1 00:00:00,080 --> 00:00:03,400 Speaker 1: There was an ugly scene after Turkish President Airdwan met 2 00:00:03,400 --> 00:00:06,000 Speaker 1: with U S President Trump last week. Members of Air 3 00:00:06,080 --> 00:00:09,200 Speaker 1: to one security detailed clashed with protesters outside the Turkish 4 00:00:09,200 --> 00:00:13,440 Speaker 1: ambassador's residence in Northwest Washington. Videos show air to Wan's 5 00:00:13,440 --> 00:00:17,040 Speaker 1: men charging the demonstrators, then punching and kicking them. DC's 6 00:00:17,079 --> 00:00:19,880 Speaker 1: chief of police called it a quote brutal tech on 7 00:00:20,000 --> 00:00:23,279 Speaker 1: peaceful protesters. But any effort to hold air to Wan's 8 00:00:23,280 --> 00:00:25,840 Speaker 1: bodyguards accountable is going to have to overcome the hurdle 9 00:00:25,880 --> 00:00:29,920 Speaker 1: of diplomatic community. Is that obstacle an insurmountable. One our 10 00:00:29,920 --> 00:00:33,040 Speaker 1: guest to talk about that is Ruth Wood. Ruth Wedgwood, 11 00:00:33,080 --> 00:00:36,560 Speaker 1: a professor of international law and diplomacy at the Johns 12 00:00:36,560 --> 00:00:40,760 Speaker 1: Hopkins School of International Studies. Ruth, thanks for joining us. UM, 13 00:00:40,920 --> 00:00:43,960 Speaker 1: just tell us what is your understanding of what happened 14 00:00:44,000 --> 00:00:47,960 Speaker 1: outside the Turkish ambassadors home. Well, I wasn't there obviously 15 00:00:48,000 --> 00:00:50,800 Speaker 1: in person. I've seen some film clips and what it 16 00:00:50,880 --> 00:00:56,120 Speaker 1: does look like is that the Turkish bodyguards charged various 17 00:00:56,160 --> 00:00:59,600 Speaker 1: of civilians who were demonstrating, which is their first Amendment 18 00:00:59,680 --> 00:01:03,320 Speaker 1: right to in this country, and brutalize them. And I 19 00:01:03,520 --> 00:01:06,800 Speaker 1: frankly found it extraordinarily shocking. I drive by their every 20 00:01:06,880 --> 00:01:10,240 Speaker 1: day on my way to work. It is Sheridan's Center, 21 00:01:10,840 --> 00:01:14,479 Speaker 1: Sheridan Circle, right by the American Society of International Law. 22 00:01:14,840 --> 00:01:19,240 Speaker 1: And I've never seen anything quite like this in recent history, 23 00:01:20,280 --> 00:01:24,880 Speaker 1: because while embassies have immunity for their senior officials, it 24 00:01:24,959 --> 00:01:29,039 Speaker 1: gives them no license to become thugs and the kind 25 00:01:29,040 --> 00:01:32,640 Speaker 1: of a mob attacking people whose views they happen to 26 00:01:32,680 --> 00:01:35,600 Speaker 1: disagree with. So so let's let me jump to sort 27 00:01:35,600 --> 00:01:37,640 Speaker 1: of the bottom line question, and then we can explore 28 00:01:37,680 --> 00:01:41,320 Speaker 1: the nuances of it. Um. If what you described is 29 00:01:41,360 --> 00:01:44,360 Speaker 1: what you know, what you understood, and what I think 30 00:01:44,360 --> 00:01:47,480 Speaker 1: I understand from the videos is what happened. Um. And 31 00:01:47,680 --> 00:01:52,240 Speaker 1: as men are culpable in this, can they be prosecuted? 