Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Islamists vs Military: Turkey's Recent History and Egypt's Near Futu

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Islamists vs Military: Turkey's Recent History and Egypt's Near Futu

    Daily News Egypt
    November 18, 2011 Friday



    Islamists vs. Military: Turkey's Recent History and Egypt's Near Future



    The long over-due confrontation between the political Islamic forces
    and the military has just started. The events Turkey has seen since
    its 1980 military coup seem to have reemerged in Egypt today. Turkey's
    1980 constitution written by the military and Egypt's much debated
    constitutional principles proposed by the SCAF; the role of Turkey's
    army as the 'guardian of the Turkish Constitution' and Egypt's army
    defining itself as the 'defender of constitutional legitimacy' as
    mentioned in article 9 in its suggested principles; Turkey's
    military-dominated 'National Security Council' and Egypt's 'National
    Defense Council' mentioned in article 10 of the draft principles; the
    Islamist roots of Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP) and
    the Muslim Brothers' Freedom and Justice Party. The similarities are
    endless.

    There is also much enthusiasm for the Turkish model among Egyptians
    and especially among the Muslim Brothers. So why do the MBs admire the
    Turkish model so much? And why is a Turkey-like parliamentary system
    among the first goals mentioned in the Freedom and Justice Party's
    program? Is it because Turkey appears to be the first successful model
    of Islamic democracy with international appeal and acceptance and a
    flourishing economy? Perhaps. Or is it because of the way Erdogan's
    AKP took control of Turkey's presidency, government, the
    constitutional court, and most importantly its military? Surely.

    The current conflict between the Islamists and the military on
    supra-constitutional principles is just the beginning of a long power
    struggle between the two main forces. Despite four military coups that
    have occurred in Turkey's modern history, the military has still
    always managed to transfer rule to civilians within a considerably
    short time. Military intervention has always happened either to
    establish stability during times of chaos or to overthrow an Islamic
    government that was allegedly attempting to undermine the secular
    principles of Turkey's constitution.

    Pre- Erdogan's Justice and Development Party

    The history of the struggle between the military and Islamist forces
    goes way back to the times of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk since 1923. His
    successful quest to establish a strict secular version of Islamic
    society is still under attack by Islamic fundamentalists to this day.
    However, the period in Turkish history that is quite relevant to
    Egypt's current situation started in the 1980s, right after the 1980
    military coup that followed a series of violent political clashes and
    assassinations and a death toll of 5000. In 1982 the military forced a
    secular constitution on Turkey and gave itself more powers via the
    National Security Council, the military's political arm. The military
    made sure that items like the defense budget, declaration of war,
    sending troops to foreign countries, emergency laws, and martial law,
    lay outside the control of the government and the parliament and
    reasserted that it would guarantee the continuation of Kemalist
    reforms and secular ideology. A year later the military held
    parliamentary elections and banned Islamist parties from participating
    in the elections.

    At that time, the most powerful political Islamic figure was Necmettin
    Erbakan. In 1970, he established The National Order Party, and a year
    later, it was banned based on violations of secular articles in the
    constitution. In 1971, he established the National Salvation Party,
    but it closed in the wake of the 1980 coup. His Welfare Party was then
    established in 1983 with the hope that it would be able to join the
    parliamentary elections. Once again, this party was banned immediately
    after its inception. The ban was lifted in 1987, and Erbakan managed
    to rise to power and be the first Islamic Prime Minister in 1996 after
    his party won 21 percent of the vote.

    Erbakan's first oversees trips were to Libya and Iran, and he called
    on Muslim countries to form an EU-like club with their own currency,
    and challenge the long time Ataturkian symbol of secularism by calling
    for a lift of the ban on wearing headscarves in state schools and
    buildings. The army-controlled National Security Council warned
    Erbakan against undermining Turkey's secular characteristics. A year
    later, Erbakan was forced to step down and once again banned from
    politics for five years. His party members regrouped, however, and
    formed the Virtue Party in 1998 after which Islamic principles were
    again found to be unconstitutional and banned in 2001. During that
    period, the army effectively kept away any pro Islamic movements
    attempting to undermine Turkey's strict secularism and notably,
    without directly getting involved in politics itself.

    The Rise of Erdogan

    In 2001, Islamists led by RecepTayyip Erdogan, who had been briefly
    imprisoned for publicly reciting an old poem that supposedly incited
    religious hatred, formed the Justice and Development Party, known also
    as the AKP. In the 2002 elections, almost half of those eligible to
    vote decided to boycott the elections due to a mix of corruption
    scandals and worsening economic conditions. This circumstance led to
    Erdogan's party gaining power with 34 percent of the vote, and
    eventually allowed his party to grab 363 seats of the total 550 seats
    and form the first single party government in 11 years. The Kemalist
    Republican People's Party, or the CHP, was the only other party out of
    17 parties that managed to exceed the 10 percent threshold rule (the
    minimum for any party to enter Parliament). They came in second with
    19% of the vote and grabbed 178 seats.

