A Case Study In How Lobbyists For Turkish Government Manipulate The American Media on Gulen Issue


Date posted: January 20, 2017

Chuck Ross

Turkish news outlets lit up this weekend after a former Republican lawmaker published an op-ed at The Hill calling on the U.S. government to extradite Fethullah Gulen, an exiled Muslim cleric whose return to Turkey is an obsession for the NATO nation’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Among the reasons that former Montana Rep. Denny Rehberg’s piece went viral is an eye-catching graphic spoofing Gulen on a Monopoly board game. The piece also gained traction because, on its surface, it gave the impression that an unbiased former member of Congress felt strongly about Gulen’s extradition.

But there’s more to the story, and it exposes some of the inner workings of Turkey’s multi-million dollar lobbying effort to fetch the 77-year-old Gulen from the U.S.

Rehberg is a lobbyist for Mercury Public Affairs, a Washington, D.C. public relations shop. And one of Mercury’s clients is Amsterdam & Partners, a law firm that handles a $50,000-a-month account for the Turkish government. Amsterdam has led the effort to expose a vast network of charter schools operated by Gulen’s followers in the U.S. Many of the allegations are listed in the “Gulenopoly” graphic in Rehberg’s piece.

None of Rehberg’s or Mercury’s ties were disclosed in the op-ed when it first went up at The Hill. Rehberg was referred to only as a former congressman who served in Montana between 2001 and 2013.

The article, entitled “Resetting U.S.-Turkish Relations,” chastised the U.S. government for so far refusing the Turkish government’s request to extradite Gulen, who Erdogan has accused of masterminding a failed July 15 coup in Ankara and Istanbul.

Erdogan himself has personally asked President Obama to turn Gulen over to Turkey to face terrorism charges.

Rehberg’s article amounts to a thinly veiled threat, that the U.S. should accede Turkey’s request in order to keep its NATO ally happy.

“The United States and President Trump have a responsibility to their allies. We have a responsibility to assist Turkey in keeping their country stable by extraditing Fethullah Gulen back to Turkey and working together with our NATO ally and President Erdogan,” Rehberg wrote.

The piece was circulated online by the heads of several pro-Erdogan think tanks and organizations. Dozens of Turkish news outlets published stories on the op-ed.

The Daily Sabah, an English-language Turkish news outlet, published a piece entitled “The GOP’s War on Gulen.” In it, Rehberg is referred to as a “Republican heavyweight,” though his lobbying ties are unmentioned. The piece asserts that Donald Trump will “likely” extradite Gulen as one of his first steps towards normalizing relations with Turkey.

Trump has not commented on the Gulen issue, though Erdogan and others in the Turkish government have said that they believe the Republican will accommodate the extradition request.

Nailing down Rehberg’s connection was not a simple task. Neither The Hill nor Mercury were eager to discuss the matter.

The Daily Caller initially reached out to Rehberg to ask if he currently lobbies for the Turkish government. A spokesman responded to say that Mercury no longer works for Turkey or Amsterdam & Partners.

John Cpin, the spokesman, would not say when that contract ended. When pressed, he said it ended “a while ago.”

In the meantime, The Hill, after being contacted by TheDC, added a disclosure of sorts to Rehberg’s op-ed.

It stated that The Hill asked Mercury prior to publication whether Rehberg or Mercury were lobbying on behalf of Turkey.

“They are not currently,” was the response which The Hill attached to the piece.

That left the possibility that Rehberg decided to publish the op-ed on his own accord, perhaps because he had developed a personal interest in the Gulen issue. That would not be entirely far-fetched given that Rehberg was a member of the Turkey Caucus during his days in Congress.

The process by which the op-ed was pitched to The Hill would help clear that up, but its editor-in-chief, Bob Cusack, told TheDC that they do not discuss op-ed submissions.

But asked if Mercury submitted the op-ed, Cpin reluctantly acknowledged that the firm did.

Rehberg’s apparent lobbying raises questions about Mercury’s compliance with FARA, which is overseen by the Department of Justice.

