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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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April 8, 2019
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IPT
Exclusive: Turkish Prosecutor's Document Suggests Turkey Spying on U.S.
Soil
by John Rossomando
IPT News
April 8, 2019
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A Turkish
prosecution obtained by the Investigative Project on Terrorism (IPT) could
offer the first public documentation showing Turkish spying on people in
the United States.
Turkey has cited information gathered in the 2017 document in a
terrorism prosecution of people accused of having ties to exiled Turkish
cleric Fethullah Gülen. Gülen, who runs a network of schools, is a
permanent U.S. resident living on a compound in Pennsylvania.
Under Turkey's authoritarian President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the word
"terrorist" has become synonymous with opposition to his regime.
Erdogan even recently called
parliamentarians from Turkey's largest legal Kurdish party
"terrorists."
An IPT source obtained the document using Turkey's
National Judiciary Informatics System (UYAP), which is accessible only to
people authorized by the Turkish Justice Ministry. Its title page bears the
stamp of Hasan Yilmaz, the same
prosecutor who investigated the murder and disappearance of Washington
Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi.
The document bears the stamp of Turkish
prosecutor Hasan Yilmaz.
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"The language and the sources used in the document (Turkish
version) makes it clear to me that this is a government document by a
prosecutor's office in Istanbul," A.Kadir
Yildirim, a fellow for the Middle East at Rice University's Baker
Institute, told the IPT after reviewing it.
This document suggests that Turkey's New York consulate sought information
from human sources about a Balkan American organization, attempting to link
it with the Gülen movement – which the Turkish government calls the
Fethullahist Terrorist Organization (FETO).
The FBI interviewed
several prominent Turkish-American activists in 2016 on suspicion they were
involved in political espionage on Erdogan's behalf, an email to the
Turkish president's son-in-law Berat Albayrak showed.
Turkey has aggressively targeted dissidents abroad and has not tried to
hide it.
"Our relevant units and institutions will continue their operations
in the countries in which FETO operates, whether it be the U.S. or some
other country. Rest assured that they will feel Turkey breathing down their
necks," Erdogan spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said
last September.
He mentioned
Kosovo as an example, where Turkish agents kidnapped Gülen followers and
brought them back to Turkey for trial. "You, who are in Pennsylvania,
will also come," Erdogan vowed
in April 2018 in reference to Gülen.
Turkey's slide toward dictatorship has encouraged the use of evidence
gathered by Turkish spies abroad in prosecutions, experts say.
"The nature of dictatorships is that evidence is really secondary
to a pre-determined verdict but, in this case, it shows Erdogan's sense of
impunity," said American Enterprise Institute (AEI) Turkey scholar
Michael Rubin. "Alas, a decade of diplomatic reticence to condemn
Erdogan for his behavior and to put lipstick on the Turkish pig has
emboldened the Turkish leader. He's taking a page out of the playbook of
Iran, Saddam's Iraq and Gaddaffi's Libya."
Former Turkish National Police counterterrorism official Ahmet Yayla
told the IPT that he saw foreign intelligence used as evidence by Turkish
prosecutors. These indictments were based on intelligence because proper
evidence is lacking, he said. Yayla, an assistant
professor at DeSales University in Pennsylvania focusing on security
and terrorism, left Turkey in 2015 because he was angry with Erdogan's
support for ISIS.
Spying on Alleged Gülenists in the U.S.
Turkey has pressured
the Obama and Trump administrations to extradite Gülen. Erdogan blames
Gülen for the coup attempt, but U.S. authorities say they have yet to see
evidence to support that claim.
Thousands of people accused of being Gülenists have been arrested,
including hundreds
of journalists. Not everyone accused of being a Gülenist is one. Now
Erdogan's vendetta against Gülen and his supporters appears to have reached
American soil, the document shows.
The Turkish Consulate in New York worked
to tie the Federation of Balkan American Associations (FEBA) to the
Gülen Movement. FEBA represents people from the Balkans such as Bosnians
and Albanians, as well as Turks. It conducts educational activities
including a teaching abroad project in Turkey as well as summer camps for
kids.
"Although there is no information that can be used as an indication
for direct association with FETÖ/PDY [Gülen movement] affiliated
organizations in open sources, it is observed that some of the sponsors and
partners of TUSKON's [The Turkish Confederation of Businessmen and
Industrialists] activities are FETÖ/PDY affiliated organizations and this
connection is confirmed by the sources that are in contact with the
Consulate General of New York," the document said.
