Category: Turkey

  • Turkey’s dangerous message to the Muslim world

    Turkey’s dangerous message to the Muslim world

    A court ban on the most pro-Western party would be a big mistake. 

    By Alex Taurel and Shadi Hamid
    from the July 24, 2008 edition 

    President Bush’s vision of a democratic Middle East was premised in part on the region’s popular Islamist groups reconciling themselves to the give-and-take nature of democracy.

    It might make sense then, that the Bush administration would do what it could to support a party that has made such a transformation in Turkey. But it’s not.

    Turkey’s Justice and Development Party (AKP), which fashioned itself as the Muslim equivalent of Europe’s Christian Democrats, has stood out by passing a series of unprecedented political reforms as the country’s ruling party.

    Yet the Turkish Constitutional Court – bastion of the hard-line secularist old guard – is now threatening to close down the AKP and ban its leading figures, including Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul, from party politics for five years. And the Bush administration, in the face of this impending judicial coup, has chosen to remain indifferent. The consequences could reach beyond a setback to democracy in Turkey and affect the Middle East.

    The Constitutional Court will rule as soon as next week on an indictment accusing the AKP of being a “focal point of antisecular activities.”

    Turkey’s Constitution establishes secularism as an unalterable principle and allows the court to ban parties it deems antisecular. But disbanding a democratically-elected party on such dubious grounds as attempting to lift a controversial ban on wearing head scarves in universities – the crux of the case against the AKP – is not how mature democracies handle divisive issues. Judges should not decide parties’ fates; voters should.

    Indeed, voters have flocked to the AKP since its founding by break away reformists within the Islamic movement. The party was elected in 2002 on pledges to preserve secularism and vigorously pursue Turkey’s efforts to join the European Union. It also explicitly disavowed the Islamist label.

    The AKP-led government then passed a series of democratic reforms that led Brussels to begin formal accession negotiations with Turkey. Those reforms, together with a booming economy, spurred 47 percent of Turks to vote for the AKP in its landslide 2007 reelection.

    To be sure, the AKP’s democratic credentials are hardly perfect. It has been overly cautious in repealing certain restrictions on freedom of speech, and it abruptly lifted the head scarf ban without first initiating a national dialogue.

    Yet despite its flaws, the AKP is the most democratically inclined – and somewhat ironically, the most pro-Western – political party on the Turkish scene today. Closing it down would be a mistake.

    A ban on a party that nearly half of the country supports could spark violence – which Turkey’s secularist generals might then use as a pretext for a direct military intervention. Regardless, senior EU figures have criticized the closure case and warned that banning the AKP could gravely damage Turkey’s candidacy.

    Even more troubling is the message it would send to the rest of the Muslim world – no matter how much Islamists moderate, they won’t be accepted as legitimate participants in the democratic process.

    In recent years, mainstream Islamist groups throughout the region – including in Egypt, Jordan, and Morocco – have embraced many of the foundational components of democratic life. Yet their moderation has been met with harsh government repression, or more subtle designs to restrict their political participation.

    More is at stake than may initially appear. If the AKP – the most moderate, pro-democratic “Islamist” party in the region today – is disbanded, it will strengthen those Islamists who see violence and confrontation as a surer means to influence political power.

    During the past year, a number of Islamist leaders we’ve spoken to in Egypt and Jordan have warned that rank-and-file activists are losing faith in the democratic process, and may soon become attracted to more radical approaches. A ban on the AKP would only make it that much harder for moderates to continue making the case that participating in elections is worthwhile.

    Though US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice praises the AKP’s democratization agenda, last month she said, “Obviously, we are not going to get involved in … the current controversy in Turkey about the court case.” Yet moments later she opined, “Sometimes when I’m asked what might democracy look like in the Middle East, I think it might look like Turkey.” It’s difficult to tell if she’s referring to the new, democratizing Turkey of the past five years – or the reactionary Turkey where judges and generals flagrantly overrule the people’s will.

