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Ottoman Empire–United States relations

The relations between the Ottoman Empire and the United States have a long history having its roots even before the American independence since there was a actually a running trade between these two regions.[1] After the American independence in 1776, the first relations between these two countries started through the contact between the American merchants, statesmen and lastly the Navy and North African countries (under the rule of the Ottomans at that time)[2] and with the Ottoman Empire after 1780.[how?][3]

Ottoman–American relations

Ottoman Empire

United States
Diplomatic mission
Embassy of the Ottoman Empire, Washington D.C.Embassy of the United States, Constantinople (now Istanbul)

History of relations edit

American tribute to the Ottoman Empire edit

On September 5, 1795,[4] Joseph Donaldson, Junior, appointed by then 1st Minister of US to Portugal David Humphreys, signed the Treaty of Algiers with Hassan Bashaw, Dey of Algiers.[5] According to this treaty, the USA would pay 642,000 gold one-time and 12,000 Ottoman gold ($21,600 dollars) per year in exchange for the extradition of prisoners in Algeria and the lack of touching any ship carrying the US banner both in the Atlantic Ocean and in the Mediterranean. It is the only U.S. document in its history to acknowledge the payment of taxes to a foreign state, as well as the only treaty in a foreign language in more than two centuries of history. The USA remained loyal to this 22-article treaty until 1818.[6]

However, the first contact between the United States and the Ottoman central government took place when Captain William Bainbridge of the USS George Washington of the American Navy had to sail to Istanbul in 1800 upon being compelled by the Dey of Algiers to deliver the Dey's gifts and envoy to the Ottoman Sultan and Bainbridge arrive in Istanbul on November 9, 1800, marking the first direct encounter of the United States and Ottoman government.[1]

US Barbary Wars edit

In the early 19th century, the US fought the Barbary Wars against the Barbary states, which were under Ottoman suzerainty.

In 1825, during the Greek War of Independence and Greek civil wars of 1823-1825, the U.S. Navy conducted anti-piracy operations in the Aegean Sea. Greece and the Aegean were controlled by the Ottomans until Greece achieved independence in 1829. The first draft of the Monroe Doctrine, written in 1823, included a passage praising the Greek revolutionaries, though the passage was ultimately removed.[7]

In 1831 the U.S. sent its first formally approved envoy to the Ottoman Empire, David Porter.[8] The empire and the U.S. at that point had their representatives at the "Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary" level.[9] Sinan Kuneralp, author of "Ottoman Diplomatic and Consular Personnel in the United States of America, 1867–1917," wrote that the empire initially apparently lacked "any sensible justification" to open a mission stateside due to the relative distance between the countries.[8] Wasti wrote that "there was no real rush on the Ottoman side to send diplomatic envoys to Washington, DC".[9]

The first official Ottoman government visit to the U.S., lasting for six months in 1850, was that of Emin Bey, who toured shipyards there.[10] Two Ottoman officials, one being Edouard Blak Bey, who sensed the rise of the United States, unsuccessfully advocated for installing a mission in the U.S. during the early 1850s.[8] The first Ottoman honorary consulate in the U.S. opened in May 1858.[11]

In 1866 Ottoman foreign minister Mehmed Emin Âli Pasha declined to start a legation to the U.S. that year, after reviewing a proposal by Ambassador to France of the Ottoman Empire Safvet Pasha. However the ministry changed its mind after the leaders there perceived the reports of the Cretan revolt (1866–1869) from the US consul W.J. Stillman and other American reports to be misleading and decided they needed to present a counter-view. The empire sent its first permanent envoy to the U.S. in 1867, creating the Ottoman Legation in Washington, DC. Since the empire itself began establishing its diplomatic missions in the 1830s and due to the about three decade gap between the respective legations being established, Kuneralp wrote that the Ottomans created their U.S. mission "comparatively late".[8]

Blak was the first envoy to Washington. Kuneralp wrote that the Washington posting was not considered important to the Ottoman government, which is why some officials refused the posting and those considered promising were turned away from it. He cited the cases of then-minister to Florence Rüstem Bey and Osman Nizami Pasha, who declined in 1867 and 1912, respectively.[12] Nine envoys headed the legation beginning in 1877 and prior to full embassy status,[13] and there were a total of 13 envoys/ambassadors in the position.[12]

Mustafa Shekib Bey, in 1904, recommended that the Ottomans appoint Levantine Armand Guys as the first commercial attaché, arguing that commercial relations had increased.[14]

In 1906 the U.S. upgraded its representation in Constantinople to the embassy level.[9]

The most important aspect of American diplomacy in the late 19th century, down to 1914, involved protection of the hundreds of American Protestant missionaries to the Ottoman Empire.[15][16]

Armenian issues edit

Abdul Hamid II disliked it when the Americans pleaded for help for Armenians. As a result, he terminated the credentials of envoy Mustafa Shekib, and chose not to upgrade the mission to embassy status. Shekib therefore was unable to present his credentials to the President. Shekib slept in the daytime, and so his staff dealt with U.S. officials. Kuneralp stated that therefore "Things were eased out".[17]

Moro rebellion in the Philippines edit

In 1899, John Hay, the American Secretary of State, asked the Jewish American ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, Oscar Straus to request Sultan Abdul Hamid II to write a letter to the Moro Sulu Muslims of the Sulu Sultanate in the Philippines telling them to submit to American suzerainty and American military rule (see Philippine–American War). The Sultan obliged and wrote the letter, which was sent to Sulu via Mecca; two Sulu chiefs delivered it to Sulu and it was successful since the "Sulu Mohammedans... refused to join the insurrectionists and had placed themselves under the control of our army, thereby recognizing American sovereignty."[18]

