{"id":24632,"date":"2010-11-02T15:06:40","date_gmt":"2010-11-02T13:06:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.turkishforum.com.tr\/en\/content\/?p=24632"},"modified":"2023-04-06T08:28:30","modified_gmt":"2023-04-06T05:28:30","slug":"1922-great-britain-and-the-turks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/2010\/11\/02\/1922-great-britain-and-the-turks\/","title":{"rendered":"1922: Great Britain and the Turks"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Charles  Townshend<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-medium wp-image-24633\" src=\"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/11\/Charles_Townshend.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"202\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/11\/Charles_Townshend.jpg 400w, https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/11\/Charles_Townshend-203x300.jpg 203w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 202px) 100vw, 202px\" \/>There is nothing that the Turk desires  more ardently than to be friends with Great Britain. The price he asks is not  exorbitant. It is no more than the heritage of every free-born nation. And the  Turk is not a man to accept slavery or dependence. To him death is nothing if  the alternative is dishonor. And whether as individuals or as a nation, the  Turks will die fighting.<\/p>\n<p>I had this in mind early in October  1918, when Enver Talaat and all the pro-German gang resigned, to make way for  the party who wished to save their country by making peace with Britain and the  Allies. When I formulated the armistice terms, although I conceded the necessity  of keeping the narrow Straits open for the passage of commerce all over the  world, I emphasized the need for keeping the frontiers of Turkey in Europe as  they had been settled and defined in the Treaty of London. The bundling of  Turkey &#8220;bag and baggage&#8221; out of Europe did not appeal to me either as a just  proposal or as a practical possibility. The Turk fought his way into Europe  centuries ago. He fought his way to the gates of Vienna itself. When finally the  forces of Christendom united against him and pressed him back a little, he  consolidated his position and stayed where he was for many a prosperous and  proud generation. I am not going to defend what has been done in the name of  Turkish rule, either to Europe or in Asia. But those of us who cast stones at  the Turk should beware lest we damage our own frail house of glass. The Turk has  had to deal with turbulent and treacherous peoples, and his way of dealing with  them had the merit of strength at least. If the atrocities were totaled on  either side of an account, we should find that many of the so-called Christian  nations were deeper in bloodshed and guilt than the champion of  Islam.<\/p>\n<p>After the fall of Kut, I was taken in  battle and became a prisoner. In October, 1918, I was released without  condition, save that mine was the task of bearing proposals to my own government  for a peaceful settlement and the deliverance of thousands of men from bloodshed  and weary struggle. In the cabin of the launch, which took me across from  Prinkipo to the Sublime Porte, I jotted down in my pocketbook the conditions  which I proposed. They were as follows:<\/p>\n<p>1 The opening of the Dardanelles and  the Bosporus to the British<\/p>\n<p>fleet.<\/p>\n<p>2 Autonomy of Mesopotamia and Syria  under the sovereignty of the<\/p>\n<p>Sultan, and evacuation of those territories by the  troops of the<\/p>\n<p>Entente.<\/p>\n<p>3 Frontier settlement as in the Treaty  of London.<\/p>\n<p>4 Immediate release of all British and  Indian prisoners of war.<\/p>\n<p>On arrival at Constantinople, I was  taken at once to see Field Marshal Izzet Pasha, a great soldier and an honorable  man. He talked with me alone and told me that he would suggest no terms; for he  knew that the terms I would suggest would be honorable. But he laid emphasis on  the desire of Turkey for British protection. Later on in the evening I saw Raouf  Bey, minister of marine, at my house in Prinkipo, and he in turn emphasized the  desire of Turkey for friendship and support from England. What must men of this  type have thought when they saw our Prime Minister egging on the Greeks to the  occupation of Asia Minor, a country which is not theirs and from which they have  been ignominiously chased by forces inferior in number and lacking outside  support?<\/p>\n<p>When peace was made with Turkey,  Austria at once took the cue and capitulated. That left the Germans no  alternative. The war was won, civilization was saved and the barbaric prospect  of German domination was done with forever. The first step in this achievement  was taken when the Turkish leaders approached me and gave me authority to enter  into peace negotiations. How were they rewarded for this, the first active offer  to end the misery and destruction of Armageddon? They were given the Treaty of  Sevres.