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ANKARA: Turk neo-nationalists, ultra-nationalists form axis of evil

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  • ANKARA: Turk neo-nationalists, ultra-nationalists form axis of evil

    From: "Katia M. Peltekian" <[email protected]>
    Subject: ANKARA: Turk neo-nationalists, ultra-nationalists form axis of evil

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    June 1 2008



    Turkish neo-nationalists and global ultra-nationalists form an axis of
    evil


    Why would Gündüz Aktan, a former ambassador and a
    declared nationalist, refer to both Carl Schmitt (1888-1985) and
    Schmitt's staunch critic, Leo Strauss (1899-1973), in the same article
    as sources of inspiration to define the current domestic political
    struggle in Turkey?

    Aktan did this in his farewell article to the readers of the Radikal
    daily on June 9, 2007 and claimed that Turkey's situation coincided
    with Schmitt's view that politics is a struggle of different
    lifestyles that can be fatal. Schmitt is known to be the ideologue of
    National Socialism, and Leo Strauss was a Nazi survivor who immigrated
    to the US to become the theoretician of the neo-conservative
    ideology. What brought these two unlikely bedfellows together and made
    them a source of inspiration to Aktan was their uncompromising
    antagonism against liberalism. Schmitt believed that through its
    endeavor to reconcile opposites, liberalism was an effort to change
    the intrinsic characteristics of politics and Strauss believed in "the
    continuation of the existing hegemony" by any means necessary. Schmitt
    believed that war is a way to keep the current hegemony so it has to
    exist to prevent the spread of liberalism. Strauss believed that
    "noble lies," robust internationalism, declarations of emergency,
    immunity from accepted rules and laws and, finally, the
    aestheticization of violence were all legitimate methods to preserve
    the standing hegemony.

    Turkish neo-nationalists (Ulusalcı) do not have the
    intellectual depth of Gündüz Aktan, but their
    operational strategies overlap with those of Schmitt and Strauss to
    such an extent that it is unexplainable without a link between the
    various embodiments of the Ulusalcı ideology -- such as the
    Å?emdinli gang, the Red Apple Coalition, the Ergenekon gang and
    the Republican rallies -- and the two conflicting ideologues of
    neo-conservatism. The link is in human form: Michael Rubin, Daniel
    Pipes, Matthew Bryza, Barry Rubin, Zeyno Baran and Soner
    Ã?aÄ?aptay (directly) and Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz,
    Richard Perle and Robert Novak (less explicitly).

    The most visible link between the American neo-cons and the Turkish
    Ulusalcıs is the love affair between Rubin and the
    self-marginalized Turkish daily Cumhuriyet. Rubin, an associate of the
    American Enterprise Institute (AEI), is the inventor of the term
    "Islamofacism." In his articles in the Middle East Forum journal he
    has openly praised names like Serdar Akinan, Tuncay Ã?zkan and
    Nihat Genç and compared Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    ErdoÄ?an to French racist Jean-Marie Le Pen and Austrian fascist
    Jörg Haider. What is interesting and unacceptable about Rubin
    is the fact that though he has attacked Turkey after the March 1
    memorandum with the worst of words, he was still invited to the War
    Academy in Turkey to give a conference. Rubin's claims about Fethullah
    Gülen reflect the rhetoric of the Ulusalcıs to the point
    that he uses Gülen's name in its distorted form (Fetullah), as
    is done by the Ulusalcıs of Turkey.

