Category: Turkey

  • The Middle Eastern Balance of Power Matures

    The Middle Eastern Balance of Power Matures

     

    George Friedman

    By George Friedman

    Last week, a coalition of predominantly Sunni Arab countries, primarily from the Arabian Peninsula and organized by Saudi Arabia, launched airstrikes in Yemen that have continued into this week. The airstrikes target Yemeni al-Houthis, a Shiite sect supported by Iran, and their Sunni partners, which include the majority of military forces loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh. What made the strikes particularly interesting was what was lacking: U.S. aircraft. Although the United States provided intelligence and other support, it was a coalition of Arab states that launched the extended air campaign against the al-Houthis.

    Three things make this important. First, it shows the United States’ new regional strategy in operation. Washington is moving away from the strategy it has followed since the early 2000s — of being the prime military force in regional conflicts — and is shifting the primary burden of fighting to regional powers while playing a secondary role. Second, after years of buying advanced weaponry, the Saudis and the Gulf Cooperation Council countries

    are capable of carrying out a fairly sophisticated campaign, at least in Yemen. The campaign began by suppressing enemy air defenses — the al-Houthis had acquired surface-to-air missiles from the Yemeni military — and moved on to attacking al-Houthi command-and-control systems. This means that while the regional powers have long been happy to shift the burden of combat to the United States, they are also able to assume the burden if the United States refuses to engage.

    Most important, the attacks on the al-Houthis shine the spotlight on a growing situation in the region: a war between the Sunnis and Shiites. In Iraq and Syria, a full-scale war is underway. A battle rages in Tikrit with the Sunni Islamic State and its allies on one side, and a complex combination of the Shiite-dominated Iraqi army, Shiite militias, Sunni Arab tribal groups and Sunni Kurdish forces on the other. In Syria, the battle is between the secular government of President Bashar al Assad — nevertheless dominated by Alawites, a Shiite sect — and Sunni groups. However, Sunnis, Druze and Christians have sided with the regime as well. It is not reasonable to refer to the Syrian opposition as a coalition because there is significant internal hostility. Indeed, there is tension not only between the Shiites and Sunnis, but also within the Shiite and Sunni groups. In Yemen, a local power struggle among warring factions has been branded and elevated into a sectarian conflict for the benefit of the regional players. It is much more complex than simply a Shiite-Sunni war. At the same time, it cannot be understood without the Sunni-Shiite component.

    Iran’s Strategy and the Saudis’ Response

    One reason this is so important is that it represents a move by Iran to gain a major sphere of influence in the Arab world. This is not a new strategy. Iran has sought greater influence on the Arabian Peninsula since the rule of the Shah. More recently, it has struggled to create a sphere of influence stretching from Iran to the Mediterranean Sea. The survival of the al Assad government in Syria and the success of a pro-Iranian government in Iraq would create that Iranian sphere of influence, given the strength of Hezbollah in Lebanon and the ability of al Assad’s Syria to project its power.

    For a while, it appeared that this strategy had been blocked by the near collapse of the al Assad government in 2012 and the creation of an Iraqi government that appeared to be relatively successful and was far from being an Iranian puppet. These developments, coupled with Western sanctions, placed Iran on the defensive, and the idea of an Iranian sphere of influence appeared to have become merely a dream.

    However, paradoxically, the rise of the Islamic State has reinvigorated Iranian power in two ways. First, while the propaganda of the Islamic State is horrific and designed to make the group look not only terrifying, but also enormously powerful, the truth is that, although it is not weak, the Islamic State represents merely a fraction of Iraq’s Sunni community, and the Sunnis are a minority in Iraq. At the same time, the propaganda has mobilized the Shiite community to resist the Islamic State, allowed Iranian advisers to effectively manage the Shiite militias in Iraq and (to some extent) the Iraqi army, and forced the United States to use its airpower in tandem with Iranian-led ground forces. Given the American strategy of blocking the Islamic State — even if doing so requires cooperation with Iran — while not putting forces on the ground, this means that as the Islamic State’s underlying weakness becomes more of a factor, the default winner in Iraq will be Iran.

