Turkey's Ambassador to Washington Serdar Kılıç on Friday disputed a Washington Post op-ed that accused the Trump administration of "enabling" Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Writing in the same paper two weeks after columnist David Ignatius, Kılıç said the piece contained "groundless and irrational allegations and ignored Turkey's contributions to the fight against terrorism, to the NATO alliance and to regional security."
"Mr. Ignatius claimed that Turkey is pushing 'Islamist fundamentalism.' That is false and misleading," the ambassador wrote in the article titled "Turkey fights, not fosters, 'Islamist fundamentalism'".
"We were among the first to recognize Daesh, also known as the Islamic State, and al-Nusra as terrorist organizations. It is baseless and cynical to claim that Turkey did anything other than fight Daesh terrorists, who consider Turkey an archenemy of their distorted worldview and claimed the most innocent lives outside of Syria and Iraq — in Turkey," he added.
"Mr. Ignatius praised so-called promoters of moderation, although the same people murdered one of the genuine moderate voices in the Islamic world, Jamal Khashoggi," said Kılıç.
Ignatius accused Turkey of being "the elephant in the room" on matters of US foreign policy in his opinion piece, saying Erdoğan "embraces terrorists from Hamas," and threatens US allies.
"Yet, somehow, he gets away with it," wrote Ignatius.
Kılıç maintained that Turkish forces killed or captured more than 4,000 Daesh terrorists in Syria, citing a recent Pentagon inspector general report that, he said, determined Turkish "operations have impacted the group's 'ability to smuggle fighters, funds and supplies.'"
"One may as well ask the United States to prove its value to Turkey by stopping its political, economic and military support for the Syrian branch of the PKK, a terrorist organization that has killed 40,000 Turkish citizens of all ethnicities," Kilic wrote.
"As a proud NATO member during these unprecedented times, Turkey will continue to stand guard at the front lines to confront future threats to our collective security," he concluded.