Turkey’s man in Washington
Re “Trump’s foreign policy plan: Just wing it,” Opinion, Oct. 15
Jonah Goldberg glibly concludes that President Trump was “simply winging it” when he greenlighted Turkey’s invasion of northern Syria and betrayed our Kurdish allies.
Trump, in fact, has consistently aligned our foreign policy with Russian and Turkish interests. Lest we forget, Trump’s first national security advisor, Michael Flynn, was an unregistered paid agent for Turkey.
Moreover, it has been reported that, in 2017, Trump requested then-Secretary of State Rex Tillerson to pressure the Justice Department to dismiss pending federal criminal charges against a Turkish national with close ties to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The defendant was accused of laundering billions of dollars in an effort to evade sanctions over Iran’s nuclear program.
Tillerson reportedly refused Trump’s request, telling then-Chief of Staff John F. Kelly it was “illegal.”
This incident clearly foreshadowed Trump’s recent capitulation to Turkey, which has strengthened Russia’s hand in Syria. Mark E. Kalmansohn
Santa Monica ::
A century ago, World War I was to be the “war to end all wars.” It did not turn out that way.
It’s time for a change, and it seems our president would rather wage economic wars using sanctions as our weapon. It could be more effective and produce far fewer deaths and injuries.
Perhaps Trump is onto something. George Epstein
Los Angeles ::
Trump takes a phone call from his friend Erdogan and proceeds to initiate a new human rights catastrophe against our very own allies. And now, his go-to solution in his attempt to placate those who are outraged is sanctions.
He tosses out sanctions as if they were paper towels in Puerto Rico, as if they were superlatives he applies to himself. A stable genius, indeed. Nancy Kreile
Bonsall, Calif.