From DW:
“US
officially changes spelling of Turkey to Turkiye”
US diplomats
and government statements in the future will now refer to the "Republic of
Türkiye," several months after the Turkish government requested the
change. The United States moved to adopt the Turkish preferred spelling for its
NATO ally, changing from Turkey to Turkiye, the State Department confirmed on
Thursday. The move comes months after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
government called on countries and international bodies to adopt the name
change — seeking to differentiate the country from the North American bird of
the same name. Thursday's announcement also comes ahead of a key visit later
this month by Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.
Why did the
US make the change? The change of spelling was first noticed in a statement
posted by the US State Department about joint US-Turkish action against
suspected "Islamic State" financiers. Officials later
confirmed the spelling change, but said the pronunciation would stay the same.
"The Turkish Embassy did request that we use this spelling in our
communications," State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters. "The
Department will use the spelling that you saw today in most of our formal
diplomatic and bilateral contexts, including in public communications," he
said. Later this month, Turkey's top diplomat is expected in Washington
for talks on Russia's invasion of Ukraine as well as Finland and Sweden's NATO
membership bids. Initial implementation of the change appeared spotty,
with both the State Department website and the Foreign Affairs Manual not yet
reflecting the change. The US State Department rarely changes its
stylistic rules on foreign country names — with the recent exceptions of North
Macedonia and Eswatini.
Why did
Turkey request the change? In 2021, President Erdogan ordered countries and
international bodies using Latin script to consistently use the spelling of
Turkiye (spelled with an umlaut as Türkiye). The United Nations and NATO
took over the name change, as well as Canada, India, Australia and New Zealand.
The association with the large, North American turkey — a bird that is
typically served for dinner at Thanksgiving or Christmas — has been a sore
point for Turkish officials. Turkish public broadcaster TRT World
recently pointed out in an article that alongside the association with the
bird, the word "turkey" in English can also be used as slang for a
"stupid or silly person."
^ Maybe Turkey
should not focus on whether people think of them as a Bird or a Country and
start focusing on letting Finland and Sweden into NATO (they and Hungary are
the only hold-outs), recognizing what the Ottoman Turks did to the Armenians from
1915-1917 (when 1. 2 Million Armenians were murdered) as a Genocide and getting
Russia to end its War in Ukraine. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/us-officially-changes-spelling-of-turkey-to-turkiye/a-64301304
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