Tag: Gulen

  • Crisis in Turkey

    Crisis in Turkey

    by Daniel Pipes
    National Review Online
    March 2, 2010

    The arrest and indictment of top military figures in Turkey last week precipitated potentially the most severe crisis since Atatürk founded the republic in 1923. The weeks ahead will probably indicate whether the country continues its slide toward Islamism or reverts to its traditional secularism. The denouement has major implications for Muslims everywhere.

    1113“Taraf” broke the Balyoz conspiracy theory on Jan. 22, 2010.

    Turkey’s military has long been both the state’s most trusted institution and the guarantor of Atatürk’s legacy, especially his laicism. Devotion to the founder is not some dry abstraction but a very real and central part of a Turkish officer’s life; as journalist Mehmet Ali Birand has documented, cadet-officers hardly go an hour without hearing Atatürk’s name invoked.

    On four occasions between 1960 and 1997, the military intervened to repair a political process gone awry. On the last of these occasions, it forced the Islamist government of Necmettin Erbakan out of power. Chastened by this experience, some of Erbakan’s staff re-organized themselves as the more cautious Justice and Development Party (AKP). In Turkey’s decisive election of 2002, they surged ahead of discredited and fragmented centrist parties with a plurality of 34 percent of the popular vote.

    Parliamentary rules then transformed that plurality into a 66 percent supermajority of assembly seats and a rare case of single-party rule. Not only did the AKP skillfully take advantage of its opportunity to lay the foundations of an Islamic order but no other party or leader emerged to challenge it. As a result, the AKP increased its portion of the vote in the 2007 elections to a resounding 47 percent, with control over 62 percent of parliamentary seats.

    Repeated AKP electoral successes encouraged it to drop its earlier caution and to hasten moving the country toward its dream of an Islamic Republic of Turkey. The party placed partisans in the presidency and the judiciary while seizing increased control of the educational, business, media, and other leading institutions. It even challenged the secularists’ hold over what Turks call the “deep state” – the non-elected institutions of the intelligence agencies, security services, and the judiciary. Only the military, ultimate arbiter of the country’s direction, remained beyond AKP control.

    Several factors then prompted the AKP to confront the military: European Union accession demands for civilian control over the military; a 2008 court case that came close to shutting down the AKP; and the growing assertiveness of its Islamist ally, the Fethullah Gülen Movement. An erosion in AKP popularity (from 47 percent in 2007 to 29 percent now) added a sense of urgency to this confrontation, for it points to the end of one-party AKP rule in the next elections.

    1114Gen. Ibrahim Firtina, a former head of the air force, was questioned in court about a plot to overthrow the government.

    The AKP devised an elaborate conspiracy theory in 2007, dubbed Ergenekon, to arrest about two hundred AKP critics, including military officers, under accusation of plotting to overthrow the elected government. The military responded passively, so the AKP raised the stakes on Jan. 22 by concocting a second conspiracy theory, this one termed Balyoz (“Sledgehammer”) and exclusively directed against the military.

    The military denied any illegal activities and the chief of general staff, İlker Başbuğ, warned that “Our patience has a limit.” Nonetheless, the government proceeded, starting on Feb. 22, to arrest 67 active and retired military officers, including former heads of the air force and navy. So far, 35 officers have been indicted.

    Thus has the AKP thrown down the gauntlet, leaving the military leadership basically with two unattractive options: (1) continue selectively to acquiesce to the AKP and hope that fair elections by 2011 will terminate and reverse this process; or (2) stage a coup d’état, risking voter backlash and increased Islamist electoral strength.

    1115Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, President Abdullah Gul and Armed Forces Chief of Staff Gen. İlker Başbuğ met on February 25.

    At stake is whether the Ergenekon/Balyoz offensives will succeed in transforming the military from an Atatürkist to a Gülenist institution; or whether the AKP’s blatant deceit and over-reaching will spur secularists to find their voice and their confidence. Ultimately the issue concerns whether Shari’a (Islamic law) rules Turkey or the country returns to secularism.