<\/p>\n<p>What I think about that treaty is  that, if we had deliberately set ourselves to devise the most unjust, ungenerous  and merciless policy of revenge, if we had picked for the task our clumsiest and  most ruthless and discredited politicians and partisans, we could not have  evolved a worse result than that which was achieved by our complacent and  self-congratulatory diplomatic &#8220;experts&#8221; at the Foreign Office and in Downing  Street. They seem to have set themselves to create a Turkish Alsace-Lorraine,  and they have done their job well enough. As I said in the House of Commons last  May, before I went to Angora to see Mustapha Kemal, it might have been thought  that to take away Irak, Syria, Palestine, Arabia and the Hedjaz was enough  punishment for Turkey. But no. Our &#8220;experts&#8221; took away Thrace right up to the  walls of Constantinople; they took away the holy city of Adrianople; and&#8211;the  crowning insult and indignity of all&#8211;they invited the Greeks to set their feet  upon Turkish soil and adopt the air of conquerors of a nation which has beaten  them in almost every conflict that the two peoples have ever  had.<\/p>\n<p>To occupy Constantinople with British  Troops was a folly of a similar brand. It was bad tactics. It created,  strengthened and cemented the Turkish Nationalist party and took from the puppet  administration in Constantinople whatever claim it might have had to be  representative of Turkish opinion. Where was the need to occupy Constantinople  with British war-ships six hundred yards from the Sultan&#8217;s palace? What else  could be the result of this insulting demonstration&#8211;the sight of foreign troops  pacing the streets of the capital of Islam&#8211;than to send every patriotic Turk  into the arms of the first strong man who was ready to take the lead in the  defense of the national honor and integrity?<\/p>\n<p>I went to Angora without the  permission of the Foreign Office, because I took the liberty of thinking that  our government, though not the British people, had broken faith with an  honorable enemy. And more: I knew what the Prime Minister did not seem to know:  that the greatest safeguard we could possibly have for the preservation of India  and our empire in the East was Turkey&#8217;s friendship. I thought I might do  something to persuade the Turkish government at Angora that things were not so  hopeless as they seemed and that this heaping of insult upon indignity was not  the policy of more than a bigoted few in Great Britain.<\/p>\n<p>I went to Angora. And what did I find  there? Not a band of brigands or irregulars, fighting under the compulsion of  adventurers for a cause in which they did not believe. Not a scattered remnant  of fanatics and disappointed tyrants. I found an entire nation in arms, under  the leadership of single-minded patriots. I found an army whose match the world  would be hard put to it to provide today, full of spirit, brilliantly led, from  the generals down to the platoon officers, supplied with artillery, equipment  and munitions which their own hands had made and adapted, ready to fight to the  last man for the defense of their sacred soil. And after a long talk with  Mustapha Kemal, I found that he was still ready to accept substantially the  terms I had been asked to deliver to my government when I was set free, nearly  three years before, to take the conduct and control of peace negotiations from  Prinkipo to the British fleet in the Aegean Sea.<\/p>\n<p>Now that the Greeks have met defeat  and Mustapha Kemal has proved that Turkey will stand for her rights whatever  happens, Downing Street is proposing almost the very conditions which Turkey  asks for. These conditions are roughly as follows:<\/p>\n<p>1 The restoration of Smyrna and all  occupied territory in<\/p>\n<p>Asia Minor, the Turkish government  guaranteeing the safety of<\/p>\n<p>life and possessions for Greeks and  other foreigners in these<\/p>\n<p>territories.<\/p>\n<p>2 Modification of the frontier of  Thrace as defined in the<\/p>\n<p>last conference at Paris, in such a  way as to leave<\/p>\n<p>Constantinople amply defensible by  the Turks themselves, or<\/p>\n<p>to have its defense guaranteed, not  by a combination of<\/p>\n<p>Balkan interlopers, but by Great  Britain and France only.<\/p>\n<p>3 The international garrison for the  Dardanelles to be<\/p>\n<p>composed of British, French,  Italian and Turkish detachments,<\/p>\n<p>under the command of a  disinterested neutral, say a Dane,<\/p>\n<p>such occupation to be fixed for a  definite period of five<\/p>\n<p>years and extended if  necessary.<\/p>\n<p>4 Abandonment of the proposal to limit  the Turkish armed<\/p>\n<p>forces to forty thousand regular  troops and forty-five<\/p>\n<p>thousand gendarmerie and the  substitution in their place of<\/p>\n<p>three hundred thousand fighting  troops, without counting the<\/p>\n<p>gendarmerie, dividing these troops  equally between the<\/p>\n<p>European and Asiatic  fronts.