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Turkish Political Crisis In Works Yet Again

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  • Turkish Political Crisis In Works Yet Again

    TURKISH POLITICAL CRISIS IN WORKS YET AGAIN
    Jane Roh

    National Journal, DC
    Aug 13 2007

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has again nominated
    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul to be president, in a direct challenge
    to millions of his countrymen and the military, AP reports. Gul is a
    member of the ruling AK party, which is viewed by critics as advocating
    political Islam.

    Erdogan's decision will likely reignite a tense confrontation between
    his government and Turkey's fiercely secularist military. In the
    spring, when Erdogan first announced he wanted outgoing President
    Ahmet Necdet Sezer, a secularist, to be succeeded by Gul, more than
    a million Turks took to the streets and the military threatened a coup.

    Parliamentary elections were moved up to last month to help resolve
    the crisis. To most observers' surprise, voters decisively sided with
    the AK party in that vote.

    Soon after, the AK tried to smooth things over by offering to pick
    a non-Islamist for the speakership. But Erdogan wouldn't say whether
    he would settle on a compromise candidate.

    Today's announcement indicates Erdogan believes Gul can win and
    that the military is bluffing. One factor that is very much out of
    his control is how the population reacts. Turks are hungrily eyeing
    assimilation into the EU for their quickly modernizing nation.

    Europe, on the other hand, views the overwhelmingly Muslim country
    with skepticism. Turks eager to cleave their identities from more
    radical Islamist countries may take to the streets in protest again.

    Meanwhile, last month's vote shows that political Islam seems to be
    catching on in Turkey. The war in Iraq is a likely factor; studies
    show it's had a radicalizing effect in Muslim nations.

    What Washington will do about another spurt of unrest is far from
    clear. The White House counts Erdogan as an ally on the war on terror,
    despite some bad blood over Ankara's having refused to play staging
    ground in the run-up to the Iraq war. Like most world leaders, Erdogan
    has inched away from President Bush, whose unpopularity went global
    long ago.

    Turkey also has a somewhat legitimate beef with the White House over
    its failure to lend a hand against PKK terrorists after promising to
    do so. The State Department reported that more than 500 people had
    been killed in cross-border skirmishes with the militant Kurdish
    group last year. On July 30, columnist Robert Novak reported that
    U.S. special forces and the Turkish military were engaged in a secret
    operation. That may have been the Bush administration's way of averting
    a full-on military response against Iraqi Kurds after Turkish tanks
    began amassing along the border earlier this summer.

    Though Washington would probably prefer to see Turkey remain the
    prosperous secular Muslim democracy it is today, don't expect to hear
    much criticism of Erdogan from the White House. Ankara has indicated
    its cooperation in the Iraq war comes with a price.

    The latest example concerns the Ottoman Empire's alleged genocide of
    Armenians in the early 20th century. Washington lobbyists and lawmakers
    are duking it out over a congressional resolution condemning Turkey
    for denying the genocide ever happened. Guess which side the White
    House is on?

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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