    A somewhat similar situation exists in Syria, though with a different demographic. Iran and Russia have historically supported the al Assad government. The Iranians have been the more important supporters, particularly because they committed their ally, Hezbollah, to the battle. What once appeared to be a lost cause is now far from it. The United States was extremely hostile toward al Assad, but given the current alternatives in Syria, Washington has become at least neutral toward the Syrian government. Al Assad would undoubtedly like to have U.S. neutrality translate into a direct dialogue with Washington. Regardless of the outcome, Iran has the means to maintain its influence in Syria.

    When you look at a map and think of the situation in Yemen, you get a sense of why the Saudis and Gulf Cooperation Council countries had to do something. Given what is happening along the northern border of the Arabian Peninsula, the Saudis have to calculate the possibility of an al-Houthi victory establishing a pro-Iranian, Shiite state to its south as well. The Saudis and the Gulf countries would be facing the possibility of a Shiite or Iranian encirclement. These are not the same thing, but they are linked in complex ways. Working in the Saudis’ favor is the fact that the al-Houthis are not Shiite proxies like Hezbollah, and Saudi money combined with military operations designed to cut off Iranian supply lines to the al-Houthis could mitigate the threat overall. Either way, the Saudis had to act.

    During the Arab Spring, one of the nearly successful attempts to topple a government occurred in Bahrain. The uprising failed primarily because Saudi Arabia intervened and imposed its will on the country. The Saudis showed themselves to be extremely sensitive to the rise of Shiite regimes with close relations with the Iranians on the Arabian Peninsula. The result was unilateral intervention and suppression. Whatever the moral issues, it is clear that the Saudis are frightened by rising Iranian and Shiite power and are willing to use their strength. That is what they have done in Yemen.

    In a way, the issue is simple for the Saudis. They represent the center of gravity of the religious Sunni world. As such, they and their allies have embarked on a strategy that is strategically defensive and tactically offensive. Their goal is to block Iranian and Shiite influence, and the means they are implementing is coalition warfare that uses air power to support local forces on the ground. Unless there is a full invasion of Yemen, the Saudis are following the American strategy of the 2000s on a smaller scale.

    The U.S. Stance

    The American strategy is more complex. As I’ve written before, the United States has undertaken a strategy focused on maintaining the balance of power. This kind of approach is always messy because the goal is not to support any particular power, but to maintain a balance between multiple powers. Therefore, the United States is providing intelligence and mission planning for the Saudi coalition against the al-Houthis and their Iranian allies. In Iraq, the United States is providing support to Shiites — and by extension, their allies — by bombing Islamic State installations. In Syria, U.S. strategy is so complex that it defies clear explanation. That is the nature of refusing large-scale intervention but being committed to a balance of power. The United States can oppose Iran in one theater and support it in another. The more simplistic models of the Cold War are not relevant here.

    All of this is happening at the same time that nuclear negotiations appear to be coming to some sort of closure. The United States is not really concerned about Iran’s nuclear weapons. As I have said many times, we have heard since the mid-2000s that Iran was a year or two away from nuclear weapons. Each year, the fateful date was pushed back. Building deliverable nuclear weapons is difficult, and the Iranians have not even carried out a nuclear test, an essential step before a deliverable weapon is created. What was a major issue a few years ago is now part of a constellation of issues where U.S.-Iranian relations interact, support and contradict. Deal or no deal, the United States will bomb the Islamic State, which will help Iran, and support the Saudis in Yemen, which will not.

    The real issue now is what it was a few years ago: Iran appears to be building a sphere of influence to the Mediterranean Sea, but this time, that sphere of influence potentially includes Yemen. That, in turn, creates a threat to the Arabian Peninsula from two directions. The Iranians are trying to place a vise around it. The Saudis must react, but the question is whether airstrikes are capable of stopping the al-Houthis. They are a relatively low-cost way to wage war, but they fail frequently. The first question is what the Saudis will do then. The second question is what the Americans will do. The current doctrine requires a balance between Iran and Saudi Arabia, with the United States tilting back and forth. Under this doctrine — and in this military reality — the United States cannot afford full-scale engagement on the ground in Iraq.

    Turkey’s Role

    Relatively silent but absolutely vital to this tale is Turkey. It has the largest economy in the region and has the largest army, although just how good its army is can be debated. Turkey is watching chaos along its southern border, rising tension in the Caucasus, and conflict across the Black Sea. Of all these, Syria and Iraq and the potential rise of Iranian power is the most disturbing. Turkey has said little about Iran of late, but last week Ankara suddenly criticized Tehran and accused Iran of trying to dominate the region. Turkey frequently says things without doing anything, but the development is still noteworthy.

