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AKP Goverment Caught Between A Rock And A Hard Place In Response To

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  • AKP Goverment Caught Between A Rock And A Hard Place In Response To

    AKP GOVERNMENT CAUGHT BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE ON RESPONSE TO PKK ATTACK
    By Gareth Jenkins

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    http://jamestown.org/edm/article.php?article_id =2372528
    Oct 24 2007

    Hundreds of thousands of Turks took to the streets in towns and
    cities across the country yesterday (October 23) to protest the
    killing of 12 soldiers in an attack by the Kurdistan Workers' Party
    (PKK) on October 21 (see EDM, October 22). They also called for a
    military strike against the organization's headquarters in the Qandil
    Mountains of northern Iraq. The continuing public pressure has now
    made it almost impossible for Turkish government not to be seen to
    taking decisive measures against the PKK. Yet any course of action
    will come with a price.

    There is little doubt that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    personal and political instincts are in favor of a military operation
    into northern Iraq. Although his Islamist sentiments -- particularly
    his youthful radicalism -- tend to receive more publicity, Erdogan
    is also a committed Turkish nationalist. Yet, despite his landslide
    election victory on July 22, Erdogan is also aware that, when it
    occurs, the main challenge to his ruling Justice and Development Party
    (AKP) will come from the nationalist right of the political spectrum.

    Although Turkish secularists accuse the AKP of having long-term plans
    to erode the principle of secularism enshrined in the current Turkish
    constitution, such accusations tend to resonate more with Turkey's
    elite than with the masses who comprise the AKP's grassroots support,
    not least because the majority of them are already very religious.

    However, it is also among the lower-income groups that nationalist
    feelings tend to be the strongest.

    The most emotional of the dozens of public protests yesterday were
    at the funerals of the 12 soldiers slain in the October 21 attack.

    Services were held in 11 of Turkey's 81 provinces. Significantly,
    as was the case with the 13 Turkish commandos killed in a PKK ambush
    on October 7, all of the soldiers who were buried yesterday came from
    lower-middle class or working-class backgrounds. To put it another way,
    the soldiers who are dying are coming from the AKP's core constituency.

    The last 18 months had already witnessed the rise of a bruised and
    increasingly strident nationalism in Turkey. It had undoubtedly been
    exacerbated by the public sense of rejection by the EU and, more
    recently, by what was widely regarded as the national humiliation
    of the U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee's
    approval of a motion describing the killing of Ottoman Armenians
    as genocide. But its main focus had been the continuing death toll
    exacted by the PKK, which is operating out of northern Iraq. To make
    matters worse, the repeated warnings to Ankara by Washington not to
    launch a military operation against the PKK's camps, meant that most
    of the Turkish population regarded the organization as operating at
    least under the de facto protection of the United States.

    The recent PKK attacks have sparked a further spike in nationalist
    sentiment. In addition to the public protests, the streets of
    Turkey are now festooned with Turkish flags, hung not only between
    lampposts by local authorities but also from a large proportion of
    residential apartments. Flag manufacturers estimate that, in a nation
    of approximately 73 million, they have sold around 15 million Turkish
    flags since October 21 (Milliyet, Radikal, October 24).

    But, regardless of the international repercussions, the AKP also
    faces a possible backlash within its own ranks if decides to launch a
    cross-border military operation. One of the most remarkable aspects of
    its July 22 election triumph was that the AKP appeared to have bridged
    the nationalist divide in Turkey. Even though leading figures such as
    Erdogan are known to be Turkish nationalists, the AKP nevertheless
    emerged as the largest party in the predominantly Kurdish southeast
    of the country. The main reasons appear to have been the fact that
    AKP fielded ethnic Kurds as candidates and that it has the image of
    being a religious party, which plays well in the most conservative
    region of Turkey. As a result, around 100 of the AKP's 341 MPs are
    believed to be of Kurdish origin.

    Even if they dislike the PKK as an organization, most of the population
    of southeast Turkey are opposed to a military incursion into northern
    Iraq and would prefer a peacefully negotiated settlement, including
    some form of amnesty for PKK militants. This is partly because
    they fear that an invasion will ultimately lead to an escalation of
    violence and partly because almost all have a friend or relative who
    is, or has been, involved with the PKK.

    In addition to military action, the AKP is also under intense pressure
    to impose economic sanctions on northern Iraq, including closing
    the border gate at Habur. In the wake of the October 21 attack,
    many company owners and heads of business associations have expressed
    their willingness to sacrifice their profits and curtail their economic
    ties with northern Iraq if, by doing so, they are serving the national
    interest (Hurriyet, Milliyet, October 23).

    However, their enthusiasm is not shared by the masses of southeastern
    Turkey; for many of whom trade with northern Iraq represents not extra
    profits but their livelihood. Mehmet Kaya, chairman of the Board of
    Commerce and Industry in Diyarbakir, the largest city in southeast
    Turkey, estimated that transportation alone provided employment for
    200,000 people in the region. "The region has a trade volume of $2.5
    billion with Iraq," he said. "About 60 percent of the 300,000 tankers
    and transportation vehicles work for Iraq. Will 200,000 people sit
    at home if Habur is closed?" (Referans, October 24).

    Unless the AKP responds to the pressure from Turkish nationalists
    among its grassroots, it risks seeing their support shift to the
    ultranationalist Nationalist Action Party (MHP). But if it takes
    military action or imposes economic sanctions on northern Iraq,
    the AKP risks alienating a sizeable proportion of the population of
    southeast Turkey and undoing one of its greatest achievements in the
    election of July 22.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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