    Unlike his Islamist predecessor, Erdogan quickly announced that his
    first official trips would be to several European countries, and he
    reiterated that joining the EU was his top priority. He also declared
    that the headscarf issue was not among his government priorities.
    However, Erdogan's feud with the military started just a few months
    after he settled into his new position. He pushed for a set of EU
    'harmonization packages' that would, rightly so, increase Turkey's
    chances to join the European Union. However, the reforms would also
    conveniently limit the military's powers and turned its political arm,
    The National Security Council, into a mere advisory body. In 2003, the
    bills were presented and approved by parliament, totally bypassing the
    military's National Security Council. (A procedure that Egypt's
    military is currently trying to block by enforcing Article 9 of the
    fundamental principles). The Turkish military was helpless at this
    point as the majority of Turks wanted to join the EU, especially the
    secularists. In addition, Erdogan did so little to promote any Islamic
    agenda that the military had no justification to intervene as it had
    earlier

    The 2007 Elections

    Right before the 2007 elections, Erdogan was eying the position of
    Ahmed Sezer, the fiercely secular President of Turkey whose term was
    about to end and he nominated his Foreign Minister, Abdullah Gul, for
    the job. After getting the parliament's blessing, the army threatened
    to intervene on its official website. This threat was known later as
    the Army's 'e-coup'. A few days later, as many as 1 million secular
    demonstrators took to the streets of Istanbul, and police had to fire
    teargas to disperse the crowd. Later on, the Constitutional Court
    supported the case against Gul's candidacy and forced the AKP to
    withdraw it. Erdogan called for earlier elections, and in them the AKP
    won 46.6 percent of the parliament majority with 341 seats.
    Immediately afterwards, Abdullah Gul became Turkey's president,
    becoming the first openly pious Muslim president in Turkey's modern
    history. As president, Gul also became the Commander-in-Chief of
    Turkey's armed forces.

    In 2008, the Constitutional Court accepted a case presented by the
    chief prosecutor to ban Erdogan's AKP and President Gul on accusations
    that they were undermining Ataturk's secular characteristics of
    Turkey. Both escaped this 'judicial coup' by a very thin margin, with
    10 out of 11 judges agreeing that the AKP was promoting anti-secular
    activities, but only 6 voting for the ban; 7 were needed for such a
    ruling. And only a fine was imposed.

    In 2009, new bills allowing senior Army officers to be prosecuted in
    civilian courts were introduced by the AKP and approved by parliament.
    AKP officials repeatedly declared that these new set of laws to
    produce a more democratic Turkey.

    In the same year, the Constitutional Court again defied the AKP and
    blocked a law approved by parliament to lift the ban on headscarves
    worn in public institutions. Two years later, the AKP introduced a new
    set of laws requiring parliamentary approval for banning parties and
    giving the president the power to choose 14 of the 17 members of the
    Constitutional Court. The president also gets to choose the Supreme
    Board of Judges and Prosecutors, the body that chooses court
    officials, giving the AKP an unprecedented control over the judiciary.

    2011 Elections: The End of a Nine-Year Battle

    After a sweeping victory by the AKP with 54 percent of the vote in the
    2011 elections, the offensive on the army continued with the detention
    of over 200 serving and retired military personnel on charges they
    were attempting to overthrow the AKP. This alleged coup was known as
    Operation Sledgehammer. Beaten and powerless, the senior commanders
    had no choice but to resign in July of 2011. Handpicked, pro-Erdogan
    generals replaced them all.

    Erdogan's next challenge, as publicly stated, was to rewrite the whole
    Constitution written by the military after the 1980 coup. He would
    have done it unilaterally had he won 65 percent of the vote, but now
    he has to seek the support of other parties. He also mentioned that he
    would like to replace the parliamentary system with a French-like
    presidential one. Since he cannot now run for a fourth term, it is
    suggested that he is eyeing a Putin-style position swap with Gul but
    with more powers as president. The Turkish tale is not over yet,
    however. Now that the AKP's popularity is still on the rise, the
    economy is stronger than ever, and the army is finally under AKP's
    control, we have yet to see how Turkey's story will finally evolve.