    Turkey’s Islamic importance suggests that the outcome of this crisis has consequences for Muslims everywhere. AKP domination of the military means Islamists control the umma‘s most powerful secular institution, proving that, for the moment, they are unstoppable. But if the military retains its independence, Atatürk’s vision will remain alive in Turkey and offer Muslims worldwide an alternative to the Islamist juggernaut.

    https://www.danielpipes.org/8009/crisis-in-turkey

  • Armeno-Turkish Relations:  Pitfalls and Possibilities

    Armeno-Turkish Relations: Pitfalls and Possibilities

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation

    NY and NJ Committees

    Present

    Armeno-Turkish Relations:

    Pitfalls and Possibilities

    A public forum

    Featuring

    John Evans

    Former US Ambassador to Armenia

    Ken Hachikian

    Chairman, ANCA

    Richard Hovannisian

    AEF Chair in Modern Armenian History, UCLA

    Dennis Papazian

    Emeritus Professor of History, University of Michigan-Dearborn

    Sunday, March 7

    4:30 pm

    New York Hilton Hotel

    1335 Ave. of the Americas (at 53rd St)

    Admission is Free

    For more information, contact the ARF at (718) 651-1530 or (201) 945-0011

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  • What’s Really Behind Turkey’s Coup Arrests?

    What’s Really Behind Turkey’s Coup Arrests?

    What’s Really Behind Turkey’s Coup Arrests? | Foreign Policy

    BY SONER CAGAPTAY | FEBRUARY 25, 2010

    FEBRUARY 27, 2010

    What’s Really Behind Turkey’s Coup Arrests?

    All signs point to Fethullah Gülen, whose shadowy Islamist movement is rapidly extending its tentacles into all aspects of Turkish political life.

    BY SONER CAGAPTAY | FEBRUARY 25, 2010

    For the last several decades, the Turkish military was untouchable; no one dared to criticize the military or its top generals, lest they risk getting burned.  The Turkish Armed Forces were the ultimate protectors of founding father Kemal Ataturk’s secular legacy, and no other force in the country could seriously threaten its supremacy. Not anymore.

    On Feb. 22, 49 officers—including active-duty generals, admirals, and former commanders of the Turkish navy and air force—were arrested on allegations of plotting a coup against the government. Specifically, the officers were charged with authoring a 5,000-page memo that was later published in Taraf, a paper whose editorial policy is singularly dedicated to bashing the military. Among other things, the memo stated that the Turkish military was planning to bomb Istanbul’s historic mosques and shoot down its own planes to justify a coup.  When I asked a former U.S. ambassador to Turkey for his views on the news, he thought the scenario was ridiculous. “If the Turkish military was going to do a coup, they would not be writing a 5,000-page memo about it,” he stated.  Three days later, the former commanders of the navy and air force were released — further proof that the government’s intention was to intimidate Turkey’s military, rather than proceed with an indictment against these high-ranking officials. The arrests followed a Feb. 19 incident in which an audio recording of Turkey’s chief of staff was leaked to Vakit, a small jihadi Islamist newspaper that has celebrated the killing of U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan. In Turkey, it is illegal to wiretap individuals without a court order, and it is also illegal to publish such wiretaps. However, no one has been prosecuted for this wiretap against the chief of staff—a sign that the balance of power in Turkey has shifted decisively.

    A mountain has moved in Turkish politics. All shots against the military are now fair game, including those below the belt. The force behind this dramatic change is the Fethullah Gülen Movement (FGH), an ultraconservative political faction that backs the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). The FGH was founded in the 1970s by Fethullah Gülen, a charismatic preacher who now lives in the United States but remains popular in Turkey. It is a conservative movement aiming to reshape secular Turkey in its own image, by securing the supremacy of Gülen’s version of religion over politics, government, education, media, business, and public and personal life.