Rehberg has not filed a short-form registration document that lobbyists must submit within 10 days of beginning work for a foreign client.

But Mercury has documented Rehberg lobbying on Amsterdam’s behalf in other disclosures. A semi-annual disclosure report lists Rehberg as lobbying several senators and members of Congress in May. It’s not clear why he did not also file a short-form registration. The three other Mercury lobbyists who have done work on the Amsterdam/Turkey account have disclosed that activity in a short-form registration.

And though Mercury’s spokesman says that the firm is no longer contracted with Amsterdam & Partners, a termination statement has yet to be filed. Lobbyists have 30 days to file a termination report after cutting ties with a foreign client.

As for The Hill, this is not the first time that it has published an op-ed specifically calling for Gulen’s extradition while failing to disclose lobbying ties.

In November, retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn published a piece at the website calling on the U.S. government to extradite Gulen. It was a peculiar article, not just because it was published on Election Day, but also because Flynn had never publicly discussed Gulen. Flynn had even expressed support for the attempted coup.

But as TheDC discovered, Flynn had been hired a couple of months prior by a Dutch shell company that was controlled by a Turkish businessman who serves as head of a business consortium with close ties to the Turkish government. (RELATED: Michael Flynn Is Lobbying For Obscure Company With Ties To The Turkish Government) 

The Hill has said it does not believe that Flynn’s op-ed requires a disclosure.

Source: The Daily Caller , January 19, 2017


Related News

Kimse Yok Mu waits weeks for aid campaign go-ahead

Turkish charity Kimse Yok Mu (Is Anybody There?) has been waiting 37 days for permission from the İstanbul Governor’s Office to continue seven aid campaigns bringing various kinds of relief and services to people in need around the world.

Turkish police detain 35 lawyers for ‘defending’ Gülen sympathizers

This latest move against the Gulen sympathizers is a violation of a basic right of the suspects, who are still legally innocent until proven guilty, to defend themselves at the courts. It is clear that Erdogan regime leaves the suspects no room to defend themselves at the courts.

Teacher detained in Turkey after forced return from Myanmar

Muhammet Furkan Sökmen, a Turkish teacher working for two schools established by Gulen movement followers in Myanmar, was forcibly returned to Turkey despite his cries for help on social media.

Pro-AKP media flop as corruption charges swell

This may be a Gulen Movement attack on the government. However, one cannot help but ask who gave the Gulen Movement so much access in the government to begin with? Also, the government has been screaming “show us evidence” to all questions of financing and allegations of corruption. Now it seems there is some sort of evidence — should not those be dealt with first? Shouldn’t the AKP come clean with the Turkish public first, and then fight its battle with the Gulen Movement or other “foreign” provocateurs?

Thunder’s Enes Kanter in London after detainment in Romania over politics

Oklahoma City Thunder center Enes Kanter, who said he was detained in Romania on Saturday morning after his passport was seized by the Turkish government, has been allowed to leave the country and is in London, the NBA said.

Turkey introduces new decree law to seize all Gulen-related companies

Thanks to a new decree law released as part of the state of emergency declared late on July 20 following a failed coup, Turkey’s government is now set to seize all the Turkish companies owned by businessmen somehow linked to the US-based Islamic Scholar Fethullah Gülen.

Latest News

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

Erdoğan’s Civil Death Project’ : The ‘politicide’ spanning more than a decade

Fethullah Gülen’s Vision and the Purpose of Hizmet

In Case You Missed It

Kurdish problem, PKK, AKP, Hizmet movement

Once shut down by Taliban, now Afghan gov’t plans to hand over successful Turkish Schools to Turkish Gov’t

Hizmet’s political stance: Speak the truth to power, no matter what the cost is

Int’l language and culture festival ends with spectacular ceremony in Germany

Alevi leader Kenanoğlu: Discrimination against Alevis increased in 2013

Education Ministry sought to profile students, teachers through surveys

First purification, next habituation

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News