Turkey’s
crisis deepens
S P
SETH
The tumultuous events in Turkey are a harbinger of worst to come.
The failed military coup has catapulted the government of President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan into turning the country upside down to re-engineer its make up
by going after a whole range of institutions suspected of subverting/sabotaging
and seeking to overthrow the country’s elected government. A military coup is
rarely a justified exercise because (i) it does more harm than good by
violating the principle of people’s sovereignty exercised by a duly elected
government and (ii) it tends to be self-perpetuating thus losing whatever
little rationale it might have, in the first place. Therefore, it is not
surprising the attempted coup in Turkey aroused such concern and reaction. But
to use it as an exercise in settling political scores with related or unrelated
enemies will only further inflame the situation. There are reports that the
Erdogan government had lists already prepared for purges and suspensions, and
the failed coup has brought forward the whole exercise.
While a faction in the military engineered the failed coup, it is
being made out that it was somehow a much bigger affair involving elements
loyal to Fethullah Gulen, a Muslim cleric who lives in self-imposed exile in
the US. Gulen is being made out as some kind of a superman with wings spread
out all over and able to act at will. It is even suggested that the US was
behind the coup, with Gulen’s presence in the US being proof of it apparently.
In other words, cleric Gulen is even able to manipulate and mesmerize the US
into doing his bid. Turkey’s labour minister, Suleyman Soylu, who is said to be
close to Erdogan, reportedly told a television station that “America is behind
the coup.” And Erdogan has, more or less, has said the same.
And it has gained so much currency and self-belief in the Erdogan
quarters that President Obama was obliged to personally deny this. He said
that, “Any reports that we had any previous knowledge of a coup attempt, that
there was any U.S. involvement in it, that we were anything other than entirely
supportive of Turkish democracy are completely false, unequivocally false.” One
reason for making these accusations against the US would seem to be to exert
pressure on Washington to extradite Gulen to Turkey. Which the US is reluctant
to do without solid evidence of his involvement in the coup. Indeed, Erdogan
personally asked Obama to hand over Gulen to his government. To which Obama
said: “I told President Erdogan that they should present us with evidence that
they think indicates the involvement of Mr. Gulen, and it would be processed
the way it is always processed, and that we would certainly take any
allegations like this seriously.” In the meantime Turkey needed to conduct its
investigation of the coup attempt “consistent with the rule of law.” Which is
sound advice for the good of the country, but it is only further complicating
US relations with the Erdogan government.
Erdogan and Gulen were erstwhile political allies and worked
together to rid Turkey’s political system of military domination. Gulen
suffered under periodic military coups in Turkey as he reminded in a statement
denying any such involvement. He said: , “As someone who suffered under
multiple military coups during the past five decades, it is especially
insulting to be accused of having any link to such an attempt.” The
Gulen-loyalists are accused of having infiltrated the military to create a strong
faction, which then sought to engineer the coup that failed. How they managed
to continue operating as an autonomous force within the military without being
noticed stretches one’s imagination! It would seem that ever since Erdogan
purged the generals and put some of them behind bars after he came to power
early in the last decade, there was some disquiet among elements of the armed
forces, which eventually led to the failed coup. And the government would need
to go through the process of uncovering the truth seriously and transparently
without hysteria and paranoia leading to large scale purges.
Erdogan and his loyalists seem to smell rat almost at all levels and
in all institutions, and that rat is an undifferentiated Gulenist. Which is now
leading to large-scale purges, dismissal and arrests in the military,
judiciary, educational institutions, bureaucracy and wherever. It is beyond
belief that during his several years in power, all these so-called saboteurs
and terrorists with links to Gulen and his movement, somehow continued to
function to bring down the government. Besides, there apparently was, if one
can believe, some sort of intricate mechanism for all these diverse elements to
be acting for one unified goal of overthrowing the Erdogan government. The
Turkish government doesn’t do its cause any good by giving free reign to its
paranoia of seeing enemies all around. Gulen’s followers, like others who dare to
disagree with Erdogan, are “terrorists”—no two opinions about it.
Prime Minister Binali Yildrim likened Gulen’s followers to a
“parallel terrorist organization.” And added that, “We will dig them up by
their roots so that no clandestine terrorist organization will have the nerve
to betray our blessed people again.” And the process of digging them up “by
their roots” has started with thousands being hauled up with no end in sight. A
state of emergency has been declared for three months, which is likely to be
extended as Prime Minister Binali Yildrim has indicated. He reportedly said,
“Our goal is that it shouldn’t be extended, but if the need arises it may of
course be extended.” The first decree issued after the emergency ordered the
closure of 1043 private schools, 1229 charities and foundations, 19 trade
unions, 15 universities and 35 medical institutions, all suspected of links o
the Gulen movement. And it is just the beginning. The witchhunt unleashed by
the government against its ‘enemies’ is likely to make many people worry that
it might be their turn next.
At a time when the government is waging war against Kurds, IS and
all sorts of conceivable enemies, it simply is madness to whip up mass hysteria
imagining that the government will be able to direct and control it at its
will. And that is what Erdogan is doing, apparently unmindful of the forces
that he is unleashing. He has justified the declaration of emergency in
Orwellian doublespeak. He said that, “A state of emergency is not against
democracy, the rules of law and freedom. On the contrary, it aims to protect
and strengthen them.” And he darkly said that, “A lot of people have been
arrested but we haven’t come to an end yet. We have so many suspects, and so
many suspicions. Theses detentions and arrests will provide us with many
names.” The numbers already arrested are staggering and the process will
continue. In other words, Turkey will increasingly become unstable, further
adding to the instability of the region around it.
Not surprisingly, Turkey’s NATO allies are worried as Turkey is an
important ally. The US uses its Incirlik air base to attack IS positions in
Syria. Turkey is being urged by its NATO and European allies to act with
restraint and lawfully. NATO secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, urged “a
swift return to calm and full respect for the rule of law and democratic
institutions.” But such advice is rather adding to tensions between Turkey and
its western allies.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times
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