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Turkey: Armenian massacres: USA, Ankara not mincing words

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  • Turkey: Armenian massacres: USA, Ankara not mincing words

    ANSAmed, Italy
    March5 2010


    TURKEY:ARMENIAN MASSACRES;USA,ANKARA NOT MINCING WORDS


    (ANSAmed) - ANKARA - The vote of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the
    US House of Representatives on a non-binding resolution in which the
    1915 and 1917 Armenian massacres that took place during the Ottoman
    empire are defined as ''genocide'' was expected in Ankara. So much so
    that, with unusual speed in Turkey, as soon as it was discovered from
    the website of the Turkish Cabinet Office that out of the 46 members
    of the Committee, 23 against 22 voted in favour of the document, a
    message of condemnation immediately appeared. Premier Tayyip Erdogan
    expressed concern over the consequences of the vote and underlined
    that the taking of a stance by the parliamentary body ''risks damaging
    Turkish-American relations, as well as the process of normalisation
    between Turkey and Armenia.'' Shortly after, it was announced that the
    Turkish Ambassador to the US, Namik Tan, has been immediately recalled
    to Ankara ''for consultation''. Tan arrived in Washington just a few
    weeks but is already an expert on America. That things were not
    looking good for Ankara was already clear a few days ago, but events
    have taken a turn for the worse in the last 48 hours. Turkey was
    opposed to the approval of the document insomuch as it has always
    denied that the number of Armenians killed during the massacres total
    one and a half million (for Ankara there were ''only'' 300,000) and
    that they died as a result of a civil war and not due to genocide.
    Thus yesterday morning Turkey had already raised not only the
    possibility of withdrawing their Ambassador if the resolution were
    approved, but also the potential of cancelling contracts worth 45
    billion dollars with five large US defence companies. Furthermore,
    Ankara has circulated - via the Turkish press - a so-called 'Plan B'
    to be implemented if the document is approved. This plan sets out,
    amongst other things, that Turkey could potentially not ratify the
    protocols of normalisation of relations signed in October in Zurich
    with Armenia, considered to be important for the stability of the
    Caucasus.

    http://www.ansamed.info/en/top/ME11 .XAM09443.html
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