    President Bush has one last opportunity to reinvigorate the cause of Middle East democracy. By publicly denouncing the closure case, the administration would signal that the US not only supports Turkish democracy against a dangerous internal assault, but that it is also committed to defending all actors willing to abide by democratic principles in a region that desperately needs more of them.

    Alex Taurel is a research associate at the Project on Middle East Democracy. Shadi Hamid is the director of research there and a research fellow at the American Center for Oriental Research in Amman, Jordan.

  • Turkey and Kyrgyzstan Sign Agreement on Military Aid

    Turkey and Kyrgyzstan Sign Agreement on Military Aid

    Kyrgyzstan, Bishkek, 24 July / corr. Trend News R.Meshedihasanli / The governments of Kyrgyzstan and Turkey signed in Ankara an agreement on free military aid and the Kyrgyz Defense Ministry and the Turkish General Headquarters signed a protocol to grant financial aid to the Kyrgyz Armed Forces.

    Abilov, the Kyrgyz Plenipotentiary Ambassador to Turkey, and Major General Alpaslan Erdogan, the head of defense planning and resource management department of the Turkish General Headquarter, signed these documents.

    Within the framework of these international agreements, the Turkish Government issues grant in the amount of 1,312,425 the Turkish liras (more than $1mln) to the Kyrgyz Government, which will be directed to the assistance in development of bilateral relations between two countries,” The Kyrgyz Defense Ministry told Trend News.

    Source: news.trendaz.com, 24.07.08

  • France seeks better security and defense ties with Turkey

    France seeks better security and defense ties with Turkey

    Thursday, July 24, 2008

    In a move to repair defense and military ties, Paris dispatches a high-level ambassador to Ankara to inform Turkish officials of Sarkozy’s newly announced White Book. ‘Turkey is one of the few countries that we have chosen to present our new defense and security strategies to,’ says D’Aboville

    SERKAN DEMİRTAŞ/Analysis
    ANKARA – Turkish Daily News

    A top French diplomat yesterday brought Turkish officials up to date on the recently published White Book on defense and security strategies, a move that is being interpreted as Paris’ intension to seek to mend damaged bilateral ties in the military field.

    “Turkey is a very important country for us. Turkey is one of the few countries that we have chosen to present our new defense and security strategies to,” Benoit D’Aboville, chief advisor at the National Audit Office, told the Turkish Daily News yesterday.

    Turkey and France have experienced bitter times in recent years after Paris recognized the 1915 deaths of Armenians as genocide and tried to pass a law punishing the denial of the genocide. The harshest reaction came from the Turkish military, which still affects bilateral military ties. Turkey excluded French companies from defense procurement tenders and even closed its airspace to French military aircraft.

    D’Aboville admitted that there were still some difficulties in bilateral military ties but said the two countries have an excellent cooperation in NATO, especially in the operations in Afghanistan, Bosnia and in Kosovo. “Our troops are working together in some very dangerous zones in Afghanistan,” he said. Turkey and France rotate the command of the NATO’s ISAF mission in Kabul.

    On June 17, French President Nicholas Sarkozy unveiled the White Book, a blueprint for France’s short term and strategic planning in the field of domestic and foreign security, detailing new threats stemming from globalization, introducing new structures to better organize and better finance its cost. Another dimension of this security understanding is France’s full participation in the structures of NATO, after nearly four decades of its withdrawal from the alliance’s military command.

    Return to NATO

    “In fact, we have not much need to return to NATO,” a high-level French diplomat said. “But President Sarkozy considers NATO as a family and he believes that France should be side by side with the other members of the family,” the diplomat added.

    However, Paris has not yet officially announced its decision to return to NATO. There are a number of countries which welcome Paris’ intension, according to diplomats. “Our return will let our officers get better positions in the command structures. Nothing more. We’re already very active and efficient within NATO. More than 4,000 French troops are serving for the alliance, which makes 10 percent of all 29 countries’ contributions,” another diplomat added

    No need for approval

    A French return to NATO has been on Turkey’s agenda for some time as well. According to unconfirmed reports in the Turkish press, Ankara was seeking to bargain with Paris to allow the latter’s full participation in NATO in return for compromises such as less resistance to Turkey’s bid to join the European Union.

