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ANKARA: Is the JDP Power Being Shaken?

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  • ANKARA: Is the JDP Power Being Shaken?

    Zaman Online

    SAHIN ALPAY

    03.14.2005 Monday - ISTANBUL 12:07

    Is the JDP Power Being Shaken?

    I believe the most penetrating analysis of the reasons for the Justice and
    Development Party's (AKP's) success in the 2002 general and later in the
    2004 local elections is the one provided by Professor Ziya Onis in his
    article entitled "The Political Economy of Turkey's Justice and Development
    Party" dated November 2004.
    (http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=659463)
    The point underlined in this analysis is that AKP owes
    its success mostly to its ability to bring together both the winners and
    losers of the globalization of the Turkish economy, in a broad cross - class
    electoral alliance. According to Onis, the AKP succeeded in raising among
    broad segments of Turkish society the hope that in government it would be
    able to utilize the positive aspects of globalization, consolidate freedoms
    and alleviate social injustices.


    Undoubtedly, external alliances also contributed a great deal to the ascent
    of AKP until at least the end of year 2004. AKP government's determination
    to follow both the economic stability program and political reforms helped
    relations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Union
    (EU) to develop in a positive direction. Relations with the United States,
    strained due to the rejection in March 2003 of American troop deployment in
    Turkey, were stabilized through the offer of 10 thousand Turkish troops to
    be deployed in Iraq and other means. Since the beginning of 2005, however,
    both the internal and external alliances of the AKP seem to suffer certain
    jolts. The most problematic part in the chain of external alliances is the
    relations with the United States. Ankara as a whole is upset by the Bush
    administration's Iraq policy: It is concerned with the fact that Americans
    are allowing for the presence of the Kurdistan Workers' Party's (PKK) in
    Northern Iraq, and that an independent Kurdish state in Iraq under U.S.
    occupation is in the making. The U.S., on the other hand, is not pleased
    with Ankara's distancing itself from Israel, its rapprochement with Syria
    and Iran (which Washington keeps under the threat of "regime change"), and
    its reluctance to meet the new American demands concerning the use of the
    Incirlik air base.

    Spokespersons for the neo-conservative clique have expressed Washington's
    dissatisfaction with Ankara through articles published in The Wall Street
    Journal ("The Sick Man of Europe - Again") and in the Middle East Quarterly
    ("Green Money, Islamist Politics in Turkey"). In these articles, the AKP was
    accused of "secret and insidious" Islamism and of being manipulated by Saudi
    Arabia. An American friend of mine, who closely follows Turkish - US
    relations, wrote the following comment in a letter he sent a few days ago:
    "I wonder what the secret agenda of these articles is? My guess is that the
    neo-cons are extremely disturbed by Turkey's new independent - minded
    foreign policy, and want to encourage the Bush administration to topple the
    AKP government. Such an attempt by Bush would be extremely foolish, and yet
    he might try it. If he does, he may find himself faced with a left Kemalist
    and ethnic - nationalist government in Ankara."


    The other problematic part of AKP's external alliances has to do with the
    EU. A decision was made by the EU to start accession negotiations on October
    3. The conditions set are, however, tough and discriminatory. Almost no
    measures were taken towards lifting of the international isolation of the
    Turkish Cypriots. France has decided to hold a referendum on Turkey's
    membership. [Nicholas] Sarkozy and [Angela] Merkel have been pressing for a
    "privileged membership." "Recognize the Armenian genocide!" pressures are
    mounting. These developments, which threaten the pro-EU alliance in Turkey,
    do not strengthen the AKP's hand. With no incentives to move further, AKP's
    reform agenda has "laxed".

    The most important problem in AKP's domestic alliances is the frustrations
    experienced among the Islamic circles. Due to opposition by the
    military-civilian bureaucracy, the AKP government has so far been unable to
    take any measures to lift the headscarf ban in the universities or to
    provide equal opportunities in the national university entrance examination
    for vocational high school graduates, and among them the graduates of prayer
    leader and preacher schools. Reports of the EU and verdicts of the European
    Court of Human Rights augment disappointments. Surely the sheer luck factor
    is no longer on AKP's side, and it has become increasingly difficult to
    manage the domestic and external political alliances. As long as AKP sticks
    to the economic stability and political reform agenda, however, jolts in
    alliances may not lead to serious consequences.

    March 8, 2005



    03.14.2005
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