Tag: Mavi Marmara

  • WHY IS TURKEY ONLY NOW THE VILLAIN OF THE PIECE?

    WHY IS TURKEY ONLY NOW THE VILLAIN OF THE PIECE?

    Jewish Chronicle
    July 1 2010

    Israel’s protests — in the wake of the flotilla crisis — at Turkish
    misdeeds are cynical in the extreme

    By Keith Kahn-Harris, July 1, 2010

    In the wake of the flotilla crisis, Israel’s relations with Turkey
    have taken a dramatic turn for the worse. Once Israel’s closest ally
    in the region, both countries fearing Islamism together with Iranian
    and Arab expansionism, the alliance now hangs by a thread.

    As the geopolitical tectonic plates shift, so does the rhetoric of
    Israel’s defenders. Into the crosshairs of Hasbara-niks and pro-Israel
    campaigners comes the Turkish state. Turkey certainly has many
    deeply disturbing features that can and should be highlighted. To say
    nothing of its recent Islamist turn, this is a country that continues
    to oppress the Kurdish people and of course in 1917 carried out a
    genocide in its slaughter of over one million Armenians. Not only has
    Turkey never apologised for the genocide, it has vigorously denied it,
    protesting against commemorations of the slaughter and persecuting
    Turkish writers who have tried to come to terms with the past.

    In recent Israeli demonstrations against Turkey and in vigils outside
    its embassy, placards have been prominently displayed reminding the
    world of the Armenian genocide. But until very recently not only were
    Turkish human rights abuses – past and present – ignored by Israel
    and its supporters, they were among the most active in perpetuating
    the denial of the Armenian genocide.

    In his book The Banality of Denial: Israel and the Armenian Genocide,
    Yair Auron recounts the shameful history of Israel’s complicity
    in Armenian genocide denial. Driven by short-term political
    considerations, Israeli governments have resisted recognising the
    genocide and in 1982 tried to pressure Israeli scholars from taking
    part in an international conference on the subject.

    In the diaspora, the record of most Jewish and pro-Israel organisations
    has been equally woeful. There was pressure on the Holocaust Memorial
    Museum in Washington DC not to mention the Armenian genocide. In
    2007, the Anti-Defamation League’s Abraham Foxman was central to the
    successful suppression of a renewed attempt at commemoration.

    And now? With the war of words between Turkey and Israel growing
    ever more virulent and with grassroots pro-Israel groups taking
    every opportunity to remind the world of Turkish atrocities, Jewish
    and Israeli complicity in Armenian genocide denial looks likely to
    end. As Morris Amitay, a former executive director of AIPAC has said:
    “If someone asked me now if I would try to protect Turkey in Congress,
    my response would be, ‘You’ve got to be kidding.’”

    But if cynically denying genocide was bad then cynically affirming
    it is almost as repellent. It undermines moral credibility and –
    most dangerously given the spread of Holocaust denial in the Muslim
    world – risks tarring Shoah commemoration with the same cynicism.

    It may be tempting to put consideration for Israel’s strategic
    interests above respect for history and human rights, but it should be
    resisted. If Turkey is now too morally tainted to be worthy of having
    Israel as an ally, then it never was a worthy ally. When the next
    dodgy alliance rears its head (China? Russia?) Israel and its friends
    should remember the Turkish example and put moral survival first.

    Keith Kahn-Harris is honorary research fellow at the Centre for
    Religion and Society, Birkbeck College. His book (co-authored with
    Ben Gidley) ‘Turbulent Times; The British Jewish Community Today’
    will be published this month.

  • Israel: Official Secretly Meets Turkish FM

    Israel: Official Secretly Meets Turkish FM

    June 30, 2010
    Israeli Minister of Trade, Industry and Labor Benjamin Ben-Eliezer and Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu met in Zurich on June 30, Ynet reported, adding that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu apparently approved the meeting. The office of Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Lieberman was unaware of the meeting, adding that it violated trust with the prime minister. A reporter with Israel’s Channel 2 uncovered the meeting during a telephone conversation with Ben-Eliezer, The Jerusalem Post reported, claiming that Ben-Eliezer is Israel’s secret mediator with Turkey.

    =============================================================
    Turkey: FM Holds Clandestine Meeting With Israeli Minister
    July 1, 2010
    Israeli Industry, Trade and Labor Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer and Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu met in Switzerland on June 30 for two hours without the permission of Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, Haaretz reported July 1, citing Hurriyet. The meeting was reportedly a result of pressure from the Obama administration, according to Jerusalem sources. Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak reportedly opposed the meeting and expressed concerns to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but he did not veto the meeting. Davutoglu traveled to Switzerland by private plane and the conference room was reserved under an assumed name, Hurriyet reported. Davutoglu reportedly called for an apology for the Israeli attack on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla.
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  • Lieberman slams Netanyahu over government’s secret meeting with Turkey

    Lieberman slams Netanyahu over government’s secret meeting with Turkey

    Tension within coalition as foreign minister accuses Netanyahu of undermining trust following reports PM approved clandestine talks with Turkish foreign minister.

    By Barak Ravid and Haaretz Service

    Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman reacted furiously on Wednesday to reports that a cabinet colleague had held a secret meeting with the Turkish government, saying the move had damaged his relationship with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    Lieberman accused the prime minister of undermining his authority after it emerged that another minister, Benjamin Ben Eliezer, had met with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in Switzerland – without first gaining permission from the foreign ministry.

    Avigdor Lieberman, April 29, 2010
    Photo by: AP

    The foreign minister takes a very serious view of the fact  that this occurred without informing the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,” Lieberman’s office said in a statement. “This is an insult to the norms of accepted behavior and a heavy blow to the confidence between the foreign minister and the prime minister.”

    Ben Eliezer, a Knesset member of Defense MInister Ehud Barak’s Labor party, has over the past few weeks expressed concern over Israel’s deteriorating relationswith Turkey. Ties between the once-close allies have come close to breakdown following a deadly raid by Israeli commandos on a Turkish-flagged aid ship a month ago.

    Wednesday’s talks were apparently aimed at repairing the diplomatic damage.

    Later on Wednesday, Netanyahu’s office released a statement that cited technical grounds for the failure to inform Lieberman of the meeting in Zurich.

    Turkish officials had approached Ben Eliezer perosnally with a request for an informal discussion, which the prime minister had seen no cause to block, the statement said.

    “In recent weeks there have been several attempts at contacts with Turkey of which the foreign ministry was aware,” the statement said. “The foreign minister was not informed for technical reasons only. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is working in full cooperation with the foreign minister and will clarify the incident with him.”

    Lieberman’s hard-line Yisrael Beiteinu party is the second largest in the government coalition, behind Netanyahu’s Likud. But the foreign minister’s right-wing views have made him unpalatable to many of Israel’s allies and he has often taken a back seat internationally, leaving high-level diplomacy to Netanyahu and Barak.

    Following Israel’s May 31 raid, Ben Eliezer broke with other ministers in demanding an international inquiry into the incident, in which nine pro-Palestinian activists, eight of them Turkish, were killed.

    Israel is conducting its own probe, led by a former Supreme Court judge and monitored by two international observers.

  • Erdogan: Turkey still friend to Israel

    Erdogan: Turkey still friend to Israel


    Flotilla Raid
    Photo: AFP
    magdelet4 English 'Give Hamas a chance.' Erdogan Photo: AFP
    Photo: Reuters
    magdelet4 English Clash on Mavi Marmara Photo: Reuters

    Turkish PM tells Charlie Rose US must take leading role in aftermath of flotilla raid because one of those killed was American citizen. IHH calls commando raid 'terrorist attack' Ynet
    Published: 06.29.10, 16:50 / Israel News
    Turkey remains “a friend to Israel,” but the government under Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is “the biggest barrier to peace” in the Middle East, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said. In an in interview with PBS television’s Charlie Rose aired late Monday, Erdogan called on the US to take a leading role in dealing with the aftermath of Israel’s May 31 commando raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla, during which nine Turkish naitonals were killed.
    Deteriorating Ties
    Report: Turkish airspace closed to Israel / Yoav Zitun and AP
    Erdogan tells reporters in Canada Turkey imposed ban on Israeli military flights following raid on Gaza-bound flotilla. Israel Transport Ministry: We did not receive any notification
    Full Story
    "The US administration should take ownership of the situation because there was an American involved,” Erdogan said, referring to Furkan Dogan, a 19-year-old American- Turkish dual citizen who was killed on board the Mavi Marmara vessel. The Turkish PM reiterated Ankara's position regarding Hamas, according to which the Islamist group should be given an opportunity to govern the Palestinian people. "Elections were held, and Hamas won the election. They should have been given the opportunity to govern, because when that didn’t happen, there was a loss of confidence, trust, and that created problems,” he said. Meanwhile, IHH, the Turkish NGO that organized the sail to Gaza, released a report Wednesday saying the Israeli raid on the Gaza-bound flotilla was a pre-mediated "terrorist" attack motivated by hostility. "Israel exhibited an example of illegal action by stopping the attempts for breaking the embargo in Gaza which is a collective punishment of Palestinians," the report said.
    IHH accused the Israeli troops of "killing unarmed civilian humanitarian aid volunteers by directly opening fire on them. Obviously, (the) current Israeli government performed a planned terrorist attack to kill out of nothing but hostility." "During this terrorist attack nine people have lost their lives and around 50 aid activists have been wounded," said the report, adding that, "The attack carried out against the flotilla is an attack on all humanity and peace."