    To some, it might appear that the newfound freedom to criticize the military proves that Turkey is becoming a more liberal democracy. But the truth is that Turkey has replaced one “untouchable” organization for another, more dangerous, one. Criticizing the Gülen movement, which controls the national police and its powerful domestic intelligence branch, and which exerts increasing influence in the judiciary, has become as taboo as assailing the military once was. Today, it is those who criticize the Gülen movement who get burned. COMMENTS (87) SHARE: Digg  Facebook  Reddit   More…

    Of course, coup allegations are serious matters that warrant immediate action.  However, these allegations are part of the Ergenekon case—a convoluted investigation that so far has produced nothing in the last three years but a record-setting 5,800-page indictment, hundreds of early-morning house raids, and the detention of many prominent Turks, including university presidents and prominent educators such as Kemal Guruz and Mehmet Haberal. The only quality that ties together all of those arrested is their opposition to the AKP government and the Gülen movement. Zekeriya Oz, the chief prosecutor leading the Ergenekon case, and Ramazan Akyurek, the head of the police’s domestic intelligence branch, as well as other powerful people in the police, are thought by some to be Gülen sympathizers.

    Although some of the people interrogated and arrested might have been involved in criminal wrongdoing, most appear to be innocent. Take, for instance, Turkan Saylan, a 73-year-old grandmother who was undergoing chemotherapy. Saylan ran an NGO providing liberal arts education scholarships to poor girls in eastern Turkey, an area where Gülen’s network runs many competing organizations. She was interrogated by the Turkish police for allegedly plotting a coup from her death bed, and passed away only four weeks later.

    Many others have languished in jail, or even died, without seeing an indictment.  The Gülen-controlled parts of the judiciary and police have also wielded illegal wiretaps against those entangled in the Ergenekon case, leaking intimate details of their private lives, such as marital infidelity, to pro-AKP and pro-Gülen media in order to damage their reputations.

    Illegal wiretaps and arbitrary arrests serve to intimidate the public, not prosecute criminals. Because of Ergenekon, Turks who oppose the AKP and the Gülen movement fear to speak their minds freely. If you have doubts, call a friend in Turkey and ask for an opinion of the case. Your friend will respond with details of the weather.

    The military, which opposes the AKP and the Gülenists because it sees itself as the virtual guardian of Turkey’s secular polity à la Ataturk’s vision, serving as a bulwark against religion’s domination over politics and government, has become the primary target of this round of politically motivated arrests.  Illegally obtained documents, including confidential and sometimes embarrassing medical records of four-star generals, were published openly in Gülenist media.  Although the chief of staff said the documents were doctored, they were recently used as evidence, with the support of anonymous witnesses, to arrest serving generals and admirals.

    The roots of the Gülen movement’s vendetta against the army run deep. Following the pattern of the evangelical movement in the United States, the FGH grew dramatically in the 1980s. Gülen espoused a Machiavellian approach to democracy, saying to his followers in a message broadcast on Turkish TV in 1999 that “every method and path is acceptable [including] lying to people.” In the 1990s, the movement gained political power by throwing its weight behind various governments, which in return appointed FGH members to prominent positions in the bureaucracy, including the police and the intelligence branch.  In the late 1990s, Gülen went head-to-head with Turkey’s military—and lost.  The clash between the Islamist Welfare Party (RP) government, which was supported by the FHG, and the military was at the center of this conflict. In 1997, the Turkish military orchestrated a public campaign against the RP. With pressure mounting against its rule, the RP government stepped down. As a result, members of Islamist movements, including those belonging to the FGH, were purged from their posts in the bureaucracy and the military.  When the Turkish courts charged Gülen with corruption and anti-secular political activities in 1999, he fled to a rural compound in Pennsylvania. Although he was later acquitted, Gülen has never returned to Turkey.  The FGH has returned, however, with a vengeance. When the AKP, which is largely a reincarnation of the banned RP, came to power in 2002, the FGH positioned its media, voter, and business lobby support behind the governing party. In return, the AKP appointed FGH members to prominent positions in the judiciary and the bureaucracy, including the police’s intelligence branch.  With the Gülen movement in control of large portions of the government apparatus and running a political witch hunt against its opponents through the Ergenekon case, Turkey is taking a dangerously authoritarian turn. A personal friend and politician from the former Soviet Union once said, “A police state emerges not when the police listen to all the citizens, but when all the citizens fear that they are being listened to.” Welcome to the new Turkey: If you listen carefully, you can hear the political ground shifting below your feet.

