INSIDE TRACK: TURKISH ELECTION FEVER
by Thomas Goltz
The National Interest Online, DC
http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id =14920
July 9 2007
ISTANBUL, Turkey-The record-breaking heat-wave that enveloped the
country in late June may have subsided, but the temperature continues
to rise between the dozen-odd political parties and a multitude of
independent candidates contesting the upcoming parliamentary elections
on July 22. Major contenders are literally taunting their rivals with
the hangman's noose.
"If you don't have a rope, take mine!" bellowed Devlet Bahceli,
chairman of the Nationalist Action Party (MHP), symbolically flinging
the gallows instrument at the (absent) feet of Prime Minister Recep
Tayyib Erdogan of the governing Justice and Development Party (AKP).
He was referring to Mr. Erdogan's accusation that the government
preceding his had not hung Abdullah Ocalan, captured leader of the
outlawed and separatist Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), when they had
the chance-before Turkey banned the death penalty under pressure from
the European Union.
The question of being too soft on separatist Kurds, who have
recently mounted a series of bloody attacks across the Turkish
southeast-allegedly from safe-havens in northern Iraq-has become the
third rail in the election contest. Virtually every candidate has
wrapped him or herself in the red and white, star and crescent Turkish
flag. Many had believed that the capture of Mr. Ocalan-in Kenya,
of all places-in 1999 was the end of the PKK rebellion, which had
cost some 35,000 lives and devastated much of the rough countryside
in the southeast over the course of 15 years. Partially bowing to
EU pressure and partially admitting to decades of head-in-the-sand
nationalist idiocy, successive governments recognized the "Kurdish
Reality", and allowed Kurdish language instruction and broadcasting
rights to the country's estimated 20 million Kurds.
But the ongoing chaos in Iraq has allowed the PKK to regroup and launch
new attacks in Turkey, both against hard (military) and soft (civilian)
targets from safe-havens in northern Iraq. During the 1980s and 90s,
the Turkish military would mount periodic cross-border, hot pursuit
missions to eradicate bases with impunity.
Now, however, the specter of a massive, cross-border operation
into Iraqi Kurdistan brings with it the nightmarish possibility of a
confrontation between Turkish and American troops in the same theater,
which until now has been the quietest part of war-torn Iraq.
For Turks, however, Iraqi Kurdistan is a terrorist redoubt that must
be crushed-but which NATO allies are preventing the Turkish military
from accomplishing.
"While anticipating international cooperation in dealing with a
terrorist organization, we have difficulty in understanding the
lack of response", General Yashar Buyukyanit, chief of the General
Staff sternly remarked at a July 3 NATO conference in the Turkish
resort city of Antalya. "Among the obstacles is the inability of the
international community to define what exactly constitutes an act
of international terrorism. Sadly, this fact does not merely prevent
international cooperation, but provides a foundation for the spreading
of international terrorism."
Adding fuel to the fire is the recent allegation made by several
PKK defectors that they personally witnessed U.S. military vehicles
delivering weapons to a PKK base in northern Iraq. Although denounced
by the U.S. embassy in Ankara as "ridiculous", the report was broadcast
widely and fits into the growing negative view most Turks have about
their NATO ally-a negative view captured in the blockbuster movie
Valley of the Wolves: Iraq. Loosely based on a real incident in 2003,
in which a Turkish special forces team was arrested by American
forces in Iraqi Kurdistan and then marched in front of cameras with
sacks over their heads, the film pretends to show the aftermath: a
second team of Turkish commandos, in alliance with both Iraqi Kurds
and Arabs, takes revenge on the psychotic American commander and his
men responsible for the humiliation. The film broke all box-office
records, but has now been semi-suppressed.
This has not eased the growing antipathy shown by most Turks toward
American policy in the region. A recent Pew poll showed that a
miniscule 9 percent of Turks have a positive image of their long-time
NATO ally, one of the lowest approval ratings in the world.
So sensitive is the American issue that in a recent scenario session
held at the Hudson Institute in Washington, the team playing the
United States decided against handing over captured members of the
PKK to Erdogan's AKP government, lest it be perceived in Turkey that
such a gesture meant American support for the AKP in the run-up to
the elections. Other elements in the Hudson scenario session-the
assassination of a supreme court judge, a mass terrorist action in
Istanbul-added little positive to the picture. The very idea that
such discussions involving Turkey could be entertained in the American
capital was seen as yet another example of potential U.S. perfidy. The
pending legislation in Congress marking the so-called Armenian Genocide
is mere icing-or more poison-on top of the cake.
And, as for a Turkish foray into northern Iraq, most believe that
it is only a matter of time-and likely to happen before the July
22 elections.
