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Erdogan's Visit To US In Limbo Over 'Genocide' Tensions

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  • Erdogan's Visit To US In Limbo Over 'Genocide' Tensions

    ERDOGAN'S VISIT TO US IN LIMBO OVER 'GENOCIDE' TENSIONS

    Today's Zaman
    March 17 2010
    Turkey

    The government is weighing whether Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan should accept an invitation from US President Barack Obama
    to visit Washington next month for a nuclear conference at a time
    when relations are strained following a US House committee vote to
    recognize Armenian claims of genocide.

    Another option is the attendance of a government minister, instead of
    Erdogan, at the April 12-13 summit, underlining Turkish unease over
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee decision earlier this month. The
    Obama administration has said it opposed the resolution, but Ankara
    asserts that it should have done more to prevent the vote. The passage
    in the committee paves the way for a vote in the full House, but US
    officials have said it was unlikely that the measure would make its
    way to the floor.

    To protest the March 4 vote, the government recalled Ambassador to
    the US Namık Tan and put its high-level contacts with the US on hold,
    waiting for more clarity on how Washington plans to act on the matter.

    President Obama is to make an annual statement on April 24, the day
    Armenians say marks the beginning of the genocide campaign against
    their ancestors in eastern Anatolia during World War I. Last year,
    Obama avoided using the word "genocide" while referring to the killings
    in order not to harm ongoing talks between Turkey and Armenia to
    normalize their relations. It is not clear how he will formulate the
    text of the message this year. Government sources have said visits
    at the ministerial level to the US will be suspended until April 24.

    Prime Minister Erdogan, when responding to a question on whether
    he would visit Washington next month, at a press conference late
    on Monday, was elusive. "We had no plans to visit the US, although
    there was an invitation from the US. These are routine invitations. A
    colleague of ours might attend the conference on behalf of Turkey,
    but who this person could be, we haven't decided," he told reporters,
    referring to a Cabinet minister.

    Earlier in the day, government spokesman Cemil Cicek briefly said
    the issue was still under consideration.

    On Tuesday, Energy Minister Taner Yıldız also declined to comment
    on Turkish participation at the Nuclear Security Summit. "We will
    be following developments. We will discuss this issue with the prime
    minister," he told reporters.

    Yıldız, however, said the political tension over the "genocide"
    resolution was unlikely to affect energy cooperation between Turkey
    and the US, saying US oil giant Exxon Mobil was to continue exploring
    for oil in the Black Sea as part of a previous deal with the Turkish
    government to that effect. "I don't think there will be a negative
    impact regarding this project," he said.

    US wants dialogue Meanwhile, a senior US official has expressed regret
    that Turkey recalled its ambassador and called for continued dialogue,
    saying the US highly values its partnership with Turkey in the region.

    US Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg, speaking at a meeting
    at the Washington-based Atlantic Council, said the US valued its
    partnership with Turkey and was looking forward to working with Turkey
    in its process of reconciliation with Armenia, irrespective of what
    differences there may be between Turkey and Congress. "We think we
    have a very strong and constructive engagement with Turkey, and I hope
    the Turkish leadership understands the strong importance we place on
    this and continue to work with us to achieve common objectives."
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