<\/p>\n<p>The suggestion made at Paris last  March that the Turkish army should be voluntary one, I can scarcely have the  patience to discuss. The Turks are a nation of fighters. They do not desire an  army modeled on our own expensive regular force, and they cannot afford it. A  limited conscription suits them best; and it will suit our own interests as well  since, if we allow it, the Turks will become our friends and safeguard our  interests in the East.<\/p>\n<p>Now suppose for a moment that we make  enemies of the Turks. What does that mean? Does it mean merely the possibility  of war with Turkey? I wish it did. I wish that the peril were confined to that  issue. But if we back the Turk up against the wall, we shall have to fight not  him alone, but the entire Mahommedan world. Let us make no mistake at all about  this point. The &#8220;holy war&#8221; is a card, which the Turk has not yet played,  although he knows he has it and he knows that we know he has it. And it is just  because the Turk likes and admires the spirit of Great Britain and France and  sees therein a reflection of his own best qualities, just because he finds in us  so many of the qualities which were once, under the great sultans of two and  three centuries ago, the admiration of the world, that he is willing to leave us  and the French in peaceful control of our vast Mahommedan populations. When we  remember that in India and Africa Great Britain alone has a population of close  upon a hundred million Mahommedan subjects, that there are large numbers in the  Malay Peninsula and that the Hindu population of India has made the cause of  religious freedom for all the races of India its own, we can see what the peril  might be if we antagonize and insult the Turk, the acknowledged head and leader  of Islam, in his own holy capital.<\/p>\n<p>At any moment, if Kemal likes, he can  give the signal to raise the whole Mahommedan world against us. He has at his  command not only the organized fanaticism of the Senussi in the deserts of  Africa, not only the malcontents and agitators of Egypt and the Indian  Peninsula, but the unscrupulous and powerful forces of Soviet Russia, ready to  lend him any support for an enterprise which shall strike at the heart of the  British and French empires. It is to Kemal&#8217;s lasting credit that he has not yet  called upon this incalculable force to support him in his demands. It is to his  lasting credit that he has not relied upon that support to make his demands such  as would threaten the integrity and even the existence of the British Empire. Is  it reasonable to expect that if we force him into a corner, if we deny him right  and justice, he will hesitate to use the resources that he has at his call and  face us with them in a war to the death, once the issue is  declared?<\/p>\n<p>The Treaty of Sevres contains an  insult to Turkey in almost every paragraph. The French Chamber of Deputies never  accepted it. The Italians ignored it. France and Italy have always recognized  the right of the Turks to live and have laughed at the Gladstonian bombast that  pretended to turn them out of Europe. It is not Kemal who is preaching the &#8220;holy  war.&#8221; He is demanding justice. But there are more than sufficient fanatics among  the nonconformist element in England who know nothing of the East and wish to  know nothing, but are ready to send our men to the horror and savagery of modern  warfare in an unjust cause. The votes of these gentry have counted for much in  the recent attitude of Mr. Lloyd George and his supporters. Their influence  helped him along the road of intrigue with Greece, an intrigue which has almost  wholly cost us our prestige. There is not a Turk who does not believe that  British money and guidance were behind the invasion of Asia Minor by the rabble  of King Constantine.<\/p>\n<p>There is the &#8220;holy war&#8221; which has been  opened, not by the Turks or by Islam, but by the false champions of  Christianity. To think that for so many generations great Englishmen in India  and all over the Near and Far East have labored to keep the name of Britain fair  and unstained, by insisting that the religious feelings of subject populations  should be respected, and that now a British government should claim to take away  the very center and focus of Mahommedanism and hand it over to the domination of  an alien race and an alien creed1 What an advertisement for British justice and  British policy!<\/p>\n<p>At this very moment there is on foot a  great Mahommedan movement in India and Mesopotamia directed against British  rule. That movement still lacks leadership, and we can deal with it by firmness  and justice. But I served for twenty-one years amongst the Mahommedans of  northern India and the Sudan, under that great administrator, Lord Kitchener,  and I have never known a time when the peril of religious war was more grave and  fraught with more dire consequences. In Turkey they speak openly of this  movement against Great Britain and of the support it will have from Soviet  Russia and Germany when occasion offers. There are plenty of Russians in Angora  today and there is plenty of Russian gold ready for distribution. But the Turks  dislike and distrust the Bolshevist movement and are themselves not anxious to  engineer insurrection against the British in the East. It is only if forced too  far that they will make use of the last, the greatest and in my opinion the one  indubitably successful means of coercion. With Turkey leading the Mahommedan  world in an organized rebellion against British rule, there would be, as I see  it, no hope for the maintenance of the security of the empire.