Abdul Hamid used his position as caliph to order the Sulu Sultan not to resist and not fight the invading Americans.[19] President McKinley did not mention the Ottoman role in the pacification of the Sulu Moros in his address to the first session of the 56th Congress in December 1899 since the agreement with the Sultan of Sulu was not submitted to the Senate until December 18.[20] Despite Sulu's "pan-Islamic" ideology, he readily acceded to Straus' request to avoid hostilities between the West and Muslims.[21] The Sulu sultan was persuaded by the Ottoman Sultan.[22]

John P. Finley wrote that,

"After due consideration of these facts, the Sultan, as Caliph caused a message to be sent to the Mohammedans of the Philippine Islands forbidding them to enter into any hostilities against the Americans, inasmuch as no interference with their religion would be allowed under American rule. As the Moros have never asked more than that, it is not surprising, that they refused all overtures made, by Aguinaldo's agents, at the time of the Filipino insurrection. President McKinley sent a personal letter of thanks to Mr. Straus for the excellent work he had done, and said, its accomplishment had saved the United States at least twenty thousand troops in the field. If the reader will pause to consider what this means in men and also the millions in money, he will appreciate this wonderful piece of diplomacy, in averting a holy war."[23][24][25]

The Muslim peoples obeyed the order.[26]

In 1904, the Moro Rebellion then broke out between the Americans and Moro Muslims.

Young Turk Revolution edit

The Young Turk Revolution removed Abdul Hamid II from power in 1908, and officials more favorable to the U.S. replaced him.[17] The Ottoman Legation in Washington was designated as an embassy in 1909,[9] and given the second class ranking; the Ottoman Empire at the time ranked its embassies by importance.[27]

During the Presidency of William Howard Taft, an American strategy was to become involved in business transactions rather than military confrontations, a policy known as Dollar Diplomacy. It failed with respect to the Ottoman Empire because of opposition from US ambassador Oscar Straus and to Turkish vacillation under pressure from the entrenched European powers who did not wish to see American competition. American trade remained a minor factor.[28]

World War I and the Armenian genocide edit

Henry Morgenthau, Sr. was the U.S. Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire during World War I until 1916. Morgenthau criticized the ruling Three Pashas for the Armenian genocide and sought to get help for the Armenians.[29] Jesse B. Jackson, consul in Aleppo, also assisted Armenians.

Morgenthau's replacement Abram Isaac Elkus, served in 1916–1917.

The Ottomans severed diplomatic relations with the United States on April 20, 1917, after the United States had declared war against Germany on April 4, 1917. The United States never declared war on the Ottoman Empire.[30]

On January 28, 1919,[31] Mark Lambert Bristol began serving as the High Commissioner for Turkey. He served in this role through the end of the Ottoman Empire and the beginning of the Republic of Turkey, the Ottoman Empire's successor state.[32] Thomas A. Bryson of West Georgia College wrote that in 1919 "the United States enjoyed a benevolent reputation in Turkey" due to missionary work done by Americans and because the United States did not declare war on the empire.[33] He also stated that Bristol had "built up a large deposit of Turkish good will for the United States".[34]

Bristol's role ended in 1927,[32] when normal diplomatic relations were established with Turkey.[30]

Diplomatic missions edit

U.S. diplomatic missions in the empire included:

  • Constantinople (Istanbul) – Legation/Embassy
  • Aleppo[36]
  • Beirut[36]
  • Brusa[36] (Bursa)
  • Harput/Kharpert (now in Elazığ)
    • Started from January 1, 1901 with Dr. Thomas H. Norton as the consul;[37] he had no previous experience in international relations, as the U.S. was just recently establishing its diplomatic network.[38] The consulate was established to assist missionaries. The Ottoman Ministry of Internal Security gave him a teskireh travel permit, but the Ottoman Ministry of Foreign Affairs initially refused to recognize the consulate.[37] The building had three stories, a wall, and a garden with mulberry trees. Leslie A. Davis became consul of Harpoot in 1914; Davis stated that this mission was "one of the most remote and inaccessible in the world".[39] Davis observed the Armenian genocide.[40] Davis hid about 80 Armenians in the consulate grounds. His term ended with the cessation of Ottoman-U.S. relations in 1917.[39]
  • Jerusalem[36]
  • Mersina[36] (Mersin)
  • Samsun[36]
  • Smyrna (now İzmir)[36]

Ottoman diplomatic missions to the U.S. included:

  • Washington, DC (Embassy) – Classified as a "second class embassy".[27]
  • New York City (Consulate-General)
    • Established after the 1880s to monitor anti-Ottoman activity. New York City, previously served by an honorary consulate, had received increased immigration from the empire. Ottoman envoy Alexandros Mavrogenis had advocated for a full consulate-general and afterwards, on the grounds of New York having more diplomatic importance to the empire than Washington, DC, asked the Ottoman government for a vice consul in New York. The consuls in New York began to squabble for power with the Washington consuls.[41] Kuneralp wrote that the conflict between New York City consul general Refet Bey and his respective Washington envoy, Yusuf Ziya Pasha, "took almost epical dimensions."[42]
  • Boston (Consulate-General)

Honorary Ottoman consulates in the U.S.:

