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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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September 24, 2018
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CAIR
Chief to Meet with Turkish and Iranian Presidents
by John Rossomando • Sep 24, 2018
at 5:13 pm
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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani invited Nihad
Awad, the Council on American-Islamic Relations' (CAIR) executive director,
to meet with them in New York during this week's U.N. General Assembly
meeting.
"It's not about photo ops for me," Awad wrote on Twitter.
"It's about real issues and people's lives. Please engage and tell me
what issues and questions I should raise."
It marks the third straight year Awad meets Erdogan around the UN
session, joining U.S. Council of Muslim Organizations (USCMO)
leaders last year and with two dozen other Islamists in 2016.
"...[It] makes you wonder what Awad gets in return from Erdogan's
government," said exiled Turkish journalist Abdullah Bozkurt, who
noted Erdogan has jailed 60,000 opponents.
Despite Erdogan's increasing authoritarian actions, Awad and his organization have held Erdogan's Turkey out as a beacon of democracy.
While Awad has been warm toward Turkey and Erdogan, his relations with
Iran have been different. He attended a 2009 meeting with then-President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, but skipped similar meetings with Hassan Rouhani in protest of
Iran's support for Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad. He apparently lambasted Rouhani during
a 2016 meeting, blaming Iran for Syrian bloodshed and denouncing Iran for
promoting sectarianism.
Erdogan will be in New York until Thursday. He spoke over the
weekend at several events sponsored by the Turkish American National
Steering Committee (TASC).
His son-in-law, Turkey's Finance Minister Berat Albayrak, joined Erdogan
at a speech he gave Sunday to TASC supporters, the Turkish news website
Haberler.com reported. Hacked
emails from TASC leaders showed they gave Albayrak regular updates
about their work and were interviewed by the FBI on suspicion they were
engaged in political espionage on behalf of Erdogan. One such email
from former TASC co-chairman Ibrahim Uyar to Albayrak
described a July 2016 White House rally against the Turkish coup attempt
that he organized. Awad and other American Islamist leaders participated
in that rally, which also was sponsored by TASC.
Politics is the means for Muslims to convey their demands to decision
makers, Erdogan said in Sunday's speech. That includes Muslims in the
United States.
"American Muslims have an interest in the nearing elections, which
is positive news. At the end of the elections we hope to see many of our
brothers in decision-making positions. We are ready to exchange our
experience as Turkey," Erdogan said.
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