    It should be remembered that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has hoped to see Turkey as a regional leader and the leader of the Sunni world. With the Saudis taking an active role and the Turks doing little in Syria or Iraq, the moment is passing Turkey by. Such moments come and go, so history is not changed. But Turkey is still the major Sunni power and the third leg of the regional balance involving Saudi Arabia and Iran.

    The evolution of Turkey would be the critical step in the emergence of a regional balance of power, in which local powers, not the United Kingdom or the United States, determine the outcome. The American role, like the British role before it, would not be directly waging war in the region but providing aid designed to stabilize the balance of power. That can be seen in Yemen or Iraq. It is extremely complex and not suited for simplistic or ideological analysis. But it is here, it is unfolding and it will represent the next generation of Middle Eastern dynamics. And if the Iranians put aside their theoretical nuclear weapons and focus on this, that will draw in the Turks and round out the balance of power.

    =========================

    George Friedman

    Founder and Chairman Print Text Size
    George Friedman

    George Friedman is the Chairman of Stratfor, a company he founded in 1996 that is now a leader in the field of global intelligence.  Friedman guides Stratfor’s strategic vision and oversees the development and training of the company’s intelligence unit. His book Flashpoints: The Emerging Crisis in Europe was released on Jan. 27.

    Dr. Friedman is the author of The New York Times best-seller
 The Next Decade, which forecasts the major events and challenges that
 will test America and its presidents over the course
 of the next decade. Dr. Friedman’s previous book, The Next
 100 Years, was also a New 
York Times best-seller and was published in over 20
 languages. His other books on warfare and intelligence include America’s Secret War, The Future of War and The Intelligence Edge.

    A very popular keynote speaker, Dr. Friedman is in high demand at numerous conferences and industry-specific events for major financial firms such as J.P. Morgan, Citibank, Ernst & Young and many Fortune 500 companies. In addition, he has briefed the Australian Command and Staff College, Eglin Air Force Research Laboratory, U.S. Marine Corps Command and Staff College and many other military and government organizations. Dr. Friedman is frequently invited to speak internationally, including in Turkey, Germany, Poland, Azerbaijan, Australia and New Zealand.

    The world’s top media organizations regularly ask Dr. Friedman to appear as an international affairs expert. He has been featured in TIME, The New York Times Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Fortune, Newsweek, The Financial Times and many other domestic and international publications, as well as broadcast media ranging from NPR to CNN to CNBC. He and Stratfor were also featured in cover stories in Barron’s and the New Statesman.

    He received his Bachelor’s degree from the City College of the City University of New York and holds a Ph.D. in Government from Cornell University.

    AREAS OF EXPERTISE

    • Global Geopolitics
    • Intelligence Gathering and Analysis
    • International Affairs
    • Geopolitical Forecasting
    • Modern and Historical Warfare
    • U.S. Foreign Policy
  • Contentions Turkey into the Press Freedom Abyss

    Contentions Turkey into the Press Freedom Abyss

  • Letter to Harut Sassounian

    Ten Reasons Why Obama Should Travel to Armenia on April 24

    Dear Mr. Sassounian,

    Whether President Husein Obama decides to visit Yerevan, be it on the 24th April or on some other date, that must surely be his own decision and only if he deems it necessary and conducive to American interests.

    You, Sir, counted ten (10) reasons why he should! I can equally count just as many reasons why he shouldn’t from the American point of view. However, this pissing race won’t take us anywhere!

    In your point 4, you say that; “Pres. Obama could lay the foundation for improved Armenian-Turkish relations “. You very well know that your initiative is based on revenge and definitely not on improving relations or peaceful co-existence. The unfriendly activities by your Diaspora organisations and the ASALA terrorists’ bloody work (55 dead Turkish Diplomats) is ample proof of that.

    In your point 5, you talk of Turkey lifting the blockade, and Pres. Obama taking a look at Mount “Ararat” which is within the boundaries of the Turkish Republic(Iğdır Province) and its Turkish name is AGRI dag. (View of AGRI from Igdir:

    https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c6/MountArarat.jpg/1024px-MountArarat.jpg

    1024px MountArarat

    View of AGRI dag from IGDIR.