    For an anti-imperialist newspaper like Cumhuriyet, Rubin, a political
    strategist working with figures like William Kristol and Robert Kagan
    who are leading the openly imperialist Project for the New American
    Century (PNAC), should be the last name to be praised or used as a
    reliable source in their pages. But this fellow and Cumhuriyet have
    developed a fruitful relation wherein Rubin cites Cumhuriyet's
    distortions as a source and then Cumhuriyet carries them to its
    headlines as if they belonged to Rubin himself. This vicious circle of
    "referencing" is used by other Ulusalcı
    publications. Aydınlık weekly, for example, uses its
    relations with Andrey Melnikov of Nezavisimaya, a daily published by
    the Izvestia Group in Russia, and Yana Amelina, a foreign policy
    editor for the Russian News Agency, in the same way. They are informed
    directly by Aydınlık or through its grandmaster
    DoÄ?u Perinçek's son Mehmet Perinçek, who has a
    post-graduate degree from Moscow, and later on Aydınlık
    refers to them as reliable sources of information about the Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party), the future of Turkey, Islam and the
    Gülen Movement. These Russian names are expectedly from the
    supporters of the Eurasia Movement and have good relations with Mehmet
    Perinçek due to his active role in Eurasianist circles. The
    Moscow bureau of the Ulusalcıs is run by Mehmet Perinçek
    and, in a striking similarity to Rubin, they have also organized
    conferences in Turkey managing to reach the core of the secularist
    establishment.

    Political analyst Emre Uslu says that it is almost impossible to
    detect the organic links of the Ulusalcıs with the West because
    these people were the ones who once managed almost all relations
    between Turkey and the West. So their relations may be a continuation
    of old innocent relations. These relations are also hard to detect,
    according to Uslu, because they are being managed by institutions,
    think-tanks and academicians that have legitimate covers.

    The think tanks actively engaging the Turkish Ulusalcıs are
    AEI, the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and the Hudson
    Institute. The institutional relations between the American neo-cons
    and the Turkish Ulusalcıs are run by the office of Dick Cheney,
    Richard Perle of AEI and Zeyno Baran of the Hudson Institute on the
    American side and, on the other side, by Mustafa Süzer, former
    owner of Kentbank and a close associate of Perle, and Ä°lhan
    Selçuk, "big brother" of Cumhuriyet. Süzer's meetings
    with Dick Cheney were disclosed in the Turkish press and never denied
    by either side. Selçuk is also reported to have spoken with
    Cheney's advisors and established a back-channel with the US vice
    president's office through Elçin Poyrazlar, the Washington
    representative for Cumhuriyet. Writing in the Yeni Å?afak daily,
    Taha Kıvanç claimed that this back-channel had already
    been established before the American occupation of Iraq and that
    Selçuk had promised the Americans Turkey's support in return
    for American neo-con support for the Turkish Ulusalcıs to come
    to power in Ankara.

    Cengiz Ã?andar claimed in a recent article in the Referans daily
    that the Ulusalcıs are using the pretext of a future American
    operation in Iran as an opportunity to convince the neo-cons that an
    Ulusalcı government in Ankara would serve them better.

    The think tank connections of the Ulusalcıs are working both
    ways: The Ulusalcıs receive tactics and information from the
    think tanks, and they also try to influence the American
    administration through the think tanks. One example of this
    reciprocity can be seen in the articles of the Washington Institute's
    Ã?aÄ?aptay, in which Ã?aÄ?aptay has not only
    labeled Turkey's AK Party government as a danger to Turkish-American
    relations, but has even guided former President Ahmet Necdet Sezer on
    how to prevent the AK Party's further growth and Constitutional
    reforms. The Hudson Institute meeting in which the scenario of a
    possible military intervention in Turkey was discussed with two
    high-ranking Turkish generals in attendance is another example.

    This advisory connection is evidenced mainly in newspaper articles
    from neo-con writers. The Washington Times, The Washington Post and
    The New York Times frequently publish articles by the American allies
    of the Ulusalcıs. Figures like Rubin, Pipes, Jim Hoagland and
    Novak try to convince Americans that post-July 22, 2007 Turkey is no
    longer an ally of the US; that the AK Party government would feel
    better at home in Iran than in the US; that the AK Party uses the
    rhetoric of EU membership and economic development to conceal its real
    intentions; that the real allies of America in Ankara are the soldiers
    and the American should work with them alone; that Turkey should not
    be taken into the EU; and that Turkey will soon become a second Iran
    in the region. One protagonist of this last absurd idea is Rubin, who
    wrote recently in National Review Online that a prospective return of
    Gülen to Turkey would have the same effect as Khomeini's return
    to Iran from Paris and called on Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
    not to support the AK Party government even in the name of
    democracy. Rubin was sarcastically critical of the American Ambassador
    in Ankara Ross Wilson, who managed to convince Rice to stand by
    democracy in Turkey, claiming that Wilson knew only partying in the
    garden of the embassy.