  • COMMUNITY ALERT

    COMMUNITY ALERT

    THIS SUNDAY FEBRUARY 28, CBS-60 MINUTES WILL AIR A SEGMENT ON THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    PLEASE BE SURE TO WATCH. TELL YOU FRIENDS & FAMILY!

    –USE THE ‘FORWARD EMAIL’ link below.

    –SHARE THE NEWS ON FACEBOOK / TWITTER

    It is anticipated that the segment will also be available for viewing after broadcast on the 60 MINUTES WEBSITE.

    AGBU/CHICAGO BOARD

    60 MINUTES
    PROGRAM DESCRIPTION:
    “BATTLE OVER HISTORY” Bob Simon reports on what the Armenians call their holocaust – the 1915 forced deportation and massacre of more than a million ethnic Armenians by the Turks – an event that the Turks and our own government have refused to call genocide. Michael Gavshon and Drew Magratten are the producers.

  • Turkey’s Gul seeks to calm military ‘coup plot’ fears

    Turkey’s Gul seeks to calm military ‘coup plot’ fears

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (left), President Abdullah Gul and Gen Ilker Basbug meet in Ankara, February 25 2010

    Thursday’s meeting was called amid escalating tension between the government and the military

    Turkey’s president has said tensions over an alleged military coup plot will be resolved within the law, after meeting the head of the armed forces.

    President Abdullah Gul made the statement after a summit with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and armed forces chief Gen Ilker Basbug.

    Tension between the government and the military has risen following a round of arrests over the alleged plot.

    Twenty military officers were charged this week in connection with the case.

    They were among more than 40 officers arrested on Monday.

    HOW ‘COUP PLOTS’ EMERGED
    June 2007: Cache of explosives discovered; ex-soldiers detained
    July 2008: 20 arrested, including two ex-generals and a senior journalist, for “planning political disturbances and trying to organise a coup”
    July 2008: Governing AK Party narrowly escapes court ban
    October 2008: 86 go on trial charged with “Ergenekon” coup plot
    July 2009: 56 in dock as second trial opens
    Jan 2010: Taraf newspaper reports 2003 “sledgehammer” plot to provoke coup
    Feb 2010: More than 40 officers arrested over “sledgehammer”; 20 charged

    Turkey’s religious-secular divide

    Turkish military faces crossroads

    The retired head of the air force Ibrahim Firtina and former navy chief Ozden Ornek were in court on Thursday morning for questioning and could still be charged.

    After several hours of talks on Thursday, Mr Gul sought to reassure the country.

    “It was stressed that citizens can be sure that the problems on the agenda will be solved within the framework of the constitution and our laws,” a statement from his office said.

    Mr Erdogan was quoted by local media as saying Thursday’s meeting had gone “very well”.

    The military has denied any coup plot and has held its own officers’ summit to discuss the “serious situation” in the wake of the latest arrests.

    Unprecedented operation

    The BBC’s Jonathan Head in Istanbul says the Turkish government is embroiled in the greatest test yet of its authority over the armed forces.

    Turkey’s military has overthrown or forced the resignation of four governments since 1960 – most recently in 1997 – though Gen Basbug has insisted that coups are a thing of the past.

    The scale of Monday’s operation against the military was unprecedented. Those arrested include two serving admirals, three retired admirals and three retired generals.

