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  • 'Yellow card' to Erdogan

    Mideast Mirror
    June 21, 2010 Monday

    'Yellow card' to Erdogan


    A U.S.-Israeli campaign is underway to punish Turkish PM Erdogan for
    his pro-Palestinian stance, says Mohammad Kharroub in Jordanian
    al-Ra'i

    Last Friday's decision by the Turkish Supreme Court to release a
    public prosecutor and nine other individuals accused of attempting to
    overthrow the elected Turkish government, and the decision by the U.S.
    Congress and Israeli Knesset to revive the issue of the First World
    War Armenian massacre, are clear signs of a conspiracy at work against
    Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    Enhanced Coverage LinkingRecep Tayyip Erdogan -Search using:
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    after his recent positions against Israel, maintains a Jordanian commentator.

    FIERCE CAMPAIGN: "A fierce campaign is underway, giving the impression
    of a conspiracy at work," writes Mohammad Kharroub in the Jordanian
    daily al-Ra'i.

    Those who are averse to conspiracy theories should scrutinize what is
    going on before dismissing this particular one.

    The campaign's target is the Turkish PM who has deviated from the text
    written for him, or was forced to do so, or found an opportunity to
    register more points, greater influence, and a stronger role for his
    country, in favor of Turkish diplomacy, and especially in to serve his
    party.

    No sooner did his opponents seem to have been on the verge of losing
    their 'street' -- especially after the sex scandal that toppled the
    head of the largest opposition party (Deniz Baykal, the head of the
    People's Republican Party [CHP]) -- than they regained the initiative.
    They elected a leader who is even more hard-line and more outspoken in
    defending the values of the secular republic declared by (CHP founder)
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in 1923.

    On Friday, the Turkish Supreme Court ordered the release of a public
    prosecutor accused of belonging to a network aimed at toppling the
    government. The Court also ordered the release of nine other detained
    people, including military men and intelligence agents. The order
    angered Erdogan who accused the Court of disrespecting justice and
    violating constitutional rules.

    This means that Erdogan, who is amidst a difficult domestic and
    foreign confrontation, is trying to preempt his opponents and prevent
    them from delivering the 'message' they wished to send via the
    judiciary and the military establishment that stands behind it.

    These two institutions are the 'redoubts' that Erdogan has tried to
    'storm' by legal and constitutional methods. He achieved relative
    success via the Ergenekon [alleged military coup] case and its
    investigations, which involved judges and generals, both on active
    service and in retirement. He also won an important point by
    introducing amendments to the constitution. But he did not succeed in
    wining over a sufficient number of votes to transform these amendments
    into law, which means that they will soon be put to a popular
    referendum.

    Despite all this, Erdogan is now facing a 'setback' because of the
    Supreme Court's decision. That decision may enhance his opponents'
    self-confidence and push them towards a greater confrontation that
    could, in turn, push Erdogan to respond with uncalculated steps that
    would expose him to greater losses at the domestic and foreign levels.

    Why at the foreign level? Because the 'supporters of freedom, the
    defenders of human rights, the children of light' in the U.S. Congress
    and the Knesset have emerged in public to issue a 'yellow card' --
    since we are in the midst of the World Cup -- against the PM of a
    state that is NATO member. It is also a state whose forces have taken
    part in the war on terrorism in Afghanistan.

    They have warned him against the dire consequences of continuing to
    'draw away' from Israel and expose its interests to danger. And they
    publicly threatened to take 'well-considered' steps and issue a 'red
    card' that would pave the way to toppling him, and perhaps hang a
    noose around his neck -- as happened with his predecessor Adnan
    Menderes half a century ago.

    But what will those Congressional members do? They will reopen the
    debate regarding the Armenian massacre, a file that the Zionist lobby
    in Congress -- and, obviously, the Knesset -- has long covered up and
    postponed. That was because their interests coincided with Turkey's as
    a strategic ally of Washington and Tel Aviv alike.

    In fact, the Armenian issue -- like all other issues of liberation,
    human rights, resistance to occupation and racism, and public liberty
    -- was not viewed as a moral issue or one of conscience; nor was it
    given any importance on the 'enlightened' West's agenda.

    Now, however, it is being dug out from the archives and dusted off.
    Congress has rolled up its sleeves and will discuss the massacre of
    the Armenians. And so will its 'sister' parliament, the Israeli
    Knesset, in the near future. In other words, the 'hotheads in Ankara
    should understand the implications and seek an honorable way out for
    themselves ... or else.'

    In other words, they are seeking to 'tame the wild horse.' But will
    they succeed with Erdogan?

    It would be too adventurous to speculate. After all, politics is the
    art of the possible, and everything is possible in politics. At the
    end of the day, Erdogan's fate is linked to his personal future, his
    country's interests, and those of his party. However, his political
    future will be under threat if he retreats and disregards his
    country's honor, his people's blood, and his homeland's sovereignty.

    For this reason, Erdogan will continue to attack Israel -- albeit more
    cautiously. He will continue to say that his country 'will not remain
    silent regarding piracy and injustice and will seek solutions within
    the framework of international law,' as he said in a meeting of his
    AKP party on Friday.

    He was also notably careful to stress that his country's problem is
    with the Israeli 'government' which 'refuses to recognize laws,' and
    not with the 'Israeli people.'

    All possibilities remain open, including that of taming Erdogan or
    threatening his political future. However, is all that is happening
    not consistent with a tripartite conspiracy theory -- with the U.S.,
    Israel, and the Turkish military establishment as its three sides?

    "In fact, the latter may soon move its tanks out of their barracks
    with Western backing; one that adopts a hypocritical discourse and the
    honeyed talk to which we have become accustomed when justifying the
    recognition of 'white but bloody' military coups arranged by the CIA,"
    concludes Kharroub.




    From: A. Papazian
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