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Turkey Continues To Deny Armenian Massacre

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  • Turkey Continues To Deny Armenian Massacre

    TURKEY CONTINUES TO DENY ARMENIAN MASSACRE
    By Andrew Borowiec

    The Washington Times
    World Peace Herald, DC
    May 16 2006

    NICOSIA, Cyprus -- Turkey remains adamant in rejecting foreign pressure
    to admit guilt for the 90-year-old massacres of Armenians, at the
    same time intensifying its military buildup on its border with Iraq.

    After a tense period of what some analysts describe as "rejectionist
    diplomacy," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan reiterated his
    government's unswerving opposition to a proposed French law that would
    make denial of the World War I massacres of 1.5 million Armenians a
    criminal offense.

    The French draft bill is "like a virus," Mr. Erdogan said after
    ordering the withdrawal of a Turkish component from NATO military
    maneuvers in Canada because Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper
    described the massacres as genocide.

    Some analysts say Turkey has painted itself into a "diplomatic corner"
    at a time when it needs support in its negotiations for membership
    in the European Union, in which France is a key member.

    On Thursday, the French National Assembly is to open debate on the
    bill, which calls for punishment of one year in prison and a $57,000
    fine for anyone who denies the massacre of Turkish-Armenians.

    Turkish officials have asked several French businessmen in Turkey to
    pressure lawmakers to block the bill, whose drafting was influenced
    by the Armenian diaspora. France was threatened with a boycott of
    goods even though it is the biggest foreign investor in Turkey.

    Diplomats say the campaign could degenerate into a trade war and
    hamper Turkey's EU aspirations. The Erdogan government has staked
    its prestige on EU membership.

    For years, the denial of the deaths of the Armenians during a forced
    "resettlement march" in 1915 has marred Turkey's relations with
    several European countries, tarnishing its human rights record.

    The political and diplomatic skirmishing over the issue has been
    accompanied by a systematic military buildup along Turkey's border
    with northern Iraq, where diplomats estimate about 200,000 troops
    and paramilitary forces have been massed.

    During her visit to Ankara in April, Secretary of State Condoleezza
    Rice warned Turkey to keep out of Iraq regardless of its assertion
    that northern Iraq harbors bases of separatist guerrillas of the
    Kurdistan Workers Party.

    Washington and some of its allies worry that a Turkish incursion
    into Iraq would represent yet another destabilizing factor in the
    troubled country.

    Turkey says its forces in the area are a "shield" to prevent rebel
    infiltrations in a war with Turkish Kurds that since 1984 has claimed
    more than 37,000 lives and devastated hundreds of villages.

    "If the conditions arise," Gen. Bekir Kalyoncu has said, "Turkey will
    use its right as any sovereign country." Turkish officials have said
    the United Nations charter, which authorizes "the right to self-defense
    in case of attack," justifies the right to "hot pursuit."
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