  • Fitzgerald: Misreading Turkey and its misrule

    Fitzgerald: Misreading Turkey and its misrule

    Two weeks ago, during the aftermath, or more aptly in the wake, of the Mavi Marmara, and the Hamas-and-Al-Qaeda-linked I.H.H.’s propaganda stunt, a number of commentators had their say on Turkey, that is, Turkey in its malevolent present incarnation under Erdogan and his AKP party.

    Quite a few people seemed to think they knew why Erdogan was behaving as he was behaving.

    There was, for example, quick-off-the-mark Tony Blair. Tony Blair, you may need reminding, has always been an enthusiastic – because uncritical, and unthinking – supporter of Turkey’s admission to the E.U. In 2005, just after a vote in Austria that suggested some lack of enthusiasm (could memories of two Ottoman attempts to seize Vienna have anything to do with it?) for Turkey’s admission, it was Blair who thought he should remind everyone in Europe, and reassure the Turks too, that Turkey simply had to have a “future” inside the E.U.

    In The Guardian for 30 September 2005, under the headline “Blair insists that Turkey’s future in the EU,” appeared this:

    Tony Blair today insisted Turkey’s future was in the EU as British officials in Brussels worked to dispel a looming crisis over next week’s talks on its membership.In an interview with Turkey’s Hurriyet newspaper, the prime minister said he would work hard to help Turkey realise its EU ambitions.

    “I sincerely believe that EU membership is Turkey’s future,” Mr Blair – a long-time supporter of Ankara joining the 25-nation bloc – told the paper. “We shall work towards achieving that.”

    Nor in the five years since then, as the nature of Islam becomes clearer and clearer to those willing to take account of reality and the day’s daily Jihad News from around the world, has smiling Tony Blair, pocketing his dishonorable honoraria, ever given any hint of rethinking this view. (Like Clinton, with whom he has so much in common, Blair has made 100 million dollars in speaking fees and consultancy work since he left “public service” to make “some real money.”) Erdogan’s defense of Ahmedinajad, and his repeated visceral denunciations of Israelis (Peres at Davos) and of Israel for daring to defend itself against the Fast and Slow Jihadists of Hamas and Fatah, have made no difference.

    So it was no surprise that, a few weeks ago, Blair should come out yet again with his support for Turkey’s admission to the E.U., even after the Mava Marmara incident, and even after Erdogan’s defense of, and expression of solidarity with, the Islamic Republic of Iran. The Jerusalem Post reported:

    Quartet special envoy Tony Blair said in an interview on Channel 10 on Tuesday that the Turkish change was very worrisome. He expressed hope that out of the crisis a new bridge would be built between Israel and Turkey.Blair, who advocated Turkey joining the EU in 2005, said the cold shoulder the EU gave Turkey led to Ankara’s decision to turn in the direction of Iran.

    Let’s repeat that: “Blair…said the cold shoulder the EU gave Turkey led to Ankara’s decision to turn in the direction of Iran.”

    So it is the E.U. that “pushed” Turkey, or even “forced” Turkey, or rather Erdogan and his fellows in the DKP, to “turn in the direction of Iran.”

    Astonishing, you may think, in its idiocy, but apparently this idiocy is not Blair’s alone.

    For on June 10, in the Wall Street Journal, there appeared a piece on p. A15, under the headline “Gates Says EU Pushed Turkey Away.” And the sub-headline reads: “U.S. Defense Secretary Blames Bloc’s Resistance to Granting Membership for Ankara’s Turn from Israel and the West.”

    And here’s more of that article:

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates accused the European Union of pushing Turkey toward the East by its resistance to letting the mainly Muslim nation join the bloc, the closest any senior U.S. official has come to saying the West risks losing Turkey.The comments, made Wednesday to reporters while Mr. Gates was in London and reported by news agencies, came as Turkey voted against a U.S.-backed resolution at the United Nations Security Council mandating new sanctions against Iran. Mr. Gates also expressed “concern” at the sharp deterioration in relations between U.S. allies Turkey and Israel, over the killing of Turkish citizens by Israeli soldiers on a ship bound for Gaza last week.

    “I personally think that if there is anything to the notion that Turkey is, if you will, moving eastward, it is, in my view, in no small part because it was pushed, and pushed by some in Europe refusing to give Turkey the kind of organic link to the West that Turkey sought,” Mr. Gates said, according to the agency reports.

    “We have to think long and hard about why these developments in Turkey [are occurring] and what we might be able to do to counter them and make the stronger linkages with the West more apparently of interest and value to Turkey’s leaders,” he said.

    And now, in a Gogolian vein, from the Simply Idiotic of Blair and Gates to the Idiotic In All Respects of the inimitable Tom Friedman, in his column entitled “Letter From Istanbul” (and sure enough, he was in Istanbul, no doubt staying at the five-star hotel on the Bosphorus, and enjoying the Times expense-account for all it is worth). Of course the column, for all of that “a dispatch from the front” suggestion, could just as easily have been written, say, from a Dunkin’ Donuts in Newark, New Jersey. And Friedman has an Explanatory Theory for Turkey’s behavior, as tom-friedmans-of-the-times so often do, and this one might be called the Vacuum-Packed Theory.

    For Tom Friedman thinks that Turkey’s behavior, or rather, the behavior of the Islamizing regime of Erdogan, is explained by “a series of vacuums that emerged [sic] in and around Turkey in the last few years [and] have drawn Turkey’s Islamist government – led by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdgoan’s Justice and Development Party – away from its balance point between East and West. [Now time for the friedmanian Portentous:] This could have enormous implications. Turkey’s balancing role has been one of the most important, quiet, stabilizers in world politics. [!] You only notice it when it is gone. Being in Istanbul [instead of at that Dunkin’ Donuts in Newark, or possibly just in his study, and actually reading some relevant material that might enlighten him as to Islam, and the Return to Islam in Turkey] convinces me that we could be on our way to losing it if all these vacuums get filled in the wrong ways.”

    And the vacuums include a “vacuum” of “leadership in the Arab-Muslim world” which Turkey may wish, according to Friedman, to fill. The vacuum has come about because, for example, Saudi Arabia is “asleep.” That will come as news to those on the receiving end of all those mosques and madrasas and non-stop clever propaganda campaigns financed by the Saudis all over the world. And the best way for Erdogan to “fill” that vacuum is to attack Israel, “loudly bashing Israel over its occupation [sic] and praising Hamas [the Fast Jihadists] instead of the more responsible Palestinian Authority [Slow Jihadists of Fatah]…”

    And another “vacuum” is that which Friedman discerns inside Turkey itself, a “vacuum” of secular leadership. Well, there is plenty of secular leadership, but naturally, secularists may differ among themselves, while those who seek to Bring Back Islam are working for the same goal and can more easily make common cause. And Friedman appears to be unaware of how Erdogan has used the requirements imposed by the E.U. itself to take away the power of the chief defender of Kemalism, or secularism, that is, the Turkish army. Nor does he say anything about the non-stop campaign to weaken other centers of secular power, including the magistrates, the journalists, the university rectors and the most advanced professors. He is describing the results of this relentless campaign against the defenders of Kemalism as a “vacuum” that just occurred, when it is the result of Erdogan and his supporters plotting and planning, and doing everything they can, to remove the secular opposition from all positions of power and influence inside Turkey.

    But the most important “vacuum” according to the egregious Friedman is the first one: the “vacuum” that was created somehow when Turkey was not immediately welcomed, a friend with every conceivable benefit, into the “Christian club.” It is nothing of the kind, but it is a club that does not wish 70 million Muslims to enter, as well as all those non-Turkish Muslims too to whom Erdogan has hinted Turkish citizenship might someday be granted. Once Turkey is in the E.U., these Muslims will be able to move freely about the cabin of Schengenland once the takeoff has occurred. And the E.U., unaware of the fatal weight of the Turkish passenger allowed on, turns off the seatbelt sign, and now — va-va-voom — anything goes.

    Here is Friedman blaming the E.U.:

    The first vacuum comes courtesy of the European Union. After a decade of telling the Turks that if they wanted E.U. membership they had to reform their laws, economy, minority rights and civilian-military relations – which the Erdogan government systematically did – the E.U. leadership has now said to Turkey: “Oh, you mean nobody told you? We’re a Christian club. No Muslims allowed.” The E.U.’s rejection of Turkey, a hugely bad move, has been a key factor prompting Turkey to move closer to Iran and the Arab world.

    Friedman’s essential emptiness is on display in this little paragraph. First, the chutzpah of the overlooking of the obvious. To wit, the changes that Erdogan made, ostensibly to “comply” with the E.U., were really made in order to break the power of the army and the secular magistrates, his most steadfast and powerful opponents. As always, Friedman misstates and he overstates. He knows that you don’t know exactly what Turkey has done or not done to “reform their laws, economy, minority rights and civilian-military relations,” and you don’t know why, when some of these things were done, they may have been done. But Friedman has no idea, either. He is not a detail man.

    Then there is the misstatement of the E.U. supposedly telling Turkey “we’re a Christian club.” No one in the E.U. could possibly have said or even hinted at that, and no one in post-Christian Europe would do so. Nor did anyone say “no Muslims allowed” when there are now tens of millions of Muslims, alas, already inside the countries of Western Europe, with behavior so different from that of all other, non-Muslim, immigrants, and so very much the same among the different populations of Muslim immigrants no matter what European country they have managed to settle within. But it makes things simpler, snappier, and that’s what Tom Friedman likes, that’s what, after he does the world-capital-hopping hokey-pokey and turns himself about, that’s what he’s all about.

    And then he says that “[t]he E.U.’s rejection of Turkey, a hugely bad move, has been a key factor prompting Turkey to move closer to Iran and the Arab world.”

