US CEOs warn against Armenia ‘genocide’ bill

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The US aerospace and  defence industry is urging House of Representatives lawmakers  to reject a measure that would call a World War One-era  massacre of Armenians by Turkish forces genocide, warning it  could jeopardize US exports to Turkey.

The chief executives of Lockheed Martin Corp, Boeing Co,  Raytheon Co, United Technologies Corp and Northrop Grumman Corp issued a rare joint letter, warning that passage of the  measure by the House Foreign Affairs Committee could lead to “a  rupture in U.S.-Turkey relations” and put American jobs at  risk.

“Alienating a significant NATO ally and trading partner  would have negative repercussions for US geopolitical  interests and efforts to boost both exports and employments,”  the CEOs warned in a Feb. 26 letter to the committee’s  Democratic chairman, Representative Howard Berman.

They said US defence and aerospace exports to Turkey  exceeded $7 billion in 2009 and were seen reaching a similar  level in 2010, supporting tens of thousands of US jobs.

Industry executives are worried about Turkey’s continued  participation in several big US weapons programmes, including  the Lockheed F-35 fighter, a $1.2 billion deal with Boeing for  14 CH-47 Chinook helicopters, and Patriot missile sales.

Turkey is one of eight international partners working with  the United States on development of the $300 billion F-35  fighter, a program that has already seen some erosion of  overseas amid cost overruns and delays in critical testing.