32 00:01:52,880 --> 00:01:56,640 Speaker 1: Depends on their rank in the embassy. Uh. If they were, 33 00:01:56,720 --> 00:02:00,640 Speaker 1: for example, just contract officials, then yes, indeed. UH. If 34 00:02:00,640 --> 00:02:03,960 Speaker 1: they are have embassy status, we would certainly and we 35 00:02:04,040 --> 00:02:07,760 Speaker 1: should demand that Turkey wave their sovereign immunity or their 36 00:02:07,800 --> 00:02:12,480 Speaker 1: personal immunity. Uh. You can use expulsion, declare them persona 37 00:02:12,560 --> 00:02:16,560 Speaker 1: non grata, and expel anybody of any rank. Frankly, I 38 00:02:16,600 --> 00:02:20,000 Speaker 1: would expel some very senior officials if not the ambassador, 39 00:02:20,040 --> 00:02:22,760 Speaker 1: perhaps the d c M, the Deputy chief of Mission, 40 00:02:23,080 --> 00:02:25,600 Speaker 1: to make the point that you just can't do this. 41 00:02:26,000 --> 00:02:29,919 Speaker 1: This I will note is where the assassination of late 42 00:02:29,919 --> 00:02:35,280 Speaker 1: Tellier a Chilean uh, what was occurred must be one 43 00:02:35,480 --> 00:02:39,320 Speaker 1: three decades ago. But literally this is embassy row. You 44 00:02:39,480 --> 00:02:43,160 Speaker 1: don't use hooliganism in embassy row. It's it's bad for 45 00:02:43,200 --> 00:02:47,799 Speaker 1: the US abroad, it's unseemly for a Turkey. So you 46 00:02:47,880 --> 00:02:51,600 Speaker 1: made a distinction between you talked about contracts and employees 47 00:02:51,639 --> 00:02:56,320 Speaker 1: and and uh embassy personnel. If these are are people 48 00:02:56,360 --> 00:02:58,680 Speaker 1: who came with aired Wan and there may be a 49 00:02:58,720 --> 00:03:01,079 Speaker 1: mixture of people because there were lot of a lot 50 00:03:01,120 --> 00:03:03,919 Speaker 1: of people there. If it's somebody who's on air to 51 00:03:04,000 --> 00:03:08,240 Speaker 1: wanees uh, you know staff in Turkey who travels with 52 00:03:08,360 --> 00:03:13,000 Speaker 1: him and came here, where would that person fall on 53 00:03:13,080 --> 00:03:16,119 Speaker 1: that divide? Well, the lower level you are, the less 54 00:03:16,200 --> 00:03:19,680 Speaker 1: immunity you generally have. Lower level employees will typically have 55 00:03:19,800 --> 00:03:22,799 Speaker 1: official acts community and you can have a nice conversation 56 00:03:23,280 --> 00:03:28,400 Speaker 1: even litigation about whether beating up harmless demonstrators is an 57 00:03:28,440 --> 00:03:31,520 Speaker 1: official act, because surely Turkey is not going to want 58 00:03:31,560 --> 00:03:35,160 Speaker 1: to embrace that as the policy that they desired. So 59 00:03:35,400 --> 00:03:37,680 Speaker 1: what one could ask Turkey to waive in the immunity 60 00:03:37,760 --> 00:03:41,040 Speaker 1: that those people have as well and put them put 61 00:03:41,040 --> 00:03:43,200 Speaker 1: a couple of them in the slammer. This is really 62 00:03:43,280 --> 00:03:46,920 Speaker 1: unacceptable behavior. It's Cold war behavior. It's not the behavior 63 00:03:47,000 --> 00:03:50,440 Speaker 1: of an ally. So Turkey does not seem like they 64 00:03:50,440 --> 00:03:53,240 Speaker 1: are going to to agree to do any of that 65 00:03:53,280 --> 00:03:55,320 Speaker 1: sort of thing at least. You know, what happened today 66 00:03:55,560 --> 00:03:59,360 Speaker 1: was apparently there's a report that they Turkey summoned the 67 00:03:59,440 --> 00:04:03,640 Speaker 1: US and as to protest what Turkey called the aggressive 68 00:04:03,640 --> 00:04:08,320 Speaker 1: and unprofessional actions of US security personnel during the visit. 