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ANKARA: Rand: AK Party Closure Will Deepen Divide

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  • ANKARA: Rand: AK Party Closure Will Deepen Divide

    RAND: AK PARTY CLOSURE WILL DEEPEN DIVIDE

    Today's Zaman
    http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.d o?load=detay&link=144938&bolum=102
    June 16 2008
    Turkey

    The ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) of Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan is likely to take a moderate course if it is
    not closed down by the Constitutional Court and act more cautiously
    about pressing for measures that could be perceived as changing the
    secular-religious balance in the country or provoking the secularists
    into another attempt to remove it from power, a study sponsored by
    the Pentagon has predicted.

    The report, sponsored by the undersecretary of defense for policy and
    conducted by the International Security and Defense Policy Center
    of the RAND National Defense Research Institute, also found that
    the religious-secularist divide will deepen within Turkey and that
    Turkey's relations with the European Union will become more problematic
    if the ruling party is closed. Shutting down the AK Party, however,
    is unlikely to eliminate it as a political force because "if it is
    closed, the party is likely to simply reemerge under another name,"
    the report said.

    "It would, however, sharpen the secularist-religious divide within
    Turkey and could lead some pious Turks to lose faith in the political
    system. Turkey's prospects of EU membership, already facing serious
    obstacles, would be further jeopardized," the report, penned by Angel
    Rabasa and F. Stephen Larrabee, predicted.

    The AK Party is facing closure on charges of becoming a focal point of
    anti-secular activities. Its senior members, including Prime Minister
    Erdogan, and President Abdullah Gul, a former AK Party member, are
    also facing political bans.

    Assessing the alternative scenarios for Turkish politics, the RAND
    report said the AK Party will be faced with structural limits for
    opening space for Islam in the public sphere. One such limitation
    stems from the fact that "the Kemalist establishment remains largely
    intact" and that "any government that crosses the lines that define the
    acceptable role of religion in politics risks accentuating political
    tensions and possibly provoking intervention by the military." Other
    factors, such as Turkey's Western orientation and the presence of
    a moderate and pluralistic tradition of Islam that does not embrace
    rigid interpretations or Shariah rule will also lead the AK Party to
    take a moderate path.

    According to the report, there are other scenarios under which
    the AK Party could pursue a more aggressive Islamist agenda or the
    military could intervene in the country's politics, but they look less
    likely. It noted that there were secularist Turks who were worried
    that the AK Party would appoint Islamists to state posts and turn
    away from Europe to create a rival Islamic bloc. But this "creeping
    Islamization" scenario is unlikely for several reasons: "First, it
    would lead to greater political polarization and would likely provoke
    intervention by the military. Second, most Turks support a secular
    state and oppose a state based on the Shariah. Third, EU membership has
    been a core element of the AK Party's foreign policy," said the report.

    As for possible direct military intervention, the report said this
    would occur only as a last resort in the event that the AK Party
    presses for an Islamic agenda more aggressively. "A confrontation
    could take place if the AK Party takes actions seen by the military
    as crossing important lines. ...While direct intervention by the
    military cannot be excluded from consideration, especially if the AK
    Party begins to push an Islamic agenda more aggressively, it is not
    very likely and would occur only as a last resort after the military
    had exhausted all other options," said the report.

    The report noted that the AK Party's Erdogan, unlike his Islamist
    predecessor, Necmettin Erbakan, was oriented toward Europe and that
    the party's electoral success "does not translate into popular support
    for an Islamist agenda." Assessing the implications of the AK Party's
    pro-European policies, the report said they paved the way for the
    reconfiguration of Turkish politics as well: "As the West became a
    tacit ally of the AK Party, formerly pro-Western secularists surfaced
    as opponents of EU accession. The [main opposition Republican People's
    Party] CHP, once the champion of a Western orientation for Turkey, has
    increasingly moved in a more nationalistic direction and has adopted
    a more ambiguous attitude toward the West, seeing some aspects of the
    West's influence as a threat to the integrity of the Turkish state
    and Kemalism."

    Lessons for US: Turkish alliance in Mideast not taken for granted With
    its renewed focus on Middle Eastern affairs and growing interests in
    the region, Turkey is likely to avoid offering the United States a
    blank check for military cooperation, a US study has revealed.

    The study, sponsored by the Pentagon and conducted by the International
    Security and Defense Policy Center of the RAND National Defense
    Research Institute, said the Turkish policy toward the Middle
    East is likely to remain a sensitive issue in bilateral US-Turkish
    relations. "Turkey's growing interests in the Middle East are likely to
    make Ankara wary about allowing the United States to use its military
    facilities for regional contingencies except where such operations are
    clearly perceived to be in Turkey's interest," it said, calling for a
    diversification of US access options that would provide alternatives
    to Ä°ncirlik air base in case Turkey increases restrictions on US
    use of it or other Turkish facilities.

    Turkey disappointed the US by refusing to cooperate militarily in the
    war on Iraq in 2003. Iran, whose nuclear program is viewed with deep
    suspicion by the US, is expected to be the next issue of contention
    between Ankara and Washington in the event the US administration
    decides to go ahead with military sanctions to force Tehran to end
    its nuclear program.

    The RAND report also cautioned the US administration against describing
    Turkey as a "model" for coexistence of Islam and democracy in its
    political system because this makes many Turks, particularly the
    secularists and the military who believe that it pushes Turkey
    politically closer to the Middle East and weakens Turkey's Western
    identity, "uncomfortable."

    This, however, does not mean that Turkey is different from other
    Muslim countries in its long experience with fusing Islam with
    Westernization. Referring to Turkey's ruling Justice and Development
    Party (AK Party), the report said: "The ability of a party with
    Islamic roots to operate within the framework of a secular democratic
    system while respecting the boundaries between religion and state
    would refute the argument that Islam cannot be reconciled with modern
    secular democracy. On the other hand, if the experiment fails, it
    could lead to greater secular-Islamic polarization, further reducing
    the middle ground needed to build the moderate Muslim bulwark needed
    to contain the spread of radicalized Islam."

    "Beyond Turkey, the accommodation of Islam with democracy and
    secularism that has been achieved there is a valuable resource in
    the current ideological conflict between radical and mainstream
    interpretations of Islam. Mainstream entities in Turkey, therefore,
    should be encouraged to partner with groups and institutions
    elsewhere in the Muslim world to propagate moderate and pluralistic
    interpretations of Islam," the report also noted.

    The report dismissed characterization of the current tensions in Turkey
    as a struggle between "Islamists" and "secularists" and said these
    tensions were "a part of a struggle for power between newly emerging
    social sectors and the secularized elite -- a struggle between the
    'periphery' and the 'center'-- that has deep roots in Ottoman and
    recent Turkish history."

    It also noted that while the AK Party has Islamic roots, "it enjoys
    broad-based political support that transcends religious, class,
    and regional differences" and suggested Washington should remain
    committed to supporting Turkey's membership in the EU because this
    would "rebut the claim that the West, especially Europe, is innately
    hostile to Muslims."

    Future US administrations will need to work closely with congressional
    leaders to ensure that the Armenian issue does not poison future
    relations with Turkey, the report said, and urged Washington to follow
    up with concrete steps in its current cooperation with Turkey against
    the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). Ä°stanbul Today's Zaman

    --Boundary_(ID_O/uSTI2hOrxfWL8UQbXgoA)--
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