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Turkey's Very Own Sun King

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  • Turkey's Very Own Sun King

    TURKEY'S VERY OWN SUN KING

    The Palestine Chronicle
    April 7, 2014

    By Jeremy Salt

    Turkey is in a turbulent and uncertain state. Street demonstrations
    are crushed with tear gas and water cannon. Protestors are killed
    without one policeman being charged. A 15-year-old boy dying 269
    days after being hit in the head by a tear gas canister is called a
    member of a terrorist organization by the Prime Minister without him
    providing a shred of evidence: of all the abusive remarks Erdogan has
    ever made, this must rank as the most truly contemptible. Evidence of
    massive corruption at the highest levels of government is followed
    by the 'reassignment' of prosecutors and more than 10,000 police
    in an apparent attempt to stifle investigations and destroy the
    'state within the state' (the Gulen movement). Direct control of the
    judiciary by the executive follows, along with the closing down of
    Twitter and You Tube to stop the flow of surreptitiously recorded
    conversations into the media. In one of the most recent leaks, the
    possibility of a false flag operation on a supposedly sacred Ottoman
    tomb in Syria is raised in conversation between the Foreign Minister,
    the head of the national intelligence organization (MIT), the deputy
    chief of the general staff and a senior Foreign Ministry official.

    The MIT head, Hakan Fidan, offers to launch a missile attack and send
    four men across the border to get things going.

    Sitting atop this steaming pile of political ordure is the Turkish
    Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's very own Sun King. His
    face is everywhere and his fingerprints are on everything. He is the
    government in this country. His supporters adore him. They roar their
    approval no matter what he says. He rules by division, turning one
    half of the country against the other and presenting himself as the
    victim of terrorists, atheists, the state within the state, leftists,
    marauders, holding companies and the interest rate lobby. Now we
    have the cat lobby, cats being blamed for power failures during the
    counting of votes after nationwide municipal elections held on March
    30. As power failed in more than 40 cities, towns and villages,
    the cats obviously organized themselves very well, sticking their
    paws or tails into electricity grids power and causing one shortage
    after another. Coincidentally, of course, electricity in all the
    affected areas is supplied by companies close to the ruling Justice
    and Development Party (AKP).

    Reports came in from across the country of ballot papers being burnt,
    of bundled up bags of ballot papers being found on rubbish dumps, of
    one person signing a mass of ballot papers and of AKP officials being
    inside polling stations while the votes were being counted. Thus,
    the official 46 per cent received by the AKP cannot be regarded as
    reliable. In some electorates the result was turned around after a
    recount but in the national capital, where AKP incumbent mayor Melih
    Gokcek officially received 44.7 per cent of the vote against 43.8
    per cent for the CHP's (Republican People's Party) Mansur Yavas,
    the head of the electoral body refused calls for a recount. Yavas
    says he is certain of electoral fraud and has appealed.

    In his election victory balcony speech, Erdogan warned his enemies
    of his pending revenge. He also raised the question of Syria, which
    he said 'is at war with us'. This was a crude inversion of the truth
    because it is Turkey, and specifically Erdogan, who is at war with
    Syria. He had choices three years ago and it was his choice to prolong
    the conflict in Syria by giving support to the armed groups in the
    campaign being waged against the Syrian state and society as part of
    the broader campaign against Iran by the collective calling itself
    the Friends of the Syrian People. Arms have poured across the Turkish
    border. The 'refugee' camps in Turkey teem with takfiri jihadis, free
    to move between the camps and crossing the border to fight and kill
    before returning to the food, blankets, heating and medicine provided
    by local and international aid agencies. When wounded they are carried
    back across the border and treated in Turkish clinics. Istanbul is a
    junction for takfiris - terrorists as they would be defined in any
    other circumstances by the governments supporting them - flying in
    from across the world. They walk to the domestic terminal and take
    the first plane to Antakya or Adana, where safe houses await them.

