, 1888 He first served as
United States Minister to the
Ottoman Empire from 1887 to 1889 and again from 1898 to 1899. Upon his arrival to
Constantinople, he was said to have been given a "cordial welcome". At the outbreak of the
Philippine–American War in 1899, Secretary of State
John Hay asked Straus to approach Sultan
Abdul Hamid II to request that the Sultan write a letter to the
Moro Sulu Muslims of the
Sulu Sultanate telling them to submit to American
suzerainty and American military rule. with Straus writing that the "Sulu Mohammedans ... refused to join the insurrectionists and had placed themselves under the control of our army, thereby recognizing American sovereignty." President McKinley sent a personal letter of thanks to Straus and said that its accomplishment had saved the United States at least twenty thousand troops in the field." The
Moro Rebellion then broke out in 1904 with war raging between the Americans and Moro Muslims and atrocities committed against Moro Muslim women and children such as the
Moro Crater Massacre. On January 14, 1902, he was named a member of the
Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague to fill the place left vacant by the death of former President
Benjamin Harrison. == Secretary of Commerce and Labor==