    So here we are again, with Friedman repeating or bleating the same notes earlier emitted by smiling Tony Blair and dour-faced Robert Gates: that it is the E.U.’s “rejection of Turkey” that has been a “key factor” in causing Turkey to behave as, suddenly, many in the Western world have at long last begun to notice after the attempt to run diplomatic interference for the Islamic Republic of Iran, and after the collaboration with Hamas through the Mavi Marmara incident deliberately provoked by the Hamas-and-Al-Qaeda-linked I.H.H.

    This is utter nonsense, and it could only be said by someone who has not followed, and does not understand, the slow and steady growth of the party of Erdogan, and the power of people who want to undo the Kemalist constraints systematically placed on Islam as a political and social force in modern Turkey ever since the 1920s, and maintained since sometimes with coups, and only successfully undone by Erdogan and his party over the past decade.

    But Erdogan did not arrive at his desire to undo Kemalism, and his dislike of the West, because of the E.U. He may claim that is the case, but by now we should all have learned to ignore that, and to examine the underlying ideology that animates Erdogan and his supporters – that is, Islam. As a young man, remember, Erdogan wrote, produced, and acted in a play, Mas-Kom-Ya, which takes its name from the three “enemies” that Erdogan identified – the Masons, the Communists, and the Jews (Mason, Kommunist, Yahud). In 1998 Erdogan was sentenced to ten months in jail (he served four) for reciting the line about how the “mosques are our barracks, the domes are our helmets, the minarets are our bayonets, the Believers are our soldiers.” Erdogan has been fixed in his views for his entire adult life. Only someone who had not followed him, and had remained ignorant because simplification and inattention to detail are that someone’s necessary stock in trade, could not know that. That includes Blair and Gates as Permanent Top Bananas in the slips-sliding Corridors of Power, both being too “busy” to study up on Erdogan. It also includes Friedman, last and least, unwilling to change his highly-rewarding modus operandi in order to actually make sense of things for those who still rely on him, or even accord him a respect he never deserved.

    Did Friedman not notice how the Turkish government refused to allow a fourth American division to enter Iraq from the north? Did he not notice how high Turkish officials described American soldiers in Iraq as like Nazis or even “worse than Nazis” without any reprimand? Did he fail to notice the way that Erdgoan treated the Armenian matter, and repeated the nonsense about Armenian attacks on Turks as being ignored, and as being morally equivalent to the mass killings of Armenians, both in 1915 and the years following, and – when no war was on – in 1894-96? Did he not notice the popularity of that viciously anti-American and antisemitic Turkish movie “Valley of the Wolves,” where American soldiers act like Nazis and a Jewish doctor harvests the organs of Iraqis who had been killed, for sale to clients in Los Angeles, New York, and Tel Aviv?

    And while Friedman offers a hint of noting the domestic politics of Turkey in his “third vacuum,” he apparently failed to note the attacks, over the last few years, on the university rectors and magistrates, on secular businessmen and their media empires (Dogan), and on all those who might stand up to Erdogan’s relentless attempts to reclaim Turkey for Islam. For Islam, as Erdogan rightly says, cannot be divided into “moderate” Islam and another kind (the kind some in the West with their foolish and false Machiavellianism call “Islamism”), “for there is only one kind of Islam.”

    Turkey is behaving the way it is because the forces of Islam, under Erdogan, have steadily fought to become the molders of Turkish minds, and the shapers of Turkish policy. That – the Return to Islam and the Undoing of Kemalism – is what explains Turkish behavior, including the vicious attacks on Israel, and the full-throated embrace of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Anyone can say–and no doubt some will – that this or that act by the West, or some part of the West, is what “turned” Turkey from “West to East.” Why, I suppose someone could say that the interest in the Armenian massacres and the resolutions passed by various Western parliaments about those massacres helped to “turn Turkey” to the East. But really, was that it? These are all excuses, and they excuses that have the effect of preventing any intelligent examination of the Return to Islam, and of Islam itself. And that is a pity, because the Turkish example has many things to tell us. It tells us, for example, that any secular class that benefits, as some Turks did, from constraints put in place against Islam, has a duty to vigilantly preserve and defend and extend those constraints, and should not leave it up to the army to defend secular interests against a Return to Islam.

    The example of Turkey also shows that Islam is a powerful force. It keeps, like Rasputin, coming back even when you think you have taken care of it. Western polices ought to be based on this understanding, and no permanent trust put in any state peopled by Muslims, even if that state is under the temporary control by secularists, whether in Turkey, before Erdogan, or in Iran, before Khomeini, or in Turkey, after Erdogan (for he may well lose the next election) or in Iran, after the epigones of Khomeini are defeated. No nuclear weapons, no major weaponry of any kind, no reliance on a Muslim state to be a permanent ally. That just cannot be.

    Blair doesn’t like to think about Islam. He’s said to be “deeply religious” – a convert to Catholicism – and thus, like Bush, also someone saved by religion, he’s inclined to think that anything that is called a “religion” must be 1) worthy of automatic respect and 2) exempt from any critical scrutiny, or at least from any public expression of the results of such critical scrutiny. And Gates – Gates has never given signs of grasping the nature of the ideology of Islam, for he’s a man who thinks war consists of soldiers, rifles, Bradley fighting vehicles, helicopters, tanks, and not of immigration policies, and banning of Saudi money to pay for mosques and madrasas, and vigilant monitoring of Muslim Da’wa efforts in our prisons and among the psychically marginal outside of prisons, where Adult-Onset Islam can turn a nondescript American citizen into a mortal threat.

    And then there is Tom Friedman, a clown, a simplifier and snappy-title man, all “The World Is Flat” and never mind if what I say today I will be changing, as the winds change, tomorrow. If you want someone to explain the world to your collected franchise-holders, or bankers, or others too busy to keep informed themselves, without really informing them, and carefully avoiding any need for real thought, then Tom Friedman is, and always will be, your man, until another mountebank with a tireless booking agent comes along to arrange those lectures and gather and process those fat checks. But as for promoting understanding – oh, that you will still have to do on your own.

    And one final observation. Turkey has become what it has become because Erdogan, and his followers, are not “cultural Muslims,” and not “Muslim-for-identification-purposes-only” Muslims, but true Muslims. And a true Muslim, that is, one who takes Islam seriously, will naturally, and inevitably, end up with the kind of attitudes so much on display in Turkey this last week, this last month, this last year, this last decade.

    But what if that were not true? What if it were not the Return to Islam, and its effects, natural and inevitable, that explained the attitudes and behavior of many Turks and certainly of the Turkish government, whipping up those Turks, today? What if Blair and Gates and Friedman were right, and it was the reluctance of so many countries in the E.U. to admit Turkey to full membership, that “explained” the behavior of Erdogan and of Turkey? Blair and Gates and Friedman all appear to think that the obvious answer is that the E.U. should drop its objections, and admit Turkey. In other words, the imperiled countries of Western Europe should allow into the E.U., as its most populous member, a Muslim Turkey where Islam is resurgent, and where, it has been suggested, other, non-Turkish Muslims, might even be extended citizenship so that they, too, could become part of the E.U.

    Neither Blair, nor Gates, or Friedman, seems aware of what we at this site all know, and that so many Europeans now, to their enormous sorrow, know.

    To wit: The large-scale presence of Muslims in the countries of Western Europe has created a situation, both for the indigenous non-Muslims and for other, non-Muslim immigrants, that is far more unpleasant, expensive, and physically dangerous than would be the case without that large-scale Muslim presence. No one can deny the truth of that assertion.

    Or rather, only a few can do so, and that is if they refuse to learn, or are incapable of learning, and in detail, about the texts and tenets of Islam, and how those explain the behavior of Muslims in Europe today.

    And among those who refuse to learn are Tony Blair, for many years and until recently the Prime Minister of Great Britain, and Robert Gates, the present Secretary of Defense of the United States, and Tom Friedman, a well-known self-promoter and columnist for our best-known newspaper.

    And that, you see, is part – a very large part – of the problem.

    Posted by Hugh

    24 Comments

    lilredbird | June 25, 2010 6:53 AM | Reply

    Hugh, am I correct in observing that another thing that ties people like Gates, Blair, and Friedman together is their (at least subconscious) belief that nothing about the resurgence of jihadist Islam will ever impact their lives directly? They will be rewarded for evasion, denial, and perpetuating disinformation, whereas identifying and taking a stand against the real nature of Islam would sound the death knell for their careers. These are men who obviously dismiss even the possibility of a new caliphate, and who must assume that their comfortable lifestyles would remain more or less intact even were that reinstatement to occur.

    perpster | June 25, 2010 7:23 AM | Reply

    I recently caught a re-run of the James Bond movie “From Russia With Love”. My interest was piqued by the many street scenes shot on location in Istanbul. There was nary a Muslim garb to be seen. How interesting it would be to shoot those same scenes today and compare them side by side.

    Sword of Damocles | June 25, 2010 9:44 AM | Reply

    Hugh,

    What a splendid article! Thenks for enlighthening us. Given the worrisome views that Blair holds, what would have been the fate of the EU had he won the EU presidency, (a position that he coveted), which, thank God, went to Herman van Rompuy? I have no doubt that the outcome would have been academic, to wit, that the oily Blair would by now be pushing for Turkish admission into the EU.

    Thomas Pellow | June 25, 2010 10:09 AM | Reply

    Erdogan has found his natural political ally in the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Ahmadinejad:

    “The Mussolini of the Middle East stabs America in the back”

    Jeff Camery | June 25, 2010 11:35 AM | Reply

    unusually good essay; and i’m a fan.

