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Turkey And Ergenekon: From Farce To Tragedy

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  • Turkey And Ergenekon: From Farce To Tragedy

    TURKEY AND ERGENEKON: FROM FARCE TO TRAGEDY
    By Bill Park for OpenDemocracy.net

    ISN Zurich, International Relations & Security Network
    http://www.isn.ethz.ch/isn/Current-Affairs /Security-Watch/Detail/?ots591=4888CAA0-B3DB-1461- 98B9-E20E7B9C13D4&lng=en&id=113654
    March 12 2010

    An epic military, political, and security scandal continues to absorb
    Turkey. The affair's latest bizarre sub-plots make the tensions
    between the country's 'deep state' and its constitutional order even
    more acute, says Bill Park for openDemocracy.

    The sprawling, chaotic, all-consuming "Ergenekon" investigation into
    the activities of Turkey's so-called derin devlet ("deep state")
    shows no sign of abating. Indeed, its tentacles are spreading ever
    further as it moves from enveloping its politicians and public to
    polarising the state's core institutions.

    The reverberations of a seemingly permanent yet ever-elusive political
    scandal have reached a decisive stage at the highest level of official
    politics. Turkey's prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and head of
    the ruling Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi (Justice & Development Party
    /AKP) intends to bring a thirteen-part constitutional-reform package
    to parliament by the end of March 2010. Its passage would enable
    oversight of the party's key institutional adversary, the Hakimler ve
    Savcılar Yuksek Kurulu (supreme board of judges and prosecutors /
    HSYK). But Ergenekon's corrosive effect is equally evident in the
    longer-term divisions it is fomenting within Turkey's military and
    judiciary, which the latest developments in the affair are sharpening
    (see Soner Cagaptay, "What's Really Behind Turkey's Coup Arrests?",
    Foreign Policy, 25 February 2010).

    A conflict of shadows

    The frenzy surrounding Ergenekon has begun to focus primarily
    on one of the overarching conspiracy's many sub-plots: namely,
    the extraordinary 5,000-page Balyoz (Sledgehammer) plan. This was
    revealed in January 2010 by the Turkish journal Taraf, the leakers'
    outlet of choice. The plan - approved by the military elite in 2003,
    following the AKP's election victory of November 2002 - was modelled
    on the orchestrated disruption that preceded the "generals' coup"
    of 12 September 1980. Its aim seems to have been to generate an
    atmosphere of crisis in Turkey in order to prepare the ground for
    a military takeover (see Gareth Jenkins, Between Fact and Fantasy:
    Turkey's Ergenekon Investigation [Silk Road Studies, August 2009]).

    The Balyoz plan's detail mixes the fantastical and the deeply serious.

    It envisaged the bombing of Istanbul mosques during Friday prayers;
    the deliberate shooting down of a Turkish warplane over the Aegean
    to provoke a crisis with Greece; names of friendly and hostile
    journalists; and lists of bureaucrats, ambassadors, and regional
    governors to be targeted for arrest.

    The military elite insists that the plan is no more than a
    war-game scenario; its voluminous documentation was dismissed by the
    chief-of-staff Ilker Basbug as amounting to a "piece of paper". This
    stance ran into trouble over a single scrawl on one such piece. The
    signature of an army colonel, Dursan Cicek, was found on a document
    (published by Taraf in June 2009) outlining ways to discredit the
    AKP and the Fethullah Gulen movement; Basbug said that the signature
    was forged, though civilian forensic and police agencies declared
    it authentic - a finding now acknowledged by an internal military
    investigation.

    This incident is emblematic of how each story-line in the wider
    Ergenekon chain of disclosures tends to unfold in a way that
    intensifies the pressure on the Turkish military. For example, the
    signature of a retired general, Cetin Dogan, is now also alleged
    to appear in the Balyoz archive. Dogan was charged on 26 February
    2010 as part of the Balyoz investigation - along with the former
    special-forces commander Engin Alan, the most senior of around fifty
    active and retired officers detained in the most recent round-up (see
    Gareth H Jenkins, "Defense against documents: the Turkish military's
    rearguard action", Turkish Analyst, 23 November 2009).

    Dogan suggests that the former chief-of-staff General Hilmi Ozkök
    should confess what he knows about the affair; Ozkök in turn
    claims to have had no knowledge of Balyoz, and insists the then
    land-commander General Aytac Yalman should take responsibility;
    Yalman agrees, but refuses to speak until given permission from
    the current chief-of-staff Ilker Basbug. The unsettled Basbug seems
    more concerned with identifying whistleblowers from within the ranks
    than with assisting the investigation, and is increasingly shrill
    in his warnings about the morale of the armed forces (see "BaÅ~_bug:
    'A demoralized military is a national problem'", Hurriyet Daily News,
    11 February 2010).

