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Turkey urges US to block 'genocide' bill

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  • Turkey urges US to block 'genocide' bill

    Agence France Presse
    March 5 2010


    Turkey urges US to block 'genocide' bill

    By Sibel Utku Bila (AFP) `

    ANKARA ' Turkey reacted angrily on Friday to a US Congress panel's
    resolution calling the Ottoman-era massacre of Armenians "genocide"
    warning of damage to US ties and efforts to reconcile with Armenia.

    Having recalled its ambassador immediately after the resolution was
    adopted, Ankara warned that Washington risked a showdown with a key
    Muslim ally if the resolution advanced to a full vote at the House of
    Representatives.

    Turkey is "seriously disturbed" that President Barack Obama's
    administration "did not put enough weight" behind efforts to prevent
    the resolution from being passed by the Foreign Affairs Committee,
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said.

    "We expect the US administration to make more efficient efforts from
    now on," he said.

    "We hope Turkish-US ties will not be put to a new test ... otherwise,
    the prospect that we will face will not be a positive one," he added,
    calling the issue a "matter of national honour."

    The committee passed the non-binding resolution on Thursday by a slim
    23-22 margin, ignoring pressure from Turkey and the White House.

    Davutoglu said Turkey would consider counter-action, but did not
    elaborate, saying only that consultations with the recalled envoy
    "could take a long time."

    President Abdullah Gul has warned that "Turkey will not be responsible
    for the negative ramifications this vote may have in every field."

    NATO member Turkey is a prominent Muslim partner in US efforts to
    stabilise Afghanistan and Iraq, and lies on a key route taking oil and
    natural gas to Western markets.

    The US army has long used a Turkish base for operations in Afghanistan
    and Iraq, and US companies have won lucrative tenders to arm the
    Turkish military.

    Davutoglu said the resolution also raised the "the risk of stopping"
    bridge-building efforts with Armenia and stressed that Turkey would
    not bow to pressure to ratify a troubled peace deal with its eastern
    neighbour.

    "We are determined to normalise Turkish-Armenian ties but we are
    against this being secured through the intervention of third parties
    and through pressure," he said.

    The non-binding resolution calls on Obama to ensure that US foreign
    policy reflects an understanding of the "genocide" and to label the
    mass killings as such in his annual statement on the issue.

    Following US-backed talks to end decades of hostility, Turkey and
    Armenia signed a deal in October to establish diplomatic relations and
    open their border.

    But the process has already hit obstacles, with Ankara accusing
    Yerevan of trying to tweak the terms of the deal and Yerevan charging
    that Ankara is not committed to ratifying the accord.

    Davutoglu said the Armenian massacres should be studied by historians
    and lashed out at US lawmakers for passing a judgement as part of
    "local political games."

    Stressing that only another "no" vote would have killed the
    resolution, he said: "One vote would have changed the flow of
    history... How can history be taken so lightly?"

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million people were killed during World War I
    as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart, a claim supported by several
    other countries.

    Turkey argues 300,000 to 500,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks
    died in what was a civil strife when Armenians rose up against their
    Ottoman rulers and sided with invading Russian troops.

    Washington has traditionally condemned the killings, but refrained
    from calling them a "genocide," anxious not to strain relations with
    Turkey.

    US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had urged the committee not to
    hold the vote for fear it might harm Armenia-Turkey reconciliation.

    "We do not believe the full Congress will or should act on that
    resolution," she said.

    Obama pledged during his election campaign to recognise the massacres
    as genocide, but has so far refrained from using the term.

    During a visit to Turkey in April, Obama said he retained his view
    that the killings amounted to genocide but stressed that
    reconciliation between the two neighbours was more important.
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