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Ankara blames Obama over massacre vote

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  • Ankara blames Obama over massacre vote

    Ankara blames Obama over massacre vote
    By Delphine Strauss in Ankara and Daniel Dombey in Costa Rica

    FT
    March 5 2010 18:05

    Turkey on Friday warned of serious damage to its relations with the US
    and blamed Barack Obama's administration for failing to stop a
    congressional panel approving a resolution that describes the
    Ottoman-era massacres of Armenians as genocide.

    The committee vote is a severe test of bilateral ties when Washington
    is already struggling to persuade Ankara, a Nato member and key
    regional ally, to back sanctions against Iran.

    The Turkish government, which denies the genocide, recalled its
    ambassador to Washington for consultations after the foreign affairs
    committee approved the resolution by 23 votes to 22, and complained
    that a last-minute plea by Hillary Clinton, secretary of state, to
    stop the measure was not forceful enough.

    `We expect a more effective policy from the administration,' said
    Ahmet Davutoglu, foreign minister, adding that Washington had
    displayed `a lack of strategic vision'.

    He also said the vote could harm Turkish and Armenian efforts at
    reconciliation,, which had already stalled, as Turkey `never took
    decisions under pressure'.

    The Turkish cabinet would assess the situation on Monday after
    consultations with Namik Tan, the country's ambassador to the US who
    was flying back from Washington, Mr Davutoglu said.

    He said it was too early to talk of any retaliation. But US officials
    expressed fears that the panel vote had hurt chances of winning an
    already sceptical Turkey's support for Iranian sanctions in the United
    Nations Security Council, where it has a non-permanent seat.

    `Getting Ankara on board for punitive actions against Tehran was
    already going to be a challenge, but an Armenian genocide resolution
    would make it nearly impossible,' said Stephen A. Cook, a fellow at
    the Council on Foreign Relations.

    Similar resolutions have passed a committee vote before without
    reaching the floor of Congress, and the US administration is
    signalling that the pattern may be repeated.

    `We understand that there will be no decision in full Congress. We are
    against any new Congress decision,' Jim Jeffrey, US ambassador in
    Ankara, told reporters after being summoned to the foreign ministry on
    Friday.

    `I do not think it is for any other country to determine how two
    countries resolve matters between them,' Mrs Clinton said on Thursday,
    adding that the administration did not believe the full House `will or
    should' vote on the resolution.

    Nationalist and anti-American feeling runs high in Turkey, and
    Ankara's tough reaction reflects its need not to alienate voters
    shortly before a possible referendum on constitutional reform, and
    with elections looming in 2011.

    Turkey denies that the 1915 killings of some 1.5m Armenians
    constituted genocide, saying many Turks also died in the chaos that
    engulfed the disintegrating Ottoman empire and that historians, not
    politicians, should interpret the events.

    The Armenian National Committee of America hailed the vote, but said
    the real test was a full House vote.
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