  • Baltimore
    • William Grange served as honorary consul, selected by Blak.[41]
  • Boston (later replaced with a consulate-general)
    • Joseph Yazidiji, an Ottoman citizen, was an honorary consul.[41]
  • Chicago[41]
  • New Orleans
    • J. O. Nixon was honorary consul, selected by Blak.[41]
  • New York City[41] (later replaced with a consulate-general)
  • Philadelphia[41]
  • San Francisco[41]
  • Washington DC/Baltimore (later replaced with a legation/embassy)
    • George Porter became the honorary consul for Washington, DC and Baltimore in May 1858.[41]

Ottoman ministers and ambassadors to the U.S. edit

The Ottoman government chose to continue the mission with a charge, Hüseyin Avni Bey, after World War I began, and this appointment ended with the cutoff of diplomatic relations on April 20, 1917.[43][44]

Kuneralp stated that these officials were "interesting figures" but that there was not "a Wellington Koo" among them and "they did not shine in their diplomatic careers", as the Ottoman government did not view this post to be important.[12] He also stated that Madame Bey, wife of first secretary Sıtkı Bey, due to her participation in American social life, was actually the most well-known person in the Ottoman diplomatic community within the US.[43]

American ministers and ambassadors to the Ottoman Empire edit

Chargé d'Affaires:

Minister Resident:

Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary:

Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary:

High Commissioner for Turkey:

See also edit

Books about the relations:

Relations between the United States and countries once a part of the empire.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Erhan, Çağrı (2015). Türk-Amerikan İlişkilerinin Tarihsel Kökenleri (in Turkish) (2nd ed.). Ankara: İmge Kitabevi. pp. 41–42.
  2. ^ Lippe, John M. Vander (1997). ""The Terrible Turk": The Formulation and Perpetuation of a Stereotype in American Foreign Policy". American Foreign Policy. 17: 39–57 – via Cambridge.
  3. ^ Andrew C. A. Jampoler, Embassy to the Eastern Courts: America's Secret First Pivot Toward Asia, 1832–37 (Annapolis: Naval Institute, 2015. xvi, 236 pp.
  4. ^ Ross, Frank E. The Mission of Joseph Donaldson, Jr., to Algiers, 1795-97 The Journal of Modern History. Volume 7, Number 4, pp. 422ff December 22, 1935.
  5. ^ Hunter Miller, ed. (1931), Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States of America.
  6. ^ Robert J. Allison, The Crescent Obscured: The United States and the Muslim World, 1776-1815, Oxford University Press: New York
  7. ^ Jay Sexton (2011). The Monroe Doctrine: Empire and Nation in Nineteenth-Century America. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 59–60. ISBN 9781429929288.
  8. ^ a b c d Sinan Kuneralp, "Ottoman Diplomatic and Consular Personnel in the United States of America, 1867–1917." (2001) p. 100 online.
  9. ^ a b c d e Syed Tanvir Wasti (2012). "Ahmed Rüstem Bey and the End of an Era". Middle Eastern Studies. 48 (5): 781–796. doi:10.1080/00263206.2012.703616. S2CID 144132608. - Published online August 14, 2012 - Cited: p. 781.
  10. ^ Kuneralp, p. 100-101.
  11. ^ Kuneralp, p. 105-106.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Kuneralp, p. 101. "During the half-century that followed Blacque's appointment till 1917[...]12 heads of missions succeeded one another in Washington."
  13. ^ Turkish Yearbook of International Relations. Ankara Üniversitesi Diş Munasebetler Enstitüsü, 2000. (head book says 2000/2 Special Issue of Turkish-American Relations. Issue 31, Page 13. p. 13. "Over the 35 years that the dispute lasted (1877-1912), some nine envoys succeeded one another at the head of the Washington mission which was raised to Embassy level in 1912,[...]"
  14. ^ Kuneralp, p. 105.
  15. ^ Edward Mead Earle, "American Missions in the Near East." Foreign Affairs 7.3 (1929): 398-417. online
  16. ^ Roger R. Trask, The United States Response to Turkish Nationalism and Reform, 1914-1939 (1971) pp 3-15.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Kuneralp, Sinan (2011). "Ottoman Diplomatic and Consular Personnel in the United States of America, 1867–1917". In Esenbel, Selcuk; Criss, Bilge Nur; Greenwood, Tony (eds.). American Turkish Encounters: Politics and Culture, 1830-1989. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 102. ISBN 978-1-4438-3260-1.
  18. ^ Kemal H. Karpat (2001). The Politicization of Islam: Reconstructing Identity, State, Faith, and Community in the Late Ottoman State. Oxford University Press. pp. 235–. ISBN 978-0-19-513618-0.
  19. ^ Moshe Yegar (1 January 2002). Between Integration and Secession: The Muslim Communities of the Southern Philippines, Southern Thailand, and Western Burma/Myanmar. Lexington Books. pp. 397–. ISBN 978-0-7391-0356-2.
  20. ^ Political Science Quarterly. Academy of Political Science. 1904. pp. 22–.
  21. ^ Mustafa Akyol (18 July 2011). Islam without Extremes: A Muslim Case for Liberty. W. W. Norton. pp. 159–. ISBN 978-0-393-07086-6.
  22. ^ J. Robert Moskin (19 November 2013). American Statecraft: The Story of the U.S. Foreign Service. St. Martin's Press. pp. 204–. ISBN 978-1-250-03745-9.
  23. ^ George Hubbard Blakeslee; Granville Stanley Hall; Harry Elmer Barnes (1915). The Journal of International Relations. Clark University. pp. 358–.
  24. ^ The Journal of Race Development. Clark University. 1915. pp. 358–.
  25. ^ Idris Bal (2004). Turkish Foreign Policy in Post Cold War Era. Universal-Publishers. pp. 405–. ISBN 978-1-58112-423-1.
  26. ^ Idris Bal (2004). Turkish Foreign Policy in Post Cold War Era. Universal-Publishers. pp. 406–. ISBN 978-1-58112-423-1.
  27. ^ a b İhsanoğlu, Ekmeleddin. History of the Ottoman State, society & civilisation: Vol. 1. IRCICA, Research Centre for Islamic History, Art and Culture, 2001. ISBN 9290630531, 9789290630531. p. 343. "Changes which were initiated in 1886 divided Ottoman embassies into four categories." - View #2: "second class embassies in Washington and Montenegro[...]"
  28. ^ Naomi W. Cohen, "Ambassador Straus in Turkey, 1909-1910: A Note on Dollar Diplomacy." Mississippi Valley Historical Review 45.4 (1959) online
  29. ^ "AFFIRMATION OF THE UNITED STATES RECORD ON THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION". Govinfo.gov. Retrieved 2023-11-18.
  30. ^ a b Spencer Tucker, ed. Encyclopedia of World War I (2005) p 1080
  31. ^ a b Bryson, Thomas (September 1974). "Admiral Mark L. Bristol, an Open-Door Diplomat in Turkey". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 5 (4): 450–467. - Cited: p. 452.
  32. ^ a b "Mark L. Bristol papers". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2023-11-18.
  33. ^ Bryson, Thomas (September 1974). "Admiral Mark L. Bristol, an Open-Door Diplomat in Turkey". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 5 (4): 450–467. - Cited: p. 454.
  34. ^ Bryson, Thomas (September 1974). "Admiral Mark L. Bristol, an Open-Door Diplomat in Turkey". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 5 (4): 450–467. - Cited: p. 451.
  35. ^ "Unstated". Servet-i Fünun (1423): cover. 1919-08-21. - caption is in French
  36. ^ a b c d e f g Hurewitz, J. C. (editor). "Ottoman-American Severance of Relations." The Middle East and North Africa in World Politics: A Documentary Record - British-French Supremacy, 1914-1945. Yale University Press, 1979. ISBN 0300022034, 9780300022032. p. 99.
  37. ^ a b Armenian Perspectives: 10th Anniversary Conference of the Association Internationale Des Études Arméniennes, School of Oriental and African Studies, London. Psychology Press, 1997. ISBN 0700706100, 9780700706105. p. 293.
  38. ^ Armenian Perspectives: 10th Anniversary Conference of the Association Internationale Des Études Arméniennes, School of Oriental and African Studies, London. Psychology Press, 1997. ISBN 0700706100, 9780700706105. p. 2937.
  39. ^ a b White, Edward (2017-02-03). "The Great Crime". The Paris Review. Retrieved 2020-04-09.
  40. ^ Merrill D. Peterson. "Starving Armenians": America and the Armenian Genocide, 1915-1930 and After. p. 35.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kuneralp, p. 106.
  42. ^ a b Kuneralp, p. 107.
  43. ^ a b Kuneralp, p. 103.
  44. ^ "Ottoman Empire during World War I", Wikipedia, 2020-09-13, retrieved 2020-10-13
  45. ^ "President Benjamin Harrison Names Solomon Hirsch Minister to Turkey". Shapell Manuscript Collection. Shapell Manuscript Foundation.

