On Saturday, Biden used the word "genocide" to describe the persecution of the Armenian people by the Ottoman authorities in his Armenian Remembrance Day statement, prompting objections from Ankara. The Vatan party already held protests outside of the US embassy in Ankara, near the Consulate General in Istanbul, at the Incirlik airbase and in major Turkish cities, demanding that the US military bases be shut down and Crimea be recognized as Russian territory.
"The Incirlik and Kurecik bases should be immediately transferred under the full control of the Turkish armed forces, and the US troops should be sent home within 15 days. Diplomatic contacts with Russia, Iran and Azerbaijan should be initiated to recognize Crimea [as Russian] and Abkhazia [as independent], as well as the [self-proclaimed] Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus," Rifat Mutlu, the party head in Izmir, said at the protest, as quoted in the statement for Sputnik.
Mutlu noted that Biden cannot threaten "Turkey united with Russia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Iraq, Syria and Libya."
The protesters also called on the Turkish authorities to immediately begin military cooperation with Syria to "put an end to the US-backed Kurdistan Workers' Party."
Turkey firmly rejects the assertions of genocide and has repeatedly warned the Biden administration that such a move by the United States would hurt the already strained bilateral relations.