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Turkish PM Does Not Want Any Country To Have Nukes

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  • Turkish PM Does Not Want Any Country To Have Nukes

    TURKISH PM DOES NOT WANT ANY COUNTRY TO HAVE NUKES
    MATTHEW BARAKAT

    Associated Press Online
    April 12, 2010 Monday 8:38 PM GMT

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Monday that his
    country does not want Iran or any other nation to have nuclear weapons.

    Erdogan is among dozens of world leaders in Washington for President
    Barack Obama's nuclear security summit. He spoke Monday at George Mason
    University's new Center for Global Islamic Studies, just outside the
    U.S. capital.

    Turkey currently holds one of the rotating seats on the U.N. Security
    Council, and the United States is hoping Turkey will cooperate with
    efforts to impose sanctions against Iran as punishment for its alleged
    work toward creating nuclear weapons.

    While the United States worries about Iran's nuclear program, Turkey
    has its own concerns about Israel's nuclear program. Israeli Prime
    Minister Benjamin Netanyahu opted not to attend Obama's summit, and
    insiders said he had expected Turkey and Egypt to use the conference
    as a platform to challenge him over his country's widely assumed
    nuclear arsenal, which the Jewish state never has acknowledged.

    Erdogan, in his remarks, did not specifically mention Israel's nuclear
    program, but he criticized its treatment of Palestinians in the Gaza
    Strip and called Gaza an "open-air prison."

    While he specifically said Turkey does not want nuclear weapons in
    "our region," he also said Ankara "would like to see all countries
    possessing nuclear weapons work to eliminate them in a certain time
    frame." His remarks in Turkish were translated by an interpreter.

    As for Iran's nuclear ambitions, Erdogan noted that Tehran has
    denied it is pursuing a nuclear weapon, but he also said that the
    International Atomic Energy Agency, the world's nuclear watchdog,
    has faulted Iran for a lack of transparency.

    In his prepared remarks, Erdogan also criticized a long-running effort
    in the U.S. Congress to pass a resolution declaring that Armenians
    were victims of Turkish genocide nearly a century ago.

    "We are against a one-sided interpretation of history," Erdogan said.

    "History cannot be written in parliament and judged by parliament."

    Turkey recalled its U.S. ambassador last month in protest after the
    House Foreign Affairs Committee passed a resolution declaring that
    the Ottoman-era killings amounted to genocide. The full House has
    not voted on the resolution.

    Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by
    Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I, an event widely viewed
    by scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey denies
    that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been inflated
    and those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.
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