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Turkey Stands Against Allies For Saying Turks Committed GenocideAgai

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  • Turkey Stands Against Allies For Saying Turks Committed GenocideAgai

    TURKEY STANDS AGAINST ALLIES FOR SAYING TURKS COMMITTED GENOCIDE AGAINST ARMENIANS

    PRAVDA, Russia
    May 11 2006

    The moves come in a week of tense diplomacy for the Turks, who briefly
    recalled ambassadors to both France and Canada in protest against
    recent statements in those countries on the killings of Armenians. The
    ambassadors returned Thursday after four days in Ankara.

    The diplomatic maneuvering shows how sensitive Turks are to the
    issue. In recognizing the killings as genocide, other countries are
    putting the Ottoman Turks in the same category as Nazi Germans, a
    move intensely resisted in Turkey and not likely to make the Turks
    any more popular in the European Union they hope to join.

    Turkey vehemently denies that a genocide against Armenians took
    place, and has made it government policy to fight such assertions with
    diplomatic and economic sanctions if necessary. But it is unclear how
    far Turks are willing to go to fight recognition abroad, especially
    if it could mean harming the EU bid on which the government has staked
    its reputation.

    "Sometimes you talk, then you have to behave according to the way
    you talk, and you get to a place you never wanted to go in the first
    place," said Ilter Turan, a political scientist at Istanbul Bilgi
    University, of whether Turkey would carry through on its threats.

    Combating recognition of genocide has long been a give and take battle
    for Turkey, which is often outmuscled abroad by local constituencies
    of Armenians, and then forced to rely on high-level diplomatic and
    economic threats to keep them from achieving their aims.

    The tactic Turkey is using now seems to be to ignore Canada - both
    politically and economically - and engage France using a mix of
    incentives and threats.

    The Foreign Ministry released a statement saying Canada had learned
    nothing from "the stagnation of relations between the two countries"
    after the Canadian parliament voted to recognize the killings of
    Armenians as genocide, which Canada's prime minister recently said
    he stood by.

    On the other hand, Turkey sent a parliamentary delegation to Paris
    this week, the Turkish chambers of commerce have sent letters to their
    counterparts pleading for help and warning of a boycott, and Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday held a private meeting in
    Ankara with representatives of large French firms with investments in
    Turkey, where he warned of serious harm to relations if the genocide
    measure was allowed to pass.
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