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  • ANKARA: US resolution wont harm Turkey anyway but bilateral ties

    www.worldbulletin.net , turkey
    March 6 2010

    Erdogan: US resolution wont harm Turkey anyway but bilateral ties


    Turkish PM Erdogan said that the U.S. House resolution on Armenian
    allegations would not harm Turkey in anyway.

    Saturday, 06 March 2010 14:29

    Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Saturday that the U.S. House
    resolution on Armenian allegations would not harm Turkey in anyway but
    really hurts the relations between two ally, at a business conference
    in Istanbul.

    "We will not lose anything. Those who act on animosity and a feeling
    of revenge with cheap tricks, they will lose. Let me put this clearly,
    the resolution of the U.S House Committee on Foreign Affairs will not
    harm Turkey in anyway," said Erdogan.

    The Committee on Foreign Affairs of the U.S. House of Representatives
    adopted a resolution Thursday with 23 votes against 22, calling on
    U.S. President Barack Obama to recognise the incidents of 1915 --which
    took place shortly before the fall of the Ottoman Empire-- as
    genocide.

    The adoption of the resolution stirred wide reaction in Turkey which
    strongly rejects the allegations and regards the events as civil
    strife in wartime which claimed lives of many Turks and Armenians.

    Erdogan said the resolution on Armenian allegations would seriously
    harm U.S. relations and interests.

    Turkey insists that World War I-era incidents should be examined by
    historians using scientific tools and archives, Anadolu Agency said.

    "Relations harmed"

    "The decision of the Foreign Affairs Committee will not hurt Turkey,
    but it will greatly harm bilateral relations, interests and vision.
    Turkey will not be the one who loses," said Erdogan, speaking at a
    summit of Turkish businessmen.

    Turkey severely criticized the resolution Friday warning that it would
    jeopardise the historic rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia and
    harm Turkey-U.S. relations.
    Turkish Foreign Minister told an exclusive press conference that the
    Obama Administration did not throw enough weight around the issue.

    Following Turkey's reaction the Obama administration announced that it
    was against any further congressional action on the resolution warning
    the congress that it could harm the normalisation process between
    Turkey an Armenia.

    The Congress is yet to decide whether or not to put the resolution to
    vote in the house floor, which would seriously risk further straining
    relations with Turkey, a close ally to the U.S. for decades.

    The Obama administration made a last-minute appeal against the
    resolution and has vowed to stop the vote, which was broadcast live on
    Turkish television, from going further in Congress.

    Ambassador to U.S. recalled

    Turkey recalled its envoy to the United States for consultations.

    Turkey's ambassador to the United States told journalists upon his
    return on Saturday it was unclear when he would head back to
    Washington following his talks with the president, prime minister and
    foreign minister.

    "I will return when the time is right ... We will have to wait and
    see," Namik Tan said. Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu was quoted in a
    media report as saying that the consultations could last "a long
    time."

    The resolution urges Obama to use the term "genocide" when he delivers
    his annual message on the killing of Armenians in April.

    Commentators had said the bill could affect Washington's use of the
    Incirlik air base in southeast Turkey which s unpopular among Turkish
    people ans many intellectuals. Turkish lawmakers rejected to accept
    the base iduring Iraq war in the first parliament vote but in next
    sessions it is accepted.

    Turkey is a transit route for U.S. troops going to and from Iraq, and
    the country has 1,700 non-combat troops in Afghanistan.


    Agencies
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