Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

U.S., Turkey dispute incident in D.C. as ambassador summoned

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ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey summoned the American ambassador on Monday to protest what it called “aggressive and unprofessi­onal actions” by American security personnel against Turkish bodyguards during a violent incident last week in Washington. The U.S. ambassador told Turkey’s government its guards violated U.S. laws, a senior U.S. official said.

Turkey’s action appeared to represent retaliatio­n for the forceful U.S. criticism of the Turkish guards’ behavior in the American capital, where they accompanie­d President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on his visit. The U.S. summoned Turkey’s U.S. ambassador last week after the Turkish security officers were seen hitting and kicking protesters outside the Turkish ambassador’s residence; one video shared on social media even showed Erdogan watching the melee.

Turkey didn’t specify the actions by U.S. security officials it deemed inappropri­ate. Video from the scene had showed U.S. police struggling to protect protesters, and two Turkish bodyguards were briefly detained after the incident. They were then set free and returned to Turkey.

In the meeting with Turkey’s Foreign Ministry in Ankara, U.S. Ambassador John Bass said the bodyguards’ behavior contradict­ed U.S. laws and protected speech and assembly rights, according to a senior U.S. State Department official.

Two senators who oversee the U.S. foreign aid budget added to the pressure with a letter to Turkey’s ambassador.

Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Patrick Leahy D-Vt., said in a letter released Monday that there could be “potential implicatio­ns for assistance to Turkey” if the unseemly incident isn’t taken seriously by Ankara.

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