69 00:04:08,480 --> 00:04:11,400 Speaker 1: What what's your reaction to that? One don't know which 70 00:04:11,520 --> 00:04:15,440 Speaker 1: US personnel they're talking about, other than perhaps policemen. Uh, 71 00:04:15,480 --> 00:04:19,560 Speaker 1: but that just seems to mean be nonsense on stilts. 72 00:04:19,560 --> 00:04:22,320 Speaker 1: Given the film that we have, I take it that 73 00:04:22,400 --> 00:04:25,800 Speaker 1: the First Amendment or freedom of speech, freedom of demonstration 74 00:04:26,160 --> 00:04:28,640 Speaker 1: is not as familiar in parts of Turkey as it 75 00:04:29,120 --> 00:04:32,719 Speaker 1: might wish it to be. But these are sophisticated people 76 00:04:32,760 --> 00:04:34,720 Speaker 1: that these are. These are not just folks that came 77 00:04:34,760 --> 00:04:37,279 Speaker 1: off the boat. They knew what they were doing. I 78 00:04:37,320 --> 00:04:40,560 Speaker 1: think this was an attempt to be forward leaning on 79 00:04:40,640 --> 00:04:42,520 Speaker 1: the part of Turkey and to show that they have 80 00:04:42,640 --> 00:04:48,320 Speaker 1: a certain uh uh prowess in intimidation. I think it 81 00:04:48,640 --> 00:04:51,200 Speaker 1: really is ugly, and so if it reflects what the 82 00:04:51,200 --> 00:04:54,760 Speaker 1: White House might have inadvertently signaled as acceptable behavior, I 83 00:04:54,800 --> 00:04:57,640 Speaker 1: do think that the President should be very careful in 84 00:04:57,640 --> 00:05:00,880 Speaker 1: the future that nobody who's coming here on official visit 85 00:05:00,960 --> 00:05:04,320 Speaker 1: has a a insane belief that they can get away 86 00:05:04,320 --> 00:05:06,279 Speaker 1: with this kind of thing. Let me just back up 87 00:05:06,320 --> 00:05:09,160 Speaker 1: for a second, return to the subject of diplomatic community. 88 00:05:09,200 --> 00:05:13,720 Speaker 1: Where where does that concept come from? It's been embodied 89 00:05:13,839 --> 00:05:17,760 Speaker 1: in treaty language. There's the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, 90 00:05:18,160 --> 00:05:21,760 Speaker 1: which gives immunity absolute immunity, meaning all you can do 91 00:05:21,800 --> 00:05:25,320 Speaker 1: is expel them to very senior people, and then official 92 00:05:25,360 --> 00:05:28,880 Speaker 1: acts immunity to lower level people, and then has a 93 00:05:28,920 --> 00:05:33,800 Speaker 1: third category of kind of drivers and operatives. But it's 94 00:05:33,800 --> 00:05:38,560 Speaker 1: but it's one of the most ancient venerable guarantees and 95 00:05:38,640 --> 00:05:42,480 Speaker 1: traditions in order to make diplomacy possible, because otherwise you'd 96 00:05:42,520 --> 00:05:45,320 Speaker 1: be very leery of going into the mouth of the 97 00:05:45,360 --> 00:05:48,320 Speaker 1: lion for fear of what would happen to you. And 98 00:05:48,360 --> 00:05:51,159 Speaker 1: particularly in the Cold War, it was very, very important 99 00:05:51,200 --> 00:05:54,920 Speaker 1: for our folks in Moscow to have diplomatic community less 100 00:05:54,920 --> 00:05:58,000 Speaker 1: they be put in the gulag or intimidated or or assaulted. 