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Attack on US sailors highlights state of US-Turkish ties

US officials condemn the Istanbul attack on three US sailors as "ugly and disturbing," and say it is “a great discredit upon the Turks and the Turkish reputation for hospitality.”
U.S. sailors stand on board as guided-missile destroyer USS Ross leaves from the port in Istanbul November 13, 2014. A group of Turkish ultra-nationalists attacked three U.S. sailors on a crowded street in Istanbul on Wednesday, shouting "Yankee go home" and trying to pull hoods over their heads in an assault condemned by the United States. The attackers' actions were an apparent reference to an incident in Iraq in July 2003, when U.S. forces detained a Turkish special forces unit, leading its members away

The Nov. 12 attack by a group of Turkish nationalist youth in Istanbul on three US sailors on shore leave from the USS Ross poses a new test for Ankara and Washington, whose ties are already strained over developments in Syria.

Diplomats are trying to limit the damage, but the leniency shown to the youth by Turkish authorities and the lack of a strong condemnation by the government, apart from a brief statement by the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, is said to have increased the anger on the US side.

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