    This is indeed a thorrny question since Armenia refuses to recognize the borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan. Not forgetting that Armenia occupies 20 % of Azeri territory as a result of aggression and occupation by Armenia, clearly condemned by the UN Security Council. Pres. Obama surely knows very well the facts on Berg Karabag as well as where Agri dag is situated.

    Yes, you are right that Pres. Obama should tell Armenia to withdraw from Karabagh and at the same time ask her to close the Russian military bases within Armenia.

    Yes, Pres. Obama should remind Armenia of the fact that despite of her biblical ties to the christian West, she is surrounded by Turcic Muslim countries as neighbors. That may be a curse or a blessing depending on which side of Arart you assume God lives!

    Mr. Sassounian, considering the spiritual aspects of Easter time, may be you feel a softening of your heart to forgive and forget for the sake of the future generations of Armenians and Turks. I wish you, your readers and loved ones a happy Easter season and remain

    sincerely yours

    Küfi Seydali

  • Davutoglu vs. Davutoglu

    Davutoglu vs. Davutoglu

    Fw: Davutoglu vs. Davutoglu :: Bekdil at Gatesto

     

    by Burak Bekdil
    The Gatestone Institute
    March 26, 2015

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    In a speech in parliament on Jan. 28, Turkey’s main opposition leader, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, addressed Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu: “You are not the prime minister. You are kid seated on the prime minister’s chair.”

    The weird situation Davutoglu has found himself in is the product of his boss and predecessor, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    Last summer, as election season approached, then Prime Minister Erdogan and then Foreign Minister Davutoglu tightened their grip on the internet. The duo deliberately limited their citizens’ access to social media and to popular and informative websites. They also increased the government’s power over the courts and the power of the MIT (Turkish intelligence Agency) to spy on people. None of this stopped the AKP from winning at the polls.

    Shortly after Erdogan won the presidential election in August, he nominated Davutoglu to be his successor as party chairman and prime minister.

    But Erdogan’s longer-term plan was different. In a move possibly modeled after the arrangement between Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Medvedev in Russia, Davutoglu would take the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) to parliamentary elections in June 2015 and win a two-thirds majority, allowing them to amend the constitution to enable Erdogan to become a hands-on “executive president” (rather than a symbolic one), with almost endless executive powers — while the prime minister would be reduced to a symbolic role. In other words, Davutoglu’s political task would finish off his own mission.

    Turkey’s prime minister is probably the world’s first ever politician demanding votes to end his own rule.

    Since then, Davutoglu has carefully avoided political conflict with Erdogan in public. His loyalty to his boss has remained unquestioned. In public speeches, Davutoglu is often seen echoing Erdogan and imitating his confrontational rhetoric. But he probably has also been privately (and grudgingly) rethinking his own role: the “photo-op” premier.

    The first blow came when Davutoglu asked three of four former cabinet ministers accused of corruption, to volunteer to be tried at the supreme court. A parliamentary commission was investigating the charges. In the face of strong evidence against the suspects, even the commission’s AKP members signaled they could vote in favor of court proceedings. That is, until Erdogan intervened to save all four of them.

    After pressure from Erdogan, to Davutoglu’s embarrassment, all nine members of the AKP commission voted against legal proceedings.

    Heartbroken, but still keen to fight corruption, Davutoglu did not know the second blow would come soon.

    Davutoglu drafted a bill, dubbed “The Transparency Package,” which would introduce compulsory asset declaration for senior party officials, provincial and district-level party executives, and executives of radio and television channels. The presidents and members of the top courts, as well as the heads of chambers of these courts, would also have been accountable for asset declaration.

    But Erdogan, meeting with party officials in the absence of Davutoglu, ordered to freeze the effort, which he said was “badly-timed ahead of parliamentary elections [on June 7].” In early February, the AKP said the transparency package was being indefinitely postponed.

    Heartbroken once again, Davutoglu decided to augment his team by pushing Turkey’s master spy, Hakan Fidan, into parliamentary elections. Fidan would run for parliament and become a minister in Davutoglu’s post-election cabinet.

    But Erdogan expressed resentment over Fidan’s candidacy. “He should have taken my consent before leaving the job,” he said. That was enough to pull the string.

    About a month after his resignation as chief intelligence officer, Fidan withdrew his candidacy, quit the AKP and was back at his former job almost on the same day as he quit party politics.

