Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

CNN: Turkey Recalls Envoy To U.S. Over Panel's 'Genocide' Vote

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • CNN: Turkey Recalls Envoy To U.S. Over Panel's 'Genocide' Vote

    TURKEY RECALLS ENVOY TO U.S. OVER PANEL'S 'GENOCIDE' VOTE

    CNN
    March 5 2010

    Washington (CNN) -- Turkey recalled its envoy to the United States
    following a vote by a congressional panel passing a resolution calling
    the killing of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey genocide.

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee narrowly passed a measure Thursday
    recommending that the United States recognize the killings as genocide.

    The measure passed 23-22 and will now head to the full House.

    In response, Turkey ordered its ambassador to the United States
    home for "consultation," foreign ministry spokesman Burak Ozugergin
    told CNN.

    The nearly century-old issue has placed Congress and the White House
    in the middle of a political minefield, balancing moral considerations
    with domestic and international concerns.

    The Obama administration had urged the House Foreign Affairs Committee
    not to pass the resolution, warning it could damage U.S.-Turkish
    relations and jeopardize efforts to normalize relations between Turkey
    and its neighbor Armenia. The two do not share formal diplomatic
    relations.

    "We are concerned that the possible action ... would ... impede the
    positive momentum that we see in the Turkey-Armenia normalization
    process," State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told reporters
    ahead of the vote.

    He added that the United States was concerned about the effect the
    vote could potentially have on U.S.-Turkish relations. Turkey, among
    other things, is considered a strong American ally and is home to a
    critical U.S. air base.

    This is another proof of the devotion of the American people to
    universal human values. ...

    --Edward Nalbandian, Armenia's foreign minister Armenia's foreign
    minister, Edward Nalbandian, said his country highly appreciates
    the committee's vote. "This is another proof of the devotion of the
    American people to universal human values and is an important step
    toward the prevention of the crimes against humanity," he said. The
    Armenian National Committee of America said the passage of the measure
    shows that "Turkey doesn't get a vote or a veto in the U.S. Congress."

    Turkish officials vehemently opposed the measure.

    "Turkey is saddened by the bill that has been accepted in the Foreign
    Affairs Committee today," Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    Web site said.

    "We condemn this bill that accuses the Turkish nation of a crime it
    has not committed. The people who support this bill have adopted a
    wrong and unfair attitude, ignoring the differences of opinion of
    expert historians and historical facts. The bill has been prepared
    with tangible historical mistakes regarding the 1915 incidents and
    with a completely subjective attitude," the statement said.

    A Turkish foreign ministry spokesman recently issued a public warning
    that passage of a resolution labeling the World War I killings as
    genocide "would harm U.S.-Turkish relations." Turkish officials
    have also warned that passing the resolution could hurt a historic
    agreement aimed at normalizing relations between Turkey and Armenia,
    and reopening their long-closed border.

    "It would harm the normalization process," spokesman Ozugergin said.

    "And it is wrong. The substance is also wrong."

    Turkey officially denies a genocide took place in the last days of
    the crumbling Ottoman Empire. Ankara instead says that Muslim Turks
    and Christian Armenians massacred each other on the killing fields
    of World War I.

    Historians have extensively documented the Ottoman military's forced
    death march of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Armenians into the
    Syrian desert in 1915. Every April 24, Armenians worldwide observe
    a day for those killed.

    We condemn this bill that accuses the Turkish nation of a crime it
    has not committed.

    --Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Web site RELATED TOPICS
    Armenia Turkey U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs U.S. House
    of Representatives The killings decimated the Armenian population in
    what is modern-day eastern Turkey.

    The government in the Armenian capital of Yerevan and influential
    Armenian diaspora groups have been urging countries around the world
    to formally label the events of 1915 "genocide."

    "I don't pretend to be a professional historian," Foreign Affairs
    Committee Chairman Howard Berman, D-California, said ahead of the
    vote. "But the vast majority of experts ... agree that the tragic
    massacres of the Armenians constitute genocide."

    Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-New York, acknowledged that Turkey is an
    "important, strong [and] necessary ally of the United States." But
    "overriding all of that," he said, "is the issue of justice and the
    issue of history. ... History has to be righted."

    Opponents of the resolution had expressed sympathy toward the victims
    of the 1915 killings but said current political concerns took priority.

    Rep. Mike Pence, R-Indiana, praised the committee's "sincere effort"
    to illuminate "a dark chapter in history" but said the committee
    should not pass the measure.

    "I do not minimize the horror that took place," he said. But "now is
    not the time for this committee of the American Congress to take up
    the measure that is now before us."

    Turkey is a strategic partner of U.S. efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan,
    Pence said.

    Furthermore, the logistical support provided by the U.S. base in
    Incirlik, Turkey, is a "staple" of American power in the Middle East,
    he said. "In a time of war," the United States should not "take the
    relationship [with Turkey] for granted."

    Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Virginia, said Congress should not do anything
    to undermine the Turkish government, which is a "secular alternative
    model for the Muslim world."

    "I hate this vote," he said. "The United States has a great deal at
    stake in the Turkish relationship," and passing the resolution would
    jeopardize that relationship. Congress shouldn't "pontificate on this
    issue" and then pretend "there will be no consequences," he said.

    Last year, the foreign ministers of Turkey and Armenia signed a series
    of protocols aimed at establishing embassies in Ankara and Yerevan.

    The U.S.-, European- and Russian-backed agreement also called for
    the creation of an international committee of historians to examine
    archives and "restore mutual confidence between the two nations."

    In October 2009, Armenia's president traveled to Turkey to attend a
    historic soccer match between the two countries' national teams.

    Despite this round of "football diplomacy," the diplomatic overture
    between the two capitals has slowed in recent months.

    In 2007, the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed a previous
    resolution recognizing the Armenian "genocide." The Turkish government
    protested by temporarily recalling its ambassador from Washington.

    The resolution did not make it to the House floor.

    http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/03/04/tur key.armenia/?hpt=T2
Working...
X