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ANKARA: Ergenekon Is A Tiny Piece Of The Deeper State, Says Mihri Be

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  • ANKARA: Ergenekon Is A Tiny Piece Of The Deeper State, Says Mihri Be

    ERGENEKON IS A TINY PIECE OF THE DEEPER STATE, SAYS MIHRI BELLI

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 26 2008
    Turkey

    One of the most important former leaders of the Turkish left, Mihri
    Belli, has expressed the opinion that the Ergenekon organization,
    some of whose members currently face trial on charges of plotting
    to overthrow the government, is just a drop in the ocean of the
    "deeper state" or "counter guerrilla," vaguely defined as rogue
    elements inside the state hierarchy pushing and pursuing their own,
    often nationalistic, agenda.

    "Ergenekon is only a small piece of the counter guerilla," says Belli
    in an interview Today's Zaman, adding that confronting Turkey's
    two coups -- namely the Sept. 12, 1980 coup and the March 12,
    1971 intervention -- is the only way for the country to establish
    democracy. Belli also stated that in order for the "deep state" to
    be exposed completely, the unresolved murders of Kurdish businessmen
    and other individuals in the Southeast and attacks including the
    assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in 2007 had
    to be investigated until their murkiest details are illuminated.

    "Ergenekon must merely be a part of the counter guerilla that they
    discarded. The main body is still active. The Ergenekon trial, it seems
    to me, is slightly teasing those in Turkey who are pro-democracy. The
    real organization is still being protected. But if this trial is
    expanded, and if those police officers or army officers involved
    in the Hrant Dink murder, and if those individuals who organized
    provocative demonstrations ahead of the Sept. 12 and March 12
    military interventions are brought before court, the real network
    could be exposed. It is the responsibility of every democrat in this
    country to make sure these people are found and brought before a
    court." Belli said,

    Belli also said that the National Forces Associations (Kuvayi Milliye
    Dernekleri), whose leaders and senior members have all been detained
    as part of the Ergenekon investigation, are organized in the same
    structure as units that were part of Operation Gladio -- a post-World
    War II NATO operation structured as "stay-behind" paramilitary
    organizations, with the official aim of countering a possible Soviet
    invasion through sabotage and clandestine operations. In fact, many
    analysts believe such networks of groups in Turkey today, sometimes
    referred to as the "deep state," are remnants of the Turkish leg
    of Gladio.

    He said, however, that the trial process associated Ergenekon too
    closely with the Workers' Party (Ä°P), whose leader, Dogu Perincek,
    is currently in jail as an Ergenekon suspect. "Attributing all this
    to Dogu's little party is pushing the imagination a bit too far. It
    is possible that certain centers in the military and the deep state
    used the Ä°P. It looks like there is another game at play, since
    the admiral who kept those journals was not arrested," Belli said,
    referring to a retired navy commander whose alleged journals from 2004
    kept meticulously detailed descriptions of a coup plot against the
    Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government. No legal action
    against or investigation into the retired admiral has materialized.

    A retrospective look

    Belli also stated that he and his friends had fought in the past
    to unify the Turkish left. In response to a question on why he and
    Perincek, an old comrade of his, went their separate ways, Belli said,
    "Perincek parted ways with us because we weren't close enough to
    the military."

    --Boundary_(ID_A6LmXsIHSq6aWuFHv+ xitg)--
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