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US officials try to limit damage caused by vote over genocide

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  • US officials try to limit damage caused by vote over genocide

    US officials try to limit damage caused by vote over genocideGiles
    Whittell, Washington


    The Times/uk
    Giles Whittell, Washington

    March 6, 2010


    US officials tried to limit the damage to relations with Ankara
    yesterday after the Turkish Government condemned the Obama
    Administration's failure to prevent a vote labelling the murder of 1.5
    million Armenians as genocide.

    The Turkish Ambassador to Washington arrived back in Ankara after
    being recalled in protest over the vote, as while theWhite House
    issued a strong warning to Congress to drop its effort to force the US
    to change its official position on the 1915 killings.

    `Any further congressional action is an impediment to ongoing efforts
    to normalise relations between Turkey and Armenia,' a senior
    administration official told The Times. `We have a broad and strategic
    relationship with Turkey and continue to support its efforts to
    improve relations with Armenia.'

    A regional backlash against Thursday's vote was already brewing in
    Azerbaijan, where President Aliyev joined Turkey to condemn what a
    spokesman called `a unilateral decision... accepted under pressure
    from pro-Armenian congressmen'.


    The spokesman repeated Azerbaijan's demand that Turkey and Armenia
    shelve their efforts at diplomatic rapprochement until Armenia has
    resolved its dispute with Baku over the mainly-Christian enclave of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Though within Azerbaijan's borders, the enclave has
    been administered by Armenia since a war in the early 1990s that left
    nearly 30,000 people dead.

    The Turkish Ambassador to Washington arrived back in Ankara after
    being recalled in protest over the vote and Ahmet Davutoglu, the
    Turkish Foreign Minister, summoned the US Ambassador to Ankara for
    talks.

    He said that the White House could have prevented the vote, which
    calls on President Obama to refer to the massacres as genocide in his
    annual speech to Armenians in the US.

    `If an adviser had whispered `No' instead of `Yes' in the ear of a
    member of the House of Representatives, the vote would have been
    different,' Mr Davutoglu said.

    The House Committee on Foreign Affairs approved the resolution by 23
    votes to 22. Nancy Pelosi, the House Speaker, can refuse to call a
    vote by the full chamber, but has shown sympathy for the Armenian
    position in the past.
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