Thomas Goltz is a visiting scholar at the University of Montana's
Central and Southwest Asia Studies Program. His most recent book is
Georgia Diary (M.E. Sharpe, 2006).
by Thomas Goltz
The National Interest Online, DC
http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id =14920
July 9 2007
ISTANBUL, Turkey-The record-breaking heat-wave that enveloped the
country in late June may have subsided, but the temperature continues
to rise between the dozen-odd political parties and a multitude of
independent candidates contesting the upcoming parliamentary elections
on July 22. Major contenders are literally taunting their rivals with
the hangman's noose.
"If you don't have a rope, take mine!" bellowed Devlet Bahceli,
chairman of the Nationalist Action Party (MHP), symbolically flinging
the gallows instrument at the (absent) feet of Prime Minister Recep
Tayyib Erdogan of the governing Justice and Development Party (AKP).
He was referring to Mr. Erdogan's accusation that the government
preceding his had not hung Abdullah Ocalan, captured leader of the
outlawed and separatist Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), when they had
the chance-before Turkey banned the death penalty under pressure from
the European Union.
The question of being too soft on separatist Kurds, who have
recently mounted a series of bloody attacks across the Turkish
southeast-allegedly from safe-havens in northern Iraq-has become the
third rail in the election contest. Virtually every candidate has
wrapped him or herself in the red and white, star and crescent Turkish
flag. Many had believed that the capture of Mr. Ocalan-in Kenya,
of all places-in 1999 was the end of the PKK rebellion, which had
cost some 35,000 lives and devastated much of the rough countryside
in the southeast over the course of 15 years. Partially bowing to
EU pressure and partially admitting to decades of head-in-the-sand
nationalist idiocy, successive governments recognized the "Kurdish
Reality", and allowed Kurdish language instruction and broadcasting
rights to the country's estimated 20 million Kurds.
But the ongoing chaos in Iraq has allowed the PKK to regroup and launch
new attacks in Turkey, both against hard (military) and soft (civilian)
targets from safe-havens in northern Iraq. During the 1980s and 90s,
the Turkish military would mount periodic cross-border, hot pursuit
missions to eradicate bases with impunity.
Now, however, the specter of a massive, cross-border operation
into Iraqi Kurdistan brings with it the nightmarish possibility of a
confrontation between Turkish and American troops in the same theater,
which until now has been the quietest part of war-torn Iraq.
For Turks, however, Iraqi Kurdistan is a terrorist redoubt that must
be crushed-but which NATO allies are preventing the Turkish military
from accomplishing.
"While anticipating international cooperation in dealing with a
terrorist organization, we have difficulty in understanding the
lack of response", General Yashar Buyukyanit, chief of the General
Staff sternly remarked at a July 3 NATO conference in the Turkish
resort city of Antalya. "Among the obstacles is the inability of the
international community to define what exactly constitutes an act
of international terrorism. Sadly, this fact does not merely prevent
international cooperation, but provides a foundation for the spreading
of international terrorism."
Adding fuel to the fire is the recent allegation made by several
PKK defectors that they personally witnessed U.S. military vehicles
delivering weapons to a PKK base in northern Iraq. Although denounced
by the U.S. embassy in Ankara as "ridiculous", the report was broadcast
widely and fits into the growing negative view most Turks have about
their NATO ally-a negative view captured in the blockbuster movie
Valley of the Wolves: Iraq. Loosely based on a real incident in 2003,
in which a Turkish special forces team was arrested by American
forces in Iraqi Kurdistan and then marched in front of cameras with
sacks over their heads, the film pretends to show the aftermath: a
second team of Turkish commandos, in alliance with both Iraqi Kurds
and Arabs, takes revenge on the psychotic American commander and his
men responsible for the humiliation. The film broke all box-office
records, but has now been semi-suppressed.
This has not eased the growing antipathy shown by most Turks toward
American policy in the region. A recent Pew poll showed that a
miniscule 9 percent of Turks have a positive image of their long-time
NATO ally, one of the lowest approval ratings in the world.
So sensitive is the American issue that in a recent scenario session
held at the Hudson Institute in Washington, the team playing the
United States decided against handing over captured members of the
PKK to Erdogan's AKP government, lest it be perceived in Turkey that
such a gesture meant American support for the AKP in the run-up to
the elections. Other elements in the Hudson scenario session-the
assassination of a supreme court judge, a mass terrorist action in
Istanbul-added little positive to the picture. The very idea that
such discussions involving Turkey could be entertained in the American
capital was seen as yet another example of potential U.S. perfidy. The
pending legislation in Congress marking the so-called Armenian Genocide
is mere icing-or more poison-on top of the cake.
And, as for a Turkish foray into northern Iraq, most believe that
it is only a matter of time-and likely to happen before the July
22 elections.
Thomas Goltz is a visiting scholar at the University of Montana's
Central and Southwest Asia Studies Program. His most recent book is
Georgia Diary (M.E. Sharpe, 2006).
