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ISTANBUL: Specters as remnants of the 20th century

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  • ISTANBUL: Specters as remnants of the 20th century

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    April 15 2012


    Specters as remnants of the 20th century

    by MARKAR ESAYAN

    The greatest advantage of the Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
    has been the fact that the Enverist-Kemalist and neo-nationalist
    circles have done everything wrong throughout the 20th century. If you
    take the Sublime Porte (Babı Ali) raid as a reference point and start
    of the pro-coup tradition in the country, this means that we have been
    subjected to the brutality and arbitrary decisions of this tradition
    for a century.
    It should be acknowledged that the Kemalists have observed the
    principle of equality in brutality and repression. They have repressed
    and persecuted the Muslims, the Alevis, the Armenians and all others
    without discrimination. And even when these circles and social
    segments came to represent a large majority of the nation, out of
    arrogance the Kemalists failed to realize that those they
    discriminated against could not be discounted.

    There are so many wrongs and errors done by this tradition that
    despite its pragmatism and reluctance, every single step that it takes
    improves the AK Party's popularity. Like it or not, the AK Party is
    the only party that promotes change. And when the Republican People's
    Party (CHP) strongly opposes change and reform, the AK Party's
    popularity grows even further. The greatest mistake that the CHP and
    its supporters hold is their belief that the Kemalist rule represented
    a true success. Yes, Kemalism has created a new type of human being.
    You and I are of this type. We will never know the alternate outlook
    this country would have had if its history had been shaped otherwise.
    But there is one thing that we know: Kemalism has left indelible
    imprints on our identity.

    But from another perspective, Kemalism is a dramatically failed
    ideology because it has been promoted in the absence of popular
    support and it has moved forward by oppressing the people. As a
    result, the people have developed negative sentiments and opposition
    to it, and this opposition ended this engineering project. From a
    Foucauldian approach, a rule that is not internalized cannot be
    sustained. The rule needs to be adopted, conveyed and reinterpreted by
    the governed. Kemalism failed to realize that it has been able to
    survive because of fascism in Europe and the circumstances of the Cold
    War up to the 1990s. Kemalists thought that their survival was due to
    their success. Because of this, Kemalism has repressed civilian
    administrations viewed as being in opposition to its policies by
    reliance on military coups. While it was a country that executed its
    prime minister and ministers, Turkey was still able to receive
    external support due to the oppressive political ideologies of the
    time.

    That support has disappeared with the collapse of the Soviet Union and
    end of the Cold War era. Instead, a huge information revolution is
    taking place, globalization is declaring all dictatorships enemies to
    global markets, and as a result it seems that any dictatorial regime
    that is unable to integrate with the world economic system will not be
    able to survive. China's transition to state capitalism and subsequent
    global tolerance of its antidemocratic practices is a good example of
    this. Had China not adopted this stance, it would have become a
    country was struggling with insurgencies that would have attracted
    global support. And let us call this one of the unethical impacts of
    globalization.

    For this reason, the military did not stage a conventional coup on
    Feb. 28, 1997. It could be said that then-Chief of General Staff Gen.
    Ismail Hakkı Karadayı served as a balancing actor between those who
    wanted to stage a conventional coup and those who favored a postmodern
    coup. Former Chief of General Staff Gen. Hilmi Ã-zkök's subscription to
    democracy is being praised because of his opposition to the coup
    attempts by the junta within the army in 2003 and 2004. But this is a
    false view. Even if the junta wanted to carry out a coup, they would
    not have achieved it in 1997 and 2003. Even if they had attempted to,
    this would not have been successful; and in that case, Turkey would
    have pursued the reform process more strongly. I am telling you, if
    there had been a conventional coup on Feb. 28, the reforms in the last
    decade would have been more radical, and we would have made our new
    constitution. Some hold that Turkey is immune to developments in the
    world, but this is not the case.

    In sum, we are still dealing with a number of problems as remnants of
    20th-century issues including the Kurdish issue, the Armenian issue,
    the Cyprus problem, the coup constitution and coup institutions and
    laws. They are like paper tigers. They could be destroyed by a single
    fist. But our hesitation does not allow us to do this.

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