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Turkey: Why 'Armenian genocide' resolution may hurt US interests

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  • Turkey: Why 'Armenian genocide' resolution may hurt US interests

    Christian Science Monitor
    March 5 2010


    Turkey: Why 'Armenian genocide' resolution may hurt US interests

    Turkey's deep emotional reaction to the 'Armenian genocide' resolution
    passed by a US congressional committee yesterday could have
    far-ranging implications for US policy in Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan.


    By Yigal Schleifer Correspondent / March 5, 2010
    Istanbul, Turkey

    Those watching the mounting US-Turkey tensions over a congressional
    committee's resolution recognizing the Armenian 'genocide' could be
    forgiven for feeling a sense of déjà vu.

    A committee passed a similar resolution in 2007, leading Turkey to
    recall its ambassador to Washington ` something it did again after the
    resolution passed yesterday ` and warn of a serious rupture in
    relations with the US. A last-minute intervention by the Bush
    administration kept the bill from going any further.

    This year was supposed to be different. The historic accords that
    Turkey and Armenia signed this past October to restore diplomatic
    relations and put in motion a process to examine the past were
    supposed to take the legs out from under any effort to tar Turkey with
    the `genocide' label.

    But the stalling of that reconciliation process, and Turkey's deep
    emotional reaction to the genocide issue have, once again, created a
    potentially damaging situation for Turkish-US relations. It could have
    far-ranging implications for US policy in the Middle East, where
    Turkey is one of Washington's most important allies and an
    increasingly influential powerbroker.

    `Turkey will certainly feel impelled to take retaliatory action
    against the US, which will take the form of noncooperation in terms of
    Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan and possibly leading to restrictions on the
    use of strategic assets like the Incirlik air base ` areas where there
    is important cooperation,' says Sinan Ã`lgen, chairman of the Center
    for Economics and Foreign Policy Studies (EDAM), an Istanbul think
    tank.

    `This is an area where identity and emotion are in a sense superseding
    pure interests," he adds. "On a topic like this, the national interest
    is trumped by a core question loaded with emotions that cuts deep to
    the issue of identity.'

    Why accords with Armenia have stalled

    The signing of the accords was initially hailed in Turkey as an
    important breakthrough. But Ankara seemed to put the brakes on the
    process after facing strong opposition from domestic forces and oil-
    and gas-rich Azerbaijan, a traditional Turkish ally that is also a key
    component of Ankara's energy policy.

    `Obviously there was an attempt by the Turkish authorities to try
    something else than what they were doing for the last 95 years, and it
    failed,' says Cengiz Aktar, director of the European Studies
    Department at Istanbul's Bahcesehir University.

    Neither country has ratified the accords, and Turkey now insists that
    their progress is conditional upon movement on the status of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of Azerbaijan occupied by Armenian forces.

    The stalling of the Armenia accords, say analysts here, is a key
    reason why the US and Turkey have reached a point where Ankara is
    again warning that its ties with Washington could be severely damaged
    if the resolution continues on its way to a full vote.

    `We would not have been here if the protocols had gone forward,' says
    Hugh Pope, Turkey analyst with the International Crisis Group, a
    Brussels-based policy and advocacy group. `Turkey's insisting on the
    conditionality, which was not part of the protocols, has led us to
    where we are today.'

    'Enraged' at being portrayed as grandchildren of genocide perpetrators
    Now faced with another `genocide' resolution in Washington, Turkey
    appears to have returned to the same strategy it has used in previous
    years, one that is informed by more than simply political concerns.

    `It's emotional because Turks are very much enraged to be portrayed as
    grandsons of people who committed genocide, especially when it
    happened during a time when tumultuous things were happening all
    over,' says Mr. Ã`lgen of EDAM.

    `The second aspect [of the Turkish reaction] is the political and
    legal question, namely, if such a bill is adopted in Congress, that
    might lead to a situation where Turkey might find itself as a
    defendant in a number of legal cases in the US, which is something
    Turkey doesn't want to find itself in,' he adds.

    The question now is how far Ankara is willing to take things if the
    resolution is put forward for a full vote in the House, something
    Speaker Nancy Pelosi must first decide to do.

    Brad Sherman, a Democrat from California, called Turkey a "paper
    tiger" and noted that, although France passed a resolution recognizing
    the genocide in 2001, trade between the countries has since
    flourished.

    Bahcesehir's Aktar says he also believes Turkey's threats are a
    `bluff.' But Ulgen says `all bets are off' if Congress actually passes
    the resolution.

    http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle -East/2010/0305/Turkey-Why-Armenian-genocide-resol ution-may-hurt-US-interests

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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