A week after President Donald Trump sparked anger in Turkey by authorizing the arming of Syrian Kurds, he welcomed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to the White House on Tuesday.
The two leaders are holding talks expected to focus on that dispute, as well as the wider conflict in Syria.
WATCH: Trump - Erdogan joint statement
The U.S. sees the Kurdish force, the YPG, as a key part in the fight against Islamic State and the effort to oust the militants from their de facto capital in Raqqa. But Turkey considers the YPG terrorists because of their links to the Kurdistan Workers' Party that has been waging a three-decade insurgency inside of Turkey.
Erdogan called the decision to provide U.S. arms "contrary to our strategic relations to the U.S."
But he said last week ahead of the trip that he views his visit to Washington as "a new beginning in Turkish-American relations."
Protests
Prior to Erdogan's arrival at the White House, a brief scuffle broke out between pro-Erdogan demonstrators and a group of Kurdish advocates. The two sides were quickly separated by police and Secret Service agents stationed outside the White House gates.
Both Turkey and the United States have backed rebels in Syria during the six-year war against President Bashar al-Assad's forces and allies. And the NATO allies have been heavily involved in battling Islamic State since the group swept into large areas of northern and western Iraq and eastern Syria in mid-2014.
Erdogan is also likely to bring up with Trump the status of Fethullah Gulen, the exiled cleric living in the United States whom the Turkish president blames for a failed coup attempt last year. Turkey has asked the U.S. to extradite Gulen, but that request has gone nowhere.
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