<\/p>\n<p>I wonder if the British government  knows anything of the quality of Kemal&#8217;s army. The talk of French or German  officers having led it against the Greeks is all nonsense. The Nationalist Turks  want no foreign interference. Again and again they have said to me: &#8220;We are not  the old Turks. We stand upon our own feet. We desire to see a Turkish nation  composed of Christians as well as Moslems&#8211;but it must be a united nation. We  want no foreign officers in our army, no foreign directors of our customs and  finance. We recognize our foreign debts and will pay them. We look to the  support of the great nations of the West in the development of our national  existence. We are ready and anxious for foreign trade. But we are an independent  nation and will not live upon foreign sufferance or  permission.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>They have given enough proof of their  determination in the past few years. I cannot conceive how any statesman, after  seeing what Turkey has done to organize itself and maintain its freedom against  colossal odds, can deny it the right to independence. These are not the days of  Gladstone. These are new days. The World will not uproot the Turk from Europe or  Asia Minor by accusing him of atrocities, especially when all mention of  atrocities committed against him is carefully suppressed. The world will not  destroy the Turk in Europe until it has killed the last man of the nation&#8211;and  that man, when he dies, will die fighting.<\/p>\n<p>We hear a great deal about the hidden  intrigues of other European nations against the British Empire. I suppose all  nations intrigue at times. But I must qualify that statement: it is the  diplomatists and the politicians who cannot be trusted not to intrigue. They are  always at it. But I do not believe that in this matter of the Mahommedan menace  there is, or could be, any difference of opinion between Great Britain, France  and Italy. On broad principles, in this and other matters, our union is as close  as ever it was during the great war. I will not pretend that the reason for this  community of policy is entirely altruistic. On the contrary, their own interest  impels France and Italy to join hands with us in any safe and just policy  designed to protect our empire of Mahommedan subject peoples. The French and the  Italians will be the first to feel within their own colonial borders the  repercussion of revolt against the British Empire by the Mahommedan subjects. It  is for this reason, and because they have already seen the wisdom of the course  we shall have to take in the end, that they have refused to support Mr. Lloyd  George&#8217;s pro-Greek policy and have ceased empire-building in the Near East. If  the British government proposes to force Turkey into the toleration of alien  military and civil authority in Asia Minor, we shall be left to fight the issue  alone. And Mr. Lloyd George could not have gone to the House of Commons and  asked for a hundred millions or so and permission to raise five hundred and  fifty thousand men for the support of the Greeks in a new offensive in Asia  Minor. It would have ended his government sooner. If any British politician  wants the situation put picturesquely, let me tell him that he can, perhaps,  push the Turk out of Europe; but if he does so, he will make Turkey an Asiatic  Power and turn its eyes at once to our empire in India and Egypt. We must  realize that Turkey watches closely every phase of the present situation and is  quite capable of using it to the best advantage. And I would venture to say that  whatever anti-British feeling there is in Turkey has been deliberately fomented,  not by foreign agitators so much as by British incapables.<\/p>\n<p>There are certain matters, as I have  explained, in which Turkey looks for help from us and from other western Powers.  Turkey wants our moral support and wants us to have more interest in Turkish  trade, which up to now has been conducted to the profit of the Greek under the  shadow of British prestige. I do not pretend that the Turk is very fond of the  Bulgar or the Serb or the Rumanian. I am sure that he has no love for the  Russian and especially the Bolshevik. But there is one nation he hates, and that  is the Greek. From time immemorial Greeks have assisted in the conduct of  Turkish affairs, but always as subordinates. If one went close enough into the  matter, it would be found that the Greeks themselves had little to complain of  in the opportunities that were given them, under the Turkish Crescent, for  personal aggrandizement in the commercial and even in the political sphere. But  they have always been subordinate, and their presence in Asia Minor was  tolerated only so long as they did not interfere with the rule of the country.  