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Turkey’s Erdogan demands U.S. hand over Gulen
He said: “Sooner or later the USA will make a choice”.
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It will be the first visit to the neighboring country by a senior Iranian official since the failed coup attempt in Turkey back on July 15.
Ankara is ready to discuss the possibility of a joint operation with Russian Federation in Syria against the Islamic State, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told NTV television news channel on Thursday.
Turkey has been angered by the Western response, viewing Europe as more concerned about the rights of the plotters than the events themselves and the United States as reluctant to extradite Gulen.
Cavusoglu said however Turkish jets would now actively join in anti-ISIS air raids in Syria in the future, without specifying when.
The newspaper Hurriyet said a further 648 judges and prosecutors had been suspected on Wednesday, bringing to 3,500 members of the judiciary suspended since the coup attempt.
Bulgaria’s deportation to Turkey of a supporter of US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen, whom Ankara blames for last month’s failed coup, sparked an outcry in the European Union member state today.
As they arrived the embassy building, the Turkish Ambassador to Nigeria, Hakan Cakil, was already waiting outside to receive them. Either the coup-plotting terrorist FETO (the Gulenist Terror Organisation) or the democratic country Turkey.
The statement was made in response to speculative press reports regarding NATO’s stance on the foiled coup in Turkey, which left 240 people dead and almost 2,200 wounded.
“Sooner or later the United States of America will make a choice”.
In addition, he said that Turkey has sent “eighty five boxes of files” to Washington to prove Gulen’s alleged role in the failed coup.
Cavusoglu added that Turkey was seeking cooperation with Russian Federation as North Atlantic Treaty Organisation had let Turkey down.
Turkish admiral Mustafa Ugurlu had been on a posting to a North Atlantic Treaty Organisation base in Virginia at the time of the 15 July botched coup and had recently been recalled home by the Turkish government.
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Turkey’s government said the foiled putsch, which left 240 people martyred and almost 2,200 injured, was organized by followers of Gulen, who has lived in a self-imposed exile Pennsylvania since 1999. Early last month, North Atlantic Treaty Organisation leaders including Erdogan had endorsed the alliance’s largest military revamp since the end of the Cold War to counter a more assertive Russian Federation in the fallout from the Ukraine crisis.