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ANKARA: Tan: We Expect US Administration To Act With Commonsense

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  • ANKARA: Tan: We Expect US Administration To Act With Commonsense

    TAN: WE EXPECT US ADMINISTRATION TO ACT WITH COMMONSENSE

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    Dec 28 2006

    Ankara yesterday called on the U.S. administration to act with
    commonsense against efforts in the U.S. Congress -- now controlled by
    the Democrats -- to adopt a resolution recognizing Armenian genocide
    claims.

    Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesperson Namik Tan, in his weekly press
    conference, yesterday, expressed Ankara's displeasure at efforts by the
    Armenians diaspora to take advantage of recent political developments
    in the U.S. to have their genocide claims recognized by Congress.

    Tan described the relations between Turkey and the U.S. as "strategic
    and multidimensional."

    "The U.S. administration has been pursuing a commonsensical approach
    so far. We believe that the U.S. administration will maintain relations
    with the same understanding. Relations between Turkey and the U.S. have
    importance beyond these small calculations. We have close cooperation
    with the U.S. We will continue informing them on the issue at all
    levels. We expect the U.S to act with commonsense in the following
    term," he underlined.

    Commenting on recent statements by Armenian officials proposing a
    normalization of relations without putting forward recognition of the
    so-called genocide as a precondition, Tan underlined that Turkey's
    constructive proposal on the issue still awaits a positive response
    from Yerevan.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in a letter to Armenian
    President Robert Kocharian last year proposed the establishment of
    a joint committee of Turkish and Armenian historians to investigate
    the 1915 incidents, in order to put an end to the major controversy
    between two capitals.

    Tan said concrete progress could not be made towards a normalization
    of relations so far because of the negative approach of Armenia
    towards Turkey's proposal. "A joint committee would be a mechanism
    that eliminates differences of interpretations with regards to the
    1915 incidents and functions as a confidence-building tool between
    Turkish and Armenian peoples," Tan said.

    He also underlined that yielding a result from the efforts depended
    on a more flexible and constructive approach by Yerevan (to overcome
    bilateral and regional problems) and Armenia's acting in line with
    the international laws.

    Asked whether Ankara had protested to Baku about the mistreatment of
    Armenian-origin Turkish citizen Burak Bedikyan who is not allowed
    to enter Azerbaijan, Tan said that the Turkish side has asked
    for information from Azeri authorities and are still waiting for
    a response.
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