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ANKARA: Ensoy Warns Israel Could Be Hurt By Genocide Debate

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  • ANKARA: Ensoy Warns Israel Could Be Hurt By Genocide Debate

    ENSOY WARNS ISRAEL COULD BE HURT BY GENOCIDE DEBATE

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Aug 31 2007

    Though the Turkish government is strongly opposed to any congressional
    action by the United States, the Turkish Jewish community has nothing
    to fear -- but Turkey's relations with Israel and the US would probably
    not survive such a resolution unscathed, said Turkish Ambassador to
    the US Nabi ªensoy in remarks to the New York-based Jewish Telegraphic
    Agency (JTA).

    "I cannot really dismiss that if this resolution does pass, there
    will be certain impacts on certain relationships. There is no doubt
    about it," ªensoy was quoted as saying in an interview with the JTA
    this week.

    Last week, the US-based Anti-Defamation League (ADL) reversed its
    long-time policy concerning the killings of Anatolian Armenians in the
    early 20th century and said the killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks
    "were indeed tantamount to genocide."

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died in a systematic
    genocide campaign by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I,
    but Ankara categorically rejects the label, saying that both Armenians
    and Turks died in civil strife during World War I, when the Armenians
    took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with
    Russian troops that were invading the crumbling Ottoman Empire.

    ªensoy also voiced uneasiness over certain emphasis by the ADL on
    concerns over safety of the Jewish community in Turkey. "I'm very
    disturbed to hear this kind of remark coming from anywhere. They
    seem to be forgetting the history of Turks and Jews, which goes back
    at least 500 years. We've always had the best of relations between
    Turks and Jews and the Turkish Jewish community is part-and-parcel --
    and an integral part -- of the Turkish community," he said.

    Similar remarks reflecting Ankara's uneasiness on the same point were
    delivered by Foreign Ministry spokesperson Levent Bilman last week
    when he reacted against the ADL statement. "The Jewish community in
    our country is a part of our society and there isn't any particularity
    that they should fear concerning developments related to the Armenian
    allegations," Bilman said.

    "We are expecting the American Jewish organizations to be neutral
    about this. Although we're aware of the fact that this is a very
    sensitive issue for the Israeli people and the Jewish community,
    what we have to seek is the truth," ªensoy told JTA.

    ADL complains about The Jewish Advocate

    An article penned by ADL National Director Abraham Foxman and published
    in a Boston newspaper, The Jewish Advocate, on Monday was widely
    interpreted in Turkey as an apparent show of determination in the ADL's
    stance, vowing that they will "not hesitate to apply the term genocide
    in the future." The fact that Foxman's article was published after he
    last week sent a letter addressing Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, saying that the ADL has huge respect for the Turkish people
    and has never desired to put the Turkish people and their leaders
    into a difficult situation, led to that particular interpretation.

    Yet, ADL directors told Turkish officials that the article by Foxman
    was actually posted to The Jewish Advocate as of last week, not after
    Foxman's letter to Erdogan, a senior Turkish diplomat, speaking on
    condition of anonymity, told Today's Zaman on Thursday. The same ADL
    directors expressed uneasiness over the choice of the newspaper to
    publish the article as if it were a brand-new article and asked the
    newspaper to remove the article from their Web site, the same Turkish
    diplomat said.

    The diplomat reiterated Ankara's expectation of a "rectification" of
    their statement by the ADL. Earlier this week, when asked by Today's
    Zaman to elaborate on how a "rectification" could be made by the ADL,
    Bilman said the right address for consulting such controversial matters
    was historians and that the ADL should refer to historians after
    making such an assertive allegation and then review its statement. "The
    issue is not closed for Ankara until such a review and rectification
    is made. We expect the ADL to rectify its statement because it is
    obvious that there is no consensus among historians on how to qualify
    the 1915 incidents, contrary to what the ADL has claimed," he said.

    --Boundary_(ID_RjOoa0ThWNqr2LitbAWPEg)--
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