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  • ISTANBUL: Latest analysis: ill-informed, ill-intentioned

    Ã?aÄ?aptay's latest analysis: ill-informed, ill-intentioned

    by Ä°HSAN YILMAZ


    A piece titled `What's Really Behind Turkey's Coup Arrests?' by Soner
    Ã?aÄ?aptay, who works for the pro-Israeli Washington Institute for Near
    East Policy (WINEP), was published very recently by the Foreign Policy
    journal. He starts his unsubstantiated claims by saying that the Gülen
    movement is a shadowy Islamist movement.

    I have written here several times that unless you call every single
    practicing Muslim an Islamist, Fethullah Gülen and his movement can
    never be called Islamist. Quite the contrary, the movement has always
    stayed away from politics. It is well known that if someone is called
    Islamist, it is implied that he is not an ordinary Muslim but is
    instead a radical and possibly a pro-violence one. Some hooligan
    right-wing Islamophobic tabloid journalist could write such a thing,
    but an academic such as Ã?aÄ?aptay must know that serious academics
    never call the Gülen movement Islamist. Even this misuse of the term
    shows that Ã?aÄ?aptay is not objective or unbiased toward the movement.
    Ã?aÄ?aptay tries to dilute evidence against the coup attempts and
    writes: `When I asked a former US ambassador to Turkey for his views
    on the news, he thought the scenario was ridiculous. `If the Turkish
    military was going to do a coup, they would not be writing a
    5,000-page memo about it,' he stated.' But on Friday the military
    prosecutor confirmed that experts agreed that the coup documents were
    authentic. I am sure the experts know this better than a former
    ambassador who only relies on speculation. What is more, we know that
    the coup-plotter generals say in the recording that they themselves
    recorded and archived that the plan they imitated was the Flag
    (Bayrak) Plan which was a written document prepared to plan Sept. 12,
    1980. The fact that the plan is longer this time is only a sign that
    coup-plotting junta knew that this time civil society is much stronger
    thanks to the Gülen movement and many others, so the plan had to be
    more detailed, careful and vigilant. They recorded everything, and one
    reason could be that they did not trust each other. On March 9, 1971,
    some generals betrayed their colleagues and the leftist (Baathist, to
    be more accurate) coup and sided with the rightist generals who
    successfully staged a coup on March 12, 1971, and the next generation
    of coup-lover generals never forgot this.

    The fact that no one has been prosecuted for the wiretap of the chief
    of General Staff is interpreted by Ã?aÄ?aptay as a sign that the balance
    of power in Turkey has shifted decisively. Bu he never mentions that
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an himself and several other Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party) deputies also were wiretapped and
    that Ergenekon suspect DoÄ?u Perinçek's newspapers and TV stations
    published them. They were not prosecuted, either. Ã?aÄ?aptay prefers to
    give us half the picture, as he has done many times before, for
    instance, when he was arguing that Turkey was changing its axis from a
    Western-alliance position to pro-Iranian, etc., position. This was
    repeatedly and vehemently denied by the US State Department, EU
    politicians and Eurocrats. Not surprisingly, only rightist Israelis,
    Likudniks, Zionists and some neocons advocate these views, which are
    not based on evidence and facts but on pure conspiracy or speculation.
    It has repeatedly been shown by academics that the main engine behind
    the success of the AK Party, the Anatolian middle classes and the
    nascent elite, are fully supportive of the EU process and that is why
    they support the AK Party. Otherwise they would support Necmettin
    Erbakan's Felicity Party (SP), which has an anti-West and anti-EU
    discourse.


