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Obama Tells Turks That US Is Not At War With Islam

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  • Obama Tells Turks That US Is Not At War With Islam

    OBAMA TELLS TURKS THAT US IS NOT AT WAR WITH ISLAM
    By Tom Raum - Associated Press Writer

    Fresno Bee
    http://www.fresnobee.com/worldnews/story/13109 17.html
    April 6 2009
    CA

    ANKARA, Turkey -- Barack Obama, making his first visit to a Muslim
    nation as president, declared Monday the United States "is not and
    will never be at war with Islam."

    Urging a greater partnership with the Islamic world in an address to
    the Turkish parliament, Obama called the country an important ally in
    many areas, including the fight against terrorism. He devoted much of
    his speech to urging a greater bond between Americans and Muslims,
    portraying terrorist groups such as al-Qaida as extremists who do
    not represent the vast majority of Muslims.

    "Let me say this as clearly as I can," Obama said. "The United States
    is not and will never be at war with Islam. In fact, our partnership
    with the Muslim world is critical ... in rolling back the violent
    ideologies that people of all faiths reject."

    The U.S. president is trying to mend fences with a Muslim world
    that felt it had been blamed by America for the Sept. 11, 2001,
    terrorist attacks.

    At a news conference earlier with President Abdullah Gul, Obama
    dealt gingerly with the issue of alleged genocide committed by Turks
    against Armenians during World War I. He urged Turks and Armenians
    to continue a process "that works through the past in a way that is
    honest, open and constructive."

    Al Jazeera and Al Arabiyia, two of the biggest Arabic satellite
    channels, carried Obama's speech live.

    "America's relationship with the Muslim community," he said, "cannot
    and will not just be based upon opposition to terrorism. We seek
    broader engagement based on mutual interest and mutual respect."

    "We will convey our deep appreciation for the Islamic faith, which
    has done so much over the centuries to shape the world, including in
    my own country," he said.

    The president spoke for about 25 minutes from a small
    white-marble-and-teak rostrum in the well of a vast, airy chamber
    packed with Turkish lawmakers in orange leather chairs.

    Except for a few instances of polite applause, the room was quiet
    during his speech. There was a more hearty ovation toward the end when
    Obama said the U.S. supports the Turkish government's battle against
    PKK, which both nations consider a terrorist group, and again when
    he said America was not at war with Islam. Lawmakers also applauded
    when Obama said the United States supports Turkey's bid to join the
    European Union.

    Earlier, Obama said he stood by his 2008 assertion that Ottoman Turks
    had carried out widespread killings of Armenians early in the 20th
    century, but he stopped short of repeating the word "genocide."

    Gul said many Turkish Muslims were killed during the same
    period. Historians, not politicians, Gul said, should decide how to
    label the events of those times.

    In his 2008 campaign, Obama said "the Armenian genocide is not an
    allegation," but rather "a widely documented fact supported by an
    overwhelming body of historical evidence."

    Now that he is president, the genocide question may not be Obama's
    best issue for taking a tough stand that antagonizes an ally. It is
    important in U.S. communities with large numbers of Armenian-Americans,
    but it has a low profile elsewhere.

    In his speech to the parliament Monday, Obama said the United States
    strongly supports the full normalization of relations between Turkey
    and Armenia. He also noted that the United States "still struggles
    with the legacies of slavery and segregation, the past treatment of
    Native Americans."

    The president also urged Turkey to help Israel and Palestine live
    "side by side in peace and security."

    Obama's visit is being closely watched by an Islamic world that
    harbored deep distrust of his predecessor, George W. Bush.
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