Further reading edit

  • Cohen, Naomi W. "Ambassador Straus in Turkey, 1909-1910: A Note on Dollar Diplomacy." Mississippi Valley Historical Review 45.4 (1959) online
  • DeNovo, John A. American Interests and Policies in the Middle East, 1900-1939 (1963), pp. 3–26.
  • Field, James A. America and the Mediterranean World, 1776-1882 (Princeton, 1969)
  • Fisher, Sydney N. "Two Centuries of American Interest in Turkey," in David H. Pinkney and Theodore Ropp, eds., A Festschrift for Frederick B. Artz (Duke UP, 1964), pp. 113–138. online free to borrow
  • Gordon, Leland James. American Relations with Turkey, 1830-1930: An Economic Interpretation (Philadelphia, 1932)
  • Kuneralp, Sinan. "Ottoman Diplomatic and Consular Personnel in the United States of America, 1867–1917." In: Criss, Nur Bilge, Selçuk Esenbel, Tony Greenwood, and Louis Mazzari (editors). American Turkish Encounters: Politics and Culture, 1830–1989 (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011). ISBN 144383260X, 9781443832601. pp. 100-108.
  • Trask, Roger R. The United States Response to Turkish Nationalism and Reform, 1914-1939 (1971) pp 3–36 on Ottoman years. online