    Speculation and accusations
    Ã?aÄ?aptay tries again to blacken the Gülen movement by labeling it an
    `ultraconservative political faction.' What is conservative? What is
    ultraconservative? Why is it political and why is it a faction?
    Ã?aÄ?aptay simply borrowed all the negative words and terms that would
    irritate the Western reader, but none of these are true, and clear
    definitions are never given. Again, he writes that the movement aims
    to `reshape secular Turkey in its own image, by securing the supremacy
    of Gülen's version of religion over politics, government, education,
    media, business, and public and personal life.' But these are pure
    blanket accusations, mind-reading and pure speculation without a shred
    of evidence.
    He also claims that `today, it is those who criticize the Gülen
    movement who get burned.' It seems that Ã?aÄ?aptay never reads Turkish
    newspapers and never watches Turkish television. The lies and
    accusations that Ã?aÄ?aptay is fabricating here are not original
    whatsoever. Every day on television and in newspapers several
    pro-oligarchy journalists, so-called writers, academics and so on keep
    repeating these conspiracy theories. Nothing happens to these people.
    In the past, Gülen always sued them and got compensation for libel
    (the pro-Ergenekon daily Cumhuriyet's archive is full of papers with
    corrections, even in the headlines), but as far as I can see, Gülen is
    no longer interested in them; maybe he does not want to make those
    marginal voices happy and famous.

    Ã?aÄ?aptay states that `Zekeriya Ã-z, the chief prosecutor leading the
    Ergenekon case, and Ramazan Akyurek, the head of the police's domestic
    intelligence branch, as well as other powerful people in the police,
    are thought by some to be Gülen sympathizers.' Everybody who is
    anti-oligarchy or not corrupt is thought to be a Gülen sympathizer.
    What can Ã?aÄ?aptay say if I write here that Ã?aÄ?aptay is thought to be a
    Mossad agent by some as he always writes along the lines of the
    pro-Israelis, and what is more he works for an openly pro-Israeli
    think tank? Writing this here seriously would be ridiculous, but this
    is what so-called academic Ã?aÄ?aptay does when it comes to police
    officers and prosecutors without -- again -- any shred of evidence.



    Ã?aÄ?aptay portrays Türkan Saylan as just a grandmother; he never
    mentions that she could not explain a document discovered on her
    computer mentioning encouraging girls (who were given scholarships by
    Saylan) to make every sacrifice needed to become close to young
    officers. Several other original documents that were filed by the
    prosecutors also show similar activities.


    No proof of evidence
    Ã?aÄ?aptay writes without any proof or evidence that `the
    Gülen-controlled parts of the judiciary and police have also wielded
    illegal wiretaps against those entangled in the Ergenekon case,
    leaking intimate details of their private lives.' But is it a
    coincidence that several Ergenekon suspects were caught with those
    recordings and pictures and sometimes they were caught not by the
    police but by the gendarmerie? Remember when former Land Forces
    Commander Gen. YaÅ?ar Büyükanıt was to be appointed the chief of
    General Staff; there was a bombardment of every single cell phone,
    e-mail inbox and Internet Web site accusing him of being everything
    from a secret Jew to a corrupt officer and so on. The oligarchy's men
    instantly blamed their scapegoat Gülen at that time, but afterwards
    all these materials were found in the office of Büyükanıt's rival for
    the position of chief of General Staff, Gen. Å?ener Eruygur (an
    Ergenekon suspect ), well protected in the army compounds. Gen.
    Eruygur today claims that he cannot remember anything. What is more,
    referring to this, Gen. Büyükanıt himself said he was also a victim of
    Ergenekon. One wonders why Ã?aÄ?aptay never mentions these important
    factual details but instead talks about rumors and repeats exactly
    what the Ergenekon suspects keep saying.
    Ã?aÄ?aptay also claims that `the military ¦ opposes the AKP and the
    Gülenists because it sees itself as the virtual guardian of Turkey's
    secular polity à la Atatürk's vision, serving as a bulwark against
    religion's domination over politics and government.' But why does
    Ã?aÄ?aptay not look at the EU progress reports on Turkey that totally
    discredit his claims and ask for a more transparent,
    democracy-friendly and accountable army? Why do EU officials always
    reiterate that the Ergenekon case gives them hope for the future of
    Turkish democracy? It seems that everybody in the EU has become Gülen
    sympathizers! It seems that they are not as intelligent as Ã?aÄ?aptay!

