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Turkey Warns US Over Armenia Genocide Bill

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  • Turkey Warns US Over Armenia Genocide Bill

    TURKEY WARNS US OVER ARMENIA GENOCIDE BILL

    Raw Story
    http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Turkey_warns_US _over_Armenia_genoci_03012010.html
    March 1 2010

    Turkey warned US lawmakers Monday against passing a bill that brands
    World War One-era massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks "genocide,"
    saying ties between Washington and Ankara would suffer.

    The Turkish foreign ministry, which also said Turkey-Armenia
    reconciliation efforts would be damaged, delivered its tough message
    three days before a key US House of Representatives panel is due to
    take up the non-binding measure.

    The US House Foreign Affairs Committee was scheduled to vote Thursday
    on the symbolic resolution, and approval would send the bill to the
    full House for consideration.

    "We expect the committee to reject the resolution which will harm
    Turkish-US ties and impede efforts on normalizing ties between Turkey
    and Armenia," the ministry said in a statement.

    "We would like to believe that the members of the committee are aware
    of the damage... the endorsement of the resolution will bring and,
    in this context, act responsibly," it added.

    The United States has traditionally condemned the 1915-1918 mass
    killings of Armenians, but refrained from dubbing them a "genocide",
    wary not to strain relations with Turkey, a NATO member and a key
    ally in the Middle East.

    US President Barack Obama pledged during his election campaign
    that he would recognise the killings as genocide, but disappointed
    Armenian-American supporters when he refrained from using the term
    in his message last year to commemorate the killings.

    "His view of that history has not changed," said US National Security
    Council spokesman Mike Hammer. "Our interest remains the achievement
    of a full, frank, and just acknowledgement of the facts."

    "The best way to advance that goal is for the Armenian and Turkish
    people to address the facts of the past as a part of their ongoing
    efforts to normalize relations," said Hammer.

    "We will continue to support these efforts vigorously in the months
    ahead," said the spokesman.

    The resolution, which does not have force of law, calls on Obama
    to ensure that US foreign policy reflects an understanding of the
    "genocide" and to label the mass killings as such in his annual
    statement on the issue.

    Washington is a firm supporter of a tentative process between Turkey
    and Armenia to normalise bilateral ties and overcome decades of
    hostility.

    The two countries signed a deal in October to establish diplomatic
    relations and open their border.

    But the process has hit the rocks amid Turkish accusations that
    Yerevan is trying to rewrite the terms of the agreement and Armenian
    frustration at the Turkish parliament's failure to ratify the accord.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were killed as the
    Ottoman Empire, Turkey's predecessor, fell apart, a claim supported
    by several other countries.

    Turkey rejects the genocide label and says the number of Armenians
    who died is grossly inflated.

    The border between the two countries has been closed since 1993
    when Turkey ordered it shut in a show of solidarity with Azerbaijan,
    then at war with Armenia over the Nagorny-Karabakh enclave.
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