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ANKARA: Pro-AKP Liberals: Useful Idiots?

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  • ANKARA: Pro-AKP Liberals: Useful Idiots?

    PRO-AKP LIBERALS: USEFUL IDIOTS?
    Mustafa Akyol

    Hurriyet
    March 23 2010
    Turkey

    For the Kemalists, the liberals are either 'useful idiots,' as Lenin
    described Soviet sympathizers in Western countries, or they are
    'sold out' pens who simply get paid by the AKP

    One of the much-debated issues in current Turkish politics is the
    alliance between secular liberals and religious conservatives. The
    former is a tiny group of pundits, and their popular support is quite
    small, but their intellectual firepower is strong. The religious
    conservatives, on the other hand, have a much broader public base,
    but they need to articulate their demands for broader religious
    freedom in a more global language, which the liberals do speak.

    The practical implication of this alliance is the support that most
    secular liberals have given to the Justice and Development Party,
    or AKP, government since 2002. This is not an unconditional and
    steady support, though. In fact, most liberals strongly criticize
    the government and the Prime Minister when they take nationalist or
    illiberal stances. Erdogan's recent blunder about "expelling illegal
    Armenian immigrants," for example, was heavily bashed by these
    pundits. But they continue to think that the AKP is still better
    than its alternatives, and that it has indeed taken the right steps
    on several important issues.

    The Turkish history of liberty

    The Kemalists, however, always see something rotten in this alliance.

    For them, the liberals are either "useful idiots," as Lenin described
    Soviet sympathizers in Western countries, or they are "sold out" pens
    who simply get paid by the AKP or somehow benefit from its ascendance.

    The common Kemalist mind simply can't imagine how secular people would
    otherwise deviate from the noble path of the country's archetypal
    secularism.

    But Kemalism has its own intellectual firepower as well. This mainly
    works by focusing on the problems within the AKP, and showing them as
    if they were the only political trouble that Turkey has. The Kemalists,
    in other words, deliberately overlook the fact that for decades Turkey
    has been ruled by an authoritarian system dominated by the military
    and judiciary. Then they speak as if the AKP is simply a power-hungry
    government which tries to dominate an otherwise perfectly fine system.

    One of the illustrations of this line of thinking was a piece which
    appeared in these pages yesterday. Its writer was criticizing the
    liberals for not opposing the AKP's new package of constitutional
    amendments. Two of these amendments were about giving the President
    and Parliament the right to appoint a minimal number of the members
    of the Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors, or HSYK, and the
    Constitutional Court - as it is the case in many EU countries. But,
    according to our writer, this would have increased the power of the
    executive, and it should have been opposed by anyone who wants more
    liberty. He was also quoting former US President, Woodrow Wilson,
    who said:

    "The history of liberty is the history of resistance. The history
    of liberty is a history of the limitation of governmental power,
    not the increase of it."

    Wilson was absolutely right. But he was speaking in a slightly
    different context. For in the U.S., the government is the only
    centralized political power that can threaten freedom. In Turkey,
    however, there is always something higher than the government: the
    state. While the government is elected by the people, the state is
    made up of self-appointing bureaucrats, such as generals and judges,
    who rule the country according to their ideology, and allow the
    elected governments only a minimal authority on serious matters.

    Moreover, history has shown that the main obstacle to Turkey's
    liberalization has been the state, and not elected governments. Just
    look at the past decade and you will see how the state has, with or
    without success, blocked liberal reforms on almost every political
    issue -- from the freedom of the markets to that of expression,
    from the rights of the Kurds to those of Christians.

    That's why Wilson's quote needs to be little adjusted to fit into
    Turkey: The history of liberty here is a history of the limitation
    of first state power, and then governmental power.

    And if you are focusing only on the latter, but totally overlooking
    the first one, your self-description as a liberal will hardly be
    convincing.

    A self-appointing caste

    The constitutional amendment package needs to be seen within the
    same perspective. The problem is not that the government wants to
    "dominate the judiciary." It is rather that the higher judiciary is
    a self-appointing ideological caste. The three main bodies, the HSYK,
    the Council of State, and the Court of Appeals, simply elect members of
    each other. The government wants the replace this co-optation system
    with a more democratic and pluralist one, in which all judges in the
    whole country will have a say.

    Most Turkish liberals see that, and therefore it won't be surprising
    to see them vouch for "yes" in the probable referendum on the
    constitutional amendment package.

    The alliance between them and the religious conservatives, after all,
    is neither unprincipled nor accidental. It is the natural outcome of
    the history of liberty in this country.
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