Mr Obama has turned down Mr. Erdoganâs request to join him for the inauguration of a Turkish-funded mosque in Maryland, and the US president has no plans for a formal one-on-one meeting with his Turkish counterpart, who is a vital ally in the fight against Islamic State, US officials told
The White House is instead expected to have Vice President Joe Biden meet with Mr Erdogan.
Senior US administration officials said the decision not to meet Mr Erdogan while he is in Washington shouldnât be taken as a slight because the two presidents met in November at the Group of 20 summit in Turkey, and spoke by phone in February.
âThe president has been in such regular contact with few other world leaders,â said a senior U.S. administration official. âWhen it comes to the NSS, there is not a robust [bilateral] schedule, so itâs not as if Erdogan is being excluded.â
Delegations from 51 nations are expected to attend the summit, which begins Thursday. Mr Obama has only one planned one-on-one meetingâwith Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Turkey is at the center of the fight against Islamic State, the struggle to end Syriaâs civil war, and the global refugee crisis, making Mr. Erdogan a key partner for Western leaders.
Mr Erdogan has alienated some allies by overseeing a crackdown on domestic critics and waging a new fight with Kurdish insurgents. The alliesâ need to work with the Turkish president has tempered their public criticism.
âThis is one of the least bright spots for Mr. Erdoganâs foreign-policy agenda, said Soner Cagaptay, director of the Turkish Research Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. âHe took a stellar personal relationship with the US president and look where it is today.â
The US and its allies need Mr Erdoganâs help in clamping down on Islamic State extremists leaving Syria and containing the migrant crisis stoked by the war in Syria.
Turkish officials have been trying for months to lay the groundwork for a meeting in Washington with Mr Obama.