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ANKARA: Armenian expert: US will refrain from using "genocide"

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  • ANKARA: Armenian expert: US will refrain from using "genocide"

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    Feb 22 2009


    Armenian expert: US will refrain naming 1915 incidents as "genocide"


    U.S. President Baracak Obama will refrain from naming the 1915
    incident as "genocide" since his country will need Turkey's support
    for Afghanistan policy, the latest key factor in U.S. foreign policy,
    an Armenian expert claimed on Saturday.

    "The U.S. key dimension is Afghanistan, which sidelined Iran and
    Iraq," PanArmenia.net website quoted professor Ruben Safrastyan,
    director of the Institute of Oriental Studies at the RA National
    Academy of Sciences, as saying.

    Washington would need Ankara's support for this purpose, Safrastyan
    said, adding that "proceeding from national interests, Obama will not
    use the term `genocide' in his annual April 24 statement."

    The Armenian lobby organizations put their efforts to have recognized
    their claims regarding the 1915 incidents to U.S. Congress. During the
    election campaign, Obama had pledged to recognize the Armenian claims.

    Turkey says it would be unfair to accept a one-sided characterization
    of the incidents by ignoring independent and impartial assessments by
    historian and scholars, reminding casualties suffered by Ottoman
    Muslims during World War One.

    "Keep in mind that CIS chief (Leon Panetta) arrived in Turkey
    immediately after Obama's phone talks with President (Abdullah) Gul
    and Prime Minister (Tayyip) Erdogan," he was also quoted as saying
    adding that Panetta was reported to discuss a possibility of deploying
    of a U.S. base in Turkey.

    The issue of 1915 incidents is highly sensitive for Turkey as well as
    Armenia. Around 300,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks, died in
    civil strife that emerged when Armenians took up arms, backed by
    Russia, for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    However Armenia, with the backing of the diaspora, claims up to 1.5
    million of their kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings in
    1915. The issue remains unsolved as Armenia drags its feet in
    accepting Turkey's proposal of forming a commission to investigate the
    claims.
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