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ANKARA: Erdogan To Announce Today Final Call On Attending Nuclear Su

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  • ANKARA: Erdogan To Announce Today Final Call On Attending Nuclear Su

    ERDOGAN TO ANNOUNCE TODAY FINAL CALL ON ATTENDING NUCLEAR SUMMIT

    Today's Zaman
    April 2 2010
    Turkey

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Thursday said that he is likely
    to announce his final decision on whether to accept an invitation
    from the White House today, noting that he would return the Turkish
    ambassador, who was recalled last month, back to Washington if he
    decides to attend the nuclear energy summit.

    "At the moment, I'm making the assessment with my advisors," Erdogan
    said when asked whether he would participate at the summit on nuclear
    security on April 13.

    Following the adoption of a nonbinding resolution by the US House
    Committee on Foreign Affairs on March 4 recognizing the World War
    I-era killings of Ottoman Armenians as genocide, Turkey recalled its
    ambassador in Washington, Namık Tan, to Ankara for consultations
    while Erdogan put his visit to the United States April 13-14, during
    which he is to attend the nuclear energy summit in the US capital at
    the invitation of US President Barack Obama, on hold.

    "I think that I will announce my decision on this issue tomorrow
    [today]. In the case that I decide to go, then I will soon send our
    ambassador back," Erdogan added.

    During a telephone conversation between US Secretary of State Hillary
    Clinton and Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Sunday,
    which was initiated by the US side, the former reiterated that the
    Obama administration stands opposed to the resolution on Armenian
    genocide and is also against a full House vote on the measure.

    During the same conversation, Clinton told Davutoglu that US officials
    hope Erdogan will attend the nuclear summit in Washington, D.C.,
    Foreign Ministry spokesperson Burak Ozugergin said in a statement
    released on Monday. In response, Davutoglu said Erdogan would decide
    in the coming days whether to attend the meeting or not. More than
    40 world leaders are expected at the summit.

    Speaking with reporters earlier on Thursday before Erdogan's brief
    remarks on his Washington visit, Ozugergin highlighted that Ankara
    considers the telephone conversation between Clinton and Davutoglu as
    "useful" in regards to its ongoing assessment on the timing of Tan's
    return to Washington. He also noted that there was no exact decision
    yet on Tan's return or Erdogan's participation in the nuclear summit,
    unlike what Turkish newspapers claimed in their Thursday editions.

    Later on Thursday afternoon, Davutoglu was scheduled to host a US
    delegation at the ministry led by Republican Congressman Edward
    Whitfield (Kentucky), the co-chairman of the Congressional Caucus on
    US-Turkish Relations, who is among the critics of the resolution.

    Ozugergin, speaking with reporters during an online press conference
    held by the ministry, was also reminded of recent Turkish news reports
    quoting a senior Armenian official as suggesting that Yerevan was
    planning to propose putting the normalization protocols signed by
    the two capitals on hold and asked whether Turkey has received such
    a proposal.

    "No official request by Armenia for the annulment or suspension of
    the signed protocols has arrived. Beyond this, even putting forward
    such a discourse is not appropriate," Ozugergin said.

    "On the other hand, claiming that Turkey is not interested in the
    resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue would not be true. Instead
    of discussing whether this element was within the protocols or not,
    it is necessary to get used to seeing the Nagorno-Karabakh issue as
    part of the integrated whole in regards to peace and stability in the
    Caucasus. In other words, it will not be possible to resolve problems
    in the region without having the Nagorno-Karabakh issue resolved,"
    he added, referring to a territorial dispute between Baku and Yerevan.

    Recent Turkish news reports also quoted the same senior Armenian
    official as voicing disappointment over the fact that Turkey has turned
    the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue into a precondition,
    although this was not the case when the protocols were negotiated
    and eventually signed.
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