The Turkish prime minister said on Sunday that he had seen that Turkish-U.S. relations had eased.
Turkey's Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkish-U.S. relations had become less rigid, thanks to talks between executives after the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the U.S. House of Representatives adopted a resolution acknowledging the Armenian allegations on the incidents of 1915.
"Our relations are milder now after the U.S. Secretary of State called our Foreign Minister, and we have sent back our ambassador to Washington D.C.," he said at a press conference before flying to the United States.
Erdogan will participate in the two-day summit to be hosted by U.S. President Barack Obama. Almost 50 heads of state and government are expected to attend the summit.
"Such resolutions do not bind us and Turkey's views are obvious," Erdogan said.
Prime Minister said Turkey was still backing its views expressed in a letter sent to former Armenian President Robert Kocharian in 2005.
Turkey thought such issues could not be solved by parliaments, but they should be handled by historical committees, Erdogan also said.
Turkey had recalled its ambassador to the United States Namik Tan after the Foreign Relations Committee of the United States House of Representatives adopted a resolution on March 4 that supported Armenian allegations regarding the incidents of 1915.
Tan returned to Washington D.C. on April 6.
Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols on October 10, 2009 to resume diplomatic relations and open their border crossing.
After years of no diplomatic contacts, Turkish President Abdullah Gul travelled to Yerevan to watch a soccer game between Turkish and Armenian national teams in September 2008.
/Trend/