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  • The AKP May Not Be The Same As Hamas, But Their Ideology Does Kill I

    THE AKP MAY NOT BE THE SAME AS HAMAS, BUT THEIR IDEOLOGY DOES KILL INNOCENT PEOPLE.
    by Stephen Schwartz, a frequent contributor to THE WEEKLY STANDARD.

    The Weekly Standard
    Turkey Votes
    http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Arti cles/000/000/013/911zygqb.asp
    07/24/2007 12:00:00 AM

    TURKEY'S REELECTION OF incumbent prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    AKP, or Justice and Development Party, has reenergized the low-level
    debate in Washington about foreign Islamic parties that claim to
    respect democracy and secularism. But for the AKP--no less than its
    rivals in the Turkish military and secular state structures--the
    positive element lacking in their outlook involves pluralism, more
    than either politics or prayers.

    Turkey is now divided between two forms of intolerance: a secular
    element that only accepts Islam under strict state supervision, and
    a religious faction that similarly restricts its approval to Sunnism.

    Neither respects Turkey's minorities: the heterodox Alevi Muslims,
    who fear the AKP because it excludes them; the Kurds, whose situation
    is dangerous for Iraq and the U.S.-led coalition there as well as
    Turkey itself; the small Greek Orthodox population, which suffers
    curtailment of its most elementary religious functions, or the
    Armenians, who still clamor for truth about the deportation and
    massacres they suffered at the end of the First World War.

    Many American commentators would like to see "Islamic democratic"
    parties emerge across the Muslim world--notably in Egypt, with a
    presumed option of American accommodation with the Muslim Brotherhood
    (MB). Both Erdogan's AKP and the Egyptian MB (the latter having been
    the godfather of Hamas among the Palestinians) talk the talk. They
    say they opt for ballots over bullets, and since voting and renouncing
    violence are the words Americans love to hear, the chance at supporting
    parties representing a "tame" Islamist ideology is attractive to many
    inside the Beltway.

    In addition, the strident rhetoric and militaristic legacy of Turkish
    secularism seems to blame Islam as a faith for the problems of Turkish
    politics, which plays well with some sectors of Western opinion,
    but is a risky conception if the Western democracies intend to
    defeat radicals inside Muslim countries. Nobody serious on the side
    of freedom has suggested that the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq should
    make the eradication of Islam its strategic goal.

    And finally, when they mark their ballots, many Turks vote for the
    AKP because after more than 75 years of enforced secularism, they
    are aggrieved at those who swore that driving religion from public
    life, and rooting out the old manners and morals of the Ottomans,
    would create a modern, efficient nation--but then failed to make
    good on their promises of accountability and prosperity. Turkey
    ended up with an army prone to violence, a police known for extreme
    corruption, and political bloodshed between leftist and rightist
    nationalists. Worst of all, the Turkish army holds on to its "right"
    to throw out governments of which it disapproves, which is hardly
    exemplary from the democratic viewpoint.

    Having trusted secularists who delivered little, many Turks want
    to give religious believers a chance in government. And the AKP,
    in its electoral propaganda, asks for no more than an opportunity
    to administer the existing state in a more conscientious and clean
    manner. Its functionaries and apologists profusely deny any intent to
    introduce sharia law--a source of literal horror among many Turks--or
    otherwise expand the role of the mosque in Turkish life.

    But will the "Islamic democrats" of AKP walk the walk? The question
    is acute in Turkey, because that country's combination of unstable
    factors means that no outcome can be certified as secure.

    AKP supporters compare the movement with Christian-based parties in
    Germany, Austria, and the Netherlands, which have excellent records
    of fidelity to democracy--but also are products of compromises by and
    between the churches. The German Christian Democrats and Austrian
    People's Party arose in response to socialist labor movements,
    and recognized or adopted many of the programmatic principles
    of the left. The Dutch religious parties were born of a national
    reconciliation between Catholics and Protestants.

    No such compromise between the AKP, the military, secular civilians,
    or, most important, religious and ethnic minorities, is in sight
    in Turkey, and, if anything, the common Turkish nationalist and
    Sunni-centric habits of both the secular military and the AKP have
    become more aggravated.

    Neither the military secularists nor the AKP will recognize the
    rights of the large Alevi minority, whose faith combines Shiism,
    Sufi spirituality, and ancient Turkish culture. Before the AKP came
    to power the secular Diyanet, or State Administration of Religious
    Affairs, built mosques and certified imams for the Sunnis, but refused
    money for the Alevis to build their meeting houses, known as cemevi,
    or to train their clerics. On that issue there is no difference
    between the secularists and the AKP.

    Neither the military secularists nor the AKP has proposed to grant
    his traditional status to the Ecumenical Patriarchate, Bartholomaeus
    I, representing Christian Orthodox believers and headquartered
    in Istanbul. The Patriarch is required to be a Turkish citizen,
    and has extremely limited official duties inside the republic. A
    Greek training seminary and publishing house have been closed. The
    secularists maintain this policy out of distaste for all religion,
    as well as Turkish nationalism. It is doubtful the Sunnis of AKP will
    rush to grant relief to the small community of Greek Christians.

    Neither the military secularists nor the AKP has shown any interest
    in resolving the question of historical Armenian suffering in Turkey.

    The novelist Orhan Pamuk mentioned the Armenian events in writing
    and was threatened with a public trial--by the AKP government. And
    finally, and most dangerously, neither the military secularists nor
    the AKP has indicated any willingness to concede ethnic rights to
    the country's large Kurdish population. Military-secular tradition
    holds that there are only Turks in Turkey, and that Kurds are all
    terrorist secessionists; anybody who defends the Kurds is labeled a
    Marxist extremist. Turkish troops have been sent to the border of
    Iraqi Kurdistan, and both the military and the AKP have adopted a
    threatening tone toward the U.S.-led coalition that may inevitably
    produce a shooting war. Both the military and the AKP have also fed
    growing anti-American propaganda.

    The Sunni-centric politicians of the AKP may not be the same as Hamas,
    but their ideology does kill innocent people, as does the secular
    Turkish army. On a date never forgotten by Turkish and Kurdish Alevis,
    a Sunni mob attack on a hotel where an Alevi cultural event took place,
    in the city of Sivas in 1993, left some 37 people dead. After years of
    official atrocities against the Kurds inside Turkey, the Turkish army
    now fires artillery into northern Iraq. It is difficult to report
    accurately on the Alevis and Kurds, because Turkey systematically
    undercounts them. While official figures state that Turkey is 99
    percent Sunni, Alevis make up from 20 to 33 percent of the population,
    depending on the source of population statistics, i.e. between 15
    and 25 million people.

    For Turkey to become a respected, modern nation, it is time for it to
    give up all forms of ideological politics: militaristic secularism,
    an ultranationalist definition of rights, and Sunni-centrism. Turkey
    needs a government about which there will be no doubts, because it will
    stand above and seek to heal--rather than stand upon and aggravate--its
    dangerous differences. The AKP cannot provide such a government.
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