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Turkey's Political Trench Warfare

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  • Turkey's Political Trench Warfare

    TURKEY'S POLITICAL TRENCH WARFARE
    Ralph Boulton

    Reuters
    http://blogs.reuters.com/global/2 009/05/19/turkeys-political-trench-warfare/
    May 19 2009
    UK

    With court charges of corruption against President Abdullah Gul,
    Turkey's conservative establishment opens a new front in what amounts
    to a form of trench warfare between the AK Party and its opponents. One
    way or another, a showdown of sorts appears to be approaching.

    You're a Turkish patriot. You're a hardline general, civil servant,
    judge or a militant nationalist politician. Like everyone you met
    at the cocktail party last night, you're convinced Turkey's AK Party
    government is turning your country into an Islamist state; backward,
    oppressive and isolated.

    You despair. The population voted for AK in their millions in 2002. As
    if that weren't bad enough, they re-elected them by a landslide five
    years later, disregarding the dire warnings of the General Staff. Worse
    still, those 'modern' secular middle classes of Istanbul, the mainstay
    of military influence, joined the religious conservatives of Anatolia
    in backing AK. They were lulled by the country's economic success,
    EU-inspired democratic and financial reforms, and by stability. The
    West, in its embrace of the AK, is either naïve or hell bent on
    the end the West always sought - the humiliation or dismemberment
    of Turkey. Extraordinary how many times, I've heard that last one at
    dinner parties and receptions.

    So what can you do, you worried ranks?

    When the East Germans rose up against communism in 1953, the Party
    leaders, after crushing the revolt with Soviet tanks, told the
    population in no uncertain terms how badly the working classes had
    failed them. Writer Bertolt Brecht, speaking ironically on behalf of
    the communist masters, suggested they dissolve the people and elect
    a new one.

    In the absence of that as a realistic option, the course for the
    Turkish hardliner seems to me to be clear enough. Discredit, undermine,
    sow division in the AK Party, by whatever channels available - the
    military, the courts, parliament, the streets.

    The Justice and Development Party (AK), after all, is not really a
    party, at all.

    AK emerged more as an 'emergency coalition' months before 2002
    elections and just as the entire structure of the Turkish party system
    was collapsing.

    Years of petty personal feuding and coalition squabbling, economic
    incompetence, corruption and general self-destructive folly had robbed
    the traditional parties of all credibility.

    The cracks in a coalition are always vulnerable to an insistently
    probing knife.

    Many labelled the Justice and Development Party, which likes to be
    known by initials that spell out the word for pure and clear, an
    Islamist party, pure and simple. Leaders Tayyip Erdogan and Abdullah
    Gul had a well-documented past in the Islamist movement. But it
    wasn't that simple. AK rallied together centre-right politicians and
    economists as well as nationalists and the conservative religious
    core. Erdogan and Gul declared their Islamist days over and pledged
    loyalty to secularist state founder Ataturk; a blasphemous crime in
    itself for some.

    AK in 2002 was for many simply the last political home standing,
    as it remains for many.

    For the first time in ages the country was ruled by one parliamentary
    party, held together firmly by the towering figure of Tayyip
    Erdogan. It pushed through an IMF programme where so many had failed
    before, reformed rights legislation, promoted business. The AK people
    were for many Westerners, diplomats, businessmen and journalists
    alike, a breath of fresh air. You could talk to them about sensitive
    subjects like the Kurds, Armenia, Cyprus or clashes with the EU without
    that haunting feeling they would march out in pique. They were more
    "pro-Western" in their dealings than an ambivalent military, the
    civil service or the judiciary of those times.

    The sceptics would say they were just pulling the wool over our
    eyes. For those who feared the worst -- for the general, the judge --
    AK provided ample evidence of fickleness from the start. There were
    the silly things. There was that impromptu prayer meeting in the lobby
    of the Hilton, local restrictions here and there on drinks licences
    for restaurants. Then the ill-fated move to lift a ban on Islamic
    headscarves for women in public buildings.

    What has followed is a form of trench warfare, the battle lines being
    the constitutional strongholds of state.

    When AK nominated Gul as president in 2007, the armed forces
    commander posted a warning on his website that secular democracy
    was in danger. Surrender of the presidency to an AK leader would
    remove one of the last checks to its power, allowing it to appoint
    senior judges and exert influence even over that holy of holies --
    the armed forces. Not only did AK publicly defy the General Staff,
    but the electorate had the audacity to back them with a landslide
    general election victory soon afterwards.

    The months passed. There were mass demonstrations in Istanbul warning
    of a Sharia state. The battle continued in the courts, where AK
    narrowly evaded a ban on accusations of Islamist activity. A fine
    however was imposed, the sense of the accusation may have stuck.

    The 'Ergenekon' coup plot scandal is seen by some as an
    attempt to discredit AK enemies and the army as power-hungry and
    anti-democratic. Hundreds, including senior retired officers, have
    been arrested over alleged plans for a campaign of demonstrations,
    bombings and assassinations that would clear the way for a military
    coup. AK holds up its hands, denying any involvement, and says the
    judicial process must take its independent course.

    The courts, though, are arguably the second trenchline, following the
    military's failure to bring AK to order. The outright military coups
    of the 20th century, no-one wants to contemplate, not least against
    a government with broad popular backing. Parliament, where AK faces
    only a weak and inept opposition, can play no real role; that is,
    for the moment.

    So, what's new?

    A court's ruling that Gul should face trial in a case dating back over
    a decade, involving millions of dollars in political funds, opens a
    new chapter in the book. Whether there is a case or not, the move will
    probably founder on Gul's immunity. Supporters will see it as another
    attempt by the judiciary to persecute AK, sceptics will see a coverup.

    The AK Party, Pure and Clear, came to power promising to sweep away the
    graft and corruption of the ancient regime. So endemic is corruption
    in public life, this was always going to be a tall order. If clouds of
    corruption gather over AK, real or illusory, the party's and Erdogan's
    authority could be seriously undermined.

    AK must remain AK, to retain its raison d'etre.

    The party's support fell at recent local elections, but it remains
    hugely popular.

    The Islamist accusations, the military warnings, the court cases,
    the demonstrations, any suggestion of corruption or instability,
    all whittle away at this emergency coalition. They test its unity,
    holding it in check until, as the script might run, it can be prized
    apart or it disintegrates of its own accord. New parties could form,
    as nervous middle classes desert, or the old parties, now languishing
    in disregard, could re-emerge. Parliament might become again a true
    political battlefield.

    For those who would wish away AK, though, whether by attrition or by
    some cataclysmic events, one poignant question arises in a country
    still strewn with the political ruins left by the hurricane of 2002:
    "If not AK, then who? If not Erdogan, then who?"

    (Demonstrators shout slogans during a protest at the mausoleum of
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, founder of modern and secular Turkey, in Ankara
    May 17, 2009. Thousands of anti-government protesters marched in
    Turkey's capital on Sunday, calling on Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan
    to resign for what they say are violations of the country's secular
    principles. REUTERS/Umit Bektas (TURKEY CONFLICT POLITICS))

    (Turkey's Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan answers questions during a
    news conference at the Prime Ministers Chancellery in Warsaw may 14,
    2009. REUTERS/Peter Andrews (POLAND POLITICS))

    (Turkey's President Abdullah Gul review a honour guard at al-Shaeb
    presidential palace in Damascus May 15, 2009. REUTERS/ Khaled al-Hariri
    (SYRIA POLITICS))
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