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ISTANBUL: Turkey's Civil War

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  • ISTANBUL: Turkey's Civil War

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Dec 6 2009


    Turkey's civil war


    by MÃ`CAHÄ°T BÄ°LÄ°CÄ°*
    Turkey today is undergoing cultural and political changes that leave
    Western observers at a loss for words.

    On one side is Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an's unprecedented
    opening of meaningful dialogue with Kurds, Armenians, Alevis and other
    religious and ethnic minorities. On the other is the seemingly endless
    Ergenekon prosecution, an eye-popping investigation into decades of
    corruption, coups and conniving that is exposing the seamy side of
    Turkey's military elite. Faced with these developments, the
    conventional juxtaposition of the `secular state' and `political
    Islamism' is increasingly inadequate. A new Turkey is emerging, and
    the contending forces are not what we imagine them to be.

    European modernity filtered into the Ottoman Empire through the
    Balkans before finally seeping into the bedrock of Anatolia, the
    Turkish heartland. As carriers and transmitters of modernity, the
    Balkan elite of the early Turkish Republic turned their geographic and
    political advantage into aristocratic domination. The modernization of
    Anatolia -- Atatürk's prized project -- was turned into a prolonged
    process that yielded addictive privileges for the ruling classes. But
    the granting of full equality to the `Middle Eastern' masses could not
    be put off indefinitely. Anatolia woke up to the power game being
    played at its expense in the era of Turgut Ã-zal, the prime minister
    who in the 1980s opened Turkey to the first waves of liberalism and
    globalization. It comes as no surprise that today the traditional
    modernizers of Turkey (the Atatürkist elites, best represented by the
    military and the Republican People's Party [CHP]) are against Turkey's
    EU accession, while the recipients of their modernizing zeal
    (Anatolian Turks and Kurds represented by the Justice and Development
    Party [AK Party] and Democratic Society Party [DTP]) have become its
    most enthusiastic supporters. The Turkish experience shows how
    modernization can turn against modernity, how an inauthentic
    secularism can work to undermine the democratic cornerstones of
    pluralism and competition.

    Throughout the 20th century, democracy was only one element in the
    larger toolbox of Turkish modernization. It was often seen as a luxury
    to be dispensed with, especially when the perceived safety of
    secularism was at stake. Turkish democracy therefore remained stunted
    under the shadow of the Balkan elites, who gave priority to their
    particular understandings of secularism and nationalism. Turkey's weak
    democracy found a new ally and breathed some much-needed fresh air
    with the dawn of globalization. In the 1990s the combined forces of
    democracy and globalization brought former peasants from Anatolia into
    the game as new political actors and an emergent economic power. Since
    2002, the balance of political power in Turkey has also shifted toward
    these new players. With the rise to power of the `mildly Islamist' AK
    Party (an epithet seemingly permanently affixed in the Western media)
    the conventional instrument used by the elite to stifle domestic
    competition and secure Western support -- the pitting of the secular
    state against political Islamism -- has lost its plausibility. The
    time has come to speak with a new vocabulary and hear a different
    story.

    A close look at Turkish politics today reveals that Turkey is in the
    midst of a civil war between its European side and its Middle Eastern
    side. It is a struggle between the secularist elite, composed largely
    of immigrants from the Balkans and the Caucasus, and the religiously
    conservative but politically liberal masses of Anatolia (Turks, Kurds
    and others). Both sides use discourses made available to them by their
    Western orientations: The Ataturkist elites have long used
    `modernization' as a justification for their domination. The newly
    rising Anatolian bourgeoisie has taken up `globalization' and
    `democracy' as the instruments of its awakening and its entry into
    power. So far, the Eurocentric nature of things has tended to
    privilege and empower the culturally and (strangely enough) ethnically
    European citizens of Turkey -- people originally from the Balkans and
    the Caucasus. Today, however, globalization (led not primarily by
    Europe, but by America and other relative upstarts) favors Turkey's
    previously repressed Middle Easterners. So a conflict that is often
    hastily characterized as `Islam vs. secularism' or `Islamists vs.
    modernists' proves rather to be between European Turks and Middle
    Eastern Turks, between the state Islam of Muslim nationalism and the
    civil Islam of Muslim liberalism. The first group may look modern, but
    is authoritarian in practice; the second group is conservative in
    demeanor, but much more liberal in practice. When this civil war
    reaches its conclusion, Turkey will emerge as a different country: its
    ruling elite will look less European, more Middle Eastern -- while its
    democracy becomes more European, less Middle Eastern.


    *Mücahit Bilici is a professor of sociology at John Jay College,

    City University of New York.
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