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US not involved in Turkey coup attempt, 'full stop', says envoy

US ambassador is 'deeply disturbed and offended by the accusations' targeting his country

Supporters of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan wave Turkish and Turkish-Cypriot flags during a demonstration on 5 August, 2016 (AFP)

The United States' ambassador to Turkey has again denied allegations his country was involved in last month's failed coup attempt, Turkish media reported on Saturday.

"I just want to say again, as I've said before and as we've said from Washington, the United States government did not plan, direct, support or have any advance knowledge of any of the illegal activities that occurred the night of 15 July and into 16 July. Full stop," US ambassador John Bass said in remarks published in English daily Hurriyet Daily News.

He added that he was "deeply disturbed and offended by the accusations" targeting his country.

The 15 July military action blamed by Ankara on US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen has rattled Turkey's relations with the United States and the European Union.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused the West of supporting the plotters and warned Washington that relations will suffer if it fails to extradite Pennyslvania-based Gulen.

Erdogan has also accused the US of hiding and sheltering the preacher and described the failed military action as a "scenario written from outside" in an allusion to foreign involvement.

His government have called on the US to extradite Gulen to face charges of terrorism but Washington has said it would not do so until Ankara provided concrete evidence. 

Shortly after the coup attempt, Labour Minister Suleyman Soylu went even further to say "the United States is behind the coup".

This week, Turkey's former army chief, Ilker Basbug, claimed that the US Central Intelligence Agency was also behind it.

"Frankly, if we would have had knowledge we would have told the Turkish government about it immediately," Bass said.

He said the US wants to see a "strong, prosperous, democratic, confident Turkey".

"Anyone who thinks that the United States somehow profits from Turkey being divided and destabilised I think is misreading history to a profound degree."

Three days after the failed coup, Bass rebutted claims his country somehow supported the putsch.

"This is categorically untrue, and such speculation is harmful to the decades-long friendship between two great nations," he said in a statement on the embassy website.

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