    'Simultaneous Extremes'

    Erdogan is surely one of the most brilliant political minds around. He
    is a one-of-a-kind man of 'simultaneous extremes'. Domestically, he
    appeals to Westerners and liberals through market openness, a liberal
    lifestyle, and what seem to be serious attempts to join the EU. At the
    same time he appeals to Islamists by easing the ban on headscarves at
    schools, opening government jobs to the clergies, appointing a former
    head of an Islamic bank as head of the Central Bank, establishing ties
    with Hamas and Iran, and taking sometimes extreme action, according to
    The Economist, like reopening an old church as a mosque, and a
    Taliban-style decapitation of an old statue on the Armenian border.
    Even internationally, his strategy is the same. He has managed to
    become Israel's Number 1 trading partner while still considered a hero
    among anti-Israel Arabs and Muslims. The much talked about Davos 'walk
    out' that protested the 2009 Gaza events, was actually followed by
    arms and trade agreements with Israel a few months later.
    Turko-Israeli trade indeed then soared by 30 percent after the May
    2010 flotilla events, and a year after those events, Erdogan cut all
    diplomatic ties with Israel. This pattern did not seem to make him
    less of a hero in the eyes of both Arabs and Muslims.

    Whether or not Erdogan has an Islamist agenda is not really the
    subject of debate in this article. It is rather the balance of power
    that has turned 180 degrees from the military to the AKP in only a few
    years. That change could not have happened without the steady increase
    in popularity of the AKP over three consecutive elections from 2002 to
    2011.

    The general Turkish population seems to be shrugging off AKP's
    sporadic pro-Islamist actions, harsh reaction to criticism, and jailed
    journalists, and decided to be more interested in a prospering economy
    and a growing global and regional influence. If there are any elements
    of fundamentalism in Turkey, then it is in the fiercely secular
    constitution established by Ataturk.

    In all fairness, women should be free to wear headscarves if they
    choose, and if they do, then they should have the right to be
    permitted inside government buildings and universities. After nine
    years in power, and aside from any conspiracy theories or possible
    hidden Islamist agendas; it seems that the government actions in
    general were more towards easing restriction on pious Muslims than
    adding restrictions on seculars.

    The Turkish population is definitely much richer with per capita
    income more than tripling since the AKP took control; and whether
    Erdogan really ever intended to join the European Union or not, Turkey
    is much closer to EU membership today than it was in 2002. In short,
    his growing power was earned, well-orchestrated and well-deserved.


    Egypt 2011

    In Egypt, the army should never give up its powers, not yet. Egypt
    could well become another Turkey, but it could also become another
    Afghanistan or Iran. The coming Islamist powers have no precedence,
    and are giving no guarantees about which direction they will take the
    country. The army's hand should be lifted gradually while it will
    still be able to intervene in case characteristics of civil states are
    undermined or minorities are threatened.

    At the same time, the army should understand that most segments of
    society have valid reasons not to trust it. It has promised to
    transfer power to civilians since 1952, but that has never happened.
    So the general lack of trust that exists is understandable. The army
    should work harder, let go of the prior regime's favorite 'keep people
    guessing' approach, and give clear guarantees that it's only goal is
    to protect the country and establish a democratic civil state. It
    should also keep all the necessary powers needed to specifically
    guarantee these goals.

    The MBs will need to understand that power comes from the people
    through achievements and gaining of trust. It does not derive from
    threats to take to the streets if their demands are not met. They also
    have to understand that real democracy will not be established in a
    day. Only fake democracy is established by taking advantage of the
    uneducated masses living in poverty and who are very gullible to
    religious slogans. Any vote has to be free from all of the above
    influences.

    Real democracy will also not be established by banning 3 million old
    opponents by calling them 'remnants' of the past regime, or by swiftly
    seizing power due to unprepared and inexperienced new opponents.

    A face-off between the MBs and the military is not in anyone's
    interest. Conspiracy theories aside, especially the ones circulating
    after the recent violent events and sectarian clashes, stability is
    what both should be pursuing. Their current gains were simply
    unimaginable just a year ago, and a clash could have disastrous
    consequences for them and also on an already deteriorating economy.
    (See article: "It's the economy, first").

    As for the liberal revolutionaries, who are surprisingly siding with
    the MBs on such issues as, attempting to ban all remnants (the only
    single force that can stand up against the MBs) forcing earlier
    elections before the constitution, and immediate trimming of the
    military powers - these liberals will have to discard the
    self-deceiving power trip they are on and quickly.

    They will need to understand their real size and influence over the 80
    million Egyptians, and acquire a real understanding of the threats
    lying around them. If they don't understand these issues today and
    then act on them with due speed, they surely will after the elections.
    But it just might be too late.

    Rahim ElKishky is the CEO of Information Technology & Services CO. He
    sits on the board of several other companies, including
    EMS-International Herald Tribune/Daily News Egypt. ElKishky holds an
    MBA in General Management from Boston University and a BA in Political
    Science from the American University in Cairo. Follow author on
    twitter @relkishky


    http://thedailynewsegypt.com/columnists/islamists-vs-military-turkeys-recent-history-and-egypts-near-future.html


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X