Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump denounces attack in Egypt, calls again for travel ban, border wall

- BY JILL COLVIN

JUPITER, Fla. — President Donald Trump on Friday denounced the deadly mosque attack in Egypt and reached out to its president, asserting the world must crush terrorists by military means — and the U.S. needs the travel ban that’s tied up in courts.

“Need the WALL, need the BAN!” Trump tweeted before his planned call to Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi. “God bless the people of Egypt.”

At his Florida resort for a long Thanksgivi­ng weekend, Trump spoke by phone with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan “about bringing peace to the mess that I inherited in the Middle East,” he said in a tweet. A Turkish official said Trump agreed the U.S. would no longer arm Syrian Kurdish fighters — a claim not verified by the White House.

Attention then turned to the attack in Egypt, where at least 235 people were killed when Islamic militants attacked a crowded mosque during prayers in the Sinai

Peninsula, setting off explosives and spraying worshipper­s with gunfire.

“The world cannot tolerate terrorism,” Trump tweeted in response. He added, “We must defeat them militarily and discredit the extremist ideology that forms the basis of their existence!”

That attack took place as Trump mixed work and play in sunny Florida, golfing — quickly, he claimed — with pros Tiger Woods and Dustin Johnson, speaking with the foreign leaders and

tweeting briskly.

During the call between U.S. and Turkish leaders, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu claimed, Trump said the United States would no longer supply arms to Syrian Kurdish fighters. Cavusoglu was in Erdogan’s office during the call.

Turkey considers the Kurdish Syrian fighters, known by the initials YPG, to be terrorists because of their affiliatio­n with outlawed Kurdish rebels in Turkey. A U.S. decision to arm the fighters soured relations between the two NATO allies.

“Mr. Trump clearly stated that he had given clear instructio­ns and that the YPG won’t be given arms and that this nonsense should have ended a long time ago,” Cavusoglu said.

The White House did not immediatel­y respond to questions about Cavusoglu’s claims and did not immediatel­y release its own take on the call.

Erdogan’s office said in its summary the two leaders had discussed the Syrian crisis and other regional issues during their phone call Friday, and they also discussed ties between Turkey and the United States.

Their talk came days after Erdogan attended a trilateral meeting with the Russian and Iranian leaders in Sochi, Russia, to promote a peaceful settlement in Syria. Relations between NATO allies Turkey and the United States have soured over a number of issues, including U.S. support to Syrian Kurdish fighters which Ankara considers to be terrorists because of their links to outlawed Kurdish rebels in Turkey.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A SWAT officer sits in a vehicle before President Donald Trump departs the Trump National Golf Club on Friday in Jupiter, Fla.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A SWAT officer sits in a vehicle before President Donald Trump departs the Trump National Golf Club on Friday in Jupiter, Fla.

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