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Turk Warns Against House Genocide Motion

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  • Turk Warns Against House Genocide Motion

    The New York Times
    October 15, 2007

    Turk Warns Against House Genocide Motion

    By SEBNEM ARSU

    ISTANBUL, Oct. 14 - The chief of the Turkish armed forces has warned
    that military relations with the United States would take a negative
    turn if Congress approved the Armenian genocide resolution that was
    passed by the House Foreign Affairs Committee last week.

    Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, the armed forces chief, was quoted by the
    newspaper Milliyet on Sunday as saying that the resolution, which
    condemns the killings of 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks
    beginning in 1915 as an act of genocide, has caused considerable
    disappointment in Turkey. He called the passage of the resolution by
    the committee "sad and sorrowful," in light of the strong links the
    two NATO allies have shared.

    Further, if it were to be passed by the full House of Representatives,
    "our military relations with the U.S. would never be as they were in
    the past," he said. "We could not explain this to our public," he
    said. "The U.S., in that respect, has shot itself in the foot."

    In another situation that is increasing tension between Turkey and the
    United States, Turkey's military on Sunday fired dozens of artillery
    shells across Iraq's northern border, hitting villages in Kurdistan,
    said Col. Hussein Rashid of the Iraqi Border Protection Forces.
    Colonel Hussein said the Turkish strikes damaged structures in several
    villages in the northern reaches of Dohuk Province in Iraq, which
    borders Turkey, but caused no casualties.

    General Buyukanit said he had conveyed his disappointment to Gen.
    Peter Pace, who stepped down earlier this month as chairman of the
    Joint Chiefs of Staff.

    The Bush administration is continuing intensified efforts to prevent
    passage of the resolution, which Nancy Pelosi, the House speaker, is
    promising to bring to the floor.

    Eric Edelman, an under secretary of defense, and Daniel Fried, the
    assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian Affairs,
    arrived in Ankara, the capital, on Saturday in an effort at damage
    control. "We have to be realistic about the difficulties of defeating
    this resolution but we intend to keep fighting it and make our points
    as clear and strong as we can," Mr. Fried said in a telephone
    interview.

    Some political analysts here say that irreversible damage has been
    done to the already strained relations between Turkey and the United
    States. In a random-sample survey of more than 1,000 adults conducted
    in Turkey early this year by Terror Free Tomorrow, a Washington-based
    nonprofit group, 73 percent of Turks surveyed said that if the House
    passed the resolution, their opinion of the United States would
    decline, while 83 percent said that they would oppose Turkish
    assistance to the United States in Iraq. The poll had a margin of
    sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points.

    Incirlik Air Base in eastern Turkey, a NATO installation, is a
    strategic logistics and transfer center for the American military
    operations in Iraq, and Turkish trucks carrying supplies for allied
    forces pass into Iraq daily. Analysts say they expect such activity
    will be slowed, if not halted completely, should relations between the
    countries worsen.

    Violent attacks in southeastern Turkey by separatist Kurdish rebels
    operating from bases in northern Iraq have intensified in recent
    months, increasing the tension and the pressure on the United States
    >From Turkey.

    Mr. Fried refused to talk about whether there were any plans to curb
    the rebel activity but said Mr. Edelman, who was en route to Baghdad
    at the time of the interview, would strongly convey the sense of
    Turkish outrage to the Iraqi authorities.

    An Iraqi employee of The New York Times contributed reporting from Kirkuk, Iraq.

    Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/15/world/europe/15t urkey.html?_r=1&oref=login
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