    Erdogan is in this war up to his neck. As he is not a man who steps
    back it can be assumed he is prepared to take it even further -
    anything rather than admit defeat. Were the Turkish people aware of
    what is going on, if they knew of the atrocities being committed by
    these takfiri marauders, including massacres, beheading, pillaging and
    the desecration of churches, they would not support this campaign but
    the sad truth is that they do not know the truth. The media, largely
    cowed and intimidated where it is not blatantly pro-government, has
    never even tried to unearth the depth of Turkey's involvement. Thus
    when Erdogan says 'Syria is at war with us' and rattles on about
    the slaps Turkey is going to give its enemies his supporters roar
    their approval.

    The most dangerous point along the Turkish-Syrian border right now is
    the western corner of Hatay province around the town of Yayladagi and
    the Sunni Muslim and Turkmen 'refugee' camps nearby. The Sunni Muslim
    camp is one of the most extreme of the camps, a corner of Afghanistan
    on the Turkish-Syrian border. The town and the camp teem with takfiri
    jihadis. The Yayladagi region appears to have been the jumping off
    point for the major offensive launched during the election campaign
    against the largely Armenian town of Kassab. First stop was to smash
    up the border post. Video shows armed men strolling across the border
    from Turkey without one policeman, jandarma or soldier in sight to
    stop them. A Turkish parliamentarian, Mehmet Ali Edipoglu, saw dozens
    of Syrian-plate cars transporting terrorists - as he called them -
    who were firing at the Kassab border post from the military road on
    the Turkish side.

    Pausing to scrawl 'Allahu Akbar' on the walls of the border post they
    moved on to the key strategic communications position of Observatory
    45 where an ecstatic henna-bearded Chechen was filmed praising God for
    the victory. Then it was on to the town of Kassab where they desecrated
    churches, pillaged apartments and smashed bottles of alcohol in the
    streets. Turkey has denied Syrian charges of providing logistical
    support and cover for the takfiris through tank and artillery fire
    across the border. The shooting down of a Syrian plane attacking the
    takfiris also took place during the first stages of the advance on
    Kassab. Against the Turkish government's claim that the plane was
    inside Turkish air space when it was hit stands the fact that the
    pilot ejected and landed far on the other side of the border.

    If the plane had been hit while in Turkish air space the pilot would
    have landed either in Turkey or just across the border where the
    takfiris would have killed him as they did the pilot of a helicopter
    shot down last September. There are no Syrian forces near the border
    and the pilot had to land well away from it to survive.

    Kassab is a picture postcard resort town set in hills overlooking
    the Mediterranean. It is a beautiful spot and the combination of
    an attack by fanatics allegedly backed by the Turkish government
    is a nightmare for Armenians. Of the town's 2000 population only a
    remnant remain. The rest have sought refuge in nearby safe cities
    or across the border in Lebanon. Kassab is only one example of the
    damage wrought by the armed gangs but the fact that it is Armenian has
    provoked outrage amongst Armenian communities around the world. Many
    Armenians are now said to be flying into Syria to join the fight
    against the armed groups. Against the claims of Turkish involvement
    in the attack on Kassab, the offer by Ahmet Davutoglu of a refuge for
    Armenians and the pictures of two elderly Armenian women transported
    across the border by the kind gentlemen of Jabhat al Nusra to whom
    they entrusted the keys of their house are grotesque.

    Thwarted by the way Bashar al Assad has resisted all attempts to
    destroy him, and defied his predictions three years ago that he would
    soon be gone, Erdogan may take the Syria campaign a dangerous step
    further. In the leaked conversation revealing consideration of a false
    flag operation reference was made to John Kerry and his apparently
    recent presentation of a detailed map for the establishment of a
    'no fly' zone in Syria. Open military intervention is possibly more
    likely because of US loss of face over the Ukraine. The Arab media
    is reporting that the US has opened an air corridor from Jordan to
    Antakya for the transit to the front line of large numbers of well-
    trained takfiri fighters, many Chechens and Saudis. Operations across
    the border near Yayladagi appear to be the opening of a new front
    in Assad's home province of Latakia. Out of weakness King Abdullah
    of Jordan has had to do what he is told but in Erdogan the US has a
    bullish partner who on many occasions has expressed his willingness
    to go all the way if the US decides on direct intervention.

