Trump, Erdogan commit to cooperate
Turkish leader cordial despite U.S. proposal to arm Kurds
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Tuesday pledged continued support for Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan, highlighting the importance of the U.S.-Turkish alliance despite mounting tensions over Washington’s support for Kurdish rebels in Syria.
Speaking alongside Erdogan at the White House, Trump said Turkey and the United States would act together against extremist groups including the Islamic State. “Again, we seek to face this threat together,” he told reporters.
Trump welcomed Erdogan, fresh off a narrow electoral victory that granted him wideranging new powers, to Washington just a week after the Pentagon announced a plan to directly arm Kurdish militiamen in Syria for the first time.
While Erdogan’s government had long warned U.S. officials against expanding its support for the People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia, empowering a group Turkey sees as an existential threat, the warm public remarks from both leaders reflect the NATO allies’ need to hold together a key partnership at a time of intense strain.
Aaron Stein, a Turkey scholar at the Atlantic Council, said the modest goals for Erdogan’s two-day visit reflected the constraints of a relationship that has generated friction on both sides but that both nations cannot afford to jettison.
It was “mission accomplished, if your expectations are that you want people who are smiling in the photographs,” he said.
For the United States, Turkey has been a key ally in the Middle East.
Most recently, the use of Turkish military facilities has been critical in its campaign against the Islamic State in Syria. For Ankara, the backing of NATO’s most powerful member has been an important boost as Turkey has asserted itself on the world stage.
In a reflection of those mixed sentiments, Erdogan heaped praise on his host — saying Trump had presided over a “legendary triumph” following last year’s elections — but reiterated his objections to the U.S. partnership with the YPG.
“We should never allow those groups to manipulate the religious structure and the ethnic structure of the region, making terrorism as a pretext or an excuse,” he said. Turkey considers both the YPG and the Democratic Union party (PYD), the political wing of the same organization, to be an extension of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), a Turkish group that both Ankara and Washington have labeled a terrorist movement.
“Taking YPG and PYD into consideration in the region will never be accepted and it is going to be against a global agreement that we have reached,” Erdogan said.
While U.S. military officials have acknowledged Turkey’s concerns, they say they have little choice in backing the YPG, the most effective fighting force they have been able to recruit in their bid to dislodge the Islamic State from Raqqa, the Syrian city that is the militants’ de facto capital.
Erdogan also made reference to another of the issues creating friction in U.S.-Turkish ties: Fethullah Gulen, the Turkish cleric who lives in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania, whom Erdogan has accused of plotting a failed coup attempt last July.
Turkish officials have repeatedly asked the United States to extradite Gulen, who oversees a vast educational and religious network in Turkey, over his suspected involvement in that episode.
So far, both the Obama and Trump administrations have resisted doing so, saying Gulen’s fate is a matter for the courts rather than political authorities.
In an opinion piece published in The Washington Post on Tuesday, Gulen denied any involvement in the coup.