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  • Warning: West Could Lose Turkey

    WARNING: WEST COULD LOSE TURKEY
    Haroon Siddiqui, [email protected]

    Toronto Star, Canada
    http://www.thestar.com/comment/article/2399 95
    July 26 2007

    Turkey has just had a democratic revolution, but which the West has
    failed to see, blinded as it is by its paranoia about Islam.

    The ruling Justice and Development Party has won the largest share
    of vote of any party in four decades - 46.6 per cent. The last time
    a party in Canada got that kind of a mandate was in 1968,0 when the
    Pierre Trudeau Liberals won 45.37 per cent of the vote.

    The Justice Party, less than a decade old and representing a new
    generation of mostly middle-class rural Turks, has handed a stunning
    defeat to the parties representing the military-led urban cabal of
    uniformed officers, judges and bureaucrats, who've had an iron grip
    on power for 80 years, through military coups and other strong-arm
    tactics.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has ushered in an era of liberalism
    that's beginning to question the narrow nationalism that refuses to
    acknowledge the 1915-17 genocide of Christian Armenians or the ethnic
    and linguistic identity of the minority Kurds.

    Yet our media coverage and commentary on Sunday's historic election
    has been stuck on one note: secularism vs. Islam.

    Erdogan once belonged to an overtly Islamic party, a crime in Turkey.

    By that standard, the 100 million or so Christian fundamentalist
    Americans would be criminals. And Stockwell Day and his ilk would be
    barred from parliament.

    Erdogan's wife and daughters wear the hijab. So does the wife of
    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul. But neither claims, unlike George W.

    Bush, to take dictation from God in foreign or domestic policy.

    Erdogan's market-oriented economics helped bring down runaway
    inflation, staved off a national bankruptcy, attracted record
    investment, and improved medicare, public schools and social housing.

    He liberalized enough domestic laws to convince the Europeans to
    begin talks for a possible Turkish entry into the European Union.

    The Kurdish language was initiated on radio and TV. Kurds have just
    won seats in parliament, after a decade-long ban imposed when a
    Kurdish MP dared speak her native language in the chamber.

    On foreign policy, Erdogan bowed to popular will in denying U.S.

    troops permission to use Turkey for invading Iraq. But he allowed
    the use of an air base.

    He continued close economic and military co-operation with Israel.

    By contrast, when Orhan Pamuk - he who had raised the Armenian issue
    - won the Nobel Prize for literature, the secularist establishment
    refused to congratulate him.

    The judiciary has been hounding writers and intellectuals on charges of
    "insulting Turkishness."

    The derin devlet (deep state), the shadowy network of
    ultra-nationalists and rogue state elements, has been suspected of
    having a hand in the bombing of a Kurdish bookstore and the murder
    of an Armenian editor.

    Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, head of the army, does not like the European
    Union, especially its insistence on greater civilian control of the
    army. So we end up with this dichotomy: The "Islamists" are liberal
    democratic modernizers while the "secularists" are retrogrades. The
    former want to fulfil Kemal Ataturk's dream of joining Turkey to
    Europe, while the latter, supposed defenders of his legacy, resist it.

    One more irony: The European opponents of Turkey joining the EU -
    France, Germany, Austria, etc. - may discover that the issue may
    no longer be that Europe has no place for Turkey but that Turkey,
    economically galloping at thrice the rate of Europe and getting tired
    of Western hypocrisy, will have no room for Europe.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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