San Francisco Chronicle

Rift opens with U.S. over fight at protest

- By Kareem Fahim Kareem Fahim is a Washington Post writer.

ISTANBUL — Turkey’s Foreign Ministry lodged a formal protest Monday with the U.S. ambassador to Ankara over what it said were “lapses of security” during a violent confrontat­ion between protesters and Turkish bodyguards during President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s visit to Washington this month.

The summoning of the ambassador, John Bass, sharply escalated a diplomatic rift between Turkey and the United States after the brawl, which prompted outrage in the United States, as well as calls for the prosecutio­n of the Turkish guards and even the expulsion of Turkey’s ambassador to Washington.

American and Turkish officials have provided directly contrastin­g versions of how the violence unfolded. Local police said the Turkish guards savagely attacked a peaceful protest outside the Turkish ambassador’s residence as Erdogan was visiting. The melee, which was recorded by video journalist­s, showed what appeared to be Turkish security guards kicking and choking protesters as D.C. police struggled to contain the unrest. The footage also showed that Erdogan was watching, from a distance, as the fighting raged.

Turkish diplomats have criticized the local police for failing to quell an “unpermitte­d” and “provocativ­e” demonstrat­ion.

The Turkish Foreign Ministry’s statement on Monday went even further, criticizin­g “the inability of U.S. authoritie­s to take sufficient precaution­s at every stage of the official program.”

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