    Shiva | June 25, 2010 11:45 AM | Reply

    Turkey, from Ally to Enemy

    MICHAEL RUBIN

    Traveling abroad on his first trip as president, Barack Obama tacked a visit to Turkey onto the tail end of a trip to Europe. “Some people have asked me if I chose to continue my travels to Ankara and Istanbul to send a message,” he told the Turkish Parliament. “My answer is simple: Evet [yes]. Turkey is a critical ally.” On the same visit, however, the president showed that he considered Turkey more firmly part of the Islamic world than of Europe. “I want to make sure that we end before the call to prayer, so we have about half an hour,” Obama told a town hall in Istanbul. Obama was not simply demonstrating cultural sensitivity. The fact is that Turkey has changed. Gone, and gone permanently, is secular Turkey, a unique Muslim country that straddled East and West and that even maintained a cooperative relationship with Israel. Today Turkey is an Islamic republic whose government saw fit to facilitate the May 31 flotilla raid on Israel’s blockade of Gaza. Turkey is now more aligned to Iran than to the democracies of Europe. Whereas Iran’s Islamic revolution shocked the world with its suddenness in 1979, Turkey’s Islamic revolution has been so slow and deliberate as to pass almost unnoticed. Nevertheless, the Islamic Republic of Turkey is a reality—and a danger.

    The story of Turkey’s Islamic revolution is illuminating. It is the story of a charismatic leader with a methodical plan to unravel a system, a politician cynically using democracy to pursue autocracy, Arab donors understanding the power of the purse, Western political correctness blinding officials to the Islamist agenda, and American diplomats seemingly more concerned with their post-retirement pocketbooks than with U.S. national security. For Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, it is a dream come true. For the next generation of American presidents, diplomats, and generals, it is a disaster.

    _____________

    The Middle East is littered with states formed from the ashes of the Ottoman Empire’s defeat in World War I. Most have been failures, but in Anatolia, one has flourished: in 1923, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founded the Republic of Turkey and, soon after, abolished the Ottoman Empire and its standing as a caliphate, a state run according to the dictates of Islamic law. In subsequent years, he imposed a number of reforms to transform Turkey into a Western country. His separation of mosque and state allowed Turkey to thrive, and he charged the army with defending the state from those who would use Islam to subvert democracy. While Middle Eastern states embraced demagogues and ideologies that led to war and incited their peoples to hate the West, Turkey became a frontline Cold War and NATO ally. Turks faced down terrorists, embraced democracy, and dreamed of full inclusion as a nation of Europe. No longer.

    Turkey’s Islamic revolution began on November 3, 2002, when Erdogan’s Justice and Reconciliation Party (AKP) swept to power in Turkey’s elections. Through a lucky quirk of the Turkish election system, the AKP’s 34 percent total in the popular vote translated into 66 percent of the Parliament’s seats, giving the party absolute control.

    Initially, Erdogan kept his ambition in check. He understood the lessons to be learned from the undoing of his mentor, Necmettin Erbakan, the first Islamist to become prime minister. After taking the reins of power in 1996 with far less power in Parliament, Erdogan’s predecessor sought to shake up the system—to support religious schools at home and to reorient Turkey’s foreign policy away from Europe and toward Libya and Iran. This became too much for the military, which exercised its power as guardians of the constitution and demanded Erbakan’s resignation. Afterward, Turkey’s Constitutional Court banned the party to which Erdogan belonged because of its threats to secular rule.

    Erdogan himself had been banned from politics because of a 1998 conviction for religious incitement. And so he initially managed the newly created AKP from the sidelines only, working through Abdullah Gul, the lieutenant who served as caretaker prime minister after the party’s 2002 victory. Gul pushed through a law to overturn the ban against Erdogan, and the latter became prime minister in March 2003. Learning the lessons of Islamist failures of the past, Erdogan sought to calm Turks who feared the AKP would dilute Turkey’s separation of mosque and state. As mayor of Istanbul, Erdogan described himself as a “servant of Sharia,” or Islamic canon law. But after his party’s 2002 victory, he declared that “secularism is the protector of all beliefs and religions. We are the guarantors of this secularism, and our management will clearly prove that.” He took pains to eschew the Islamist label and instead described his party as little more than the Muslim equivalent of the Christian Democrats in Europe—that is, all democracy and religious in name only.

    Both Turks and Westerners can be forgiven for taking Erdogan at his word. He had cultivated an image of probity as a local official that stood in sharp contrast with the corruption of many incumbent Turkish politicians. Rather than upend the system or pursue a divisive social platform, as prime minister Erdogan first sought to repair the Turkish economy. This was an attractive prospect for Turks across the political spectrum, since in the five years prior, the Turkish lira had declined in value eight-fold, from 200,000 to 1.7 million to the dollar, leading to a ruinous banking crisis in 2001. A Coca-Cola cost millions. Erdogan stabilized the currency and implemented other popular reforms. He cut income taxes, slashed the value-added tax, and used state coffers to subsidize gasoline prices. The Turkish electorate rewarded his party for its efforts. The AKP won 42 percent of the vote in the March 2004 municipal elections and placed mayors in four of Turkey’s five largest cities. In July 2007, it increased its share of the popular vote to 47 percent.

    But there was far less here than met the eye. Rather than base economic reform on sound, long-term policies, Erdogan instead relied on sleight of hand. He incurred crippling debt and, in effect, mortgaged long-term financial security of the republic for his own short-term political gain. Deniz Baykal, the former leader of the main opposition party, has said that the state debt accrued during Erdogan’s first three years in power surpassed Turkey’s total accumulated debt in the three decades prior.

    And that was only official debt. Outside of public view, Erdogan and Gul, now his foreign minister, presided over an influx of so-called Green Money—capital from Saudi Arabia and the oil-rich Persian Gulf emirates, much of which ended up in party coffers rather than in the public treasury.

    And here begins the tale of the interweaving of Turkey’s destiny with the nations to its east and south, and to the Muslim world rather than with the West.

    Between 2002 and 2003, the Turkish Central Bank’s summary balance of “payments for net error and omission”—which is to say, money that appeared in the nation’s financial system for which government reporting cannot account—increased from approximately $200 million to more than $4 billion. By 2006, Turkish economists estimated the Green Money infusion into the Turkish economy to be between $6 billion and $12 billion, and given the ability of the government to hide some of these revenues by assigning them to tourism, that is probably a wild underestimation. Some Turkish intelligence officials privately suggest that the nation of Qatar is today the source of most subsidies for the AKP and its projects.

    Thus, if Iran’s Islamic revolution was spontaneous, Turkey’s was anything but: it was bought and paid for by wealthy Islamists.

    AKP officials are well-placed to manage the Green Money influx. Throughout much of the 1980s, Erdogan’s sidekick, Gul, worked as a specialist at Saudi Arabia’s Islamic Development Bank. Before the 2002 victory, he criticized existing state scrutiny of Islamist enterprises. Senior AKP advisers made their fortunes in Islamic banking and investment. Korkut Ozal, for example, is the leading Turkish shareholder in al–Baraka Turk, Turkey’s leading Islamic bank, as well as in Faisal Finans, which also has its roots in Saudi Arabia.

    Erdogan has systematically placed Islamist bankers in key economic positions. He appointed Kemal Unakitan, a former board member at both al–Baraka and Eski Finans, as finance minister and moved at least seven other al-Baraka officials—one of whom had served as an imam in an illegal commando camp—to key positions within Turkey’s banking regulatory agency.

    Erdogan also reoriented Turkey’s official foreign trade. In 2002, bilateral trade between Turkey and the United Arab Emirates hovered at just over half a billion dollars. By 2005, it had grown to almost $2 billion. That same year, Kursad Tuzmen, the state minister for foreign trade, announced that United Arab Emirates ruler Sheik Khalifa bin Zayid al-Nuhayyan would invest $100 billion in Turkish companies. Not to be outdone, Saudi Arabia’s finance minister announced earlier this year that Saudi Arabia would invest $400 billion in Turkey over the next four years. In contrast, in 2001, Turkish-Saudi trade amounted to just over $1 billion. When Turkish-Iranian trade surpassed $10 billion in 2009, Erdogan announced a goal to increase it to $30 billion. Whether or not Turkey and its Persian Gulf allies are exaggerating their figures, the trajectory of trade is clear.

    _____________

    For wealthy donors, the conversion of Turkey has been a good investment. For decades, Turkey stood out like a sore thumb for Islamists. Here was a majority Muslim country which, even lacking oil, was far more successful than any Arab state or Iran. No sooner had Erdogan stabilized the economy and solidified his political monopoly than he turned to changing Turkey’s social order and reversing its diplomatic orientation. Erdogan’s strategy was multi-tiered. He endorsed the dream of Turkey’s secular elite to enter the European Union but only to rally European diplomats to dilute the role of the Turkish military as guardians of the constitution.

    While Turkish liberals, businessmen, and Western diplomats took solace in Erdogan’s outreach to Europe, his motivation was cynical. His ideological constituents had no interest in Europe, and Erdogan himself is intolerant of European liberalism and secularism. He criticized the European Court of Human Rights for failing to consult Islamic scholars when it upheld a ban on headscarves in public schools—a ban that dates back to Ataturk’s original reforms.

    Erdogan’s ambitions to remake Turkey, however, reached far beyond superficial issues such as the veil. He sought to revolutionize education, dominate the judiciary, take over the police, and control the media. Erdogan worked to achieve not short-term gains on hot-button issues like the headscarf but rather a long-term cultural revolution that, when complete, would render past battles moot.

