Market: Thursday, 04 August 2016
Mr. Norara
US senior military officers earlier this week sought to re-establish relations with Turkey, which were furious over the Western response of the NATO alliance to the US coup and US reluctance to hand over a Turkish clerk to a coup d'etat.
The unsuccessful coup on July 15, 2016, which left 230 people dead and thousands injured, has wreaked havoc between Andhra Pradesh and the Allies.
Presidents of Turkey, Yiwu Erdogan, and Turkish nationals are furious because the United States and European countries have criticized the crackdown by the Turkish government after the coup. Turkey is a key ally of US-led NATO in the fight against the Islamic State and is also a venue for stopping the influx of illegal immigrants to Europe.
Both the president and the Turkish people have accused Western leaders of growing fears of a coup in Turkey rather than a serious threat to a NATO member. More than 60,000 people in the military, civilian officials and teachers have been detained, suspended from work, or under investigation, raising grave concerns that Mr Ozone is taking steps to eliminate all dissidents in the country. Turkish Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told General Admiral Joseph Dunford, the US Army Chief of Staff General Staff at a meeting in Ankara, "It is important that the United States, our friends and allies show a clear and clear stance against the terrorist coup in Turkey."
US President Dunford, the chief US diplomat, condemned the unsuccessful coup d'état in Turkey and said his visit was to show solidarity and that the US would support democracy in Turkey.
Earlier on Monday, about 150 demonstrators marched to the US embassy in Ankara to protest Dunford's visit, citing "the Dunford coup d'état initiative immediately leave Turkey." There was a banner saying, "Dunford goes home and sends us Fethullah," referring to Turkish chaplain Fethullah Gullen, who has a network of supporters in the military and state institutions that Mr. Owen Gandhi has accused as an outsider for a coup.
The 75-year-old cleric, who was deported himself in Pennsylvania, United States, since 1999, dismissed his involvement in the coup. US President Barack Obama said Washington would extradite the clerk unless Turkey provides concrete evidence of the involvement of the clergy.
General Dunford met with Turkish counterparts and US military personnel stationed at the Incirlik Air Force Base in southern Turkey, using US-led coalition forces to fight the Islamic State.
In the post-crackdown of the Turkish government, about 40 percent of rebels and rebels have been dismissed, with officials claiming that the death sentence will be re-used, scare the West for a stinging blow to Mr Erdogan's iron fist.
Turkey's two main opposition parties and opposition parties are in Washington and on Monday visited the US Justice Department in a week-long visit to convince US officials to support extradition of Gullen. The head of the Turkish Delegation, said: "Turkey will send the United States essential evidence within a week that Gullen has ordered the coup. According to DrAhor, these testimonies are more recent than the pre-Turkish government sent to the US Justice Department, dated before July 15, and included testimonies and messages that were intercepted by the hostages in detention in Turkey. "Through the message and by secret contact between them, the Turkish government's intelligence team really caught up with many evidence that the Gullen cleric was directly involved in the unsuccessful coup," he said.
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