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  • ANKARA: Ergenekon investigation saved Turkey's future

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 18 2009


    Ergenekon investigation saved Turkey's future



    A number of weapons caches found at sites throughout the country in
    last week's Ergenekon operations, a clandestine terrorist organization
    charged with attempting to overthrow the government, have brought to
    mind the question of what would have happened if this organization had
    not been exposed.

    The Ergenekon operation started with the discovery of a house being
    used as a munitions depot in Ä°stanbul in June 2007. Since then,
    more than 100 people have been detained, including retired
    generals. Many such caches have been found in the course of the
    investigation, but police raids last week yielded the most weapons
    thus far, with most of them found not in a closed storage area, but
    outside on our streets or buried underground.

    Last Friday the police discovered a weapons cache buried in a forest
    in Ankara's GölbaÅ?ı district based on a map found
    in the home of one of the newest suspects. At this location police
    discovered 30 hand grenades, three light anti-tank weapons (LAW),
    plastic explosives, ammunition for Uzi machine guns and other
    ammunition buried close to a road near the capital. Another weapons
    cache was found in an Ä°stanbul house belonging Lt. Col. Mustafa
    Dönmez, who turned himself in earlier this week after running
    from the police for two days following last week's operations. Hand
    grenades, bullets, Kalashnikovs, LAWs and explosives have been found
    in various locations during police searches based on new evidence
    gathered in the previous week of detentions, which revealed that the
    group was planning to assassinate Alevi and Armenian community
    leaders, the prime minister and members of the Supreme Court of
    Appeals, acts that would have dragged Turkey into utter chaos if they
    had been carried out. Thirty-seven individuals were detained last week
    in the police operations staged in various cities as part of the
    ongoing investigation. Seventeen of these people have been arrested,
    with most of the remainder released pending trial.

    Experts say had these weapons been used to carry out the plots of the
    organization, the country would have been thrown into a chaotic period
    similar to that before the Sept. 12, 1980 coup, where there were
    clashes, bloodshed and carnage every day on the streets between
    opposing ideological groups.

    What would be the cost of not exposing the deeper branches of
    Ergenekon? Å?amil Tayyar, the Ankara bureau chief of the Star
    daily and author of the book `Operation Ergenekon,' gives a brief
    answer: `According to the Ergenekon organization, the Justice and
    Development Party [AK Party] and everybody who voted for the AK Party
    are traitors. Any political party which did not collaborate with them
    or vote in line with them are traitors. Everyone who wants Turkey to
    join the European Union is a traitor. This is why the front they hate
    is very great. If the games they planned to play had not bee exposed,
    Turkey could have really turned into a bloodbath. Major murders could
    have been committed.'

    Tayyar gave the example of the Council of State attack in 2006 that
    left a senior judge dead. The act was blamed on Islamist groups at the
    time, but now the prosecution has compelling evidence that it was
    masterminded by Ergenekon. `They should erect a statue of the cop who
    captured the Council of State hit man Alparslan Arslan. Today this
    might sound too exaggerated, but thinking in terms of the conditions
    of the day, the impact of the attack was huge. ErtuÄ?rul
    Ã-zkök had referred to the case as `Turkey's 9/11.' If
    Ergenekon had not been exposed, the AK Party could have been thrown
    out of power somehow, and the European Union negotiation process would
    have been halted.'

    Tayyar claims that after two previous failed coup attempts, made
    public by the now-defunct Nokta newsweekly, Ergenekon had to go
    underground and reorganize using its connections in different
    terrorist groups and clandestine intelligence organizations. This
    collaboration was the force behind the Council of State shooting, the
    killing of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink and the killing of
    an Italian priest in his church in the Black Sea city of Trabzon.

    `The reason they carried out these underground operations was to drag
    Turkey into chaos, damage political and economic stability and finally
    stage a coup d'état under those conditions. This is because in
    a country where everything was on the right track, there wouldn't be
    the motivation or support for a coup d'état. Their plan was to
    stage a coup in 2009, and ultimately, create a country cut off from
    the world by the year 2023 and that had cut ties completely with the
    European Union,' Tayyar said.

    Potential Alevi-Sunni conflict

    Another very likely outcome if the Ergenekon terrorist organization
    had succeeded would be a conflict between Turkey's Alevi and Sunni
    communities. It is now known that Ergenekon was preparing to
    assassinate Alevi leader Kazım Genç. The organization
    also had assassination plans against Kurdish deputies. Some experts
    claim that had Ergenekon not been exposed, Turkey could have been
    dragged into civil war and ultimately divided. `A Turkey that ends its
    European Union accession process, that annihilates its democratic
    actors and that replaces economic development with chaos and
    destruction will be dragged into social chaos. Under such
    circumstances no one can stop Kurds from dividing the country,'
    DaÄ?ı said.

    AK Party KahramanmaraÅ? deputy Avni DoÄ?an states that if
    the Ergenekon organization was not discovered, Turkey would have
    turned into the Syria of not too long ago. `This was the target of the
    organization. They planned to create a country of anarchy and chaos,'
    he told Sunday's Zaman. Columnist Mehmet Altan referred to other
    dictatorial countries that Turkey would look like and said the Turkey
    envisaged by Ergenekon would strengthen `authoritarian republicanism.'

    Sunday's Zaman has published several articles on the issue, noting
    that if the AK Party and the Democratic Society Party (DTP) were
    closed down, Turkey's Kurdish citizens would lose their faith in
    democracy and the country would practically be divided in two since an
    overwhelming majority of southeastern Anatolia voted for the two
    parties in the last elections. Had Ergenekon succeeded in toppling the
    AK Party, its next target would be the DTP and other Kurdish political
    groups. This would hasten the country's disintegration.

    AK Party Batman deputy Afif Demirkıran says even if the
    Ergenekon terrorist organization reached its target of a secularist
    coup, the post-coup Turkey would not be like the Turkey of the
    post-1960 and post-1980 coups. `We would probably not be able to
    return to democracy. We would remain an isolated country, cut off from
    the world,' he told Sunday's Zaman.

    AK Party Samsun deputy Suat Kılıç does not think
    Ergenekon would be capable of staging a coup. `They don't have enough
    power for that. But Turkey would continue to be a country of chaos and
    we would not know the real perpetrators of many crimes committed in
    the recent past,' he said.

    AK Party Bursa deputy Mehmet Ocaktan, who chaired the parliamentary
    commission that investigated the Hrant Dink murder, told Sunday's
    Zaman that had Ergenekon not been discovered, Turkey would `be a
    country that takes care of its affairs in the dark and would never be
    a transparent society.'

    DTP MuÅ? deputy Sırrı Sakık agrees that
    Turkey would have regressed to conditions in the pre-1980 era if
    Ergenekon had not been exposed. `Ergenekon is an organization that fed
    on the Kurdish question. It has its hands everywhere in the filthy war
    in the Southeast. ¦ its political elements absolutely have to be
    exposed. If not, Turkey will continue to move within the dark tunnel
    it is in. `

    18 January 2009, Sunday
    ERCAN YAVUZ ANKARA
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