    Ã?aÄ?aptay also allegedly writes that Gülen said `to his followers in a
    message broadcast on Turkish TV in 1999 that `every method and path is
    acceptable [including] lying to people'.' Even in the doctored video
    that Ã?aÄ?aptay mentions (he never says that it was broadcast to accuse
    Gülen but gives the impression that it was Gülen who broadcast this
    message), he never said this. Also, a staunchly secularist prosecutor
    prepared an indictment against Gülen based on this doctored video
    recording, and the Feb. 28 coup's mighty generals openly supported
    him, but the courts, including the highest court, the Court of
    Cassation, found Gülen not guilty, as Ã?aÄ?aptay mentions only briefly.


    A Gülen-Erbakan alliance?
    He claims that the Islamist Welfare Party (RP) government was
    supported by the Gülen movement. I am sorry, but this is a very silly
    lie. It is known by everyone in Turkey that Gülen and Erbakan do not
    like each other. Gülen never supported Erbakan. Ã?aÄ?aptay seems to be
    ignorant of Turkish social and political history. Gülen always said
    that mixing religion with politics is a satanic act. There are
    countless documents, evidence and academic studies to show this.
    Diametrically opposed to what Ã?aÄ?aptay writes, Gülen did something
    very `unGülenic' and appeared on TV at the time and stated very
    powerfully that Erbakan should quit the government because the
    situation was extremely tense and he feared a coup that would end with
    bloodshed. It is easy to find newspaper pieces, comments on this and
    even the recording of the broadcast itself. Can Ã?aÄ?aptay show us even
    a single piece proving that Gülen supported Erbakan for one moment in
    his entire life? What actually happened was that after getting rid of
    the Islamic government, the anti-Islam coup went after all religious
    people, banned the headscarf at universities, banned parents sending
    under 15-year-olds to mosques in the summer holidays to receive
    religious education, tried to bankrupt religious businessmen and so
    on. Today, almost everyone remembers those days with a feeling of
    total disgust, and no one advocates what happened. Did you also know
    that the coup's leader, Gen. Cevik Bir, said publicly that the AK
    Party was beneficial for the country?
    Ã?aÄ?aptay also claims that `the AKP ¦ is largely a reincarnation of the
    banned RP,' but there is no evidence to support this. Erbakan went on
    to establish his own party, and he accuses ErdoÄ?an and his friends of
    being children of the Byzantine Empire and sheepish slaves of the
    West. Ã?aÄ?aptay and his friends can never explain why the Armenians in
    Turkey reportedly (as declared by the Armenian patriarch and some
    Armenian journalists such as Etyen Mahçupyan, who is also a Taraf
    columnist) voted for the AK Party in the July 22, 2007 general
    elections, when the AK Party got 47 percent of the vote. Is it again a
    case of those people not being as intelligent as Ã?aÄ?aptay? I must note
    that I submitted a paper on the AK Party and its non-Islamism to a
    respected journal, and one of the reviewers was upset by the
    information on the pro-AK Party Armenian voting and did not hide his
    feelings, saying that this information was irrelevant. I wonder why?

    Ã?aÄ?aptay is himself solid proof that the conspiracy theories he
    repeats about the Gülen movement are based on fabrications and lies,
    blanket accusations without any evidence, mind reading and disrespect
    for the judicial process in Turkey. These desperate attacks on the
    movement by Ã?aÄ?aptay, Michael Rubin, Rachel Sharon-Krespin, Barry
    Rubin and so on, will only strengthen the movement's respected
    peaceful and pro-dialogue status all over the world.

    Believe me, if he had any evidence against the Gülen movement, instead
    of humiliating himself once more and abusing Foreign Policy and its
    readers, Ã?aÄ?aptay would not hide it from his readers, unless he is
    also a secret Gülen sympathizer sacrificing himself and his academic
    career by way of strange tactics.

    I did not write this piece because I take Ã?aÄ?aptay and his friends
    seriously. I do not. Google the net, and you will find thousands of
    conspiracy theories about Gülen (by the way, none of their writers got
    burned) on marginal anti-Islamic or ultra-nationalist Web sites. But I
    take Foreign Policy seriously, and I am sure they will tackle this
    abhorrent abuse of their good intentions.



    26 February 2010, Friday
    Ä°HSAN YILMAZ
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