    Turkish diplomats never confirmed such intensions but some academics strongly advised it to the government. “I think Turkey should veto a French return. France recently decided to put Turkish entrance in the EU to a referendum. Therefore Turkey should show that it also has some cards to play,” Çağrı Erhan, an academic and foreign relations expert said.

    But according to French diplomats, there will be no process of approval in the NAC, the highest decision-making body of the alliance, if France decides to fully return. Furthermore, a French diplomat stated that there was no uneasiness on the Turkish side on a French return to the alliance. “Why would Turkey be against of it?” a diplomat asked.

    “We have not heard of any uneasiness from Turkish diplomats on our full return to NATO,” a French diplomat said. “Such a thing would only make French taxpayers happy.”

    Source: Turkish Daily News, July 24, 2008

  • Turkish jets target PKK in Iraq

    Turkish jets target PKK in Iraq

    The Turkish military has said its warplanes have attacked Kurdish separatist targets in northern Iraq.

    The military, in a statement on its website, said 13 targets were “successfully hit” in the raids.

    There was no information on any casualties suffered by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

    Wednesday’s attacks, in the Zap region, were the latest in a series carried out by Turkey since it intensified operations at the end of last year.

    The Turkish statement said its military would press ahead with anti-PKK operations inside Turkey and across the border in Iraq “according to military needs”.

    Turkey accuses PKK rebels of using hideouts in northern Iraq as part of their campaign for self-rule in mainly Kurdish south-east Turkey.

    Some 40,000 people have been killed since the PKK launched its campaign in 1984.

    Source: BBC, 24 July 2008

  • Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan launch joint rail link

    Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan launch joint rail link

    By Hatice Aydogdu

     

    KARS, Turkey, July 24 (Reuters) – Leaders of Turkey, Georgia and Azerbaijan launched a railway project between the three countries on Thursday, building on links already forged by gas and oil pipelines.

     

    At a railway station in the eastern Turkish border town of Kars the presidents of the three countries held a ground breaking ceremony for the $290 million Turkish section of the railway.

     

    The three countries are already linked by the BP-led Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline and the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum gas line but trade links between Turkey and the Caucasus region are limited.

     

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul, Georgia’s Mikheil Saakashvili and Azerbaijan’s Ilham Aliyev placed three sections of railway track on a large map of the region in a symbolic launch of the project as confetti showered down.

     

    A tender last September for construction of the 76-km (47-mile) Turkish stretch of the railway was won by the Ozgun Yapi-Celikler joint venture with a bid of $289.8 million, the lowest of 14 bids.

     

    The project involves new track construction and renewal of existing track, and is expected to be completed in 2011. (Writing by Daren Butler; Editing by Jon Boyle)

  • Turkish stretch of railway linking Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan launched

    Turkish stretch of railway linking Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan launched

    ANKARA, Turkey: The Associated Press – The presidents of Turkey, Georgia and Azerbaijan have launched the construction of the Turkish stretch of a railway linking their nations.

    The US$600 million rail line will connect the Azerbaijani capital, Baku, with the eastern Turkish city of Kars, via the Georgian capital, Tbilisi.

    The project is one of several linking oil-rich Azerbaijan and Central Asia with Turkey and European markets while bypassing Russia.

    A groundbreaking ceremony in Kars Thursday marked the start of the 50 mile (76 kilometer) Turkish section of the 110 mile (180 kilometer) railroad.

    “We are launching the iron Silk Road,” Turkey’s Abdullah Gul said. “It will link China in Asia to London.”

    The Silk Road was an ancient Asian trading route. The railway will be operational in 2011.

    Source: International Herald Tribune, July 24, 2008