Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Relative Stablity Of Turkey

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Relative Stablity Of Turkey

    THE RELATIVE STABLITY OF TURKEY
    By J.R. Dunn

    American Thinker, AZ
    May 9 2007

    Nicolas Sarkozy's triumph was not the only good news for the
    resurgant West this past weekend. The Islamists also suffered a
    setback in Turkey, by way of the May 5 announcement by Abdullah Gul,
    the fundamentalists' favorite candidate, that he will no longer seek
    election as prime minister. For this we have to thank a man who has
    been dead for seventy years.

    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk was one of the most fascinating, impressive,
    and unlikely figures of the past century. A Muslim from birth who
    became a champion of the secular state, a dictator who established
    the sole working democracy in the Muslim world, an ascetic visionary
    who died of complications of alcoholism, Kemal deserves to be much
    better known than he is. He accomplished with Turkey what many insist
    even today is an impossibility: dragging a battered, defeated, nearly
    medieval Muslim state into the modern era by main force, and without
    the wholesale brutality demonstrated by nearly all other nationalist
    leaders of his era.

    No one seeing Kemal in the years prior to WW I would have expected
    anything of the sort. He was an army officer who had aroused the
    suspicions of the ruling triumvirate of the Young Turks - Djemal,
    Enver, and Talat. Few ever survived such suspicions, and Kemal might
    have suffered the same fate if he hadn't spent much of his time
    outside the country.

    During WWI, Kemal played a crucial role in the Battle of Gallipoli as
    a divisional commander. It was largely through his efforts that the
    British landing was contained and at last turned back. He led from
    the front, at one point making his way alone into the center of no
    man's land before giving the signal to attack.

    He later served in the Caucasus, fighting the Russians. He had
    nothing to do with the Armenian massacres, instigated by the vicious
    and paranoid Djemal Pasha. At the end of the war he was commanding an
    army on the Palestine front. He escaped Edmund Allenby's breakthrough
    at Megiddo, keeping most of his command intact. Retreating to Aleppo,
    he reorganized and succeeded in holding the British at the border
    of Anatolia, on the line that still exists as the frontier between
    Turkey and Syria.

    Turkey was now a defeated empire, facing occupation and partition
    by the Allies, who had decided to solve the longstanding Turkish
    Question by eliminating Turkey itself. The discredited Young Turks
    had fled, leaving a power vacuum. Kemal began organizing a Turkish
    national movement to resist the occupiers. Fleeing to Anatolia just
    ahead of an execution order, he set up a government at Ankara, the
    new parliament first sitting in April 1920. The sultan's government
    in Istanbul effectively lost legitimacy after signing the Treaty
    of Sevres, which agreed to Allied occupation of Anatolia. Kemal
    immediately picked up the reins.

    Allied forces moved against Kemal, attacking on no less than
    three fronts. Kemal allowed them to advance within fifty miles of
    Ankara before striking. The three-week long battle of Sakarya in
    August-September 1921 turned back the Greek army. After a diplomatic
    blitz which persuaded the French and Italians to withdraw their support
    from the occupation, Kemal routed the British-backed Greek forces at
    Dumlipinar on August 30, 1922. Within weeks all foreign forces had
    fled the country.

    Kemal now began the reform of Turkish society from top to bottom. He
    effectively dismissed the sultan, ending centuries of Ottoman rule.

    In the sultan's place, he set up a representative government, with
    the balance of power resting in the parliament. He completely severed
    relations between government and Islam, insisting on secularism as
    the basis of the new Turkey. Kemal was so insistent on democratic
    forms that he not once but twice founded opposition parties to serve
    as competition for his own Republican People's Party.

    His actions reached deep into the daily lives of the Turks. He
    banned the fez, internationally recognized as the symbol of Turkey,
    on the grounds that modern nations wore modern hats. He liberalized
    the dietary laws, particularly as involved alcohol. (He himself was
    grievously addicted to raki, the Turkish national liquor.) He was an
    adamant proponent of the rights of women. Two of his adopted daughters
    pioneered new roles for women in Turkish society. Afet Inan became a
    professor of sociology at a time when few women in the West held such
    positions. Sabiha Gokcen joined the Turkish air force and became the
    world's first female combat pilot.

    Some of these changes went down with difficulty in a traditionalist
    society for centuries kept in ignorance and isolation. Several revolts
    occurred, the most serious of them a 1925 religious revolt triggered by
    Sheik Said Piran in the guise of a Kurdish nationalist uprising. But
    no one else joined the rebels and they were defeated in a little over
    a month.

    Kemal had an easy solution for such throwbacks - he had them shot.

    But as ruthless as he could be in defense of his vision of a new
    Turkey, he never approached the excesses committed by other nationalist
    leaders of the period. He considered Mussolini and Stalin to be thugs,
    and Hitler no better than a maniac.

    Kemal's drinking caught up with him at last in November 1938, when he
    died of cirrhosis. He was succeeded by his comrade-in-arms and chosen
    successor Ismet Inonu, who continued his reforms. Kemal today is
    known today as "Ataturk", Father of Turks. He remains a legend among
    the Turks, a combination of Washington, Pericles, and Suleiman. The
    Kemalist state endures to this day, the oldest governmental institution
    in the Islamic world.

    One of the things that has preserved it is an odd and unique system
    of checks and balances in which the army acts as the guarantor of
    the Turkish state. If extremism or corruption of any sort threatens
    the state, the army intercedes. It generally does not take over
    governing on its own, but stabilizes the situation and makes way for
    a new civilian government. It has on several occasions overthrown
    rulers it considers to be fundamentalist, the last time occurring
    in 1997, when the army forced Necmettin Erbakan out of office. This
    is not a procedure anyone would wish to import or encourage, but it
    has unquestionably worked to keep Turkey a democratic nation. While
    Kemal himself would probably have disapproved, it cannot be denied
    that the process grew directly out of the Kemalist system.

    This is what stymied Abdullah Gul on April 27. The army expressed its
    displeasure with Gul's Islamist inclinations and policies, and clearly
    implied he would not be allowed to take office. Gul has obviously
    thought the better of his ambitions. While this is far from what
    we would call democratic, it's possible to disapprove while still
    retaining the ability to appreciate the results - this is, after
    the Middle East, where worse happens every hour. Turning respect for
    democracy and its forms into what amounts to an ideology accomplishes
    nothing and succeeds nowhere. (Anyone who doubts this is invited to
    look at the current situation in the Palestinian Authority.) We can say
    with some confidence that Turkey will not go Islamist anytime soon -
    and that's a good day's work by anyone's measure.

    The Islamists have been stymied by the hand of a dead legend reaching
    out of the past. Think about that when the war appears to have gone
    on too long and the defeatists are all you can hear and a Jihadi
    victory appears inescapable. There are currents beneath the surface
    that are operating in ways that we cannot even begin to fathom,
    and not all of them are operating against us. History keeps its own
    counsel, and makes no one any promises. Mustafa Kemal, the soldier
    who salvaged a nation, would be the first to agree.

    J.R. Dunn is consulting editor of American Thinker.

    http://www.americanthinker.com/2007/05/p ost_6.html
Working...
X