    Erdogan attacked the secular education system at all levels. First, he loosened age restrictions on children who attend supplemental Koran schools—restrictions intended to prevent their indoctrination. He also undid content regulation meant to counter the ability of Saudi-funded extremists to teach in Turkish academies. Those schools that break the remaining regulations need not worry: Erdogan’s party eviscerated penalties to the point where unaccredited religious academies now advertise openly in newspapers.

    Simultaneously, he equated degrees issued by Turkish madrassas—Islamic religious schools—with ordinary high school degrees. This bureaucratic sleight of hand in theory enabled madrassa students to enter the university and qualify for government jobs without ever mastering or, in some cases, even being exposed to Western fundamentals. When such students still fumbled university entrance exams, the AKP provided them with a comparative bonus on their scores, justifying the move as affirmative action. Erdogan made little secret of his goals: in May 2006, he ordered his negotiator at European Union accession talks to remove any reference to secularism in a Turkish position paper discussing Turkey’s educational system. Over the past year, the Ministry of Education has gutted the traditional high school philosophy curriculum and Islamized it.

    Moreover, the judiciary is no longer independent. Erdogan’s initial attempts to lower the mandatory retirement age of judges (a move that would have seen him replace 4,000 out of 9,000 judges) foundered on constitutional challenges. More than a year later, the Supreme Court of Appeals chided the AKP for attempts to interfere in the judiciary. When Gul, Erdogan’s closest ally, assumed Turkey’s presidency in 2007, there was no longer any check on his party’s authority. The president selects the Higher Education Board, appoints a quarter of the justices on the Constitutional Court, nominates the chief public prosecutor, and officially confirms the commanding general of the Supreme Military Council. Now, on the rare occasion when the high court levies decisions not to the prime minister’s liking, the prime minister simply refuses to implement them. In any case, after almost eight years in power, the AKP has been able to remake the courts. The government can now assign sympathetic judges to hear highly politicized cases. And in March 2010, the AKP unveiled proposed constitutional reforms that would make it easier for political leaders to appoint judges.

    In any other democracy, discussion and debate about government abuse of power and societal change would saturate the news. Not so in Turkey. No prime minister in Turkish history has been so hostile to the press as Erdogan. What had been a vibrant press when Erdogan took over is now flaccid. The prime minister has sued dozens of journalists and editors, sometimes for nothing more than a political cartoon poking fun at him. When a Turkish media group pursued a story about a Turkish-German charity transferring money illegally to Islamists in Turkey, tax authorities punished it with a spurious $600 million lien. When it continued to report critically, the group received an additional $2.5 billion tax penalty. And, in a strategy borrowed from Iran, Erdogan has confiscated newspapers—the high-circulation national daily Sabah most famously—that he deemed too critical or independent, and transferred their control to political allies.

    With the independent press muzzled and almost all print and airtime dedicated to his agenda, Erdogan upped his campaign against both the political opposition and the military. Whereas the Interior Ministry would once root out Islamists and followers of the anti-Semitic Turkish cult leader Fethullah Gulen, the AKP filled police ranks with them. Even AKP supporters acknowledge that the Interior Ministry regularly eavesdrops without warrants and leaks embarrassing transcripts to the Islamist press without consequence. “For 40 years, they have kept files on us. Now, it is our turn to keep files on them,” AKP deputy Avni Dogan recently said.

    The real coup against democracy, however, came on July 14, 2008, when a Turkish prosecutor indicted 86 Turkish figures—retired military officers, prominent journalists, professors, unionists, civil-society activists, and the man who dared run against Erdogan for mayor years earlier—on charges of plotting a coup to restore secular government. The only thing the defendants had in common was political opposition to the AKP. The alleged conspiracy grabbed international headlines. At its root, the 2,455-page indictment alleged that retired military officers, intellectuals, journalists, and civil-society leaders conspired to cause chaos in Turkey and to use the resulting crisis as justification for a military putsch against the AKP. In February 2010, the prosecutors revealed a 5,000-page memorandum detailing coup plans.

    The documents are ridiculous. The indictment was paper-thin. Security forces rounded up most suspects before it was even written. And as for the smoking-gun memorandum, the charge is risible: coup plotters do not write plans down, let alone in such detail. The indictments had a chilling effect across society. Turks may not like where Erdogan is taking Turkey, but they now understand that even peaceful dissent will have a price. Turkish politics had always been rough and tumble, but except at the height of the Cold War, it had seldom been lethal.

    Nor can liberal Turks rely on the Turkish military to save them. Bashed from the religious right and the progressive left, the Turkish military is a shadow of its former self. The current generation of generals is out of touch with Turkish society and, perhaps, their own junior officers. Like frogs who fail to jump from a pot slowly brought to a boil, the Turkish general staff lost its opportunity to exercise its constitutional duties. Simply put, the Turkish military failed in its job. Obsession with public relations and media imagery trumped responsibility.

    _____________

    A decade ago, Turks saw themselves in a camp with the United States, Western Europe, and Israel; today Turkish self-identity places the country firmly in a camp led by Iran, Syria, Sudan, and Hamas. Turkey may be a NATO member, but polls nevertheless show it to be the world’s most anti-American country (although, to be fair, the Pew Global Attitudes Project did not conduct surveys in Libya or North Korea). Nor do Turks differentiate between the U.S. government and the American people: they hate Americans almost as much as they hate Washington. This is no accident. From almost day one, Erdogan has encouraged, and his allies have financed, a steady stream of anti-American and anti-Semitic incitement. Certainly, many Turks opposed the liberation of Iraq in 2003, but this was largely because Erdogan bombarded them with anti-American incitement before Parliament’s vote, which withdrew the support promised to the operation. Much of Erdogan’s incitement, however, cannot be dismissed as a dispute over the Iraq war.

    In 2004, Yeni Safak, a newspaper Erdogan endorsed, published an enemies list of prominent Jews. In 2006, not only did Turkish theaters headline Valley of the Wolves, a fiercely anti-American and anti-Semitic movie that featured a Jewish doctor harvesting the organs of dead Iraqis, but the prime minister’s wife also publicly endorsed the film and urged all Turks to see it. Turkish newspapers reported that prominent AKP supporters and Erdogan aides financed its production. While much of the Western world boycotted Hamas in the wake of the 2006 Palestinian elections in order to force it to renounce violence, Erdogan not only extended a hand to the group but also welcomed Khaled Mashaal, leader of its most extreme and recalcitrant faction, as his personal guest.

    The question for policymakers, however, should not be whether Turkey is lost but rather how Erdogan could lead a slow-motion Islamic revolution below the West’s radar. This is both a testament to Erdogan’s skill and a reflection of Western delusion. Before taking power, Erdogan and his advisers cultivated Western opinion makers. He concentrated not on American pundits who found U.S. policy insufficiently leftist and sympathetic to the Islamic world but rather on natural critics, hawkish American supporters of Turkey and Israel who helped introduce Erdogan confidantes to Washington policymakers.

    After consolidating power, however, the AKP did not cultivate Jewish and pro-Israel groups, but they did little to sever the relationships. Turks traditionally looked kindly on Israel and Jews; of all the peoples of the Ottoman Empire, the Jews in Palestine were one of the few who had not revolted against the Ottoman Sultan. In the 1980s and 1990s, Turkey and Israel had much in common: both were democracies amid a sea of autocracy. They enjoyed close diplomatic, economic, and military relations. So many Israeli tourists visited Turkey that Hebrew signs became ubiquitous in Turkish cities. It was not uncommon to hear Hebrew in Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar or in restaurants along the Bosporus.

    Against such a backdrop, many Jewish groups turned a blind eye to warning signs of Erdogan’s antipathy and rationalized Turkey’s outreach to Hamas and Hezbollah, Syria, Sudan, and Iran. It was not until Erdogan exploded at the 2009 Davos World Forum, telling Israeli President Shimon Peres “you know well how to kill,” storming off the stage, and subsequently accusing Israel of genocide, that Jewish groups awakened to the change that had come over Turkey.

    Much of the blame for failing to recognize Erdogan’s agenda also lies in the West’s intellectual approach to radical Islam. For too many, the headscarf was the only metric by which to judge Islamist encroachment. For Erdogan, however, the scarf was a symbol; the state was the goal.

    Even after Erdogan began to eviscerate the checks and balances of Turkish society, European officials and American diplomats remained in denial. Certainly moral equivalency played a role: as Erdogan asked last October, why should Turkey accept the Western definition of secularism? For too many Western officials, however, to acknowledge Turkey’s turn would be to admit the failure of moderate Islamism. To criticize Erdogan’s motivations would be racist.

    Many diplomats and journalists inserted into this situation their own disdain for any military, let alone Turkey’s, and embraced a facile dichotomy in which Islamism and democracy represented one pole, while the military, secularism, and fascism represented the other. Hence, they saw the AKP as democratic reformers, while the military became defenders of an anti-democratic order. Certainly, the healthiest democracies have no room for the military in domestic politics, but by cheering the AKP as it unraveled the military’s role in upholding the constitution without simultaneously constructing another check on unconstitutional behavior, the European Union and Western diplomats paved the way for Erdogan’s soft dictatorship.

