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Biden vows 'rock solid' NATO ties as allies slam Trump
By Mike Collier with Mary Sibierski in Warsaw
Riga (AFP) Aug 23, 2016


US confirms Gulen extradition request, but says no link with Turkey coup
Washington (AFP) Aug 23, 2016 - The United States confirmed Tuesday that Turkey had made a "formal" request for the extradition of US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom Ankara blames for last month's coup attempt, but specified the request was not linked to the failed putsch.

Gulen, who has lived in self-exile in the United States since 1999, strongly denies any involvement in the coup attempt.

"We can confirm now that Turkey has requested the extradition of Mr Gulen. But I wouldn't characterize the request as relating to the coup attempt," deputy State Department spokesman Mark Toner told reporters.

"We have received a formal extradition request, just not one pertaining to the coup attempt," said Toner, who did not offer further details on the dossier submitted by Ankara.

For weeks, Turkey has said that it requested Gulen's extradition to face trial in his home country. It has even accused him of running a "parallel state" in Turkey.

Despite constant pressure from Ankara, Washington appeared to be dragging its feet on the issue, saying it had not received a "formal" request and was looking for "evidence" of Gulen's involvement in the failed putsch.

The latest State Department comments come as diplomats and officials from the US Justice Department were due to meet with Turkish authorities about the Gulen case.

Vice President Joe Biden is also expected in Turkey on Wednesday. He will be the highest-ranking US official to visit the NATO ally since the coup attempt.

The controversy swirling around Gulen, 75, has complicated already difficult ties between Washington and Ankara. Turkey has suggested a failure to deliver Gulen would severely damage bilateral relations.

US Vice President Joe Biden promised unwavering commitment to NATO's collective defence Tuesday as he sought to reassure Baltic allies spooked by a resurgent Russia and White House hopeful Donald Trump.

"Let there be no doubt -- America's Article 5 commitment is rock solid and unwavering," Biden said, referring to a cornerstone of NATO that an attack on one member state is considered an attack on all.

Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, sparked ire last month among Baltic and eastern NATO members ruled by Moscow during the Soviet era when he questioned the alliance's key Article 5 collective security guarantee.

"Don't listen to that other fellow -- he knows not of what he speaks. America will never fail to defend our allies. We will respond," Biden said, after talks with the presidents of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania.

"And we want you to know, we want Moscow to know, that we mean what we say."

Tensions between the 28-member NATO and Russia have reached their worst level since the Cold War following Moscow's 2014 annexation of the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine.

Asked in July by the New York Times about the Russian activities that have alarmed Baltic NATO members, Trump said that if Russia attacked them, he would decide whether to come to their aid only after reviewing whether those nations "have fulfilled their obligations to us."

"If they fulfil their obligations to us, the answer is yes," he said.

Biden said Tuesday he doubted whether Trump "even understands" what NATO's Article 5 commitment to collective defence means, while insisting it was America's "sacred honour" to fulfil it.

- Enhanced US presence -

Several of NATO's eastern European leaders have fired back at Trump, with Czech Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka going so far as to say that Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton is better than Trump on security for NATO allies.

"Considering the pre-election statements made by Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, from the point of view of guarantees for the allies, I see more security if Clinton is elected," Sobotka told the Tuesday edition of Czech financial daily Hospodarskie Noviny (HN).

Clinton, a former US secretary of state, offers "a greater guarantee of maintaining trans-Atlantic cooperation," he added.

Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite said Tuesday that Baltic leaders "are sure that no matter what... will be after the elections in the United States, the commitment of this country (the US) to NATO and to Baltic regions, will stay."

Hungary's anti-migrant rightwing Prime Minister Viktor Orban however became the first European leader to endorse the like-minded Trump last month, calling him a "better option" for the bloc than Clinton.

Referring to NATO's July decision to deploy multi-national battalions led by Canada, Germany, Britain and the US in the Baltic states and Poland, Biden said "the concern that the United States is somehow disengaging from the region is simply not true.

"As a matter of fact our presence will be enhanced. The fact is there will be more NATO partners on the Russian border."

Biden travels next to NATO member Turkey for high-level talks with leaders there who have been leaning toward Moscow in the wake of a failed coup attempt in July.

Biden and the Baltic leaders "expressed strong solidarity with the people and democratically-elected leadership of Turkey," in a statement issued following Tuesday talks.

The US vice president also condemned a recent string of deadly terror attacks in eastern Turkey.

mjc-mas/pvh

THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY


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