US, Biden face tough task to mend relations with Turkey
WASHINGTON — With suspicions on both sides mounting, the United States is struggling to preserve its wobbly partnership with Turkey as the Turks entertain closer relations with Russia and fume over a U.S.-based cleric blamed for orchestrating last month’s failed coup.
Vice-President Joe Biden arrives Wednesday in the Turkish capital, Ankara, to try to smooth over recent strains. He comes bearing no assurances that the United States will agree to Turkey’s demand that it extradite Fethullah Gulen, who lives in Pennsylvania. Instead, he’ll try to convey that America values Turkey as a key NATO ally amid worrying signs that the U.S. and Turkish approaches to the Syrian conflict may be diverging.
Turkey’s Justice Ministry said its officials opened talks Tuesday with U.S. Justice Department and State Department officials in Ankara ahead of Biden’s arrival.
Tensions between the countries were already bubbling under the surface before the coup attempt July 15 and since have burst into the open. U.S. leaders were incensed when Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused the United States of either supporting or backing the coup. As the U.S. issued denials, Turkish officials complained that Washington was slow to support Turkey’s government at its time of greatest need, even though the U.S. had expressed support for Erdogan during the violence that claimed 270 lives.


