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What Is Happening To Turkey?

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  • What Is Happening To Turkey?

    WHAT IS HAPPENING TO TURKEY?

    By BRET STEPHENS

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424 052748703674704575235141350028342.html?mod=WSJ_Opi nion_BelowLEFTSecond
    MAY 11, 2010
    Istanbul

    As the country has become wealthier, it paradoxically has also shed
    some of its Western trappings.

    Last week I asked Bernard Lewis where he thought Turkey might
    be going. The dean of Middle East historians speculated that in a
    decade the secular republic founded by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk might
    more closely resemble the Islamic Republic of Iran-even as Iran
    transformed itself into a secular republic.

    Reading the news about Turkey from afar, it's easy to see what Prof.

    Lewis means. Since coming to power in 2002, the ruling Justice
    and Development Party (AKP) of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    has dramatically recast the traditional contours of Turkish foreign
    policy. Gone are the days when the country had a strategic partnership
    with Israel, involving close military ties and shared enemies in Syria
    and Iran and the sundry terrorist groups they sponsored. Gone are the
    days, too, when the U.S. could rely on Turkey as a bulwark against
    common enemies, be they the Soviet Union or Saddam Hussein's Iraq.

    Today, Mr. Erdogan has excellent relations with Syrian strongman Bashar
    Assad, whom the prime minister affectionately calls his "brother." He
    has accused Israel of "savagery" in Gaza and opened a diplomatic line
    to Hamas while maintaining good ties with the genocidal government of
    Sudan. He was among the first foreign leaders to congratulate Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad on his fraudulent victory in last year's election. He has
    resisted intense pressure from the Obama administration to vote for
    a new round of Security Council sanctions on Iran, with which Turkey
    has a $10 billion trade relationship. And he has sabotaged efforts
    by his own foreign ministry to improve ties with neighboring Armenia.

    The changes in foreign policy reflect the rolling revolution in
    Turkey's domestic political arrangements. The military, long the
    pillar of Turkish secularism, is under assault by Mr. Erdogan's
    Islamist-oriented government, which has recently arrested dozens
    of officers on suspicion of plotting a coup. Last week the Turkish
    parliament voted to put a referendum to the public that would,
    if passed, allow the government to pack the country's top courts,
    another secularist pillar, with its own people. Also under assault is
    the media group Dogan, which last year was slapped with a multibillion
    dollar tax fine.

    Oh, and America's favorability rating among Turks, at around 14%
    according to recent polls, is plumbing an all-time low, despite Barack
    Obama's presidency and his unprecedented outreach to Muslims in general
    and Turks in particular. In 2004, the year of Abu Ghraib, it was 30%.

    All this would seem to more than justify Prof. Lewis's alarm. So
    why do so many Turks, including more than a few secularists and
    classical liberals, seem mostly at ease with the changes Mr. Erdogan
    has wrought? A possible answer may be self-delusion: Liberals were
    also at the forefront of the Iranian revolution before being brutally
    swept aside by the Ayatollah Khomeini. But that isn't quite convincing
    in Turkey's case.

    More plausible is Turkey's economic transformation under the AKP's
    pro-free market stewardship. Inflation, which ran to 99% in 1997,
    is down to single digits. Goldman Sachs anticipates 7% growth this
    year, which would make the country Europe's strongest performer-if
    only Europe would have it as a member. Turks now look on the EU with
    diminished envy and growing contempt. One time arch-rival Greece
    mostly earns their pity.

    Chief among the beneficiaries of this transformation has been the
    AKP's political base: an Islamic bourgeoisie that was long shut
    out of the old statist arrangements between the country's secular
    political and business elites. Members of this new class want to
    send their daughters to universities-and insist they be allowed to
    do so wearing headscarves. They also insist that they be ruled by
    the government they elected, not by the "deep state" of unelected and
    often self-dealing officers, judges and bureaucrats who defended the
    country's secularism at the expense of its democracy and prosperity.

    The paradoxical result is that, as the country has become wealthier
    and (in some respects) more democratic, it has also shed some of
    its Western trappings. Mr. Erdogan's infatuations with his unsavory
    neighbors undoubtedly stem from his own instincts, ideology and ego.

    But it also reflects a public sentiment that no longer wants Turkey
    to be a stranger in its own region, particularly when it so easily
    can be its leader. Some Turks call this "neo-Ottomanism," others
    "Turkish-Gaullism." Whichever way, it is bound to discomfit the West.

    The more serious question is how far it all will go. Some of Mr.

    Erdogan's domestic power plays smack of incipient Putinism. The
    estrangement from Israel is far from complete, but an Israeli attack
    on Iran might just do the trick. And it's hard to see why Mr. Erdogan
    should buck public opinion when it comes to Turkey's alliance with
    the U.S. when he's prepared to follow public opinion in so many
    other matters.

    Most importantly, will the Erdogan brand of Islamism remain relatively
    modest in its social and political ambitions, or will it become
    aggressive and radical? It would be wrong to pretend to know the
    answer. It would be insane not to worry about the possibility.
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