    Davutoglu is still campaigning for the June 7 elections. If the AKP can win 330 or more seats in Turkey’s 550-seat legislature, Erdogan’s dream of an “executive presidency” can at least be put to a referendum. More votes for the AKP will mean higher chances for Erdogan’s “executive presidency.” Davutoglu is probably the world’s first ever politician demanding votes to end his own rule.

    Burak Bekdil, based in Ankara, is a columnist for the Turkish daily Hürriyet and a fellow at the Middle East Forum.

  • BULENT ARINC- ERDOGAN AND AKP FROM BLOOMBERG

    BULENT ARINC- ERDOGAN AND AKP FROM BLOOMBERG

    Bloomberg) — Frustrations with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s efforts to maintain his dominance over politics bubbled to the surface, as a co-founder of the ruling AK party warned him against meddling in the government’s work. Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc criticized Erdogan twice over the weekend, signaling tensions among long-term political allies ahead of parliamentary elections in June. Erdogan has been lobbying to install a presidential system in Turkey, reducing or possibly eliminating parliament’s authority.
    “The apparent power struggle between an elected president and an elected government moved to a new level,” Mert Ulker, head of research at Ak Investment in Istanbul, said in an e-mailed report on Monday. “The AKP government is apparently not moving in harmony with the president, calling to mind a conflicts-of-interest aspect which will likely keep the political risk premium elevated.”
    Ankara Mayor Melih Gokcek, a member of the AK party, said Arinc was attacking Erdogan under orders from a “parallel structure.” The reference was to followers of U.S.-based Islamic cleric Fethullah Gulen, who officials say are trying to undermine the government from within. Gokcek, in more than 30 tweets to almost 2.5 million followers, said Arinc should resign as deputy prime minister and government spokesman. “We don’t want you,” he tweeted.
    Arinc told reporters it was inappropriate for Erdogan to use the media to criticize government efforts to make peace with the nation’s Kurds.
    ‘Worthy Service’
    “We love our president, we know his strength and we’re aware of his worthy service to the nation,” Arinc said. “But don’t forget that this country has a government and this government will go to elections.” He dismissed Erdogan’s claims that he wasn’t aware of some of the steps the government has taken in the Kurdish process.
    Arinc vowed to defend Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, head of the party and the government, against any threat to his image before June 7 general elections, and predicted he would lead the next government. Davutoglu hasn’t said whether he will support Erdogan’s declared goal to make the president Turkey’s top official instead of the prime minister. Erdogan became Turkey’s first directly elected president in August, after ruling as prime minister for 11 1/2 years.
    Transition to a presidential system would require 367 votes for ratification in parliament or 330 votes to bring it to a popular referendum. AK currently has 312 seats.
    To contact the reporter on this story: Selcan Hacaoglu in Ankara at shacaoglu@bloomberg.net
    To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alaa Shahine at asalha@bloomberg.net Amy Teibel, Mark Williams

  • Journalist Kabaş reads ‘manifesto’ on TV ahead of court appearance: I’m on trial

    Journalist Kabaş reads ‘manifesto’ on TV ahead of court appearance: I’m on trial

    KABAS

    Journalist Sedef Kabaş. (Photo: Today’s Zaman, Kürşat Bayhan)

    Journalist Sedef Kabaş faces five years in prison for sending tweets about corruption and the government’s attempt to sweep the scandal under the rug. Speaking ahead of her court appearance, she read out a manifesto on Halk TV addressing the charges and stating that she stands by her tweets:

    I am facing the possibility of five years imprisonment on the basis of a tweet I posted. And actually, because I made the police officers who came to my house wait for five minutes before letting them in, I’m also facing up to five years imprisonment for a separate case. In other words, prosecutors are pushing for me to receive a full 10 year prison sentence. Yes, some 3,770 days behind bars, all for a tweet I wrote.

    But let’s take a brief look at the country where I am being tried:

    In the country where my trial is taking place, the former Transportation Minister said in regards to my case, “I didn’t see Sedef Kabaş’s tweet, but social media is not the place for swearing and insults.” And while he acts as though my tweet was based on swear words and insults, a group many call the “AK Trolls” — media “trolls” working for the Justice and Development Party (AKP) — works morning to night hurling brazen insults and epithets at people from all factions of society.

