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  • Turkey, Armenia to discuss ties in Washington

    Turkey, Armenia to discuss ties in Washington

    Associated Press Online

    April 9, 2010 Friday 9:20 PM GMT
    By DESMOND BUTLER, Associated Press Writer

    Turkey hopes that a rare face-to-face meeting between its prime
    minister and Armenia's president in Washington next week could revive
    stalled efforts to normalize relations between the longtime
    adversaries.

    Turkey's ambassador to Washington Namik Tan told The Associated Press
    Friday that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan nd Armenian
    President Serge Sarkisian would discuss the stalled talks on the
    sidelines of the nuclear security summit hosted by President Barack
    Obama Monday and Tuesday.

    Tan returned to Washington Tuesday after being recalled to Ankara last
    month in protest at a step by the U.S. Congress toward declaring the
    Ottoman-era killing of Armenians a genocide. The Foreign Affairs
    Committee of the House of Representative's passed a resolution
    declaring the killings genocide, but it is unclear whether the full
    House will vote on it.

    Tan said that he came back after assurances by the Obama
    administration that it would oppose the congressional action and not
    itself label the killings genocide.

    "We received some satisfactory messages," Tan said. "I hope there will
    be a new chapter."

    Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by
    Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I, an event widely viewed
    by scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey denies
    that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been
    inflated and those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.

    The Obama administration must decide whether to label the killings a
    genocide in an annual statement this month on the day marking
    remembrance of the killing. It has opposed the resolution because it
    could upset the historic talks between Turkey and Armenia. The two
    countries signed agreements for reconciliation in October, but the
    deals still need to be approved by their parliaments. The agreements
    call for the establishment of diplomatic relations and the reopening
    of their border.

    The agreement, if ratified, would reopen the border Turkey closed in
    1993 to protest Armenia's war with neighboring Azerbaijan. The Turkish
    parliament has held up ratification of the deal as Turkey presses for
    a settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan over a region in
    Azerbaijan that has been under Armenian control since the war.

    Erdogan is also expected to meet with Obama while in Washington at a
    time other sensitive issues are bubbling up. Israeli Prime Minister
    Benjamin Netanyahu abruptly canceled a trip to the nuclear summit. His
    government said the trip was called off because he believed that
    Turkey and other governments attending planned to make an issue of
    Israel's nuclear program.

    Tan denied this.

    "We don't have any such thing in our agenda," he said.

    Erdogan is also likely to come under pressure from Obama to vote in
    favor of new sanctions against Iran at the United Nation's security
    council. Turkey is currently one of the rotating members of the
    council, but has opposed sanctions against an important neighbor.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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