This use of the word "sources" indicates that the consulate
relied on human intelligence to obtain the information, Yildirim said.
A FEBA board member contacted by the IPT was unaware of any contact from
Turkish operatives or monitoring by them. Still, she asked to remain
anonymous due to her fear of reprisal by the Turkish government. FEBA does
not take a political position on the Turkish government or about Gülen, she
said, although some members may support him.
Intelligence gathered by these "sources" was later used in a
criminal indictment that charged critics in Turkey with terrorism.
Yildirim said the extent of Turkish intelligence gathering on perceived
foes in the United States is unknown, but: "Given the general
political context of the last several years, it is perfectly reasonable to
assume that such practice has become common practice. I believe a similar
operation is underway in Europe where there is a larger Turkish national
population."
Using intelligence reports as evidence is supposed to be illegal under
Turkish statutes, Yayla said, but Erdogan and his supporters have decided
to ignore that.
"Considering that [the] Erdogan government goes after critics'
relatives and family members including children with blatant abuse of
criminal justice system, such profiling and espionage activities abroad
have far-reaching repercussion[s] back in Turkey," said Abdullah
Bozkurt, former editor of the Turkish newspaper Today's Zaman.
Erdogan's Long Arm Extends to Europe and America
Erdogan has shown a disregard for diplomatic protocol in the past. His bodyguards
beat up Kurdish and Armenian protesters outside the Turkish
ambassador's residence during a May 2017 visit to Washington, D.C..
NBA star Enes Kanter recently highlighted
the fear that many Erdogan opponents who live abroad face from Turkish
spies. Kanter refused to travel to London for a game between the New York
Knicks and the Washington Wizards due to his fear of being kidnapped or killed.
Turkish agents have kidnapped
at least 100 dissidents across Europe and brought them back to Turkey.
The pro-government Hurriyet Daily News reported in 2016 that
Turkey's Ministry of Religious Affairs, the Diyanet, conducts
surveillance on dissident Gülenists in 38 countries including Switzerland,
The
Netherlands, Germany,
Norway
and Austria.
This has caused
concern that the Diyanet Center mosque in Lanham, Md., could be used
for the same activity.
FBI agents questioned
leaders of a network of Erdogan-connected organizations in 2016,on
suspicion they were engaged in political espionage. The network included
the Turkish American National
Steering Committee (TASC) and MUSIAD
USA, which is a business association within the ruling Justice and
Development Party (AKP).
Both TASC and MUSIAD USA have lobbied Congress on behalf of Turkish
interests. This includes lobbying on aid
to the Kurds a year ago and against
President Trump's sanctions against Turkey last summer. Neither has
filed a FARA registration.
"[The FBI agents] asked about MUSIAD and TASC," former MUSIAD
USA Executive Director Ibrahim Uyar said in a 2016
email to Erdogan's son-in-law Berat Albayrak. "They are accusing me of
trying to intervene in American politics on behalf of our President and
making secret agents in the name of the Republic of Turkey. They have
studied our work in the last two years and they have questions because of
the report they received," Uyar wrote.
Uyar traveled to Africa with Erdogan last summer and now coordinates the
activities of MUSIAD's branches worldwide.
"There is ample evidence that Turkey, through its proxies, is
conducting illegal espionage on U.S. soil, especially with regards to
Gülenists, Kurds, and political dissidents," Rubin said. "
The Trump administration should expel Turkish diplomats in protest, he
said. Erdogan can't retaliate without l hurting his economy, which already
is teetering.
"Allies do not conduct this sort of espionage on U.S. soil. There
has to be consequence for such action," Rubin said. "It's time to
end the fiction that certain foundations and organizations aren't anything
more than Turkish proxies. If Erdogan is using such groups to bypass FARA
or conduct illegal espionage, it's time that their principles face all
penalties under the law, including for espionage."
Related Topics: John
Rossomando, Turkey,
Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, Fethullah
Gulen, FARA,
Hasan
Yilmaz, A.Kadir
Yildirim, Berat
Albayrak, Ibrahim
Kalin, Michael
Rubin, Ahmet
Yayla, Federation
of Balkan American Associations, Enes
Kanter, Diyanet,
MUSIAD
USA, Abdullah
Bozkurt
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