    Alas, when intellectual smoke and mirrors were not enough to deceive the West, Erdogan and the AKP used more-devious tactics. Just as many American diplomats retired from Saudi Arabia to serve commercially their former charges, since the AKP’s accession every retired U.S. ambassador to Turkey—Eric Edelman being the exception—has entered into lucrative business relationships with AKP companies. While running the Turkish program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, for example, Mark Parris, who led the U.S. Embassy from 1997 to 2000, just prior to the AKP’s rise, cultivated a business relationship with the AKP and helped with stories in Turkey’s anti-Semitic press about neoconservatives and coup plots. Throughout the first four years of AKP rule, Yeni Safak columnist Fehmi Koru, an outspoken Erdogan supporter, published more than a dozen columns accusing American Jewish policymakers, led by Richard Perle—who was not then a government official—of both manipulating the press and plotting a coup in Turkey. Both charges were not only false but also consistent with anti-Semitic refrains about Jewish control of the press and Protocols of the Elders of Zion–like plots. And, indeed, they served their purpose: the AKP used the columns to rally both nationalist and anti-Semitic feelings. Koru would often refer to a well-placed Washington diplomatic source. In a November 2006 column, he revealed Parris to be his source, a charge Parris has neither explained nor denied.

    Turkish Islamists also cultivated academics. After Georgetown University’s John Esposito received donations from the Gulen movement, he sponsored a conference in the Islamist cult leader’s honor, whitewashing both Fethullah Gulen’s Islamism and his anti-Semitism. The University of North Texas similarly received Gulen’s largesse, as does Washington, D.C.’s Brookings Institution, which has long peddled a soft line toward Erdogan and his agenda.

    Turkey today is an Islamic republic in all but name. Washington, its European allies, and Jerusalem must now come to terms with Turkey as a potential enemy. Alas, even if the AKP were to exit the Turkish stage tomorrow, the changes Erdogan’s party have made appear irreversible. While Turkey was for more than half a century a buffer between Middle Eastern extremism and European liberalism, today it has become an enabler of extremism and an enemy of liberalism. Rather than fight terrorists, Turkey embraces them. Today’s rhetorical support may become tomorrow’s material support. On the world stage, too, Turkey is a problem. Rather than help diffuse Iran’s nuclear program, Erdogan encourages it.

    Turkey’s anti-Americanism, its dictatorship, and the inability of Western officials to acknowledge reality endanger security. Hard choices lay ahead: as a NATO member, Turkey is privy to U.S. weaponry, tactics, and intelligence. Any provision of assistance to Turkey today, however, could be akin to transferring it to Hamas, Sudan, or Iran. Does President Obama really want to deliver the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter to a hostile Turkey, Iran’s chief regional defender, as promised in 2014? Should Turkey even remain in NATO? After all, half a century ago, NATO learned to live without France.

    Losing Turkey is tragic, but failing to recognize its loss can only compound the tragedy. The worst outcome, however, would be to let strategic denial block assessment of lessons learned. As mayor of Istanbul, Erdogan quipped, “‘Democracy is like a streetcar. When you come to your stop, you get off.” Perhaps, in hindsight, the West’s mistake was to ignore the danger of Erdogan’s ascendance into the driver’s seat.

    gravenimage | June 25, 2010 12:21 PM | Reply

    Excellent article, Hugh.

    From above:

    Blair, who advocated Turkey joining the EU in 2005, said the cold shoulder the EU gave Turkey led to Ankara’s decision to turn in the direction of Iran.

    So it is the E.U. that “pushed” Turkey, or even “forced” Turkey, or rather Erdogan and his fellows in the DKP, to “turn in the direction of Iran.”
    ……………

    There’s absolutely no sense here that Turkey—especially under Erdogan—has in fact been “turning in the direction of Iran” for some time now. It is *this* that has made Turkey unfit for membership in the mostly civilized EU—not the other way around.

    Also, we hear versions of this all the time—that some setback, or disappointment, always seems not to urge on Muslims to try harder, or find another route, as it would with a rational Westerner—but instead that that every disappointment, on an individual, national, or regional level, always drives them into the arms of Jihad.

    This is true, we suppose, whether it is Feisal Shahzad’s not getting an even better job, or Afghans not getting enough social services, or Turkey not getting into the EU—what choice can they possibly have, but to turn to Jihad? sarc/off

    There is also the case of Israel. I have seen several times lately the absurd claim that Turkey was once a “staunch ally” of Israel’s. Not so—but they were considerably less bellicose than more Islamic Muslim countries.

    That is changing. Turkey was behind the “humanitarian aid” flotilla to Gaza. It has been implied that Turkey has been such a staunch ally of Israel’s that only the worst supposed Jewish perfidy could turn them away.

    I believe the opposite is true—as Turkey under Erdogan has become more and more Islamic, it has been less and less inclined to deal with Israel in a civilized manner.

    More:

    Erdogan has used the requirements imposed by the E.U. itself to take away the power of the chief defender of Kemalism, or secularism, that is, the Turkish army.
    ……………

    *Very true*. Obviously, having military coup as your first line of defense against Islam is less than ideal—to put it mildly. But many Western observers seem completely unaware of Turkey’s military as its most powerful protector of the secularism of the state. I have read all sorts of idiotic musings about how Turkey is now “more stable” or “more democratic” now that Erdogan has curbed the power of the military—when nothing could be further from the truth.

    More, from the half-bright Tom Friedman:

    After a decade of telling the Turks that if they wanted E.U. membership they had to reform their laws, economy, minority rights and civilian-military relations – which the Erdogan government systematically did – the E.U. leadership has now said to Turkey: “Oh, you mean nobody told you? We’re a Christian club. No Muslims allowed.”
    ……………

    This is so absurd it’s hard to know where to begin. Firstly, the idea that trying to bring Turkey up to EU standards of democracy and human rights constitute—what?–just some sort of arbitrary club rules, rather than our most basic concepts of civilization?

    Secondly, the ludicrous idea that Turkey *has complied* with all of these standards, and is now a solid first-world nation with the human rights record of, say, Belgium. It is laughable to even write this.

    Then, as Hugh has already noted, the idea that the “post-religious” EU is a “Christan club” is just staggeringly absurd. The “no Muslims allowed”—while Muslims are overrunning the continent, and Shari’ah norms are worming their way into the body politic—is stunningly ridiculous.

    That Turkey is, at the same time, seeing an orgy of attacks on the last remnant of its own Christian population, makes this especially grotesque.

    Here’s more from Erdogan himself on the subject, from earlier this month:

    “Turkey calls charges turning from West ‘dirty propaganda'”

    Basically, he wants it both ways—to retain the image—always rather illusory—that Turkey is a Western country, or at least a strong and strategic ally of the West—while turning more and more toward undiluted Islam—including supporting Syria and Iran, and turning on Israel.

    logdon | June 25, 2010 12:46 PM | Reply

    I think that this move by Erdogan will come back to bite him.

    Turkey relies heavily on tourism. Obviously the lucrative Israeli market is no longer even thinkable.

    As for Europeans, we are rapidly becoming aquainted with the ways of Islam as they make their presense felt, impacting in a negative way to say the very least.

    People are wising up. They watch the news and despite every effort by the BBC and its fellow propagandists they know whats going on.

    There are plenty of other destinations in the Med, Croatia for instance where my late Father, abandoning Turkey and Spain, returned to, time after time.

    Cheap. Unspoiled. Sunny climate. Welcoming.

    As Turkey descends into islamism that final word, welcoming will wither. Then what? People will simply stop going.

    No doubt the screams of Islamophobia will ratchet up but who cares anymore?

    Crying wolf eventually falls into a reverse of the reductio ad absurdam camp of thought. An argument proved by the idiocy of the counter argument. In this case the arguments cancel themselves by the idiocy of their own absurdity.

    epistemology | June 25, 2010 3:22 PM | Reply

    As a matter of fact anybody can acquire Turkish citizenship who firstly speaks the Turkish language and secondly is a Muslim. These two prerequisites hold for all the inhabitants of Central Asia,as they are Turk peoples. The idea of Europe being flooded by all these Mohammedans is really a pleasant one.

    Hugh replied to comment from logdon | June 25, 2010 4:07 PM | Reply

    Erdogan may well lose the next election. But he will try to whip up as much anti-Infidel sentiment — against “Christian” Europe keeping wonderful Turkey out of the E.U., against ruthless and vicious Israel harming innocent Muslims who would only like to make sure that Iran can supply tens of thousands of rockets to Hamas in Gaza as they have done to Hezbollah in Lebanon — as possible, to see if it can help him hold on.

    But secularists are alarmed. And — this has not been noted elsewhere, I’m afraid — Alevis are also alarmed, for it is they who have been attacked by Sunni Muslims heartened by the new atmosphere. And others may be alarmed if tourists stay away, if those vaunted “Muslim businessmen” (much is made of this in Turkey, and by Erdogan’s party — the idea that Muslims can be successful at business, and not just the secular elite) start to do less well.

    The best way to help promote those against Erdogan is to indicate great displeasure and distrust of him, and the best way to do that is to start talking about Turkey’s membershp in NATO being, as it must be, reconsidered, for even though the Turkish military still allow the Americans to make frequent use of Incirlik, that is not enough to make up for Turkey as a security threat, in the mighty contests to come between the West, or between All The Rest, and the Camp of Islam. That will mostly be an ideological war, in which we will strive to divide and demoralize that Camp — it would not be hard to do, if sensible and well-prepared people were running things — and it is unlcear who in Turkey can be trusted to openly take the side of non-Muslims, in order to resurrect, and push further, the project begun by Ataturk. A Turkish patriot, or patriots, who felt that loyalty rather than loyalty to the Umma and to Islam, is needed, and we don’t know when, if, how, such people can be properly identified.

    Talk of ending Turkey’s role in NATO will not, as some will quickly and predictably argue, “only strengthen Erdogan” but will weaken him. It should begin right now.

    dumbledoresarmy | June 25, 2010 7:21 PM | Reply

    Turkey earns money from 1. tourism – mostly based on pre-Islamic sites and 2. Agriculture (in Australian supermarkets, most imported dried apricots and dried figs are from Turkey), 3. industry and 4. remittances from the Turkish Muslims who live in Europe (I wonder how much of that is money they’ve earned, and how much is welfare cash being sent home…).

