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Detention Of Generals Accelerates Turkey's Political Showdown

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  • Detention Of Generals Accelerates Turkey's Political Showdown

    DETENTION OF GENERALS ACCELERATES TURKEY'S POLITICAL SHOWDOWN

    Asbarez
    http://www.asbarez.com/77771/detention-of-general s-accelerates-turkeys-political-showdown/
    Feb 23rd, 2010

    ANKARA (RFE/RL)-Turkey's Islamist-rooted ruling party has dramatically
    upped the stakes in its showdown with the secularist establishment
    by detaining more than 50 current and former military commanders.

    For decades, the military has been considered the guardian of
    the secular order established by the republic founder and revered
    army officer, Mustafa Kemal. The first president of Turkey is known
    throughout the country simply as Ataturk, or "Father of the Turks,"
    and his adherents as "Kemalists."

    On February 22, the long-established order suffered a significant
    blow when 21 generals were detained, including former navy chief
    Admiral Ozden Ornek, former air force chief General Ibrahim Firtina,
    and former 1st Army commander General Ergin Saygun. Most of the others
    detained were colonels.

    The detentions are by far the most sensational single event in the
    government's investigation of the "Ergenekon" network, an alleged
    gang of top military officials who sought for decades to act as a
    shadow government and determine the country's political course.

    According to Turkish press reports, the new round of detentions may
    be linked to a plan by Ergenekon members to carry out a military coup
    against the ruling Justice and Development (AK) party in 2003.

    The plot for the coup, code-named "Balyoz" (Sledgehammer), allegedly
    involved plans to spark unrest by bombing two major mosques in Istanbul
    and staging an assault on a military museum by attackers disguised
    as Islamic fundamentalists.

    'Uncharted Territory'

    The detentions have electrified Turkey as the most sweeping move to
    date by the Islamist-rooted AK to redefine the Turkish republic by
    challenging the traditional dominance of the military as its protector.

    That protection to date has included the military's toppling of four
    governments since 1960 in the name of safeguarding the republic's
    Kemalist secular identity. Ozgur Ogrit, a correspondent for "Hurriyet
    Daily News" in Istanbul, says it is impossible to predict what will
    happen next.

    "This is uncharted territory for Turkey because, since last month,
    everyday you see the same phrase in the headlines: for the first
    time in Turkey, for the first time in republican history, for the
    first time this general came to give testimony, or this general was
    arrested, or a secret room of the military was inspected," Ogrit says.

    "I don't think anyone in Turkey can tell you where we are going to
    go from here."

    Dividing Turkey

    The Ergenekon investigation, launched in 2007, is causing huge
    divisions within Turkey as the pro-AK and pro-Kemalist camps have
    squared off in political and media circles.

    The division has equally reached into the once solidly Kemalist
    bastions of the military, judiciary, and bureaucracy - the three legs
    of the traditional Turkish state - making it still more impossible
    to predict how the showdown will end.

    The Ergenekon case has divided Turks on many levels of society. The
    detentions of the generals come close on the heels of a fierce battle
    within the judiciary itself between prosecutors determined to push
    ahead with the Ergenekon investigation and those who see the affair
    as a political tool for the AK to punish secular opponents.

    The battle within the judiciary came to a head last week as the
    Higher Board of Judges and Prosecutors condemned the arrest of
    a prosecutor who had been charged by colleagues with belonging
    to Ergenekon himself. The arrested prosecutor, Ilhan Cihaner, had
    launched a probe into the Islamic community.

    After the board removed four other prosecutors from an investigation
    into Cihaner, the AK-led government condemned the board for delivering
    a "heavy blow" against justice.

    Turkey's Future In The Balance

    But if tit-for-tat moves like those have at times risked making the
    public weary of the now years-long political crisis over the Ergenekon
    investigation, this week's detention of some 50 commanders guarantees
    the affair a new and long life.

    "People had been asking why, if the Ergenekon gang was supposed to
    be planning a coup, the investigation was bringing in journalists,
    scholars, writers, but where were the soldiers who would carry out
    the coup? And that was a very fair question," Ogrit notes. "Now,
    they have started to go after the top generals and now, I think,
    the case is meaningful once more."

    The credibility of the Ergenekon investigation had waned as it focused
    on soft targets without any immediate indication it would reach the
    alleged core Ergenekon group itself.

    At times, the arrests or detentions of secularist journalists, writers,
    and academics, appeared to rely upon increasingly dubious anonymous
    letters and secret witnesses. Some suspects accused the police of
    fabricating evidence.

    But now, with the stakes dramatically raised, the question of whether
    the investigation would reach some of the country's most powerful
    current and former members of the military is answered.

    And instead, the question for the months ahead has become whether
    the AK has the political strength to bring the detained commanders
    to trial and whether, if convicted, the verdicts would still be
    overturned by the old-guard Supreme Court of Appeals.

    The answer will tell much about the future direction in which Turkey
    will go. That direction now is generally seen inside Turkey itself as
    a choice between two poles: the traditional Kemalist secular state vs.

    an Islamic order that critics say would usher in Shari'a law.

    But the reality may ultimately be an identity at a point somewhere
    along this continuum that has not yet been determined. And part of
    the process of determining that point may be exactly the political
    crisis now rocking the country.
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