    A landscape of plots

    The agitation surrounding the Balyoz plot has to fight for space in
    Turkey's media with the equally convoluted Kafes (Cage) "operation
    action-plan". This subterranean project was exposed in April 2009
    after the discovery in Istanbul's Poyrazköy district of an illegal
    arms-cache provoked a police-raid on the home of a retired Turkish
    army major.

    The Kafes plan, allegedly (that word again) conceived within the
    navy command, compounds the multifariousness of Ergenekon and the
    scale of Balyoz with an ambition all of its own. Its bizarre features
    include an operation to assassinate non-Muslims (along the lines of the
    killing of the Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in January 2007)
    in the hope that international and domestic blame would attach to the
    AKP government; the use of prostitutes to blackmail unreliable senior
    naval officers; and the concealment of explosives inside a submarine
    exhibited at Istanbul's Rahmi M Koc museum supposedly intended for
    detonation during a visit of schoolchildren. In the latter case,
    the police's retrieval of the explosives in July 2009 was followed
    by an internal military investigation which concluded that a navy
    unit had been tasked to remove them - and "forgot" to do so.

    The Kafes and Balyoz controversies have overshadowed even the arrest
    of two special-forces command-officers in December 2009; they were
    detained outside the home of deputy prime minister Bulent Arinc on
    suspicion of plotting his assassination. The investigation into this
    incident led to the military making an unprecedented concession: that
    a civilian judge could conduct a thorough search of a super-sensitive
    military facility: in this case the special-warfare department's
    Ankara headquarters, known as the "cosmic room". The judge concerned
    received death-threats; if that was predictable, the arrest of seven
    military officers who had been tailing him was - even by Turkey's
    "new" standards - more startling (see Steven A Cook, "The Weakening
    of Turkey's Military" [Council on Foreign Relations, 1 March 2010]).

    The army for its part continues to dismiss officers suspected of
    Islamist sentiment, if so far none alleged to have been involved
    in Ergenekon-related activities (though in February 2010 a military
    tribunal did give a four-year prison sentence to a lieutenant-colonel
    who had kept at home weapons belonging to the armed forces). More
    typical of its attitude is that on 3 March 2010, the third army chief
    General Saldiray Berk - who has to date refused to appear before a
    court for questioning over his supposed political plotting - led the
    military's biannual, high-profile military exercises. The event -
    "Sarikamis 2010 Winter", referring to its location in the eastern
    province of Kars - was, somewhat unusually, not graced with the
    presence of any representatives of the Turkish government.

    Turkey's fracture-zone

    The avalanche of revelations associated with the Ergenekon
    investigation carries several "unknown unknowns" in its thunderous
    train. A major one is the impact it might be having on Turkish public
    opinion, which is traditionally well-disposed towards the armed
    forces. An effect of the long crisis has been to strip the military
    (for the time being at least) of its untouchability, as the detailed
    exposure of its disruptive plans alternates with embarrassing personal
    dramas (such as the dispute between teams of doctors as to whether
    three indicted retired generals - Levent Ersöz, Sener Eruygur and
    Hursit Tolon - are fit enough to stand trial).

    In these circumstances the tensions between Turkey's military,
    judiciary and political leaders are becoming acute. They were on
    display when on 4 February 2010 the Ankara government rescinded the
    longstanding protocol (Emasya) granting the military the right to
    assume responsibility for public order in the event of a breakdown
    (see Omer Taspinar, "Turkey's Difficult Democratization", Brookings,
    15 February 2010); and again after the chief prosecutor of Erzurum in
    eastern Turkey ordered the arrest of his Erzincan counterpart Ilhan
    Cihaner on 17 February for Ergenekon-related activities - and was
    himself dismissed almost immediately by the judges' supreme board
    (HSYK).

    The latter is far more than a local affair. The moderate-Islamist AKP
    government regards the HSYK as a bastion of the secularist-Ataturkist
    order, and suspects it of being the agent of a concerted attempt to
    undermine the Ergenekon prosecutors. This underlines the significance
    of the government's presentation of its constitutional-reform proposals
    to the Ankara parliament; these include measures (first outlined
    in 2007) to restructure the HSYK in conformity with the process of
    accession to the European Union. In turn the HSYK is conducting an
    enquiry into whether the government might be culpable of illegitimate
    pressure on the judiciary - and if the answer is "yes", the AKP could
    share the fate of its Refah Partisi (Welfare Party) predecessor in
    1998 and find itself closed down by the constitutional court.

    Turkey's lawyers and politicians are in dispute too about the
    ramifications of a constitutional-court ruling of January 2010, again
    part of the requirement to make Turkey's legal order compatible with
    the European Union's acquis communautaire. The ruling overturns a law
    passed in July 2009 which had given civilian courts the right to try
    military officers for non-military crimes. This outcome alone has
    the capacity to tip the entire Ergenekon investigation into an even
    deeper abyss.

    Turkey is surpassing itself in its capacity for the absurd - and soon
    also, perhaps, in its capacity for the tragic.
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