    As Turkey Islamifies and becomes more and more hostile toward non-Muslims, tourism from non-Muslim countries should nosedive. Pfffft goes that source of income.

    And why would any non-Muslim company with any wit, locate a factory in Turkey, if the workforce is going to become steadily more sluggish, dull, sullen and sharia-addled? I have observed pharmaceutical products whose small print says ‘made in Turkey’. BRRRRR. *Think* of the opportunities presented to a jihad-minded infidel-hating Turkish Muslim working in a pharmaceuticals factory, making medicines that he or she knows will be going abroad to be sold to unsuspecting infidels.

    Seems to me that Turkey’s income from that area is likely to drop off.

    As for income from fruit and such: wary infidels will, as Turkey Islamifies and becomes more openly aggressive and dangerous, look askance at Turkish agricultural products, too. Who wants to eat figs or apricots or dried tomatoes that have been packaged with a curse upon the future Infidel eater thereof? or that might even have been actively, deliberately, contaminated? And even if the product has not been cursed and/ or sneakily infected in some way, why buy such things and let one’s money go to people who are winking at, or actively conniving in, the persecution and even the murder of indigenous Christians and apostates, besides whipping up antisemitism?

    perpster replied to comment from Shiva | June 25, 2010 9:02 PM | Reply

    “The story of xxxxxxx’s Islamic revolution is illuminating. It is the story of a charismatic leader with a methodical plan to unravel a system, a politician cynically using democracy to pursue autocracy, Arab donors understanding the power of the purse, Western political correctness blinding officials to the Islamist agenda, and American diplomats seemingly more concerned with their post-retirement pocketbooks than with U.S. national security.”

    Turkey or the US? Or both? Chilling how it could (does?) apply to the US as well as to Turkey.

    MBR | June 25, 2010 9:41 PM | Reply

    Hugh makes the point – “and others may be alarmed if tourists stay away…” – as does DDA, that Westerners may now think hard before visiting a country that once, not that long ago, offered much to a tourist.

    Overlooking Taksim Square from a hotel lounge window on a pleasant afternnon in April 2004, beer in hand, an eye on young women walking past dressed like Paris models, an ear on some pleasantly played Cole Porter from a pianist who knew what he was about – what was not to like in Istanbul only six short years ago?

    For Turkey at least, the more things change, the more they… get worse.

    Steffen Larsen | June 26, 2010 12:08 AM | Reply

    Hugh, Shiva and the rest of you have put up some very useful facts and arguments. Thanks!
    The entry of Turkey into the EU anyway has been put on hold, and it will only become more indefinite now the Turks orient themselves towards Mecca.

    Is Turkey a European country? I think not. And imagine a EU bordering on Syria, Iraq and Iran ….
    Not to mention the constant squabbling in the EU parliament when muslims will be demanding preferential treatment or blocking anything haram.

    Hugh replied to comment from Steffen Larsen | June 26, 2010 4:55 AM | Reply

    A postscript to the article on Turkey above:

    Whatever the regime in Turkey — and that includes a regime that might replace that of Erdogan — the E.U. cannot admit Turkey. Regimes come and go, but Islam remains.

    And the appeal, or request, by secular Turks, for admission to the E.U. must also be stonily rejected, no matter how charming those Turkish supplicants may be, or how seemingly plausible their arguments. For many of those secularists don’t want to be left alone to deal with the fact that Turkey is a Muslim country always in danger of backsliding. They want Turkey to become part of the E.U. in order to throw the problem into the lap of others, even if, in so doing, they further endanger the non-Muslims of the E.U.

    Right now many Turkish secularists are pushing for Turkish admission to the E.U. even under — or perhaps especially under — Erdogan. A story the other day contained this telling line:

    “There are fears among Turkey’s secular opposition that, with EU accession moving slowly, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is steering NATO’s only Muslim member away from the West and jeopardizing the membership efforts’ chances of ultimate success. ”

    It’s entirely understandable that they should want to make what is now their problem into the E.U.’s problem, but that must not be allowed to happen.
    If and when they return to power, they must pursue the ideological war against Islam with all the fervor that Ataturk did, and building, rather than simply being content to be supported by, his base — the base of those systematic constraints.
    That means the upper classes of Turkey, rather than hold dinner parties where the the host and the guests remain complacently contented with what Kemalism has wrought for them, while the cook, and the server, and the driver all retain their primitive and soothing beliefs, there has to be an effort to make sure that those primitive and soothing beliefs are constantly being undermined, in the press, on radio, on television. Replace the Total Belief-System of Islam, if you will, with something less total, and a lot meeker and milder, rather than with nothing at all, or allow others to pick and choose (the handful of pan-Turanians can choose shamanism for all one cares). The famous “search for roots” (how many Muslim Turks might be encouraged in various clever ways to discover their Armenian, Greek, Jewish ancestry and think upon the conditions ending in the conversion of those ancestors?)– which has had such a fashion in the U.S. (else why were Mormon genealogists born?) can be usefully exploited for geopolitical reasons.

    jewdog | June 26, 2010 5:56 AM | Reply

    The resurgence of Islam in Turkey has a significant financial component due to Saudi subsidies of the AKP party. There was a recent op-ed in jpost.com by a secular Turk on the subject (“Follow the Money”), which I don’t have access to.
    An interesting subject is the appeal of Islam. Originally, it was materially rewarding, but now, outside of the petrodollar benefits, it seems to be more compelling from a psychological point of view. Raymond Ibrahim has written some good things on that subject.

    Hugh replied to comment from jewdog | June 26, 2010 6:12 AM | Reply

    “the appeal of Islam. Originally, it was materially rewarding, but now, outside of the petrodollar benefits, it seems to be more compelling from a psychological point of view.”

    But who could ever have thought otherwise? A Total Belief-System saves one from the pain of thought in which so many end up like Buridan’s ass. Samuel Johnson would have understood. He would not have agreed, he would have been horrified, but he would have understood.

    Hesperado | June 26, 2010 10:47 AM | Reply

    “there has to be an effort to make sure that those primitive and soothing beliefs are constantly being undermined, in the press, on radio, on television.”

    Kemalist Turkey isn’t and never has been a Western democracy. It didn’t merely constrain Islam through the marketplace of ideas, but through official repression of freedoms, and through harrassment, imprisonment, and torture. That’s the only way any polity can really constrain Islam, when the demographic (let alone the culture) is largely Muslim — or even when the Muslim minority gets too large. And even with those measures, the constrainment strains.

    motokosoma | June 26, 2010 10:56 AM | Reply

    The consensus from Hugh’s article and the responding comments are that the main appeal of Erdogan’s party is economic prosperity, and that tourism is a major source of that prosperity.

    Tourists will be chased away if Islamic values become the norm. Therefor, wouldn’t Turks be then discouraged from adopting Islamist domestic policies? Turks have far more personal and political contact with “The West” than with Arabs or Muslims outside of Turkey. Arab and Iranian tourists visit Turkey because they want to indulge in Turkey’s relatively liberal attitude towards alcohol and clothing. This is attested in the following nytimes article:

    Turks will not support an Islamist ban on alcohol or any enforced Islamist moral codes. There is currently unprecedented domestic opposition to Erdogan. Scaring away tourists, and the resulting economic collapse, would be the nail in his coffin. Political Islam has reached the height of its pendulum swing.

    motokosoma replied to comment from Hesperado | June 26, 2010 11:09 AM | Reply

    @Hesperado

    In your own world, Turkey must either adopt either secular fascism or else slid into its inherent Islamist tendencies. How about holding off from judgment until the next Turkish election? If Turkey unelects Erdogan’s party, which Hugh says is entirely possible, it would be the first time a Muslim country has democratically relegated political Islam.

    It would be interesting to observe your resulting cognitive dissonance. No doubt, you will find some new illogical way to maintain your dichotomous view: Turks must either be secular fascists, or Islamo-fascists!

    MBR replied to comment from motokosoma | June 26, 2010 12:30 PM | Reply

    Checking the NYT link that motoksoma seems to set so much store by, I find:

    “[Turkey’s cultural exports and political ambitions are] giving Kemal Ataturk’s constitutionally secular state an Islamic tinge.”

    [Discussing the new wave of Turkish-made racy soaps] “If this seems like a triumph of Western values by proxy,…”

    “But then, Turkey always acts like a kind of intermediary between the West and the Middle East,”

    “If America wants to make peace with the Middle East today, it must first make peace with Turkey.”

    Come now, motokosoma, if you want to come to this forum and be taken seriously, you must first decide whether you want to believe the New York Times or your own lying eyes.

    Hugh | June 26, 2010 5:05 PM | Reply

    The latest news — unreported in the press, of course — is that Turkish troops have fired on Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, kiling four. They do this, and they attack the Kurds in Iraq with impunity, because they can, secure in the knowledge that the American military will continue to supply it with all kinds of spy-satellite intelligence about Kurdish (especially but not only PKK) military movements. And the Turks would like to inveigle the Americans, so I have been told, into ever-deeper involvement in the Turkish fight against the Kurds.

    But why?

    Why would it not make more sense to encourage an independent Kurdistan that would be created in northern Iraq, and in fighting for its independence, focus the attention of non-Muslims world-wide on how Arabs treat non-Arab Muslims, denying them their rights to use their own language, preserve their own culture, and of course denying them full control over their own natural resources, and certainly denying them full citizenship), and how that should not surprise because Islam is a vehicle for Arab supremacism.