101 00:05:58,920 --> 00:06:02,240 Speaker 1: So if the US takes a really hard line on 102 00:06:02,320 --> 00:06:05,880 Speaker 1: this with with Turkey, to what extent does that have 103 00:06:06,120 --> 00:06:09,640 Speaker 1: the potential to come back and bite our people who 104 00:06:09,640 --> 00:06:15,680 Speaker 1: are American people who are overseas and and maybe are 105 00:06:15,760 --> 00:06:20,240 Speaker 1: accused of doing something by by a foreign government there. Well, 106 00:06:21,000 --> 00:06:25,240 Speaker 1: the absolute nature of diplomatic community is not disputed in 107 00:06:25,480 --> 00:06:28,200 Speaker 1: its in its in it's at its core, I mean it. 108 00:06:28,600 --> 00:06:30,840 Speaker 1: There's there's a Vienna Convention on the matter. Almost all 109 00:06:30,880 --> 00:06:33,839 Speaker 1: states assigned up to it. It existed as customary law 110 00:06:33,920 --> 00:06:40,000 Speaker 1: before any formal treaty instrument was completed. And it's something 111 00:06:40,040 --> 00:06:43,160 Speaker 1: that every country needs. So I think that Turkey would 112 00:06:43,160 --> 00:06:45,840 Speaker 1: only be piling on wood on the fire if it 113 00:06:45,880 --> 00:06:49,040 Speaker 1: attempted to attack the idea itself. They need it, we 114 00:06:49,080 --> 00:06:51,520 Speaker 1: need it, Every country needs it in order to have 115 00:06:51,600 --> 00:06:55,400 Speaker 1: the kinds of conversations that in general tend to solve 116 00:06:55,440 --> 00:06:59,359 Speaker 1: problems and escalation. And what have you heard from the 117 00:06:59,360 --> 00:07:02,200 Speaker 1: Trump administ stration so far with it about thirty seconds left? 118 00:07:02,240 --> 00:07:05,800 Speaker 1: Have they given the type of forceful response that you'd 119 00:07:05,839 --> 00:07:09,760 Speaker 1: like to like to see. I could be unaware sitting 120 00:07:09,760 --> 00:07:13,440 Speaker 1: here in the suburbs, but I do think it's incumbent 121 00:07:13,560 --> 00:07:17,120 Speaker 1: on Donald Trump, who likes to present himself as a 122 00:07:17,120 --> 00:07:19,480 Speaker 1: man of parts and a man who doesn't stand for 123 00:07:19,520 --> 00:07:24,560 Speaker 1: a lot of nonsense, to have a very very evocative, forceful, 124 00:07:25,480 --> 00:07:28,760 Speaker 1: uh damning, if I may response to this, It's not 125 00:07:28,880 --> 00:07:32,200 Speaker 1: acceptable behavior from any country, and certainly not from a 126 00:07:32,200 --> 00:07:35,440 Speaker 1: country with whom we cooperate. I want to thank our guest, 127 00:07:35,520 --> 00:07:39,160 Speaker 1: Ruth Wedgwood of Johns Hopkins University, talking to us about 128 00:07:39,720 --> 00:07:43,800 Speaker 1: the prospect of diplomatic community for the bodyguards of Turkish 129 00:07:43,840 --> 00:07:47,120 Speaker 1: President Air Duan who were involved in that fracas in Washington, 130 00:07:47,280 --> 00:07:51,200 Speaker 1: d C. Last week. Coming up on Bloomberg Bloomberg Radio 131 00:07:51,240 --> 00:07:53,480 Speaker 1: is Bloomberg Markets with Carol Masser and Corey Johnson, and 132 00:07:53,560 --> 00:07:55,960 Speaker 1: Carol is here to tell us what they're gonna talk about. Hi, Greg, 133 00:07:55,960 --> 00:07:58,640 Speaker 1: good afternoon, everybody for getting a new CEO. We've got 134 00:07:58,640 --> 00:08:02,840 Speaker 1: turmoil in Brazil. Continue doing artificial intelligence and drug discovery 135 00:08:02,880 --> 00:08:04,960 Speaker 1: and how to upgrade your life. What do you think 136 00:08:04,960 --> 00:08:08,160 Speaker 1: about that craigstore. That sounds like a heck of a show. 137 00:08:09,680 --> 00:08:12,400 Speaker 1: Stay tuned for all that coming up on Bloomberg Radio. 138 00:08:12,440 --> 00:08:16,840 Speaker 1: That's Bloomberg Markets with Carol Masser and Corey Johnson. This 139 00:08:17,120 --> 00:08:17,760 Speaker 1: is Bloomberg