Turkey is a NATO ally that claims also to be on the same side as the United States in the international fight against terrorism.
Nevertheless, has Turkey — under President Erdogan — become what is known as “a permissive jurisdiction for illicit and terror finance?”
A lawsuit leading to that conclusion has now been filed against a bank, partly owned by the Turkish government, on behalf of an American victim of terrorism and members of his family.
Foreign Podicy host Cliff May is joined by Jonathan Missner, an attorney representing the plaintiffs, in his first interview about this case. Jon is managing partner of Stein Mitchell Beato & Missner LLP and chair of the firm’s Global Practices and Corporate Strategy Groups. He’s also an adjunct professor of law at Georgetown University Law Center.
Akyan Erdemir, a former member of the Turkish parliament, now a senior fellow at FDD, and Jonathan Schanzer, FDD’s senior vice president for research, also join the discussion — focusing on where Turkey is going, and the implications for the United States and Middle East.
Turkey and America: Can This Marriage Be Saved?
Nonproliferation, Biodefense, and National Security
NATO and Its Discontents
Deal or No Deal: Confronting the Islamic Republic of Iran the Reagan Way
Why They Fight
An Israel Briefing
Why America Can’t Be Denmark
Disinformation Wars
“Pivoting” and Other Foreign Policy Delusions
Why MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) Is No Longer Reassuring
Mike Waltz: Warrior Diplomat and Congressman
The Fog of War and Diplomacy
A War in Ukraine, A Battle in Vienna, and Israel on the Edge
Sailor, Soldier, Spy: Three Perspectives on Putin’s War on Ukraine
Vladimir the Terrible
Enemies and Allies, Villains and Heroes
The Army and the Indo-Pacific
Russia and Ukraine: On the Brink of War
The Worst of Times
The Unruly and Not-So-Orderly Rules-based International Order
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