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Turkey Says Genocide Vote Will Impair U.S. Ties

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  • Turkey Says Genocide Vote Will Impair U.S. Ties

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/06/world/europe/06t urkey.html?ref=global-home

    Turkey Says Genocide Vote Will Impair U.S. Ties


    By SEBNEM ARSU and BRIAN KNOWLTON

    Published: March 5, 2010


    ISTANBUL - Turkey's foreign minster said Friday that a vote by the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee condemning as genocide the mass killing of
    Armenians early in the last century by the Ottoman army would damage ties
    with the Obama administration and set back reconciliation efforts between
    Turkey and Armenia.

    <http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/05/wo rld/europe/05armenia.html?ref=europe>
    House Panel Says Armenian Deaths Were Genocide (March 5, 2010)


    "Each interference by a third party will make this normalization
    impossible," Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in a televised press
    conference. "If an adviser had whispered 'no' instead of 'yes' in the ear of
    a member of the House of Representatives, the vote would have come out
    differently. Can history be treated in such an unserious manner?"

    Thursday's vote on the nonbinding resolution, a perennial point of friction
    addressing a dark, century-old chapter of Turkish history, was 23 to 22.

    A similar resolution passed by a slightly wider margin in 2007, but the Bush
    administration, fearful of losing Turkish cooperation over Iraq, lobbied
    forcefully to keep it from reaching the House floor. Whether this resolution
    will reach a floor vote remains unclear. The Obama administration had urged
    the committee to forgo a vote altogether.

    Turkey reacted sharply, recalling its ambassador to Washington, Namik
    Tan, in a display of annoyance. Turkey is a critical United States
    ally in NATO, but the question of Armenian genocide taps deep veins of
    national pride.

    Mr. Davutoglu criticized the Obama administration for failing to explain the
    strength of cooperation between Turkey and the United States, and said that
    in absence of more effective efforts from Washington, "the picture ahead
    will not be a positive one."

    Last October, Turkey and Armenia began the first diplomatic attempt to
    normalize relations with a series of agreements, but Mr. Davutoglu said that
    votes like Thursday's were a blow to their efforts to build a peaceful
    region for future generations.

    Turkey's newspapers headlined the news of the vote - and Turkey's diplomatic
    response - on their front pages.

    "We called the ambassador back," proclaimed Hurriyet, Turkey's largest
    circulation newspaper. "A vote crisis with the United States," Milliyet,
    another daily, said. "A vote like a comedy," read a headline in Sabah
    newspaper.

    Some Turkish analysts said Ankara might put up diplomatic obstacles for
    Washington's broader regional policies.

    "On one side of the scale, there is the Congress under the influence of
    ethnic lobby groups and on the other, there are the greater United States
    interests in Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran and Caucasus," said Sedat Ergin, a
    foreign policy analyst of the Hurriyet newspaper. "It is up to the American
    administration to come up with the best choice between the two."

    Historians say that as many as 1.5 million Armenians died amid the
    chaos and unrest surrounding World War I and the disintegration of the
    Ottoman Empire. Turkey denies, however, that this was a planned
    genocide, and mounted a vigorous lobbying campaign against the
    resolution.

    The Armenian issue has long been a taboo in Turkey and only recently has
    there been some cautious, public debate partly as a result of reforms on
    free speech prompted by Turkey's desire to join the European Union.

    While writers and intellectuals, including the Nobel laureate Orhan
    Pamuk, have faced criminal charges for airing the debate, the number
    of such cases has been dwindling over the years. Mr. Pamuk faced
    criminal charges of "insulting Turkishness" after a 2005 magazine
    interview in which he condemned the genocide and the killing of Kurds
    by Turkey in the 1980s. The charges were dropped, but many
    nationalists have not forgiven Mr. Pamuk.

    Last October, Turkey and Armenia agreed to establish an impartial
    international historical commission to study the available archives of the
    period. In 2008, Turkey's president paid the first visit by a Turkish leader
    to Armenia in the two nations' history.

    Sebnem Arsu reported from Istanbul, and Brian Knowlton from Washington.
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