ANKARA, Turkey - Turkey has suspended military relations with France in a 
dispute over whether the mass killings of Armenians early in the last century 
amounted to genocide, a top army commander said Wednesday. 
The move was the latest backlash against French legislation that, if approved 
by the Senate and president, would criminalize denial that the killings of 
Armenians in Turkey were genocide. 
 
 
 |  Turkey's Land Force Commander Gen. Ilker Bagbug waits outside 
 his headquarters for a ceremony in Ankara in this Oct. 27, 2006 file 
 photo. [AP]
 
 
 | 
"Relations with France in the 
military field have been suspended," Gen. Ilker Basbug said in Ankara, according 
to state-owned Anatolia news agency.
France's Foreign Ministry and Defense Ministry had no immediate comment. 
France and Turkey are both NATO members, and Turkey has been a buyer of 
French-made weaponry. The two countries also have participated in military 
exercises together, and have sent troops to serve in the international 
peacekeeping force in Lebanon. 
But the Turkish military also has blacklisted several French firms in the 
past in similar disputes over the mass killings of Armenians. 
Basbug, commander of land forces, disclosed the suspension of military ties 
with France in comments to reporters at a reception in Ankara, the Anatolia news 
agency reported. The French bill still needs approval from the Senate and 
President Jacques Chirac to become law. 
Asked whether any military missions between the two nations had been 
canceled, Basbug said: "There are no high-level visits between the two 
countries." 
Turkey sees the French bill as a hostile, anti-Turkish move, and has warned 
that the lawmakers' vote has already damaged Turkish-French relations. 
Turkey vehemently denies that it committed genocide against Armenians, though 
many nations have classified the killings as such. 
The United Nation's 1948 Genocide Convention makes genocide a crime, and 
defines it as killing or injuring people "with intent to destroy, in whole or in 
part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group." 
Turkey acknowledges that large numbers of Armenians died in mass expulsions 
and fighting, but says the number of dead is exaggerated and that most were 
killed in interethnic violence that erupted as the Ottoman Empire collapsed. 
Armenians and many nations say some 1.5 million Armenians were killed in a 
genocidal campaign devised and executed by Turkish leaders. 
The European Union and European media have criticized the French bill, saying 
it does not respect the principle of free expression and does not promote 
dialogue with Turkey, a hopeful EU candidate. 
The United States also criticized the French bill, saying that it gets in the 
way of reconciling the Turks and Armenians. 
The Armenian issue is one of the most divisive and emotional in Turkey. Those 
who classify the killings as genocide are often accused of 
treason.