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Report: U.S.-Based Turkish Navy Officer 'Missing' After Coup Attempt
People take over a tank near the Fatih Sultan Mehmet bridge during clashes with military forces in Istanbul on July 16, 2016. Istanbul's bridges across the Bosphorus, the strait separating the European and Asian sides of the city, have been closed to traffic. Turkish military forces on July 16 opened fire on crowds gathered in Istanbul following a coup attempt, causing casualties, an AFP photographer said. The soldiers opened fire on grounds around the first bridge across the Bosphorus dividing Europe and Asia, said the photographer, who saw wounded people being taken to ambulances. (Photo by GURCAN OZTURK/AFP/Getty Images)

Report: U.S.-Based Turkish Navy Officer 'Missing' After Coup Attempt

Navy Rear Adm. Mustafa Ugurlu, who was working at a NATO base in the United States, reportedly left his ID and badges at his base on July 22 and has not made contact since.

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Two Turkish military attaches working in Greece have fled the country for Italy after the failed military coup attempt, Turkey's foreign minister said Thursday, while reports said a naval officer based in the United States has also gone missing.

Turkey has blamed the July 15 coup attempt on officers loyal to a U.S.-based Muslim cleric who it says have infiltrated the military. The government is accusing the preacher, Fethullah Gulen, of orchestrating the failed insurrection. Gulen has denied any knowledge or involvement in the coup that left more than 270 dead but Turkey wants him extradited to face trial.

A tank moves into position as Turkish people attempt to stop them, in Ankara, Turkey, late Friday, July 15, 2016. (AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici)

Mevlut Cavusoglu, the foreign minister, told NTV television that a number of Turkish military attaches abroad supported the coup and some had even notified their embassies on the night of the failed coup that they were "in charge now."

Turkey has ordered military staff suspected of links to the coup to return to Turkey and a "legal process" has started against those who had not come back, the minister said.

Two of them included the land and navy attaches based in Greece, Cavusoglu said. Greek authorities had established that they had left Greece for Italy aboard a ferry on the night of Aug. 6, together with their families. He said one of the colonels had a brother in the Netherlands and that Italy, the Netherlands and other European countries had been notified.

"We are in contact so that the two traitors may be brought back to Turkey," Cavusoglu said.

Earlier, Turkey's state-run Anadolu Agency said Navy Rear Adm. Mustafa Ugurlu, who was working at a NATO base in the United States, had gone missing.

Anadolu, citing an official at the Turkish embassy in Washington, said Ugurlu had left his ID and badges at his base on July 22 and has not made contact since.

Asked about reports that Ugurlu was seeking asylum in the United States, Cavusoglu said Turkey had asked for information from Washington but had not yet received a response.

He repeated, however, Turkey's demand that the United States extradite Gulen.

"Our main expectation from the United States is Gulen's return," Cavusoglu said. "We are seeing signs of U.S. cooperation."

The agency said Ugurlu had been working at NATO's Allied Command Transformation headquarters in Norfolk, Virginia.

The U.S. State Department spokeswoman Elizabeth Trudeau said the department does not comment on or handle asylum cases. The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services said it could not discuss individual cases due to privacy concerns.

Turkey has also asked Athens to return eight suspected coup-plotters who fled Turkey in a helicopter, just after the coup was quashed. They insist they were not involved in the attempted coup, had been tasked with transporting wounded soldiers and civilians and had fled for their lives after coming under fire from Turkish police. The eight are seeking political asylum.

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