BUSH ADMINISTRATION TO REASSURE TURKEY OF ITS OPPOSITION TO PROPOSED GENOCIDE RESOLUTION
Desmond Butler
AP Worldstream
Feb 06, 2007
U.S. officials will reassure the Turkish foreign minister, currently
visiting Washington, that they will try to quash a proposed resolution
in Congress condemning as genocide the early 20th century killings
of Armenians.
In talks with Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, U.S. officials also will
discuss Turkish worries that the United States is not doing enough
to prevent Kurdish rebels from operating in Northern Iraq.
The meetings come at a tense moment for relations between the United
States and Turkey, a moderate Muslim democracy and NATO ally crucial
to U.S. operations in Iraq.
President George W. Bush’s administration is alarmed that the
suggested congressional resolution could disrupt efforts to repair
strains stemming from perceptions in Ankara that regional instability
caused by the U.S.-led war in Iraq have harmed Turkish interests.
The administration has opposed previous attempts by members of Congress
to pass resolutions recognizing the 1915-1919 killings in Anatolia of
up to 1.5 million Armenians as an organized genocide. A resolution
introduced in the House of Representatives in January is thought to
stand a much better chance of passing a floor vote.
State Department officials say the administration will work with
members of Congress to head off the resolution.
"A congressional resolution would be a tremendous blow to our bilateral
relationship," said U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew
J. Bryza.
"We are working harder than usual."
Turkey has adamantly denied claims by scholars that its predecessor
state, the Ottoman government, caused the Armenian deaths in a
genocide. The Turkish government has said the toll is wildly inflated,
and Armenians were killed or displaced in civil unrest during the
disarray surrounding the empire’s collapse.
In meetings with U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley, Gul is expected to press
the administration to block the resolution.
But Bush will have to persuade the new Democratic-controlled
congress, which does not need presidential approval for such a
resolution. Members behind the proposed bill have said they expect
a push by the administration and lobbyists working for the Turkish
government to keep the resolution from a full vote by the House.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who will decide whether to offer the bill
for a full vote if, as expected, it is approved by the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, has expressed support.
Gul also is likely to discuss with U.S. officials the question of
Kurdish rebels from Turkey using Iraq as a springboard for attacks
on Turkish territory.
Turkey has been unhappy with the level of cooperation in rooting out
militants from the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, holed up in the
Kurdish region of northern Iraq.
Ret. Gen. Joseph Ralston, a former NATO supreme allied commander,
has been coordinating U.S. efforts for countering the PKK.
"General Ralston is working to decrease those tensions on both sides
of the border between the Iraqis and the Turkish," State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters Monday.
"We are engaging in diplomacy so that you don’t end up with an armed
confrontation in northern Iraq. I don’t think anybody really wants
to see that."