Biden, in Turkey, calls concentration of powers 'corrosive'

US Vice President Joe Biden (L) is seen with Turkish Prime Mnister Ahmet Davutoğlu during an Atlantic Council meeting in Istanbul . AA photo

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden on Nov. 22 warned that a concentration of powers under a head of state was "corrosive," before a meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan for the first time since his critical remarks over Turkey’s policies in Syria sparked a crisis in early October.

Biden’s remarks accusing  Turkey of facilitating the development of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and other groups fighting the Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria had angered Erdoğan.

Speaking at a meeting of the Checks and Balances Network, an initiative that gather more than 150 nongovernmental organizations. Biden noted that in the United States the three branches of power -- presidency, legislature and judiciary -- are equal in status.

"Our founders (of the United States) concluded that a concentration of powers was the most corrosive thing that can happen to any system," he said.

"We still believe that," he added.

Biden did not specifically refer to Turkey in his remarks open to the press ahead of a closed-door meeting, saying he was not in Istanbul to "proselytize."

But he added: "The best way to preserve freedom is not to have too much power concentrated in any branch of government."

He said his own insistence on the issue was so great that President Barack Obama "joked with me that I thought Congress should have more power than he does."

Energy warning to EU

Earlier in the day, Biden told Europe it was time to act on improving its energy security, warning of Russia's "track record" in using energy supplies as a weapon.

Speaking at an Atlantic Council meeting in Istanbul, Biden said Europe needed to step up efforts to "ensure diversification" away from Russian oil...

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