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Turkish PM Says Going To U.S., Sending Back Envoy

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  • Turkish PM Says Going To U.S., Sending Back Envoy

    TURKISH PM SAYS GOING TO U.S., SENDING BACK ENVOY
    Pinar Aydinli

    Reuters
    April 2 2010
    UK

    Wed, Mar 17 2010ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey said on Friday that it
    was sending its ambassador back to Washington, a month after he was
    recalled to protest against a U.S. congressional committee labeling
    as genocide the World War One massacres of Armenians in Turkey.

    Barack Obama | Turkey

    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan also confirmed that he would attend an
    international nuclear summit to be hosted by President Barack Obama
    in Washington on April 12-13.

    "I received an invitation five, six months ago, to attend an
    international event that other countries will also be attending and
    serves a good cause, to prevent the use and spreading of nuclear
    weapons. I will be going to the United States," Erdogan told
    journalists.

    "My ambassador Namik Tan will go back to Washington before my visit,"
    the prime minister added.

    The U.S. House of Representatives committee approved a non-binding
    resolution on March 4 calling on Obama to refer to the killings of
    as many as 1.5 million Armenian Christians as genocide, prompting
    Turkey to immediately withdraw its envoy.

    The State Department welcomed Erdogan's decision to return the
    ambassador.

    "Turkey and the United States have a significant strategic
    relationship. There's lots of work that we can jointly accomplish,
    and that work becomes more effective when we have an able interlocutor
    here in Washington," State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told a
    briefing in Washington.

    CHAOS OF WAR

    Turkey argues that both Turks and Armenians were killed during the
    chaos of war and break-up of the Ottoman Empire almost a century ago,
    though nearly 20 countries have said the killings were genocide.

    The United States is keen to smooth over relations with Turkey, NATO's
    only Muslim member, and a key ally in trouble spots from Afghanistan
    to the Middle East.

    In a telephone call with Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu last Sunday,
    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton assured Turkey that the White
    House opposed the congressional resolution.

    It is uncertain whether the resolution will go to a vote of the full
    House, or whether it could pass. The congressional committee only
    passed the resolution by a single vote.

    Washington is seeking to persuade Turkey, a non-permanent member
    of the Security Council, to support a fourth round of U.N. economic
    sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program, while Erdogan has
    spoken against the use of sanctions.

    He doubts the effectiveness of sanctions, and is worried that Turkey's
    trade with its neighbor would inevitably suffer. Iran supplies Turkey
    with a third of its gas needs.

    Despite good relations with Tehran, Erdogan's own attempts to persuade
    the Iranian leadership to make moves needed to allay international
    concerns over its nuclear program have led to nothing. But he says
    diplomatic efforts should be intensified instead of imposing sanctions.

    (Additional reporting by Andrew Quinn in Washington; writing by Simon
    Cameron-Moore; editing by Mohammad Zargham)
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