The same applies to the Armenians. It is this which has fired the blood of every  Turkish peasant to revolt, when he sees the Greeks come marching under arms as  the conquerors of his country, the usurpers of his native soil. Should we like  it, if those whom we had made our servants for centuries were forced upon us as  conquerors by other nations for whom we had every respect and with whom we  desired to be friends?<\/p>\n<p>At this stage, when after nearly three  years of muddle, the British government is being forced back to the position it  should have taken at the armistice, the natural liking and trust of the Turks  for the British people is still so strong that the situation can be saved. In  this matter I would almost say that our luck is undeserved, if I did not feel  that it is not our politicians, but our national character, which has earned the  appreciation of the Turk.<\/p>\n<p>I remember now, as if it were  yesterday, what Raouf Bey said to me at Prinkipo, the day before I left  captivity to bear the terms of Turkish capitulation to the British government.  He pointed out that Britain must not try to force the Dardanelles, for that  would cause chaos in Constantinople. &#8220;Turkey only wants to be friends with the  British,&#8221; he said. &#8220;The whole thing must be a fait accompli before it is talked  about. If we want help, we will call on the British and open the Dardanelles.  Leave us alone till then. Treat us like gentlemen, and we will be  loyal.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>British troops and Anzacs alike will  remember that the Turk fought like a gentleman at the Dardanelles. It was not  with the approval of these troops that the British government struck at Turkish  honor when the Turk laid down his arms. I reached the British fleet, after  passing through Smyrna amid cheers and acclamation, on October 20, 1918, and  remained as the guest of Admiral Seymour. The Turkish delegates arrived on  October 26, were quartered on the Agamemnon and went into conference on the  following day. They were Raouf Bey, minister of marine, Saad-ullah, a colonel of  their general staff from Aleppo, and Reshad Hikmet Bey. Tewfik Bey, of the  Turkish navy, who had been my navel aide-de-camp at Constantinople, went with  them.<\/p>\n<p>I cannot say what happened at this  conference, for I was not present. But when I got back to England, I wrote, on  November 15, to Mr. Montagu, secretary of state for India, pointing out that the  pro-German Turks were out of power and that the race of honest Turkish peasants,  who had never wished to enter the field against Great Britain, should not be  punished for the crimes committed by the Committee of Union and Progress and its  bloodthirsty leaders, Enver and Talaat. I added the following  statement:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;It should be borne in mind that Izzet  Pasha, the field marshal, grand vizir and minister of war, has always been  friendly with England. In the interview in which he gave me my liberty, he asked  if I would help Turkey and said that he came of a family that had always  respected England and remembered the Crimean War and the policy of Lord  Beaconsfield. He said that he was ready to open the Dardanelles and the Bosporus  and to give autonomy to Mesopotamia and Syria, but under the sovereignty of the  Sultan, adding that we could take what guarantees we like. All that Turkey  wanted, he said, was the protection of England. He thought it was better for  England to have Turkey on her road to the East, a faithful and obedient ally,  than some Power which eventually would become a thorn in our side. &#8216;But,&#8217; he  continued, &#8216;we will not accept dishonorable terms; we are not Bulgarians. We  have ideas of honor. And rather than accept dishonorable terms, we will put our  backs to the wall and fight. You know what the Turks can do when driven to it,  for you have fought against them. Do not drive us out of Constantinople or  Turkey in Europe, where we have been settled for centuries, for this it is  impossible for us to accept.&#8217;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Raouf Bey, minister of marine, told  me that he was also ready to make Constantinople a free port, and with that  commercial advantage, with access to the Black Sea and the great strategic  advantage of the Dardanelles, Gallipoli and the Bosporus in our hands, we have  all Turkey at our feet &#8230; I should certainly not occupy Mesopotamia or Syria,  where we would only lock up troops for no purpose. If it is considered desirable  by the government to hold a portion of Mesopotamia, then I should retain the  province of Basrah, which might be made a free port; but, having the Persian  Gulf and the Indian Ocean, I personally see no great necessity to hold Basrah  &#8230; As regards Armenia, I should install a British regiment to see that people  were not oppressed. I know well the horrors that have been perpetrated on the  Armenian people, but it must be remembered that the Armenian question has been  to Turkey what the Irish question has been to England. The Armenians, much as I  sympathize with their wrongs, have invariably intrigued against the Turks, with  the Russians and with the English, on every possible  occasion.