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  • Turkey's ambassador to the USA returned to Ankara for consultations

    Arab Monitor
    March 7 2010


    Turkey's ambassador to the USA returned to Ankara for consultations

    Ankara, 6 March - Turkey's ambassador to the United States Namik Tan
    arrived in Ankara after having been recalled by the Foreign Ministry
    following the vote of the US House of Representatives Committee on
    Foreign Affairs, which provoked Ankara by approving a controversial
    draft bill. The draft, if approved by both US legislative bodies,
    would officially recognize as genocide the expulsion of Armenians from
    today's Turkish territory, an issue dating back to 1915.

    Still at the airport Tan made a short statement asserting that he had
    been recalled for consultations and that he was ready to resume his
    post in Washington as soon as the Foreign Ministry would see fit.
    Regarding the controversial vote, he declared that "we condemn this
    resolution which charges the Turkish nation with a crime that it did
    not commit". Ankara argues that 300.000 to 500.000 Armenians and at
    least as many Turks died in what was a civil strife, during a period
    when Armenians rose up against the Ottoman Empire and sided with the
    invading Russian troops.

    Commenting the US Congress' panel's move, Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan declared: "Let me say quite clearly that this
    resolution will not harm us. But it will damage bilateral relations
    between countries, their interests and their visions for the future.
    We will not be the losers". The push for an official recognition of an
    alleged genocide of Armenians has touched a sensitive fault-line in
    US-Turkish relations, and this in a time in which the White House
    wants to rely on Ankara's cooperation to ensure success of its own
    strategy in Afghanistan, but foremost and more urgently in Iraq.

    Turkey is regarded a key-player in closing the Iraq dilemma for the
    US, who, since they did not succeed in containing Teheran's influence
    in occupied Iraq, are now counting on the balancing power of the
    Turkish influence. In this context Ankara promised that whatever the
    outcome of tomorrow's electoral polls in Iraq might be, it is planning
    to open two new consulates, one in Kirkuk and one in Arbil, thereby
    increasing its diplomatic missions to five including Baghdad, Basra
    and Mosul.

    http://www.arabmonitor.info/news/dettaglio .php?idnews=29930&lang=en

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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