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Time To Start Talking Turkey

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  • Time To Start Talking Turkey

    TIME TO START TALKING TURKEY
    By Bridget Johnson, Columnist

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    May 1 2007

    ISTANBUL may be a far cry from the Vegas strip, but when it comes to
    politics, what happens in Turkey does not stay in Turkey.

    In fact, this country could have a greater impact on the spread of
    Islamism and the direction of the war in Iraq than anywhere else.

    Turkey isn't just the geographical doorway from the Middle East into
    Europe, but the ideological crossroads as well. Will the government
    gain acceptance into the European Union, or will it never prove
    that Turkey is European enough? Will it maintain its secular system
    or become more Islamist? Will it see Iraq's prosperous autonomous
    Kurdish region as such a threat to its wholeness that it invades?

    Islamism vs. secularism. Muslim vs. European identity. Iraqi
    stability. It's all coming together at the former Ottoman Empire,
    and it's worth paying attention.

    Last week, as foreign minister and member of the current ruling,
    pro-Islamist party, Abdullah Gul, aimed for the presidential office,
    the Turkish army vowed to step in if necessary to ensure the country
    remains firmly secularist. "Recently the main issue emerging in
    connection with the presidential election has focused on a debate
    over secularism. This is viewed with concern by the Turkish armed
    forces," read the statement from the General Staff, which has toppled
    governments four times since 1960.

    "It should not be forgotten that the Turkish armed forces are partial
    in this debate and are a staunch defender of secularism. The Turkish
    armed forces are against those debates (questioning secularism)...

    and will display its position and attitudes when it becomes
    necessary. No one should doubt that."

    The statement drew sharp rebukes from the European Union and others,
    but Turks' concerns about remaining secular are real. Strongly secular,
    current President Ahmet Necdet Sezer keeps Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan's pro-Islamist government - which has tried to criminalize
    adultery - in check. The Turkish Republic, Sezer said recently of
    the Islamist-secularist tug-of-war, "has not faced any threat as
    significant as that of today."

    And a million Turks turned out in Istanbul on Sunday to rally for
    secularism, topping the 300,000 who recently rallied in Ankara. "This
    government is the enemy of Ataturk," one demonstrator told The
    Associated Press. "It wants to drag Turkey to the dark ages."

    Also raising fears about the tide of Islamism was the murder of a
    Catholic priest last year by a teenager who claimed the shooting
    was retaliation for the Dutch Muhammad cartoons. That same month, a
    Catholic friar was beaten by assailants who said they wanted to "clean
    Turkey of non-Muslims," according to a State Department report. This
    April, three employees of a Christian publishing house were found
    with their hands and feet tied and throats slit; some Muslims had
    previously accused the publisher of proselytizing.

    And what about those ties to the direction of Iraq? Turkey fears a
    strong Iraqi Kurdistan out of concerns that its own ethnic Kurdish
    minority will be inspired to separatism. Turkey has also threatened
    Iraq on the claim that the autonomous region is aiding and sheltering
    Turkish Kurd separatists. Iraq swears any attack would be met with
    massive resistance.

    Forget the Shiite-Sunni tit-for-tats: There's a real possibility that
    the Iraq war could move to a whole new front, especially if Iraqi
    Kurdistan gains the independence it wants (and, frankly, deserves).

    Iraq's Muslims would likely unite as never before to fight off secular
    Turkey, yet the last thing coalition forces would want to do is battle
    Turkey's military - the avowed defenders of the secularism that the
    region needs - or attract fundamentalists like Iran into the melee.

    "We hope that one day Turkey can join the European Union, but for
    that, Turkey has to be a real European country, in economic and
    political terms," European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso
    said recently.

    The EU wants a less-powerful Turkish military, but without it Islamists
    could gain more power to turn back Ataturk's vision. The nationalism
    isn't synonymous with Islamism, but endangers those who are seen as
    insulting Turkish identity - such as slain ethnic Armenian newspaper
    editor Hrant Dink. Turkey could very well invade from the north,
    dramatically changing the region's Risk board and forcing the U.S. to
    uncomfortably pick alliances; with the second-largest standing armed
    forces in NATO, Turkey could best Iraq's current hardscrabble military.

    It's time to start talking Turkey.
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