Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

U.S. Urges Ally Turkey To Join Iran Sanctions Push

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • U.S. Urges Ally Turkey To Join Iran Sanctions Push

    U.S. URGES ALLY TURKEY TO JOIN IRAN SANCTIONS PUSH
    Andrew Quinn

    Reuters
    March 17 2010
    UK

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States urged Turkey on Wednesday to
    support more sanctions against Iran over Tehran's nuclear program,
    saying Ankara could face consequences if it moves out of step with
    the international community.

    Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon, the State Department's top
    diplomat for Europe, said U.S.-Turkey relations were strong despite a
    row over a resolution by U.S. lawmakers branding the 1915-era killings
    of Armenians by Turkish forces as "genocide."

    But he said Turkey, a non-permanent member of the U.N. Security
    Council that has been leery of the U.S.-led push to further punish
    Iran, must show it is "on board" with the move toward new sanctions.

    "Many would be disappointed if Turkey is an exception to an
    international consensus on dealing with Iran," he told a news briefing
    before a speech on U.S. relations with Turkey, a fellow NATO member
    and pivotal regional ally to Washington.

    "Turkey wants to be an important, responsible actor on the
    international scene. And I think joining the majority of the Security
    Council in doing this would reinforce that image," Gordon said.

    "Not doing so would not contribute to that positive outcome ... I
    think that's a consequence."

    The United States and other Western powers are seeking support new
    U.N. sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program, which they fear is
    a cover for developing atomic weapons.

    But China, a permanent, veto-wielding member of the Security Council,
    along with non-permanent members Turkey and Brazil, have urged more
    time for diplomacy with Iran, which insists its nuclear program is
    purely for peaceful purposes.

    DAMAGE CONTROL

    Amid the Iran push, U.S. officials are trying to control the damage
    after a House of Representatives committee vote this month on the
    non-binding "genocide" resolution over the 1915 killings, a move
    which infuriated Turkey.

    The House vote appeared to jeopardize halting progress by Armenia
    and Turkey to normalize relations, one key to stability in the south
    Caucasus, a region crisscrossed by oil and gas pipelines to Europe.

    Turkey withdrew its ambassador to Washington and has said he will not
    return until Ankara gets assurances about the fate of the resolution,
    which the Obama administration opposed.

    Gordon repeated the White House's hope that the resolution would not
    move forward in Congress but denied there was any deal with Democratic
    lawmakers to kill the bill outright.

    "There's no deal. The Congress is an independent body and they're
    going to do what they decide to do," he said.

    But Gordon called on Ankara to return the ambassador anyway, saying the
    breadth of the bilateral relationship -- which includes cooperation
    on Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and the Middle East -- was too important
    to link to any one issue.

    "We would like to see the ambassador here. We think he should be here,
    making Turkey's case," Gordon said.

    He said the relationship was a two-way street and noted that Washington
    was a strong supporter of Turkey's bid to join the European Union,
    one of Ankara's chief goals.

    "On nearly every issue that is critical to Turkey's future, the United
    States plays an enormously important role as a trusted friend and
    ally," Gordon said. The relationship, he added, "requires hard work
    and attention -- on both sides."
Working...
X