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Turks cry economic warfare as Moody's lowers credit rating

Turkey's freshly downgraded credit rating is fueling paranoia, though economists point out that Turkey's economic decline was well established before the coup attempt.

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A sign for Moody's rating agency is displayed at the company headquarters in New York, Sept. 18, 2012. — EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/GettyImages

On a rainy day in May 2013, US President Barack Obama and Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan stood together under umbrellas in Washington praising the strategic partnership between their countries while Moody’s Investors Service was upgrading Turkey’s credit rating to good.

But since that heartwarming meeting of two leaders, black clouds have drifted over US-Turkey relations. Deep rifts over Turkey's Syria policy, Gezi Park protests, corruption probes and finally a coup attempt have had traumatic effects on the relations between the two countries.

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