ottoman, empire, united, states, relations, relations, between, ottoman, empire, united, states, have, long, history, having, roots, even, before, american, independence, since, there, actually, running, trade, between, these, regions, after, american, indepen. The relations between the Ottoman Empire and the United States have a long history having its roots even before the American independence since there was a actually a running trade between these two regions 1 After the American independence in 1776 the first relations between these two countries started through the contact between the American merchants statesmen and lastly the Navy and North African countries under the rule of the Ottomans at that time 2 and with the Ottoman Empire after 1780 how 3 Ottoman American relationsOttoman Empire United StatesDiplomatic missionEmbassy of the Ottoman Empire Washington D C Embassy of the United States Constantinople now Istanbul Contents 1 History of relations 1 1 American tribute to the Ottoman Empire 1 2 US Barbary Wars 1 3 Armenian issues 1 4 Moro rebellion in the Philippines 1 5 Young Turk Revolution 1 6 World War I and the Armenian genocide 2 Diplomatic missions 2 1 Ottoman ministers and ambassadors to the U S 2 2 American ministers and ambassadors to the Ottoman Empire 3 See also 3 1 Notes 4 Further readingHistory of relations editAmerican tribute to the Ottoman Empire edit On September 5 1795 4 Joseph Donaldson Junior appointed by then 1st Minister of US to Portugal David Humphreys signed the Treaty of Algiers with Hassan Bashaw Dey of Algiers 5 According to this treaty the USA would pay 642 000 gold one time and 12 000 Ottoman gold 21 600 dollars per year in exchange for the extradition of prisoners in Algeria and the lack of touching any ship carrying the US banner both in the Atlantic Ocean and in the Mediterranean It is the only U S document in its history to acknowledge the payment of taxes to a foreign state as well as the only treaty in a foreign language in more than two centuries of history The USA remained loyal to this 22 article treaty until 1818 6 However the first contact between the United States and the Ottoman central government took place when Captain William Bainbridge of the USS George Washington of the American Navy had to sail to Istanbul in 1800 upon being compelled by the Dey of Algiers to deliver the Dey s gifts and envoy to the Ottoman Sultan and Bainbridge arrive in Istanbul on November 9 1800 marking the first direct encounter of the United States and Ottoman government 1 US Barbary Wars edit In the early 19th century the US fought the Barbary Wars against the Barbary states which were under Ottoman suzerainty In 1825 during the Greek War of Independence and Greek civil wars of 1823 1825 the U S Navy conducted anti piracy operations in the Aegean Sea Greece and the Aegean were controlled by the Ottomans until Greece achieved independence in 1829 The first draft of the Monroe Doctrine written in 1823 included a passage praising the Greek revolutionaries though the passage was ultimately removed 7 In 1831 the U S sent its first formally approved envoy to the Ottoman Empire David Porter 8 The empire and the U S at that point had their representatives at the Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary level 9 Sinan Kuneralp author of Ottoman Diplomatic and Consular Personnel in the United States of America 1867 1917 wrote that the empire initially apparently lacked any sensible justification to open a mission stateside due to the relative distance between the countries 8 Wasti wrote that there was no real rush on the Ottoman side to send diplomatic envoys to Washington DC 9 The first official Ottoman government visit to the U S lasting for six months in 1850 was that of Emin Bey who toured shipyards there 10 Two Ottoman officials one being Edouard Blak Bey who sensed the rise of the United States unsuccessfully advocated for installing a mission in the U S during the early 1850s 8 The first Ottoman honorary consulate in the U S opened in May 1858 11 In 1866 Ottoman foreign minister Mehmed Emin Ali Pasha declined to start a legation to the U S that year after reviewing a proposal by Ambassador to France of the Ottoman Empire Safvet Pasha However the ministry changed its mind after the leaders there perceived the reports of the Cretan revolt 1866 1869 from the US consul W J Stillman and other American reports to be misleading and decided they needed to present a counter view The empire sent its first permanent envoy to the U S in 1867 creating the Ottoman Legation in Washington DC Since the empire itself began establishing its diplomatic missions in the 1830s and due to the about three decade gap between the respective legations being established Kuneralp wrote that the Ottomans created their U S mission comparatively late 8 Blak was the first envoy to Washington Kuneralp wrote that the Washington posting was not considered important to the Ottoman government which is why some officials refused the posting and those considered promising were turned away from it He cited the cases of then minister to Florence Rustem Bey and Osman Nizami Pasha who declined in 1867 and 1912 respectively 12 Nine envoys headed the legation beginning in 1877 and prior to full embassy status 13 and there were a total of 13 envoys ambassadors in the position 12 Mustafa Shekib Bey in 1904 recommended that the Ottomans appoint Levantine Armand Guys as the first commercial attache arguing that commercial relations had increased 14 In 1906 the U S upgraded its representation in Constantinople to the embassy level 9 The most important aspect of American diplomacy in the late 19th century down to 1914 involved protection of the hundreds of American Protestant missionaries to the Ottoman Empire 15 16 Armenian issues edit Abdul Hamid II disliked it when the Americans pleaded for help for Armenians As a