    Former Air Force Commander Gen Ibrahim Firtina arriving at court in Istanbul, 25 Feburary 2010

    Ex-Air Force head Gen Ibrahim Firtina was among those being questioned

    A number of them are being kept in jail while 12 have reportedly been freed.

    Dozens of current or former members of the military have been arrested in the past few years over similar plot allegations, and some have been charged.

    The latest men to be charged were arrested over the so-called “sledgehammer” plot, which reportedly dates back to 2003.

    Reports of the alleged plot first surfaced in the liberal Taraf newspaper, which said it had discovered documents detailing plans to bomb two Istanbul mosques and provoke Greece into shooting down a Turkish plane over the Aegean Sea.

    The army has said the scenarios were discussed but only as part of a planning exercise at a military seminar.

    The alleged plot is similar, and possibly linked, to the reported Ergenekon conspiracy, in which military figures and staunch secularists allegedly planned to foment unrest, leading to a coup.

    Scores of people, including military officers, journalists and academics, are on trial in connection with that case.

    ‘Painful transformation’

    Analysts say the crackdown on the military would have been unthinkable only a few years ago.

    The army has regarded itself as the guardian of a secular Turkish state, but its power has been eroded in recent years, with Turkey enacting reforms designed to prepare it for entry to the European Union.

    Many Turks regard the cases as the latest stage in an ongoing power struggle between Turkey’s secular nationalist establishment and the governing AK Party.

    Critics believe the Ergenekon and sledgehammer investigations are simply attempts to silence the government’s political and military opponents.

    The AK Party has its roots in political Islam, and is accused by some nationalists of having secret plans to turn staunchly secular Turkey into an Islamic state.

    The government rejects those claims, saying its intention is to modernise Turkey and move it closer to EU membership.

    “Transformations may sometimes be painful,” Economy Minister Ali Babacan said Wednesday.

    “We are trying to make Turkey’s democracy first class.”


    What is your reaction to the crackdown on the military? post your views on the current crisis using the form below.

  • Shoe Flung at Turkish Prime Minister while Visiting Spain

    Shoe Flung at Turkish Prime Minister while Visiting Spain

    erdogan afis1
    Tuesday, 23 February 2010

    The Prime Minister of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, began his visit to Spain on February 22, 2010. During the visit, he attended a meeting hosted by the Nueva Economia Forum and delivered a speech about Turkey’s European Union membership process. Later, he met with Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero to talk about Turkey-Spain relations in all aspects. During the meeting, it is reported that Zapatero and Erdogan exchanged views over recent developments in the world and in the region, and Turkey’s negotiation process with the European Union.

    Later on, Erdogan, his wife Emine Erdogan and his fellow ministers joined a ceremony at the town hall of Sevilla. Erdogan examined the paintings in the building accompanied by the mayor and signed the Honor Book.

    At the ceremony, the Prime Minister was presented with an award due to his remarkable efforts to launch the Alliance of Civilizations initiative. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan received the Seville NODO Foundation’s award from Seville’s Mayor, Alfredo Sanchez Menteseirin, at the ceremony held in Seville, Spain.

    In his speech, Montesereirin emphasized the importance of the Alliance of Civilizations in the mutual understanding and dialogue in the world and said that they are proud of giving the award to Erdogan because of his important steps in the development of mutual understanding and solutions in conflicts.

    Mehmet Ozcan, director of Center for EU Studies at the International Strategic Research Organization (USAK), said that the meeting between Turkey and Spain is very important in terms of Turkey’s relations with both the European Union and Spain. He also emphasized the importance of visits to the countries which oppose Turkey’s EU membership and said, “The same determination of government is expected to be performed by extensive delegations during the visit of other countries.’’

    Upon leaving the Seville City Hall, a Kurdish-Syrian citizen threw a shoe at the Turkish Prime Minister. The 21 year old man who threw the footwear was promptly arrested in Sevilla. He is now accused of attempted assault on a head of state. The Syrian protester, who is reported to be an illegal immigrant in Spain, was detained at the scene, and his name is not known yet.

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