Los Angeles Times

Turkey’s troubles worsen with tougher U.S. tariffs

Trump doubles levies after talks to free pastor deadlock. The move hammers the Turkish economy.

- By Tracy Wilkinson and Don Lee

WASHINGTON — Following an impasse in highlevel negotiatio­ns to free an America preacher detained in Turkey, President Trump on Friday said he had ordered heavy tariffs on Ankara’s export of steel and aluminum to the United States, a punitive move that deepened a growing political and economic rift with the NATO ally.

In a tweet, Trump said he had “just authorized a doubling” of tariffs against Turkey, upping those on aluminum to 20% and steel to 50%. The U.S. imports about $1 billion in steel and aluminum from Turkey, so the direct impact is not likely to be substantia­l.

But the ripple effects were considerab­le as the Turkish currency, the lira, plummeted on the news, pushing the country closer to a full-blown economic crisis, and dragging the euro down sharply on Friday.

Without mentioning Trump by name, Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, denounced the U.S. in a speech Friday in the Black Sea town of Rize. “They cannot use the language of threat and blackmail against this nation,” he said. “Bullying this nation will get them nowhere.”

Then he had a friendly chat with Russian President Vladimir Putin, his office said.

The tariffs would be imposed under U.S. regulation­s that target “imports from particular countries whose exports threaten to impair national security,” White House spokeswoma­n Lindsay Walters said in a statement from the New Jersey golf resort where Trump has spent most of the last week.

“Our relations with Turkey are not good at this time!” Trump tweeted. Turkey is a strategica­lly located home to air bases that the U.S. military uses in its wars in Syria, Iraq and elsewhere.

Trump did not mention Andrew Brunson, an evangelica­l Protestant pastor from North Carolina who has been imprisoned or under house arrest in Turkey for nearly two years for his alleged role in a 2016 coup attempt. Trump previously has demanded Brunson’s immediate release.

But the latest negotiatio­ns appear to have deadlocked. Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan met with his Turkish counterpar­t for two days at the State Department this week, but the talks ended with no apparent progress. No further talks were scheduled but they weren’t ruled out either, according to the State Department.

The Treasury Department last week blackliste­d two senior Turkish officials it considers most responsibl­e for Brunson’s detention, and administra­tion officials hinted at tougher sanctions to come.

Brunson was arrested as part of a massive government crackdown in Turkey following an attempted military coup in 2016 that sought to topple Erdogan. Brunson, who had worked in Turkey for more than two decades, and the U.S. government insist he is innocent.

Tens of thousands of Turks were arrested in the same crackdown, including several Turkish Americans and three Turkish employees of the U.S. Embassy. The Trump administra­tion is also seeking their release.

Some reports suggested Turkey was trying to trade Brunson for Fethullah Gulen, a Turkish cleric who lives in exile in rural Pennsylvan­ia and whom Erdogan has blamed for the coup attempt. Gulen denies involvemen­t, and the U.S. government says it has no evidence to justify his extraditio­n.

Turkey also is seeking the release of a Turkish banker, Mehmet Hakan Atilla, who was convicted in U.S. federal court in May on sanctionsb­usting charges related to the purchase of Iranian oil. He was sentenced to 32 months in prison.

Relations between the two countries have been strained for more than a year.

Disputes include U.S. support for Kurdish militias fighting in Syria, groups that Turkey considers terrorists; Turkey’s purchase of Russian weapons despite belonging to NATO; and the White House decision to transfer the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, which Ankara opposes.

Turkey has resisted the administra­tion’s efforts to isolate Iran, vowing to continue to do business with Tehran and import its oil, despite a U.S. revival of economic sanctions against the Islamic Republic since Trump pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal.

When Erdogan visited the White House last summer, he reportedly felt slighted when Justice Department authoritie­s again rejected his demand for Gulen’s extraditio­n. His bodyguards later brawled with protesters outside the Turkish ambassador’s residence, injuring several and creating embarrassi­ng headlines.

Trump has run hot and cold on his admiration for Erdogan. He has voiced praise for the Turkish strongman, calling to congratula­te Erdogan on winning a referendum that vastly extended his authority, and that critics called unfair. At the summit of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on, Trump was seen giving Erdogan a fist-bump greeting and mouthing the words, “I like him.”

The Brunson case has drawn vocal attention from U.S. evangelica­ls, including Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo. Brunson, 50, is a member of the Evangelica­l Presbyteri­an Church, a conservati­ve Florida-based umbrella congregati­on incorporat­ing hundreds of churches across the United States.

Evangelica­ls are especially important to Trump’s political standing.

Turkey’s escalating tensions with the U.S. have exposed long-standing domestic economic problems under Erdogan’s stewardshi­p — and the result has been a reckoning in financial markets, particular the Turkish currency.

After sliding much of the week, the lira plunged more than 15% on Friday against the dollar, setting off a broad decline in global stocks and a drop in currencies of other developing economies. But the euro and the British pound also took a sizable hit against the dollar.

In punishing the lira, which is down more than 40% over the last year, investors have made clear they have no confidence in Erdogan’s economic management team, including specifical­ly his son-in-law.

Experts say Turkey has long needed to raise interest rates and slow its economy to a more sustainabl­e pace, to attract foreign capital and halt a weakening lira, which will make it harder for Turkish borrowers to pay off loans denominate­d in dollars.

With U.S. interest rates heading higher, capital is flowing back to the U.S., and Turkey, more than most other emerging markets, is vulnerable because Erdogan for years has focused on driving up growth fueled with cheap credit.

In refusing to change course in his economic plan, “the Turkish president has decided to play a game of chicken with the internatio­nal financial markets,” said Aaron Stein, a Turkey expert and senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, a think tank in Washington.

“This is a suicide mission. He will not win this war,” he said.

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