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Erdogan won the presidency with an unsustainable majority

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  • Erdogan won the presidency with an unsustainable majority

    Erdogan won the presidency with an unsustainable majority

    By MICHA'EL TANCHUM
    08/16/2014 22:40


    president-elect Erdogan's election strategy offers no solution for
    structural contradiction between meeting rising Kurdish expectations,
    maintaining Turkish right-wing nationalist support.

    Presidential candidate SELAHATTIN DEMIRTAS speaks during an election
    rally in Diyarbakir, days before he lost the Turkish electionPhoto:
    REUTERS
    President-elect Recep Tayyip Erdogan secured his margin of victory
    with a last-minute appeal to Turkish nationalist voters, having failed
    to expand his support among Kurds despite significant overtures on
    Kurdish issues.

    President-elect Erdogan faces an ineluctable choice between expanding
    his `Kurdish Opening,' moving Turkey closer to becoming a binational
    state, and assuaging right-wing Turkish nationalism.

    Neither choice bodes well for a Justice and Development Party (AKP)
    majority in Turkey's 2015 parliamentary elections. The AKP will be
    hard put to manage rising expectations among Turkey's Kurds while
    retaining Turkish nationalist support.

    Seeking a first-round victory in the presidential elections to claim a
    popular mandate for transforming the presidency into an administrative
    position with strong executive powers, Prime Minister Erdogan actively
    sought to expand his voter base among Turkey's Kurds, who are believed
    to account for around 20 percent of the population. Erdogan became an
    advocate of teaching Kurdish in schools as an elective language. Most
    significantly, Erdogan's government is conducting a dialogue with
    Abdullah Ã-calan, the imprisoned leader of the outlawed militant
    organization, the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). The Kurdish Opening
    of the AKP government has put a halt to a 30-year insurgency that has
    cost over 40,000 lives. The peace talks enjoy broad public support,
    but the expectations of the Kurdish political movement ` chief among
    them the release of Ã-calan from prison ` causes consternation among
    Turkey's nationalist camp.

    The talks with Ã-calan have been conducted through the auspices of
    Turkey's intelligence chief Hakan Fidan. Civilian politicians were
    legally prohibited from contacts with the banned PKK.

    To demonstrate the AKP government's earnestness about the
    negotiations, one month before the August 10 elections, the Turkish
    Parliament approved legislation creating the legal framework for
    Turkish politicians to engage in the peace talks.

    Although the Kurdish political movement focuses on state recognition
    of Kurdish identity and of the Kurdish language, the Kurdish
    population in Turkey is not monolithic. While the dominant political
    orientation prioritizes a secularist discourse of human rights, the
    more conservative elements among the Kurds prioritize Muslim
    solidarity. Erdogan's Islamic conservatism attracts votes from the
    latter but alienates the former. Erdogan's Kurdish Opening nonetheless
    created the potential for him to collect a much larger share of the
    Kurdish vote. At the outset of the presidential campaign, this seemed
    likely as the main opposition candidate Ekmeleddin Ä°hsanoglu, who was
    nominated by the two major opposition parties, the Republican Peoples'
    Party (CHP) and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), and held very
    little appeal for Kurdish voters. Ä°hsanoglu came across as a
    traditional Turkish nationalist.

    However, the entry into the presidential race of Selahattin Demirtas,
    the dynamic Kurdish human rights lawyer and co-chair of the People's
    Democratic Party (HDP) created a new complication for Erdogan. Being
    the first Kurdish candidate for major national office, Demirtas could
    credibly appeal to the AKP's core base of Kurdish support. Less than
    three weeks before the election, Dengir Mir Mehmet Firat, a Kurd and a
    former deputy chairman of the AKP ` announced his support for
    Demirtas.

    Prior to Firat's announcement, Sertaç Bucak, the leader of the
    Kurdistan Democratic Party `Turkey (KDP-T) had declared his support
    for Erdogan and his opposition to Demirtas on a Kurdish television
    program broadcast from Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan. Yet the successful
    campaign that Demirtas ran made clear that Erdogan would not be
    expanding his vote base among the Kurds; at best Erdogan could expect
    to receive roughly the same number of Kurdish votes as the AKP
    traditionally had garnered in previous elections.

    It was against this background that Erdogan toward the end of the
    presidential campaign made an eleventh-hour appeal to the Turkish
    nationalist base of the MHP. Dissatisfaction with his handling of the
    Syria and Iraq conflicts in addition to the Kurdish issue has been
    brewing among this base. In mid-July, discontent over Turkey's large
    Syrian refugee population developed into protests and violent attacks
    against the refugees.

    The advance of the jihadist organization ISIS (the Islamic State of
    Iraq and Syria, now simply the Islamic State or IS) into Iraq's Mosul
    region also has potential internal political implications. While
    Turkey has allowed over one million Syrian refugees to cross its
    borders since the civil war began, it refused to allow Turkmen
    refugees from the IS captured city of Sinjar to enter Turkey, which is
    incomprehensible to Turkish nationalists.

