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Turkey Gets Clinton Pledge On Genocide Resolution

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  • Turkey Gets Clinton Pledge On Genocide Resolution

    Turkey Gets Clinton Pledge On Genocide Resolution

    Washington Post
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/ article/2010/03/29/AR2010032900618.html
    March 29 2010

    ISTANBUL (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has
    assured Turkey the White House opposes a congressional resolution
    labeling the World War One massacres of Armenians in Turkey as
    genocide, the Turkish Foreign Ministry said Monday.

    The ministry issued the statement after a telephone call between
    Clinton and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu Sunday.

    The United States is keen to smooth over relations with Turkey, NATO's
    only Muslim member, and a key ally in trouble spots from Afghanistan
    to the Middle East.

    Turkey recalled its ambassador in Washington after a U.S. House of
    Representatives committee approved a non-binding resolution on March
    4 calling on President Barack Obama to refer to the killings of as
    many as 1.5 million Armenians almost a century ago as genocide.

    The full House of Representatives is due to consider the resolution,
    although it was unclear whether it would go to a vote or had enough
    support to pass.

    "Secretary Clinton emphasized that the U.S. administration opposes
    both the decision accepted by the committee and the decision reaching
    the general assembly," the statement said.

    Turkey wants to be sure that Obama will not use the term genocide in
    an address scheduled for April 24, and has halted high profile visits
    by officials.

    Davutoglu told Clinton the congressional committee's resolution
    had negatively affected efforts to improved stability in the South
    Caucasus.

    While Turkey and Armenia are trying to normalize relations and open
    their shared border, progress is complicated by hostility between
    Armenia and Turkey's fellow-Muslim ally, Azerbaijan.

    Clinton said U.S. officials hoped Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan would
    attend a summit in Washington next month on nuclear disarmament,
    the foreign ministry statement said.

    Davutoglu said Erdogan would decide in the next few days whether to
    attend the meeting on April 13 and 14. More than 40 world leaders
    are expected at the summit.

    Turkey has offered to use its close ties with Iran in Tehran's dispute
    with the West over its nuclear program, but has indicated it may not
    support a fourth round of U.N. sanctions being prepared by the United
    States and other Western powers.

    More than 20 countries recognize the killings of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks nearly a century ago as genocide. Turkey argues that both Turks
    and Armenians were killed during the chaos of war and the break-up
    of the Ottoman Empire.
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