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The Wall Street Journal: Ankara Recalls Ambassador After U.S. Panel

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  • The Wall Street Journal: Ankara Recalls Ambassador After U.S. Panel

    THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: ANKARA RECALLS AMBASSADOR AFTER U.S. PANEL CONDEMNS 1915 GENOCIDE OF ARMENIANS

    ArmInfo
    2010-03-05 09:02:00

    ArmInfo. A U.S. congressional committee approved a resolution
    condemning the 1915 slaughter of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
    as genocide, rejecting a last-minute Obama administration effort
    to derail it and putting a chill on relations with Turkey, the Wall
    Street Journal reported.

    The House panel's resolution, approved on a 23-22 vote, faces an
    uncertain future in Congress. But it nonetheless could damage U.S.

    relations with Turkey, a vital ally in the Middle East and Central
    Asia. Within minutes of the vote, Ankara said it was recalling its
    ambassador from Washington for consultations. Turkey took the same
    step in 2007, when the committee passed a similar resolution.

    WSJO quotes Huseyin Bagci, professor of international relations at
    the Middle East Technical University in Ankara as saying: "We can
    now declare the rapprochement with Armenia dead, the border cannot
    open now." He predicted anti-Americanism in Turkey, already strong in
    recent years, would rise, and that the vote would be seen in Turkey as
    a failure of the government's foreign policy. Turkey's small Armenian
    community was subdued. "We live with Turks, and Turkey is changing
    for the first time in one hundred years," said Etyen Mahcupyan,
    editor in chief of Agos, a bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper. His
    predecessor, Hrant Dink, was assassinated by a Turkish nationalist in
    2007. "Of course 1915 is hugely important to us, but not what the U.S.

    Congress calls it." The vote on the resolution aroused concern of a
    number of big American companies engaged in the defense sphere and
    cooperating with Turkey. Among those companies are - Lockheed Martin
    Corp., Boeing Co., Raytheon Co., United Technologies Corp. and Northrop
    Grumman Corp.

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called House Foreign Affairs
    Committee Chairman Howard Berman (D., Calif.) on Wednesday and
    "indicated that further congressional action could impede progress
    on normalization of relations" between Turkey and Armenia, a White
    House spokesman said. That undermined a campaign pledge from then-Sen.

    Barack Obama, who said in January 2008 that "as president I will
    recognize the Armenian genocide." The White House spokesman, Mike
    Hammer, added Thursday that "the president's position on the events
    of 1915 is well known and his view of that history has not changed."

    Until Wednesday, the Obama administration had taken a hands-
    off approach to the vote. That stood in contrast to the Bush and
    Clinton administrations, which openly opposed the resolution on the
    long-running genocide issue. Mr. Obama on Wednesday called Turkish
    President Abdullah Gul to thank him for his country's efforts to
    normalize relations with Armenia and pressed for rapid ratification
    of border-opening protocols, the White House said.
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