    Such an independent Kurdistan, if it does not founder in the corruption of the two main warring ruling families, could also help to unsettle both Iran and Syria which, as we all know, need all the unsettling we can provide or encourage. And Turkey,our “ally” Turkey? Instead of the Turks assuming they can do what they want, they will be put in a different position — of imploring us to squeeze out of the Kurds a promise to leave the Kurds in eastern Anatolia alone, while being given a free hand in Syria and Iran — on pain of having American diplomatic and military support withdrawn. But in exchange, the Turkish government has got to drop its bullying of the E.U. in an attempt to admitted, and undo what Erdogan has done, making sure to pursue the ideological war within Turkey to return Ataturk to his plinth, and the cause of constraining Islam to the center of Turkish life.

    Can’t be done? Simply unthinkable? So many things that are called “unthinkable” are merely difficult to achieve, and so many people only want to avoid having to use their intelligence when the mixture as before beckons. The idea of actually thinking and planning and scheming just wears them out. The very thought alarms them.

    Hugh | June 26, 2010 5:15 PM | Reply

    US: Turkey must demonstrate commitment to West

    By DESMOND BUTLER (AP) – 16 hours ago

    WASHINGTON — The United States is warning Turkey that it is alienating U.S. supporters and needs to demonstrate its commitment to partnership with the West.

    The remarks by Philip Gordon, the Obama administration’s top diplomat on European affairs, were a rare admonishment of a crucial NATO ally.

    “We think Turkey remains committed to NATO, Europe and the United States, but that needs to be demonstrated,” Gordon told The Associated Press in an interview this week. “There are people asking questions about it in a way that is new, and that in itself is a bad thing that makes it harder for the United States to support some of the things that Turkey would like to see us support.”

    Gordon cited Turkey’s vote against a U.S.-backed United Nations Security Council resolution on new sanctions against Iran and noted Turkish rhetoric after Israel’s deadly assault on a Gaza-bound flotilla last month. The Security Council vote came shortly after Turkey and Brazil, to Washington’s annoyance, had brokered a nuclear fuel-swap deal with Iran as an effort to delay or avoid new sanctions.

    Some U.S. lawmakers who have supported Turkey warned of consequences for Ankara since the Security Council vote and the flotilla raid that left eight Turks and one Turkish-American dead. The lawmakers accused Turkey of supporting a flotilla that aimed to undermine Israel’s blockade of Gaza and of cozying up to Iran.

    The raid has led to chilling of ties between Turkey and Israel, countries that have long maintained a strategic alliance in the Middle East.

    Turkey’s ambassador to the United States, Namik Tan, expressed surprise at Gordon’s comments. He said Turkey’s commitment to NATO remains strong and should not be questioned.

    “I think this is unfair,” he said.

    Tan said Turkish officials have explained repeatedly to U.S. counterparts that voting against the proposed sanctions was the only credible decision after the Turkish-brokered deal with Iran. Turkey has opposed sanctions as ineffective and damaging to its interests with an important neighbor. It has said that it hopes to maintain channels with Tehran to continue looking for a solution to the standoff over Iran’s alleged nuclear arms ambitions.

    “We couldn’t have voted otherwise,” Tan said. “We put our own credibility behind this thing.”

    Tan said that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was expected to discuss these issues with President Barack Obama on the margins of a summit of world economic powers in Toronto on Saturday.

    Gordon said Turkey’s explanations of the U.N. episode have not been widely understood in Washington.

    “There is a lot of questioning going on about Turkey’s orientation and its ongoing commitment to strategic partnership with the United States,” he said. “Turkey, as a NATO ally and a strong partner of the United States not only didn’t abstain but voted no, and I think that Americans haven’t understood why.”

    leonidas | June 26, 2010 8:03 PM | Reply

    The dismantle and defeat of Islam can only be brought about, when its source, the Koran ,is read by the majority of non muslims, so ALL non-muslims can learn, what the Muslims have been trying to do to them the last 1400 years.Ignorance of Islam is extremely dangerous.To read the Koran you can easily do so, by going to “google”->”muslims against Sharia”where all 434 pages of the koran are available. One can read it over a week-end.There, one can also find a 12 page summary of all that is cruel,savage,misogynistic,inhuman, in the koran.
    In summary, the Koran is the manual Arab Bedouins have been using for 1400 years for world conquest.But ,please do not take my word for it,read it for your selves in the website above.
    On Turkey:It was unfortunate that Ukraine restricted gas and oil flow from Russia to Western Europe several years ago,as Russia ,desperate in selling to Europe to restore her economy,financed several pipelines through Turkey, which provide Turkey with huge income to use in promoting Islam world wide by Erdogan.
    The only action necessary to dismantle and defeat Islam is to read the Koran in all the Parliaments of non muslim countries and ask then the representatives, what laws should be written to protect their citizens especially women and children of the plague that is Islam, which has been menacing the World for 1400 years already.
    But for Parliaments to do it ,their citizens must demand it,hence the wide reading of the Koran by the majority of the non -muslim countries is absolutely necessary

  • Turkey’s Consul General Speaks of Its Friend Israel

    Turkey’s Consul General Speaks of Its Friend Israel

    une 22, 2010

    by Jonah Lowenfeld, Contributing Writer

    R. Hakan Tekin, Turkey’s consul general in Los Angeles.
    Last week, while New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman was in Istanbul talking to businessmen, journalists and academics about the “fight for Turkey’s soul,” R. Hakan Tekin, Turkey’s chief representative in Los Angeles, offered up a local version of his country’s official perspective. “We have a saying in Turkish: ‘Friends speak the bitter truth,’ ” the consul general said over an afternoon cup of Turkish coffee in his office on Wilshire Boulevard. “Turkey is a friend of Israel and is speaking the bitter truth — that their policies and practices in the region are not helping them.” With Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan calling last month’s flotilla incident an example of “state terrorism” and the nation’s ministry of foreign affairs saying that “Israel has once again clearly demonstrated that it does not value human lives,” it might be hard to remember that the two countries had, until recently, long been steadfast allies. Tekin, who has headed the Los Angeles consulate since April 2007, experienced the closeness of Turkish-Israeli relations firsthand.
    RELATED: Wiesenthal Center Advises Against Travel to Turkey
    “When I first started here, my first contacts were with the Jewish community,” Tekin said. He connected with leaders of the Anti-Defamation League, the Simon Wiesenthal Center and The Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles, to name a few. Last November, he sat on a panel at Pepperdine University titled “Finding Common Ground: Reconciliation Among the Children of Abraham” with his Israeli counterpart in Los Angeles, Jacob Dayan. “Jacob is a very good friend of mine,” Tekin said. “We have a very close relationship. Of course, we are not agreeing on everything, especially these days.” But even back in “the good old days,” when Tekin spoke to audiences at the American Jewish Committee or at Hillcrest Country Club, the Q-and-A sessions weren’t easy. Asked to recall some of the more challenging questions he was asked, Tekin didn’t hesitate: “ ‘Why is Turkey so against Israel?’ Or, ‘Why didn’t we criticize Hamas as much when they were shooting rockets at Israel?’ ” But though Tekin used to field questions about anti-Semitism in Turkey or questions about Iran, he is sure about one thing: “If I had an event with a Jewish group these days, the only issue would be the flotilla incident.” And from Tekin’s point of view — which is to say, Turkey’s — the ramifications of the flotilla incident on the Turkish-Israeli relationship could not be more severe: “Israel is on the verge of losing Turkey’s friendship,” the veteran diplomat said. “The flotilla incident was a historic event for us,” Tekin said. “Never before had any group of Turkish civilians been attacked by a foreign military. So this is something serious. And this is not a government issue. The overwhelming majority of the public is furious about this.” Political observers — including Friedman — have pointed out that Erdogan has used the flotilla incident to build political support in the lead-up to next year’s election. “Like every politician,” Tekin responded. He pointed to Rep. Adam Schiff and the 43 other members of California’s congressional delegation who co-sponsored a bill that would affirm that the Ottoman Empire committed genocide against the Armenian people between 1915 and 1923. “Why are they so enthusiastic about the Armenian issue? And why are none of the congressmen from Montana co-sponsoring? Because this is politics. It’s a game of votes. There’s a big Armenian community here, and they [California’s representatives] want to cater to that constituency.” Tekin was also well aware that some Jews in Israel and in the United States had also begun taking a renewed interest in “the Armenian issue,” particularly as the relationship between Israel and Turkey became more strained. “There’s no connection between these two things, the controversy over the events of 1915, the Armenian issue — a historical issue — and Turkish-Israeli relations,” Tekin said. “And if now we see some members of Congress or some Jewish organizations saying, ‘It’s payback time: Now we should punish Turkey by recognizing the Armenian Genocide,’ and moving toward passing a resolution in Congress, I think it would be really shortsighted, counterproductive and a very opportunistic approach. It would seriously further damage the Turkish-Israeli relationship. It could cause long-term damages.” Tekin continued: “If you look at a historical issue, you have to evaluate it within its context, within its parameters. If you are adopting a position on a certain historical controversy, you have to set your position according to what you think is right and not according to some irrelevant issue.” In the past three weeks, Tekin has seen the pro-Israel group StandWithUs protesting outside his building and was visited by members of LA Jews for Peace, who came to his office to offer their condolences. But without a more official apology from Israel, and without a “transparent and international” investigation of what happened aboard the Mavi Marmara, “we cannot take any steps,” Tekin said. “If a confidence-building measure should be taken to improve Turkish-Israeli relations, that measure should be taken at this point by Israel.”