    Recently the Turkish medical association issued a statement querying
    Erdogan's mental health. It is not surprising they should think this.

    Erdogan's behavior in recent years has become increasingly
    authoritarian, belligerent, vindictive, and hubristic. His primary mode
    of defence is attack. He rules by division. He divides black Turks
    (the poor) from white Turks (the secularized urban middle class)
    and blames the problems that have beset his government in the past
    year on a host of enemies out to undermine Turkey by attacking him.

    Among his hard core supporters it has worked. When he speaks
    they roar their approval. What do they care about Twitter, You
    Tube and Facebook? Many of them don't even use the internet, just
    like supporters of Erdogan's blood brothers in Egypt, the Muslim
    Brotherhood. When he says that the leaked conversation in which he
    tells his son Bilal to get rid of the hundreds of millions of dollars
    and euros stashed away in family houses is a montage they believe him.

    The undermining of the institutions of the state don't affect them
    at all. Erdogan gives them roads, bridges and cheap housing and they
    don't seem to care about the rest. Housing is real. Justice is an
    abstract. Erdogan is their man - their lion - and they urge him not
    to bow down.

    In any other country calling itself a democracy any one of the crises
    and scandals engulfing Turkey in the past year would have seen the
    government out of office within 24 hours. It would have been shamed
    into resigning by the pressure of public opinion or it would have been
    forced to resign through the use of a constitutional mechanism. In
    Turkey those who were ashamed have already resigned from the AKP
    parliamentary party or branches but they were few in number and the
    rest are sticking with the vote-winning Erdogan even though he has
    divided the country beyond any possibility of repair as long as he
    stays in office. According to AKP rules, having served three terms
    in parliament, he must stand down as Prime Minister this year. He
    can always change the rules and stay on or - perhaps more likely -
    he will run for the presidency.

    Erdogan has succeeded in wrenching Turkey from its traditional
    moorings. This is a mighty achievement but whereas Ataturk set the
    country on the path of modernization based on science and reason,
    Erdogan is driving it deeper into a reactionary religious future in
    which his 'pious generations' will have prevailed. Man's fate will not
    be decided rationally by man (or woman) but by the unpredictable whims
    of invisible entities flying around the celestial sphere with wings
    on their shoulders. While the people concentrate on the afterlife,
    the politicians and the businessmen will look after their interests
    in this one.

    Erdogan has sponsored a war on Syria that has caused immense
    destruction and loss of life, which, of course, true to form, he blames
    on someone else, Bashar al Assad. He has turned the southeastern region
    of his country into a mustering ground for armed men whose life view
    is death-based. Some are mercenaries and some are plain religious
    fanatics. Some are deluded young men led astray by self-described
    sheikhs who defame Islam with every word they speak and some are
    plain psychopaths but in the dirty business of destroying Syria they
    are in combination perfectly suited to the task at hand.

    There is not a 'moderate' amongst them. In any other circumstances the
    governments of the US, France, Britain and Turkey would not hesitate
    to call them terrorists. When active on their own soil or threatening
    their own interests, they do.

    If the US asks Erdogan to step up to the plate and turn his country
    into a launching pad for a direct military attack on Syria behind the
    cover of a 'no fly' zone or a 'humanitarian corridor' he has indicated
    many times before that he will do it. Whatever he does inside his own
    country is one thing, but beyond Turkey's borders, Erdogan competes
    with Benyamin Netanyahu for the title of most dangerous man in the
    Middle East.

    - Jeremy Salt is an associate professor of Middle Eastern history and
    politics at Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey. He contributed this
    article to PalestineChronicle.com.

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