    It can also be assumed that right-wing Turkish nationalist voters are
    provoked by the cooperation of the Turkish government with the Kurdish
    Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq. Comments made to Financial Times on
    June 28 by the AKP's deputy chairman Hüseyin Çelik seemed to offer
    tacit support for a future KRG declaration of independence.

    However, with the commencement of hostilities between Hamas and Israel
    in the beginning of July, Erdogan was able divert public attention by
    stoking popular discontent against Israel's military operations in
    Gaza. Amid the prime minister's ratcheting up of anti-Semitic and
    anti-Israel rhetoric, little attention in Turkey was paid to the July
    11 seizure of the oil-rich city of Kirkuk by the Peshmerga forces of
    the KRG. The jewel in the crown of Kurdish territorial ambitions,
    Kirkuk is home to a sizable Turkmen population and Kurdish control of
    Kirkuk had been an important red line for Turkish foreign policy. Much
    to shock of the Turkish nationalist camp, Ankara quietly acceded to
    KRG control of Kirkuk.

    On August 4, prominent MHP deputy Sinan Ogan was physically beaten by
    AKP deputies during a parliamentary session after Ogan questioned the
    AKP government's lack of assistance to Iraqi Turkmen facing IS
    attacks. AKP supporters attacked Ogan on social media and the MHP
    deputy received death threats.

    Ogan subsequently accused Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu of
    whitewashing Turkey's policies in Iraq. Appalled by the fact that
    PKK-affiliated fighters were enlisted to protect Turkmen refugees in
    the Shinjar mountains, Ogan declared `This is a well-orchestrated
    effort by Davutoglu, who is legitimizing [past] PKK terror [against
    Turks] by portraying the PKK as heroes safeguarding Turkmens.

    ...This is a policy that contains nothing right from the beginning.'

    Facing such right-wing nationalist discontent, Erdogan engaged in the
    politics of sectarian and ethnic polarization to peel away voters from
    the MHP. At an August 2 rally, Erdogan baited the CHP leader Kemal
    Kiliçdaroglu, appealing to anti-Alevi antipathies among the MHP's
    Sunni voter base. During his speech, Erdogan exhorted, `Kiliçdaroglu,
    you may be an Alevi. I respect you. Don't be afraid of it. Say it
    openly. I am Sunni and I say it comfortably. No need to hesitate.

    There is no need to try to mislead the people.' Because the Sunni
    bonafides of the joint CHP-MHP candidate Ekmeleddin Ä°hsanoglu were
    unassailable, Erdogan's focus on Kilicdaroglu's Alevi background was a
    savvy sectarian attempt to make MHP voters identify Ihsanoglu as the
    candidate of the Alevis.

    When asked about his comments during an August 5 live television
    broadcast, Erdogan further appealed to ethnic prejudices within the
    Turkish nationalist camp by responding with anti-Armenian remarks: `In
    Turkey, anyone who is a Turk should say he is a Turk, a Kurd should
    say he is a Kurd.

    What is wrong with that? They said so many things about me. They said
    I am Georgian. Excuse me, but they said something even uglier. They
    said I am an Armenian. But I am a Turk.'

    Such remarks may very well have helped to attract MHP voters; indeed,
    the votes cast for Erdogan on August 10 in the strongholds of MHP
    across central Anatolia were noticeably higher than the percentage of
    votes that the AKP received in the March 30, municipal elections.

    Although ethnic and sectarian appeals helped him gain the Çankaya
    Presidential Mansion, president-elect Erdogan's election strategy
    offers no sustainable solution for the structural contradiction
    between meeting rising Kurdish expectations and maintaining Turkish
    right-wing nationalist support.

    Turkey's security and economic interests are impelling Ankara to
    deepen its cooperation with the Kurdish Regional Government in Iraq
    that plans to hold a referendum on independence in the near future.
    Turkey needs strong relations with Erbil as a buffer against IS as
    well as Iran. Once the planned Transanatolian pipeline (TANAP) is
    completed, the KRG could supply 10 billion cubic meters of natural gas
    to Turkey to meet its skyrocketing demand and ease its dependence on
    Russian imports.

    Ankara's close cooperation with the Kurdish government in Erbil will
    increase the already heightened expectations among Turkey's Kurds for
    full language and cultural rights and some form of local autonomy.
    President-elect Erdogan thus faces an ineluctable choice between
    expanding his Kurdish Opening, which will move Turkey closer to
    becoming a binational state, and continuing to assuage right-wing
    Turkish nationalism. Neither choice bodes well for an AKP majority in
    Turkey's 2015 parliamentary elections. The AKP will be hard put to
    manage rising expectations among Turkey's Kurds while retaining
    Turkish nationalist support.

    The author is a Fellow at the Shalem College, Jerusalem, and at the
    Middle East and Asia Units of the Hebrew University's Truman Research
    Institute for the Advancement of Peace. He also teaches in the
    Department of Middle Eastern History and the Faculty of Law at Tel
    Aviv University.

    This article was first published in the Turkey Analyst
    (www.turkeyanalyst.org), a biweekly publication of the Central
    Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program Joint Center.


    http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Erdogan-won-the-presidency-with-an-unsustainable-majority-371286

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