    I am being tried in a country where the same leaders who openly flout the laws, the flag and the founding leader of the Turkish Republic focus on those who would make the police wait five minutes. All of this while groups who have formed their own police forces and even armies in the Southeast of the country are completely ignored.

    I am being tried because I opposed the closure of the largest and deepest corruption case in the history of the Turkish Republic. I am being tried because I said: “Thievery, corruption and bribery are universal crimes. Shutting down investigations that have uncovered serious and strong evidence, documents and testimonies that support the validity of these corruption claims is of course a decision that will go down in history.”

    I am being tried because I warned people to never forget those who moved to shut down the corruption investigation.

    I am being tried in a country where those who steal, take and give bribes, and look people straight in the eye while undermining them, are not only never tried, but are never even sent to court.

    I am being tried in a country where books are called “bombs,” where Twitter is called a “disaster for everyone,” where journalists who ask questions are called “shameless,” where intellectuals are disparaged with the words “mon cher,” where those who exercise their constitutional right to protest are called “vandals,” where police who uncover serious incidents of thievery are called “coup-supporters” and where prosecutors who initiate important investigations are called “traitors to the country.”

    I am being tried in a country where even those under heavy clouds of suspicion regarding serious charges of corruption and similar improprieties can climb to a balcony after elections to flash victory signs to their supporters below. It is a country where these same people can yell from campaign platforms, “Everything for our people, we’ve done nothing we won’t account for!”

    I am being tried because regarding those who likely used their own children to engage in bribery I asked, “They became government ministers, but were they ever able to be real fathers?”

    I am being tried in a country where those who asked, “Did you steal?” are labeled as coup-supporters, Zionists and traitors of the country by those who are somehow never quite able to claim, “No, we did not steal.”

    I am being tried in a country where I can only wonder what value system and religion has brought forth all of those citizens of ours who cast their votes at the ballot boxes saying to themselves, “Well, they do steal, but at least they work.”

    I am being tried in a country where the most enormous fonts are used in newspaper headlines in an effort to make news constructed of lies look more believable. When this doesn’t work, entire pages are given over to stories to help support them. It’s a country where in the past four years, more than 150 broadcasting/publishing bans have been put into place, including for the Soma mining accident.

    I am being tried in a country where the absolutely nauseating fantasy of the attack that took place in Kabataş — a lie so stupid that only those of questionable intelligence would actually fall for it — was trumpeted from headlines, alongside claims that alcohol had been consumed in mosques and that the mosques themselves had been attacked by protesters — all in the wake of the Gezi protests. And not a single legal step has been taken against those who propelled and propagated these lies and slander against others.

    I am being tried in a country where the doctors who helped treat wounded young protestors during Gezi had legal action taken against them, even though the killers responsible for the deaths of people like Ali Ismael Korkmaz and Berkin Elvan were either protected or simply never found.

    I am being tried in a country where, while officials claim, “No other country has the sort of freedom we do,” raids unfold against homes, newspaper offices, labor syndicates, political party offices and banks. We’ve now even seen a 13-year-old taken out of his classroom by the police for insulting the president.

    Both the president and the prime minister can’t stop talking about the oppression experienced by their own spouses, but the fact is, whether you are talking about headscarved or non-headscarved women in Turkey, violence against women has increased by 1,400 percent in the past decade. It is a country where a 13-year-old girl was recently forced into marriage and then killed, and where those who rape women are let free and where words from a person of some authority who claims six-year-olds can marry are not followed up with any legal action.

    We are being tried in a country where those who have shredded up and completely polarized our identities — secular or religious, Turkish or Kurdish, Sunnis or Alevis, AKP or Gülen movement, or perhaps pro-Gül or pro-Tayyip — have actually committed the greatest of all crimes in destroying Turkey’s future.

    And those same leaders who are incapable of protecting even one handful of land for our country try to win points by insulting Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, a wartime genius who fought for the country in Tripoli, Gallipoli, on the Palestinian front and during the War of Independence. And though these people will never be tried in a court of law for what they have said about Atatürk, I am now being tried, and we are all being tried.

    Respect and esteem come down to the individual from democracy. Piousness comes not from prayer, but from your sense of humanity. And power comes not from office, but from honesty.

    I stand firmly behind my tweet, and will thus appear in court.