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Turkey warns US over Armenian `genocide' resolution

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  • Turkey warns US over Armenian `genocide' resolution

    RT, Russia
    March 6 2010

    Turkey warns US over Armenian `genocide' resolution

    Published 05 March, 2010, 17:40
    Edited 06 March, 2010, 10:45


    Propeller After hours of discussion, the House of Foreign Affairs
    Committee barely passed the resolution with a 23-22 vote that labels
    the murder of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians during World War I as
    genocide.

    Immediately after the vote, Ankara recalled its ambassador from
    Washington, condemning the US Committee's decision.

    "We condemn this bill that blames the Turkish nation for a crime it
    did not commit. Our Washington ambassador was invited to Ankara
    tonight for consultations," Turkey's Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan
    said in a statement.

    Erdogan went on to warn that `Turkey will not be responsible for the
    negative results that this event may lead to,' saying that
    Washington's decision will `harm Turkey-U.S. ties' and could derail
    talks aimed at opening the border between Turkey and Armenia.

    US, Washington: Turkey's Ambassador to US Namik Tan gives a speech on
    March 4, 2010 during the Armenian genocide vote meeting. (AFP Photo /
    Anatolia News Agencu / Turkey Out)
    `Unfortunately, by this decision, the US has demonstrated its attitude
    towards the Turkic nations. I think that everybody, who considers
    himself a Turk, should react adequately and condemn the US Committee's
    decision,' said Azerbaijani deputy Ganira Pashaeva. She added that
    `should take all necessary steps to stop the US Congress from adopting
    this resolution.'

    Like the Turkish and Azerbaijan response, Armenia's reaction didn't
    come as a surprise. The Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan
    has praised the adoption of the resolution, saying that they `highly
    appreciate the decision' of the congressional panel. `This is further
    proof of the devotion of the American people to universal human values
    and is an important step towards the prevention of crimes against
    humanity," said Nalbandyan.

    However, the Committee's decision is only another step in recognizing
    the genocide.

    The 23-22 vote now sends the measure to the full House of
    Representatives, where the prospects for passage are uncertain. In
    2007 a similar notion was adopted by the Foreign Affairs Committee;
    however, it never made to the next level. After intense pressure by
    the Bush administration, who feared passage of the resolution would
    harm their war effort in the Middle East, the resolution was not
    brought to the House floor.

    Despite US President Barack Obama's vows during the 2008 presidential
    campaign to recognize the killings of Armenians as genocide, the White
    House had urged against the vote, fearing that it could anger
    Washington's NATO ally, Turkey. However, last year at the annual White
    House statement on the day marking the Armenian remembrance, Obama
    also failed to call the killings a `genocide'.




    A Turkish official showing bread to Armenians dying of starvation.
    (AGBU's photostream )
    US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had urged the House committee
    not to vote, saying that it would damage reconciliation efforts
    between Turkey and Armenia. `We do not believe that the full Congress
    will or should act upon that resolution, and we have made that clear
    to all the parties involved,' Clinton advised lawmakers.
    It's estimated that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by the
    Ottoman Turks during World War I. Many historians call this the `first
    genocide of the 20th century.'

    A number of countries ` including Germany, Russia, Italy, France,
    Canada, Greece and most of the US states, as well as the Vatican, the
    European Parliament and the World Council of Churches have denounced
    the killings as genocide.

    Turkey however, says the death toll has been inflated and those killed
    were the victims of civil war and unrest, denying that genocide had
    taken place. Ankara insists, in order for Armenia to have diplomatic
    and economic relations with Turkey, it should drop its claim for
    international recognition of genocide.

    Olga Masalkova, RT

    http://rt.com/Politics/2010-03-05/turkey-us-ar menian-genocide.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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