result he terminated the credentials of envoy Mustafa Shekib and chose not to upgrade the mission to embassy status Shekib therefore was unable to present his credentials to the President Shekib slept in the daytime and so his staff dealt with U S officials Kuneralp stated that therefore Things were eased out 17 Moro rebellion in the Philippines edit In 1899 John Hay the American Secretary of State asked the Jewish American ambassador to the Ottoman Empire Oscar Straus to request Sultan Abdul Hamid II to write a letter to the Moro Sulu Muslims of the Sulu Sultanate in the Philippines telling them to submit to American suzerainty and American military rule see Philippine American War The Sultan obliged and wrote the letter which was sent to Sulu via Mecca two Sulu chiefs delivered it to Sulu and it was successful since the Sulu Mohammedans refused to join the insurrectionists and had placed themselves under the control of our army thereby recognizing American sovereignty 18 Abdul Hamid used his position as caliph to order the Sulu Sultan not to resist and not fight the invading Americans 19 President McKinley did not mention the Ottoman role in the pacification of the Sulu Moros in his address to the first session of the 56th Congress in December 1899 since the agreement with the Sultan of Sulu was not submitted to the Senate until December 18 20 Despite Sulu s pan Islamic ideology he readily acceded to Straus request to avoid hostilities between the West and Muslims 21 The Sulu sultan was persuaded by the Ottoman Sultan 22 John P Finley wrote that After due consideration of these facts the Sultan as Caliph caused a message to be sent to the Mohammedans of the Philippine Islands forbidding them to enter into any hostilities against the Americans inasmuch as no interference with their religion would be allowed under American rule As the Moros have never asked more than that it is not surprising that they refused all overtures made by Aguinaldo s agents at the time of the Filipino insurrection President McKinley sent a personal letter of thanks to Mr Straus for the excellent work he had done and said its accomplishment had saved the United States at least twenty thousand troops in the field If the reader will pause to consider what this means in men and also the millions in money he will appreciate this wonderful piece of diplomacy in averting a holy war 23 24 25 The Muslim peoples obeyed the order 26 In 1904 the Moro Rebellion then broke out between the Americans and Moro Muslims Young Turk Revolution edit The Young Turk Revolution removed Abdul Hamid II from power in 1908 and officials more favorable to the U S replaced him 17 The Ottoman Legation in Washington was designated as an embassy in 1909 9 and given the second class ranking the Ottoman Empire at the time ranked its embassies by importance 27 During the Presidency of William Howard Taft an American strategy was to become involved in business transactions rather than military confrontations a policy known as Dollar Diplomacy It failed with respect to the Ottoman Empire because of opposition from US ambassador Oscar Straus and to Turkish vacillation under pressure from the entrenched European powers who did not wish to see American competition American trade remained a minor factor 28 World War I and the Armenian genocide edit Henry Morgenthau Sr was the U S Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire during World War I until 1916 Morgenthau criticized the ruling Three Pashas for the Armenian genocide and sought to get help for the Armenians 29 Jesse B Jackson consul in Aleppo also assisted Armenians Morgenthau s replacement Abram Isaac Elkus served in 1916 1917 The Ottomans severed diplomatic relations with the United States on April 20 1917 after the United States had declared war against Germany on April 4 1917 The United States never declared war on the Ottoman Empire 30 On January 28 1919 31 Mark Lambert Bristol began serving as the High Commissioner for Turkey He served in this role through the end of the Ottoman Empire and the beginning of the Republic of Turkey the Ottoman Empire s successor state 32 Thomas A Bryson of West Georgia College wrote that in 1919 the United States enjoyed a benevolent reputation in Turkey due to missionary work done by Americans and because the United States did not declare war on the empire 33 He also stated that Bristol had built up a large deposit of Turkish good will for the United States 34 Bristol s role ended in 1927 32 when normal diplomatic relations were established with Turkey 30 Diplomatic missions editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2019 See also List of diplomatic missions of the Ottoman Empire U S diplomatic missions in the empire included Constantinople Istanbul Legation Embassy It was located in Pera now known as Beyoglu 35 Aleppo 36 Consul Jesse B Jackson Beirut 36 Brusa 36 Bursa Harput Kharpert now in Elazig Started from January 1 1901 with Dr Thomas H Norton as the consul 37 he had no previous experience in international relations as the U S was just recently establishing its diplomatic network 38 The consulate was established to assist missionaries The Ottoman Ministry of Internal Security gave him a teskireh travel permit but the Ottoman Ministry of Foreign Affairs initially refused to recognize the consulate 37 The building had three stories a wall and a garden with mulberry trees Leslie A Davis became consul of Harpoot in 1914 Davis stated that this mission was one of the most remote and inaccessible in the world 39 Davis observed the Armenian genocide 40 Davis hid about 80 Armenians in the consulate grounds His term ended with the cessation of Ottoman U S relations in 1917 39 Jerusalem 36 Mersina 36 Mersin Samsun 36 Smyrna now Izmir 36 Ottoman diplomatic missions to the U S included Washington DC Embassy Classified as a second class embassy 27 New York City