long opposed each other's version of events
    during and after World War I which led to the forced migration and
    death of large numbers of Armenians. Armenia claims that up to 1.5
    million were murdered or starved to death as part of a systematic
    effort by the Turkish government to end the national liberation of
    the Armenian people, and considers Turkey's actions as "the first
    genocide of the 20th century."

    Turkish officials do not deny that mass killings took place but argue
    that the deaths resulted from widespread fighting that occurred
    during the collapse of the 600-year-old Ottoman Empire, clashes that
    also left hundreds of thousands of Muslim Turks dead.

    Turkey claims that 600,000 Armenians died after they allied
    themselves with Russian forces invading the Ottoman Empire, and that
    they were not the victims of a government-sponsored campaign of
    genocide.

    On Thursday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense
    Secretary Robert Gates issued a joint appeal to the Congress, and
    offered to provide House members with a classified briefing to
    discuss what they described as the "national security interests" at
    stake.

    Legislators who voted for the measure defended it as a stand against
    state-sponsored atrocities.

    "I am Jewish. I have both a moral and person obligation to condemn
    all acts of genocide no matter where or when they occur," said Rep.
    Gabrielle Giffords, an Arizona Democrat, in a statement. "Our
    nation's relationship with Turkey is important. Our relationships
    with all other countries are important. But our relationship with
    humanity matters as well. I cannot vote to deny that the horrific
    actions of the Armenian genocide occurred."

    Turkey severed military ties with France after its Parliament voted
    in 2006 to make the denial of the Armenian genocide a crime.
    Following the US congressional vote this week, Ankara ordered its
    ambassador in Washington to return home for "consultations," but says
    he has not been formally withdrawn.

    "A similar reaction by the elected government of Turkey to a House
    resolution could harm American troops in the field, constrain our
    ability to supply our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and
    significantly damage our efforts to promote reconciliation between
    Armenia and Turkey at a key turning point in their relations," said
    Rice and Gates in the letter, as reviewed and reported by the
    Associated Press.

    On Thursday, Gates warned of the "enormous implications" for US
    military operations in Iraq if Turkey limited flights over its
    airspace and restricted access to Incirlik Air base.

    "All I can say is that a resolution that looks back almost 100 years
    to an event that took place under a predecessor government, the
    Ottomans, and that has enormous present day implications for American
    soldiers and Marines and sailors and airmen in Iraq, is something we
    need to take very seriously," Gates told reporters in London.

    Turkey provides significant logistical support for the US-led war
    effort in Iraq. About 70 percent of all air cargo sent to Iraq passes
    through or comes through Turkey, as do 30 percent of fuel and
    virtually all the new armored vehicles designed to withstand mines
    and bombs, according to Gates.

    The legislation also comes as Turkey's government prepares to seek
    permission from parliament to carry out a cross-border offensive
    against an estimated 3,000 to 5,000 members of the Kurdistan Workers
    Party (PKK) based in northern Iraq, in retaliation for rebel attacks
    that have killed 29 Turkish soldiers, police and civilians in the
    past two weeks.

    Washington has warned that a Turkish military attack across the
    border in Iraq could throw into chaos the only relatively stable
    region of Iraq.

    The PKK, an armed separatist group whose goal has been to create an
    independent socialist Kurdish state, is considered a terrorist
    organization by the US, Europe and NATO, and Turkey claims it has
    been responsible for more than 30,000 deaths, the majority of them
    civilians, when it began using political violence in the early 1980s.

    Turkey conducted its last major operation into Iraq in 1997.

    Turkish President and head of the Islamist ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AKP) Abdullah Gul called Wednesday's committee
    vote "unacceptable," and said, "Some politicians in the United States
    have once against sacrificed important matters to petty domestic
    politics despite all calls to common sense."

    The Armenian resolution debate has also unleashed an aggressive
    lobbying campaign by Ankara, which is spending more than 300,000
    dollars a month on sophisticated public relations specialists and
    former Washington lawmakers to help defeat the measure.

    The Turkish Embassy is paying 100,000 dollars a month to lobbying
    firm DLA Piper, which is associated with former Democratic House
    Majority Leader Dick Gephardt, and 105,000 dollars to the Livingston
    Group (connected to former Republican lawmaker Robert L. Livingston),
    and it recently paid public relations firm Fleishman-Hillard 114,000
    dollars a month, according to records filed with the Justice
    Department.

    (Inter Press Service)

    http://www.antiwar.com/ips/akhavi.php?articleid=1 1751
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