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ANKARA: Turkey Urges US Administration To Work Against Resolution

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Urges US Administration To Work Against Resolution

    TURKEY URGES US ADMINISTRATION TO WORK AGAINST RESOLUTION

    Today's Zaman
    March 3 2010
    Turkey

    Murat Mercan (C), who is having talks with US officials ahead of a
    vote in the US House Foreign Affairs Committee, and lawmaker Å~^ukru
    Elekdag (L) spoke at the Turkish Embassy in Washington on Monday.

    Turkey has called on the US administration to exert more effort in
    order to prevent the passage of a resolution that would recognize the
    World War I-era killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as genocide
    by a US House of Representatives committee, warning that its passage
    could jeopardize Turkish parliamentary approval of protocols that
    Turkey and Armenia signed last year to normalize ties.

    In Ankara, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan highlighted on Tuesday
    that what is at stake if the resolution is approved is also the state
    of bilateral relations between Ankara and Washington.

    "Turkish-US relations are experiencing their most successful period
    in history," Erdogan said. "I hope that they will not be damaged by
    such initiatives. I maintain trust in the leadership and common sense
    of President [Barack] Obama, who has been closely following efforts
    toward the normalization of ties with Armenia."

    In Washington, Murat Mercan, head of the Turkish Parliament's Foreign
    Affairs Commission, which is having talks with US officials ahead
    of the vote, and Å~^ukru Elekdag, a lawmaker and former Turkish
    ambassador to the US, spoke to reporters at the Turkish Embassy in
    Washington on Monday.

    "My impression is that the [Obama] administration is not fighting
    against it very effectively," Elekdag said, while emphasizing that
    Turkish cooperation with the United States was at risk if the measure
    passed.

    Also in Washington, The Hill, a congressional newspaper that publishes
    daily when Congress is in session, reported on Tuesday that a trio of
    House lawmakers have been encouraging their colleagues to stop the
    genocide resolution before the key committee vote on Thursday. In
    a Feb. 22 letter to committee members, the three co-chairs of the
    Congressional Caucus on US-Turkey Relations asked their colleagues
    to reject the resolution, warning that it will "have significant
    negative consequences on current and future relations with Turkey."

    At a time when doubts have been raised over whether the Jewish lobby,
    which has extended a crucial hand in stopping past resolutions,
    would rush to Turkey's aid this time, as Erdogan angered many Jews
    when he accused Israel of "inhumane" treatment of Palestinians,
    the Washington-based Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs
    (JINSA) announced on Monday that the resolution "should be opposed
    and defeated."

    "The Congress of the United States is not the place to debate the
    history of other people in other times. It would be unacceptable for
    Brazil to pass a resolution condemning 19th century American slavery
    or Latvia to pass one on the War of 1812," JINSA said in a statement
    posted on its Web site.

    In Ä°stanbul, the Turkish-Jewish community said: "If members of
    the US House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs accept
    the resolution about the events of 1915, they will damage Turkey-US
    relations. They are not making any contributions to Turkey-Armenia
    relations."
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