Consulate General Established after the 1880s to monitor anti Ottoman activity New York City previously served by an honorary consulate had received increased immigration from the empire Ottoman envoy Alexandros Mavrogenis had advocated for a full consulate general and afterwards on the grounds of New York having more diplomatic importance to the empire than Washington DC asked the Ottoman government for a vice consul in New York The consuls in New York began to squabble for power with the Washington consuls 41 Kuneralp wrote that the conflict between New York City consul general Refet Bey and his respective Washington envoy Yusuf Ziya Pasha took almost epical dimensions 42 Boston Consulate General Established in 1910 so the Ottomans could surveil Armenians in the U S 42 Honorary Ottoman consulates in the U S Baltimore William Grange served as honorary consul selected by Blak 41 Boston later replaced with a consulate general Joseph Yazidiji an Ottoman citizen was an honorary consul 41 Chicago 41 New Orleans J O Nixon was honorary consul selected by Blak 41 New York City 41 later replaced with a consulate general Philadelphia 41 San Francisco 41 Washington DC Baltimore later replaced with a legation embassy George Porter became the honorary consul for Washington DC and Baltimore in May 1858 41 Ottoman ministers and ambassadors to the U S edit Edouard Blak Bey 1867 12 Gregory Aristarchis Bey 12 Huseyin Tevfik Pasha 12 Alexandros Mavrogenis Bey 17 Mustafa Tahsin Bey Died of tuberculosis shortly after he began his position 17 Ali Ferruh Bey 17 Mustafa Shekib Bey 17 Mohammed Ali Bey al Abed a k a Mehmed Ali Bey 17 Huseyin Kazim Bey 17 Appointed as the first ambassador 9 Yusuf Ziya Pasha 17 Ahmet Rustem Bey a k a Alfred de Bilinsky The final Ottoman Ambassador to the U S 17 The Ottoman government chose to continue the mission with a charge Huseyin Avni Bey after World War I began and this appointment ended with the cutoff of diplomatic relations on April 20 1917 43 44 Kuneralp stated that these officials were interesting figures but that there was not a Wellington Koo among them and they did not shine in their diplomatic careers as the Ottoman government did not view this post to be important 12 He also stated that Madame Bey wife of first secretary Sitki Bey due to her participation in American social life was actually the most well known person in the Ottoman diplomatic community within the US 43 American ministers and ambassadors to the Ottoman Empire edit See also List of ambassadors of the United States to Turkey Charge d Affaires George W Erving pre 1831 David Porter September 13 1831 May 23 1840 Minister Resident David Porter May 23 1840 March 3 1843 Dabney Smith Carr February 29 1844 October 20 1849 George Perkins Marsh March 11 1850 December 19 1853 Carroll Spence February 9 1854 December 12 1857 James Williams May 27 1858 May 25 1861 Edward Joy Morris October 22 1861 October 25 1870 Wayne MacVeagh October 25 1870 June 10 1871 George H Boker March 25 1872 May 1 1875 Horace Maynard June 12 1875 July 15 1880 James Longstreet December 14 1880 April 29 1881 Lewis Wallace September 6 1881 September 4 1882 Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary Lewis Wallace September 4 1882 May 15 1885 Samuel S Cox August 25 1885 September 14 1886 Oscar S Straus July 1 1887 June 16 1889 Solomon Hirsch December 28 1889 June 16 1892 45 David P Thompson January 11 1893 May 1 1893 Alexander W Terrell July 7 1893 June 15 1897 James Burrill Angell September 3 1897 August 13 1898 Oscar S Straus October 15 1898 December 20 1899 John G A Leishman March 29 1901 October 5 1906 Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary John G A Leishman October 5 1906 June 10 1909 Oscar S Straus October 4 1909 September 3 1910 William Woodville Rockhill August 28 1911 November 20 1913 Henry Morgenthau Sr December 11 1913 February 1 1916 Abram I Elkus October 2 1916 April 20 1917 High Commissioner for Turkey Mark Lambert Bristol January 28 1919 end of empire 31 See also editForeign relations of the Ottoman Empire Foreign relations of the United StatesBooks about the relations America and the Armenian Genocide of 1915Relations between the United States and countries once a part of the empire Albania United States relations Bulgaria United States relations Egypt United States relations Greece United States relations Iraq United States relations Israel United States relations Jordan United States relations Lebanon United States relations Libya United States relations North Macedonia United States relations Palestine United States relations Saudi Arabia United States relations for the Hejaz region Syria United States relations Turkey United States relations Yemen United States relationsNotes edit Erhan Cagri 2015 Turk Amerikan Iliskilerinin Tarihsel Kokenleri in Turkish 2nd ed Ankara Imge Kitabevi pp 41 42 Lippe John M Vander 1997 The Terrible Turk The Formulation and Perpetuation of a Stereotype in American Foreign Policy American Foreign Policy 17 39 57 via Cambridge Andrew C A Jampoler Embassy to the Eastern Courts America s Secret First Pivot Toward Asia 1832 37 Annapolis Naval Institute 2015 xvi 236 pp Ross Frank E The Mission of Joseph Donaldson Jr to Algiers 1795 97 The Journal of Modern History Volume 7 Number 4 pp 422ff December 22 1935 Hunter Miller ed 1931 Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States of America Robert J Allison The Crescent Obscured The United States and the Muslim World 1776 1815 Oxford University Press New York Jay Sexton 2011 The Monroe Doctrine Empire and Nation in Nineteenth Century America Farrar Straus and Giroux pp 59 60 ISBN 9781429929288 a b c d Sinan Kuneralp Ottoman Diplomatic and Consular Personnel in the United States of America 1867 1917 2001 p 100 online a b c d e Syed Tanvir Wasti 2012 Ahmed Rustem Bey and the End of an Era Middle Eastern Studies 48 5 781 796 doi 10 1080 