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>These words I addressed to Mr.  Montagu, not only as being a member of the British government and at that time a  personal friend of Mr. Lloyd George, but also having, by virtue of his office, a  particular interest in the maintenance of a secure road between Great Britain  and India.<\/p>\n<p>What I said then about Mesopotamia,  almost the entire press, with the exception of the government organs, is saying  today. The man in the street is also saying it, but in stronger language. To  gratify the whims of a few political &#8220;experts&#8221; and to protect the selfish  interests of wealthy oil speculators, we are bleeding the British taxpayer white  for the up-keep of a needless army in a barren desert, which will never bloom  like the rose, however much we delude ourselves into thinking that it will. The  Turk kept Mesopotamia quiet with a tithe of the troops that we employ. He could  do so again.<\/p>\n<p>It is the same in Syria. Both we and  the French, if we unite on policy, can find a means of restoring Turkish control  in Syria, without injuring either the Arabs or our own  interests.<\/p>\n<p>And finally, we must make up our minds  to march side by side with the French in this Turkish affair. A lot of bad  feeling between the two nations has been artificially stimulated by interested  parties. There is no need for bad feeling at all. Our aims and objects are  identical, and with them there coincide the objects of Italy and the United  States. Even today foreign trade is being carried on extensively between the  Nationalist Turks and French, Italian and American merchants, who have missions  and agencies at Adana, the capital of Cilicia&#8211;and it will be remembered that  there was a graver incident between French troops and Turkish irregulars in this  district than anything that has occurred to us&#8211;and in the growing port of  Mersina and at Konia.<\/p>\n<p>While the Greeks were in Smyrna, the  Turks from the interior blockaded and boycotted the place. Even if it had not  been burned, the Turks would never have allowed their trade to go there while  the Greeks were on the spot. And the Greeks of Smyrna will go back again when  the place is rebuilt and under Turkish rule, as they would go back anywhere  where there is a profit to be made.<\/p>\n<p>British trade with Turkey is now  represented by a very few merchants, who are known personally to their Turkish  neighbors and are not held responsible for British policy. There are tales of  persecution of British traders by the Turks. These merchants will tell you that  there is no truth in such tales. And if the British change their policy and  extend the hand of friendship to Turkey, their traders will be welcomed with  open arms. England and France must, in common necessity, unite on the Near East  question and give back this element of self-respect and independence of which  England has sought to deprive Turkey, but which the valor of Turkish soldiery  has maintained in spite of the British government. Only so can we hope to avert  the menace of a &#8220;holy war&#8221; and keep the green flag of the Prophet from being  unfurled against Christians in every corner of the East.<\/p>\n<p>Asia, Vol. XXII, Number 12 (December,  1922): 949-953.<\/p>\n<p>By Major-General Sir Charles  Townshend<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Charles Townshend There is nothing that the Turk desires more ardently than to be friends with Great Britain. The price he asks is not exorbitant. It is no more than the heritage of every free-born nation. And the Turk is not a man to accept slavery or dependence. To him death is nothing if the [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":83,"featured_media":24633,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[94],"tags":[4124],"class_list":["post-24632","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uk","tag-charles-townshend"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/24632","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/83"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=24632"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/24632\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/24633"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=24632"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=24632"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=24632"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}