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ANKARA: 'Deep State' Suspect Offers Shallow Defense

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  • ANKARA: 'Deep State' Suspect Offers Shallow Defense

    'DEEP STATE' SUSPECT OFFERS SHALLOW DEFENSE

    Kuwait Times
    Dec 16 2008
    Kuwait

    ISTANBUL - A key suspect in the Ergenekon investigation testified in
    court yesterday, blaming the state itself and accusing it of conspiring
    against him.

    Retired Maj. Gen. Veli Kucuk, cited by some as the main organizer
    of crimes blamed on the "deep state," the term used to describe all
    illegal activities committed by state organs.

    The Ergenekon case began after the discovery of hand grenades
    in 2007 in a shanty house in Istanbul that belonged to a retired
    noncommissioned officer. The grenades were found to be the same as
    those used in attacks on the Cumhuriyet daily's Istanbul offices
    in 2006.

    The findings led to scores of detentions and to more than
    100 journalists, writers, gang leaders and politicians being
    interrogated. It turned into a terror investigation that aimed to
    crack down on an alleged ultra-nationalist gang named Ergenekon,
    that sought to topple the government by staging a coup in 2009,
    initially by spreading chaos and mayhem. Ergenekon is a pre-Islamic
    Turkish saga that tells of the Turks' emergence from an earlier defeat
    by tricking their enemies under the guidance of a gray wolf.

    Earlier bombings of daily Cumhuriyet, the murder of Hrant Dink, the
    murder of a top judge of the Council of State and alleged plans for
    the assassination of high-profile figures in Turkish politics have
    been associated with the case.

    Police also raided the homes of 11 people on March 21 in an earlier
    wave of detentions, including Cumhuriyet's chief columnist and
    licensee, Ä°lhan Selcuk, 83, Workers' Party, or Ä°P, leader Dogu
    Perincek and Istanbul University's former rector.

    The list of detainees includes retired generals Å~^ener Eruygur and
    HurÅ~_id Tolon and retired Kucuk. Many detainees are retired officials
    who gathered in associations linked to the ultra-nationalist Kuvayi
    Milliye (National Forces), a reference to irregular forces that led
    the Turkish independence war back in early the 1920s.

    In the session yesterday, Kucuk told the court he had done nothing
    wrong during his military career and said his name was being used
    to attack the standing of the military. He described the accusations
    made against him as "tragic and comical."

    "I said the eastern problem was not a Kurdish problem, but an Armenian
    problem. Some people did not like that and that is why I am here,"
    said Kucuk.

    He dismissed the existence of the Gendarmerie Intelligence Services,
    or JÄ°TEM, by saying, "The indictment against me keeps referring to
    JÄ°TEM, which does not exist."

    Kucuk also denied any involvement in the Susurluk Scandal.

    Susurluk scandal

    On Nov. 3, 1996 a car had rear-ended a truck driven by Hasan
    Gökce. Reports stated Mehmet Ozbay, Police Chief Huseyin Kocadag and
    model Gonca Us died in the accident, and a True Path Party, or DYP,
    deputy from Å~^anlıurfa, Sedat Edip Bucak, was seriously injured. It
    was later noted Ozbay was an alias used by right-wing militant Abdullah
    Catlı, the subject of an outstanding arrest warrant for the killing
    of seven left-wing students. The media interpreted the accident as
    proof there were illicit links between politicians, police and the
    mafia. Most of the trials linked to the Susurluk Scandal ended with
    verdicts of not guilty. Kucuk said yesterday, "There are claims I am
    at the center of the Susurluk Scandal," and added he had followed the
    story in the media. He said again that the scandal was a ploy to harm
    the standing of the military.

    --Boundary_(ID_MezxrwxeM4LCEqOnsVCwow)- -
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