00263206 2012 703616 S2CID 144132608 Published online August 14 2012 Cited p 781 Kuneralp p 100 101 Kuneralp p 105 106 a b c d e f Kuneralp p 101 During the half century that followed Blacque s appointment till 1917 12 heads of missions succeeded one another in Washington Turkish Yearbook of International Relations Ankara Universitesi Dis Munasebetler Enstitusu 2000 head book says 2000 2 Special Issue of Turkish American Relations Issue 31 Page 13 p 13 Over the 35 years that the dispute lasted 1877 1912 some nine envoys succeeded one another at the head of the Washington mission which was raised to Embassy level in 1912 Kuneralp p 105 Edward Mead Earle American Missions in the Near East Foreign Affairs 7 3 1929 398 417 online Roger R Trask The United States Response to Turkish Nationalism and Reform 1914 1939 1971 pp 3 15 a b c d e f g h i j Kuneralp Sinan 2011 Ottoman Diplomatic and Consular Personnel in the United States of America 1867 1917 In Esenbel Selcuk Criss Bilge Nur Greenwood Tony eds American Turkish Encounters Politics and Culture 1830 1989 Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 102 ISBN 978 1 4438 3260 1 Kemal H Karpat 2001 The Politicization of Islam Reconstructing Identity State Faith and Community in the Late Ottoman State Oxford University Press pp 235 ISBN 978 0 19 513618 0 Moshe Yegar 1 January 2002 Between Integration and Secession The Muslim Communities of the Southern Philippines Southern Thailand and Western Burma Myanmar Lexington Books pp 397 ISBN 978 0 7391 0356 2 Political Science Quarterly Academy of Political Science 1904 pp 22 Mustafa Akyol 18 July 2011 Islam without Extremes A Muslim Case for Liberty W W Norton pp 159 ISBN 978 0 393 07086 6 J Robert Moskin 19 November 2013 American Statecraft The Story of the U S Foreign Service St Martin s Press pp 204 ISBN 978 1 250 03745 9 George Hubbard Blakeslee Granville Stanley Hall Harry Elmer Barnes 1915 The Journal of International Relations Clark University pp 358 The Journal of Race Development Clark University 1915 pp 358 Idris Bal 2004 Turkish Foreign Policy in Post Cold War Era Universal Publishers pp 405 ISBN 978 1 58112 423 1 Idris Bal 2004 Turkish Foreign Policy in Post Cold War Era Universal Publishers pp 406 ISBN 978 1 58112 423 1 a b Ihsanoglu Ekmeleddin History of the Ottoman State society amp civilisation Vol 1 IRCICA Research Centre for Islamic History Art and Culture 2001 ISBN 9290630531 9789290630531 p 343 Changes which were initiated in 1886 divided Ottoman embassies into four categories View 2 second class embassies in Washington and Montenegro Naomi W Cohen Ambassador Straus in Turkey 1909 1910 A Note on Dollar Diplomacy Mississippi Valley Historical Review 45 4 1959 online AFFIRMATION OF THE UNITED STATES RECORD ON THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION Govinfo gov Retrieved 2023 11 18 a b Spencer Tucker ed Encyclopedia of World War I 2005 p 1080 a b Bryson Thomas September 1974 Admiral Mark L Bristol an Open Door Diplomat in Turkey International Journal of Middle East Studies 5 4 450 467 Cited p 452 a b Mark L Bristol papers Library of Congress Retrieved 2023 11 18 Bryson Thomas September 1974 Admiral Mark L Bristol an Open Door Diplomat in Turkey International Journal of Middle East Studies 5 4 450 467 Cited p 454 Bryson Thomas September 1974 Admiral Mark L Bristol an Open Door Diplomat in Turkey International Journal of Middle East Studies 5 4 450 467 Cited p 451 Unstated Servet i Funun 1423 cover 1919 08 21 caption is in French a b c d e f g Hurewitz J C editor Ottoman American Severance of Relations The Middle East and North Africa in World Politics A Documentary Record British French Supremacy 1914 1945 Yale University Press 1979 ISBN 0300022034 9780300022032 p 99 a b Armenian Perspectives 10th Anniversary Conference of the Association Internationale Des Etudes Armeniennes School of Oriental and African Studies London Psychology Press 1997 ISBN 0700706100 9780700706105 p 293 Armenian Perspectives 10th Anniversary Conference of the Association Internationale Des Etudes Armeniennes School of Oriental and African Studies London Psychology Press 1997 ISBN 0700706100 9780700706105 p 2937 a b White Edward 2017 02 03 The Great Crime The Paris Review Retrieved 2020 04 09 Merrill D Peterson Starving Armenians America and the Armenian Genocide 1915 1930 and After p 35 a b c d e f g h i Kuneralp p 106 a b Kuneralp p 107 a b Kuneralp p 103 Ottoman Empire during World War I Wikipedia 2020 09 13 retrieved 2020 10 13 President Benjamin Harrison Names Solomon Hirsch Minister to Turkey Shapell Manuscript Collection Shapell Manuscript Foundation Further reading editCohen Naomi W Ambassador Straus in Turkey 1909 1910 A Note on Dollar Diplomacy Mississippi Valley Historical Review 45 4 1959 online DeNovo John A American Interests and Policies in the Middle East 1900 1939 1963 pp 3 26 Field James A America and the Mediterranean World 1776 1882 Princeton 1969 Fisher Sydney N Two Centuries of American Interest in Turkey in David H Pinkney and Theodore Ropp eds A Festschrift for Frederick B Artz Duke UP 1964 pp 113 138 online free to borrow Gordon Leland James American Relations with Turkey 1830 1930 An Economic Interpretation Philadelphia 1932 Kuneralp Sinan Ottoman Diplomatic and Consular Personnel in the United States of America 1867 1917 In Criss Nur Bilge Selcuk Esenbel Tony Greenwood and Louis Mazzari editors American Turkish Encounters Politics and Culture 1830 1989 Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2011 ISBN 144383260X 9781443832601 pp 100 108 Trask Roger R The United States Response to Turkish Nationalism and Reform 1914 1939 1971 pp 3 36 on Ottoman years online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ottoman Empire United States relations amp oldid 1217790100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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