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Congressional Committee Holds Hearing On US-Turkey Relations

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  • Congressional Committee Holds Hearing On US-Turkey Relations

    CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE HOLDS HEARING ON US-TURKEY RELATIONS

    AZG Armenian Daily
    16/05/2009

    International

    Expert urges no linkage between Armenia-Turkey relations and Genocide
    recognition or NKR Turkish Caucus Co-Chair and Chairman of the House
    Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Europe, Congressman Robert Wexler
    (D-FL), held a hearing yesterday on U.S.-Turkey relations, reported
    the Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly). The panel included
    Dr. Ian O. Lesser with the German Marshall Fund of the United States,
    Dr. Stephen J. Flanagan, Ph.D. with the Center for Strategic and
    International Studies and David L. Phillips with the Atlantic Council
    of the United States.

    Testifying specifically about Armenia-Turkey relations, Phillips
    stated that there should be no linkage with respect to normalization
    of relations between Armenia and Turkey and affirmation of the
    Armenian Genocide. Phillips also indicated that there should be no
    linkage between Turkish-Armenian relations and the Nagorno Karabakh
    peace process.

    "The Armenian government has consistently and repeatedly offered to
    normalize relations with Turkey without preconditions only to see
    such offers rejected by Turkey," stated Assembly Executive Director
    Bryan Ardouny.

    "Affirmation of the Armenian Genocide and combating its denial is
    a fundamental human rights issue and in no uncertain terms should
    be linked to normalization of relations. In addition, there should
    be no linkage to Armenia-Turkey relations and the Nagorno Karabakh
    peace process," added Ardouny.

    Phillips noted that progress in relations will be measured by "actions
    and not words" and raised concerns about contradictory statements made
    by Turkish leaders. Phillips pointed to the inconsistent statements
    of Turkish President Abdullah Gul and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, in which Gul said that normalization would proceed "without
    preconditions," while Erdogan linked it to Nagorno Karabakh.

    As reported in Todays Zaman, Erdogan reassured Azerbaijan's President
    stating that "some reports said Turkey gave up on Nagorno-Karabakh
    in order to normalize relations with Armenia. This is an outright
    lie. I dismiss it...." Erdogan also said Turkey and Azerbaijan were
    "one nation with two states" and added that their stance on Nagorno
    Karabakh has never changed.

    Armenian President Serzh Sargsian criticized Erdogan for linking
    Turkey's lifting of its blockade and establishing diplomatic relations
    to the resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. "Any Turkish
    attempt to interfere in the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh
    problem can only harm that process," the President's office said in
    a statement yesterday.

    Phillips, who also served as Chairman of the Turkish Armenian
    Reconciliation Commission from 2001 to 2004, recalled the tragic
    assassination of Hrant Dink, who was prosecuted under Article
    301 of the Turkish Penal Code for speaking about the Armenian
    Genocide. Phillips indicated that one way to honor the memory and
    legacy of Hrant Dink would be to expand track two activities. Phillips
    recounted the track two recommendations of TARC, and noted that a
    legal opinion by the International Transitional Center for Justice
    (ICTJ) concluded that the Armenian Genocide met the United Nations
    definition of genocide.
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