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ANKARA: US Official Urges Turkey To Face Past Regarding Armenians

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  • ANKARA: US Official Urges Turkey To Face Past Regarding Armenians

    US OFFICIAL URGES TURKEY TO FACE PAST REGARDING ARMENIANS

    Today's Zaman
    June 20 2008
    Turkey

    A top US diplomat has urged Turkey to come to terms with its painful
    history regarding the suffering of Anatolian Armenians during World
    War I, also calling on Armenia to relinquish its territorial claims
    on Turkey.

    Remarks by Ambassador Dan Fried, US assistant secretary of state
    for European affairs, came on Wednesday during a hearing at the US
    House Foreign Affairs Committee. The senior diplomat also hinted
    that the US administration rejects the use of the term "genocide"
    to describe the early 20th century deaths of Ottoman Armenians for
    political considerations.

    The United States supports the normalization of relations between
    Armenia and Turkey, Fried noted, giving an address at an event titled
    "The Caucasus: Frozen Conflicts and Closed Borders." When he was
    insistently asked by pro-Armenian members of Congress Adam Schiff
    and Diane Watson why he didn't use the term "genocide," Fried said
    the US administration hasn't used that term as a policy, although
    acknowledging presence of painful incidents. He also noted that usage
    of this term would not make any contributions to Turkish-Armenian
    relations or to Turkey's come to terms with its history, the Anatolia
    news agency reported.

    "Reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey, however, will require
    dealing with sensitive, painful issues. Turkey needs to come to terms
    with a dark chapter in its history: the mass killings and forced exile
    of up to 1.5 million Armenians at the end of the Ottoman Empire. That
    will not be easy, just as it has not been easy for the United States
    to come to terms with dark periods of our own past. For its part,
    Armenia must be ready to acknowledge the existing border and disavow
    any claim on the territory of modern Turkey, and respond constructively
    to any efforts Turkey may make," Fried told the committee in remarks
    aired on the US State Department's Web page.

    Armenia claims Ottoman Turks killed up to 1.5 million Armenians
    during World War I, toward the end of the Ottoman Empire, and labels
    the killings genocide. Turkey says the killings occurred at a time
    of civil conflict in which both Armenians and Turks were killed and
    that the casualty figures are inflated.

    Earlier this week, President Abdullah Gul said that Turkey is a
    country at peace with its history, while noting that Turkey has
    opened all of its archives to researchers seeking to investigate the
    controversial episode.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 during a war between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan, an ally of Ankara. The move hurt the economy
    of the small and landlocked Armenia.

    In 2005 Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan sent a letter to
    then-Armenian President Robert Kocharian, inviting him to establish a
    joint commission of historians and experts from both Turkey and Armenia
    to study the events of 1915 in the archives of Turkey, Armenia and
    any other country believed to have played a part in the issue around
    the world. No positive response has yet been made to this offer.
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