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Turkey warns US over Armenian massacres dispute: report

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  • Turkey warns US over Armenian massacres dispute: report

    Agence France Presse
    January 17, 2009 Saturday 11:13 AM GMT



    Turkey warns US over Armenian massacres dispute: report

    ANKARA, Jan 17 2009


    Turkey's foreign minister has warned Barack Obama's incoming
    administration that any US recognition of Armenian massacres by
    Ottoman Turks as genocide could derail reconciliation efforts between
    the two neighbours.

    "It would not be very rational for a third country to take a position
    on this issue... A wrong step by the United States will harm the
    process," the Anatolia news agency quoted Ali Babacan as saying late
    Friday.

    Turkey has "never been closer" to normalising ties with Armenia, its
    eastern neighbour, and a breakthrough could be secured in 2009, the
    minister said.

    Obama, who takes office Tuesday, pledged to his Armenian-American
    supporters during his election campaign to recognise the World War I
    killings as genocide.

    Washington has traditionally condemned the massacres, but has so far
    refrained from terming them genocide due to concern about straining
    relations with Turkey, a NATO member and a key ally in the Middle
    East.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were killed between 1915
    and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire fell apart, a claim supported by
    several other countries.

    Turkey rejects the genocide label and argues that 300,000-500,000
    Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
    with invading Russian troops.

    Babacan said the dispute was among the issues that Ankara and Yereven
    had been discussing since reconciliation efforts gathered steam in
    September when Turkish President Abdullah Gul paid a landmark visit to
    Armenia.

    "Turkey and Armenia have never been closer to a plan on normalising
    relations," Anatolia quoted Babacan as saying.

    The fence-mending process, he said, was boosted by similar
    reconciliation efforts between Armenia and Azerbaijan, a close ally of
    Turkey.

    "The prospect of normalising relations both between Azerbaijan and
    Armenia and between Turkey and Armenia in 2009 is not a dream," he
    added.

    Ankara has refused to establish diplomatic ties with Yerevan on
    account of its campaign to have the killings recognised as genocide.

    In 1993, it also shut its border with Armenia in a show of solidarity
    with Azerbaijan, then at war with Armenia over Nagorny-Karabakh,
    dealing a heavy blow to the impoverished nation.

    Gul became the first Turkish head of state to visit Armenia when he
    travelled to Yerevan in September to watch a World Cup qualifying
    football match between the two countries on the invitation of his
    Armenian counterpart Serzh Sarkisian.
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