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FACTBOX-Vote on Armenia could hurt U.S.-Turkish ties

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  • FACTBOX-Vote on Armenia could hurt U.S.-Turkish ties

    Balkans.com Business News
    March 5 2010


    FACTBOX-Vote on Armenia could hurt U.S.-Turkish ties


    Turkey has warned ties with ally the United States would be damaged if
    a U.S. congressional panel terms a 1915 massacre of Armenians by
    Ottoman forces as genocide.

    Here are some facts about U.S.-Turkish relations.

    * DIPLOMACY:

    -- U.S.-Turkish ties suffered badly in 2003 when Ankara opposed the
    Iraq invasion. Since then, the two allies, which share interests in
    Iraq's stability, patched up differences.

    -- Barack Obama chose Turkey as the first Muslim country to visit
    after becoming president, highlighting the importance he places on the
    NATO ally. He called on Turkey to help resolve conflicts from the
    Middle East to Afghanistan.

    -- On the campaign trail, Obama had pledged to call the killing of
    Armenians "genocide". During his commemoration of the killings on
    April 24, Obama avoided using the word, welcoming efforts by Turkey
    and Armenia to normalise ties.

    -- Ahead of Thursday's vote, Turkey has stepped up a diplomatic
    campaign aimed at blocking the resolution. The issue puts Obama
    between its NATO ally and an important U.S. Armenian-American
    constituency and their backers in Congress ahead of a November
    congressional vote.

    * TRADE:

    -- U.S.-Turkish trade volume was $16.2 billion in 2008.

    -- The chief executives of Lockheed Martin Corp, Boeing Co, Raytheon
    Co, United Technologies Corp and Northrop Grumman Corp issued a rare
    joint letter this week, warning passage of the measure by the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee could lead to "a rupture in U.S.-Turkey
    relations" and put American jobs at risk.

    -- They said U.S. defense and aerospace exports to Turkey exceeded $7
    billion in 2009 and were seen reaching a similar level in 2010,
    supporting tens of thousands of U.S. jobs.

    -- Industry executives are worried about Turkey's continued
    participation in several big U.S. weapons programmes, including the
    Lockheed F-35 fighter, a $1.2 billion deal with Boeing for 14 CH-47
    Chinook helicopters, and Patriot missile sales.

    OIL SECURITY

    -- With Russia flexing its muscles in the Caucasus, the United States
    is keen to reinforce Turkey's ambitions of becoming a transit route of
    Central Asian oil for Europe. Washington, along with the European
    Union, back the ambitious Nabucco project that would take Azeri oil to
    Europe via Georgia and Turkey.

    Source: Reuters, Balkans.com Business News

    http://www.balkans.com/open-news.php?uniquen umber=50071
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