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Turkish general warns against genocide resolution

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  • Turkish general warns against genocide resolution

    Turkish general warns against genocide resolution

    By Molly Moore, Washington Post | October 15, 2007

    ISTANBUL - The commander of Turkey's armed forces warned that
    US-Turkish military relations will be irreparably damaged if the US
    House of Representatives approves a resolution accusing his country of
    genocide for the mass killings of Armenians nearly a century ago,
    according to an interview published yesterday.

    "If this resolution passed in the committee passes the House as well,
    our military ties with the US will never be the same again," General
    Yasar Buyukanit told the daily newspaper Milliyet in the interview.

    The admonition from the senior officer in Turkey's politically
    powerful military echoed warnings from the country's top civilian
    political leaders since the House Foreign Affairs Committee approved
    the resolution Wednesday. Turkey argues that the killings and
    disappearances of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were not genocide
    but the result of brutal war during the last years of the Ottoman
    Empire.

    "The United States is clearly an important ally," Buyukanit said. "But
    an allied country does not behave in this way."

    Bush administration officials and US military leaders who oppose the
    resolution say they fear Turkey could limit crucial air and land
    supply lines into Iraq as punishment if the measure is accepted by the
    full House of Representatives.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Democrat of California, reaffirmed that
    the resolution would be called to the floor this week. A similar
    resolution was pulled from the floor in 2000 by then-speaker Dennis
    Hastert, an Illinois Republican, after he was asked to do so by
    President Clinton. Pelosi said she had not heard from President Bush
    about this bill.

    "There's never been a good time" for the measure, Pelosi said on ABC's
    "This Week," adding that when she entered Congress 20 years ago, "it
    wasn't the right time because of the Soviet Union. Then that fell, and
    then it wasn't the right time because of the Gulf War I. And then it
    wasn't the right time because of overflights of Iraq. And now it's not
    the right time because of Gulf War II. And, again, the survivors of
    the Armenian genocide are not going to be with us."

    Ross Wilson, US ambassador to Turkey, said in a telephone interview
    >From Ankara, the capital, that "Turkish officials have not discussed
    with us any specific measures they might take or look at taking if the
    resolution passes."

    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice dispatched two senior deputies to
    Ankara on Saturday to assure Turkey that the Bush administration will
    continue to try to defeat the resolution in Congress.

    The Turkish government has recalled its ambassador from Washington and
    canceled a Turkish-US Business Council conference that had been
    scheduled for Tuesday in New York. Turkish State Minister Kursad
    Tuzmen also canceled a trip to the United States planned for this
    week, according to the Anatolian News Agency.

    Turkish anger over the genocide measure has coincided with growing
    frustration here over US and Iraqi failures to curtail Kurdish
    separatist guerrillas who Turkish officials say are staging attacks in
    Turkey from bases in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan plans to ask Parliament
    this week to authorize cross-border military operations against
    headquarters of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, known as PKK, training
    camps, and other operational bases in northern Iraq. Officials expect
    the measure to win approval easily.

    As part of escalating border tensions in recent days, the Turkish
    military fired a barrage of artillery shells into the northern Iraqi
    village of Zakhu late Saturday and yesterday morning, according to
    news service reports from the region.

    (c) Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

    Source: http://www.boston.com/news/world/articles/2007/10/ 15/turkish_general_warns_against_genocide_resoluti on/
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