U.S. Sailors Hit by 'Hood Attack' in Turkey

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

A group of nationalist Turkish youths on Wednesday attacked three visiting U.S. sailors in Istanbul, trying to force sacks on their heads in an assault angrily condemned by the U.S. embassy.

Several dozen members of the nationalist youth group Turkiye Genclik Birligi (Turkish Youth Union/TGB) attacked the sailors in the Eminonu district on the Istanbul waterfront, a popular tourist hub.

They sought to force white sacks onto the heads of the sailors, who were in civilian dress, and chased them across the quayside, shouting "Yankee Go Home" and "Down with U.S. Imperialism".

The use of hoods was a reference to an incident from the 2003 Iraq war that outraged many in Turkey when U.S. forces in northern Iraq arrested a group of Turkish soldiers, forced hoods on their heads and held them for three days.

The incident inflamed nationalist sentiment in Turkey and formed the basis of the smash-hit 2006 film about Turkish agents in Iraq "Valley of the Wolves: Iraq".

The TGB said that the sailors were from the USS Ross destroyer, which was moored in Istanbul after returning from military exercises in the Black Sea.

"We want you to get lost and we are using our right to protest," the group said it told the sailors.

According to NTV television, 12 people were subsequently arrested.

In a statement posted on Twitter, the U.S. embassy in Ankara described the footage of the incident, which was posted on social networks, as "appalling".

"While we respect the right to peaceful protest and freedom of expression, we condemn today's attack in Istanbul," it said.

The embassy said it had "no doubt the vast majority of Turks would join us in rejecting an action that so disrespects Turkey’s reputation for hospitality."

Turkey's refusal to cooperate with the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 caused a full-blown crisis in relations between Washington and Ankara.

But tensions has re-emerged again in recent months over Turkey's wariness of offering full support to the U.S.-led coalition fighting Islamic State (IS) jihadists in Iraq and Syria.

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden is expected in Istanbul on November 21 for talks with Turkish leaders in a visit seen as crucial for smoothing out the current tensions.

The TGB claims to be staunchly loyal to the principles of modern Turkey's founding father Mustafa Kemal Ataturk and also staunchly opposed the ruling Islamic-rooted party co-founded by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

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