    Ulusalcıs also have allies in the US State Department. Richard
    Perle is said to have worked on the name of the Turkish
    Ulusalcıs to convince -- successfully - Assistant Secretary of
    State for European Affairs Dan Fried that the AK Party is no good for
    the American policies in or around Turkey. Ali Aslan, the Washington
    representative of the Zaman daily, thinks that this is the only
    explanation that could explain why Fried could not stand firm against
    the e-memorandum of April 27, 2007. It was also claimed that State
    Department diplomat Matthew Bryza, long-time boyfriend and, more
    recently, husband of Zeyno Baran, was the person who wrote the
    declaration read by Fried that gave the Turkish military the "green
    light" by saying that the Americans were not on any side of the
    discussion. The extent to which Bryza was influenced by his wife is
    not known, but the similarities in their rhetoric against the AK Party
    are striking. Baran, who was already a controversial figure due to her
    involvement in the infamous Hudson Institute meeting, her article in
    Newsweek that predicted a military coup in 2007 and her involvement
    with the colored revolutions in Kyrgyzstan, Georgia and Ukraine, is
    known to have given speeches on several occasions claiming that the AK
    Party would, in time, return to its Islamist roots and that the
    Turkish public voted for the AK Party on July 22 with the assurance in
    mind that the army would oust the AK Party if it tried to change the
    system in Turkey.

    Another channel for Ulusalcıs to reach American ears is the
    lobbyists that worked for Turkey in the past but lost their contracts
    with Ankara. These companies are contracted by Ulusalcıs
    because their names are already associated with that of
    Turkey. Ulusalcıs are even able to reach low-ranking employees
    of lobbyists that are currently working for Turkey. One such case is
    the Livingston Group, which campaigns against Armenian genocide
    allegations. Frank Gaffney, an employee of this company, wrote in a
    Washington Times article that Turkey should be kept out of the
    European Union.

    The Eastern connections of the Turkish Ulusalcıs are more
    detectable but smaller in number. Russian political scientist
    Aleksandr Dugin from the Eurasia Movement is well known in this
    regard. He even protested the recent arrests of Ulusalcı
    Ergenekon militants in Turkey and claimed that Ergenekon was a
    supporter of Russia in Turkey. He claimed that Veli
    Küçük was the mastermind of the military project
    to turn Turkey's face to Russia. Küçük, on the
    other hand, had activities organized around the Azerbaijan Cooperation
    Association. Sources following the Ulusalcı organizations claim
    that DoÄ?u Perinçek's daughter, Kiraz Perinçek,
    who is at the head of the Turkey department of Chinese Radio, and
    Adnan Akfirat, the head of the Turkish-Chinese Business Association,
    are working to create a rapprochement between Turkey and China.

    The Western and Eastern connections of the Ulusalcıs are a
    reflection of the pre-July 22 election alliance forged between the
    Republican People's Party (CHP) and the Nationalist Movement Party
    (MHP) in Turkey on a global scale, and these relations are no less
    paradoxical. Ulusalcıs want Turkey to close its gates to the
    world and to "continue their traditional authoritarian elitist
    hegemony" within these closed gates. But they are not powerful enough
    to close those gates from within, so they turn to their traditional
    enemies, "the American imperialists," to shut them in Turkey's
    face. The irony is that there are some Americans who are lending their
    ears to that call.

    01 June 2008, Sunday


    KERÄ°M BALCI ANKARA
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