Turkey and the U.S. plunged into a deepening diplomatic tug of war after Washington hit two Turkish ministers with sanctions over their role in the detainment of a U.S. pastor, sparking a threat from Ankara for retaliation.
Turkey is drawing up retaliatory measures after Washington slapped sanctions on two Turkish ministers in one of the biggest crises between the two NATO allies in recent years.
Tensions have soared over Turkey’s detention on terror charges of American Pastor Andrew Brunson, who was first held in October 2016 and was moved to house arrest last week.
The sanctions targeting Justice Minister Abdulhamit Gul and Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu freeze any property or assets on the U.S. soil held by the two ministers and bar U.S. citizens from doing business with them.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders told journalists that both ministers had “played leading roles in the arrest and detention of Pastor Brunson” who led a Protestant church in the Aegean city of Izmir.
The U.S. Treasury implemented the sanctions under the 2016 Global Magnitsky Act named after Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who died in a Moscow jail, and which allows the U.S. to sanction foreign officials implicated in rights abuses.
The Turkish foreign ministry warned that the move “will greatly damage constructive efforts” to solve outstanding issues and told Washington it would retaliate.
“Without delay, there will be a response to this aggressive attitude that will not serve any purpose,” it said.
Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, who is set to meet US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in the next few days, also warned that the move “will not go without response.”
Hours before the sanctions were announced, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Washington of showing an “evangelist, Zionist mentality.”
The standoff appears to be one of the most serious crises between Turkey and the United States in modern history, along with the rows over the 1974 Turkish intervention in Cyprus and the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
“A scandalous decision from Washington,” said the headline in the pro-government Hurriyet daily. “A historic rupture,” added the opposition Cumhuriyet.
In a rare show of unity by Turkey’s parliament, two opposition parties joined Erdogan’s ruling party and its main ally by agreeing a joint statement opposing the sanctions.
The row over Brunson escalated last week when U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, like the pastor an evangelical Christian, said Turkey would face “significant sanctions” if this “innocent man of faith” was not freed.
His language was immediately echoed by President Donald J. Trump, who had enjoyed a relatively warm relationship with Erdogan and was even reported to have “fist-bumped” the Turkish president at a NATO summit last month.
The U.S. media reported there had been a deal with Turkey to free Brunson after Washington’s ally Israel released a Turkish woman held on terror charges. But Turkish officials have rubbished the claims.
The senior U.S. general in Europe, Curtis Scaparrotti, was on Thursday holding talks with Turkish military officials in Ankara but there was no indication the Brunson case would be raised.
The court trying Brunson has repeatedly refused to allow him to go free. The next hearing is on Oct. 12 with the pastor facing 35 years in jail if convicted.
He is accused of acting on behalf of two groups deemed by Turkey to be terrorist organizations — the movement led by U.S.-based Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen who Ankara says was behind the 2016 coup bid and the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).
The row over Brunson is just one of a number of disputes which have buried any hope of a warming of ties under the Trump presidency.
Ankara and Washington are at odds over American support for a Kurdish militia in Syria and the United States is extremely wary over Turkey’s growing cooperation with Russia and its deal to buy Russian air defense systems.
Two Turkish employees of U.S. consulates in Turkey are also currently in jail on terror charges and another is under house arrest, while several Americans have been caught up in the crackdown that followed the failed coup.
Turkey is meanwhile furious the United States has failed to extradite Gulen, who lives in rural Pennsylvania, to face trial over the coup bid.
Soylu tweeted that the only thing Turkey wanted in the United States was Gulen’s group, vowing “we won’t leave that there, we will get it!”
Gul dismissed the sanctions, saying: “I have neither a tree planted nor one penny in the U.S. or any other country outside of Turkey.”
The sanctions rattled financial markets with the Turkish lira hitting 5 to the U.S. dollar for the first time in history. The currency has lost four percent against the dollar in the last week alone.
US Imposes Sanctions on Turkey’s Justice, Interior Ministers Over Detained Pastor
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