Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Why Davutoglu's Armenian Adviser Angered AKP Deputies

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

  • Why Davutoglu's Armenian Adviser Angered AKP Deputies

    WHY DAVUTOGLU'S ARMENIAN ADVISER ANGERED AKP DEPUTIES

    Al-Monitor
    Dec 9 2014

    Author: Mustafa Akyol
    Posted December 8, 2014

    On Oct. 25, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu appointed an
    unexpected name as his "top adviser" in political matters: Etyen
    Mahcupyan, a prominent public intellectual of Armenian descent.

    This was widely seen as a wise decision, because Mahcupyan, with his
    newspaper column and regular TV appearances, has been one of the
    most sophisticated defenders of the Justice and Development (AKP)
    government in the midst of many crude attempts. The inclusion of an
    Armenian voice in the top echelons of the Turkish government was also
    seen as a prudent decision on the eve of the centennial of the ethnic
    cleansing of Armenians from Anatolia in 1915.

    Etyen Mahcupyan is one of the renowned "secular liberals" who supported
    the AKP government against the secular Kemalist establishment in the
    first decade of this century. (He always refused the term "liberal,"
    though, and declared himself a "democrat.") Many of those liberals
    gradually became disappointed with what they saw as the AKP's
    authoritarian turn, and increasingly turned into critics, if not
    outright opponents, in the last few years. However, Mahcupyan kept his
    support for the AKP solid. During the confrontation between the AKP
    and the Gulen movement, which was the definitive matter throughout
    2014, Mahcupyan solidly supported the AKP, despite the fact that
    he was then a columnist for Zaman, the flagship paper of the Gulen
    movement. No wonder he resigned from Zaman in June and moved on to
    Aksam, one of the several pro-AKP newspapers.

    However, the very sophistication of Mahcupyan soon proved a bit too
    much for some AKP folks. Mahcupyan appeared on a TV show on CNNTurk
    Nov. 25, and answered some tough questions about the government. When
    asked about corruption, he replied: "Corruption is not totally
    baloney."

    He added: "But when [pro-AKP] people put this [corruption] on
    one side of the scale and what happened on Dec. 17-25 [corruption
    investigations] on the other side, the latter proved more dangerous
    and corruption became mundane. They [pro-AKP people] did not want
    to risk a coup for the sake of going after corruption. Quite the
    contrary, they accepted living with corruption for a while to
    avert the coup threat. There were two evils and they had to choose
    the lesser one. They made a rational choice, and it was clear that
    they would make this choice. Turkey is going through a very serious
    transformation. It is not willing to risk what it has gained in the
    past decade with one stroke."

    To some, this sounded like a realistic defense of the AKP position.

    However, to some AKP members, it sounded too realistic. Two deputies
    from Ankara, Zelkif Kazdal and Fatih Sahin, wrote angry tweets against
    Mahcupyan. "No one has the right to cast any suspicions on the AKP and
    AKP governments," Kazdal said. Another AKP deputy, Mehmet Metiner, who
    is also a frequent media face for the party, also warned Mahcupyan,
    asking, "What logic does he serve?" Everybody, Metiner, argued, had
    to "talk according to the requirements of their office." In return,
    Mahcupyan wrote a note to Metiner in his column in Aksam, implying
    that he will not "distort facts to comply with the official position."

    Metiner responded with fury, telling Mahcupyan to be "wise."

    In all this tit for tat, Mahcupyan deserves respect for not "distorting
    facts," and openly acknowledging that Turkey's ruling party has a
    big problem with corruption. If he keeps on being this frank, he will
    probably get more reaction from the more propagandist voices of the
    AKP, but also perhaps make a contribution to Turkey's shamelessly
    Machiavellian political culture.

    However, I believe that Mahcupyan is also contributing to the same
    Machiavellian culture on a different level: By arguing that "law"
    is not a value that transcends politics, and thus easily disregarding
    law for the sake of supporting the "correct" political project.

    This led Mahcupyan to two gross mistakes over the years. The first was
    his rigorous support for the "coup cases" against the military and its
    secularist allies between 2008 and 2012. The so-called Ergenekon, or
    "Sledgehammer," cases put hundreds of officers along with dozens of
    academics and journalists in jail. More objective observers warned
    that these cases were turning into "witch hunts," but some Turkish
    "democrats," including Mahcupyan, insisted that they were all
    justified, and had to go on "until the end."

    Their fundamental error was to care more about the political results
    of these "coup cases" rather than their legal contents. ("These
    cases are needed to save Turkey from military rule," they kept
    telling us, disregarding the fact that some of the "evidence"
    looked too overblown.) Their belief in a political project (called
    "democratization") made them disregard the universal criteria of law,
    such as the presumption of innocence and the benefit of the doubt.

    Then, in the second round of the same drama, came the corruption
    investigations of Dec. 17-25, 2013. For figures such as Mahcupyan,
    again, the key matter was not the legal content of the cases, but
    their probable political results. The investigations could have led
    to the resignation of some AKP executives and led to a decline in
    the party's votes. This, they said, amounts to a "coup," and thus
    they supported the blocking of the cases by the government.

    In fact, Mahcupyan is aware of the meaning of his stances on these
    matters, and that is probably why he wrote several articles arguing
    that there is no such thing as "universal law." "Law does not have
    the supra-political or nonpolitical role that is ascribed to it," he
    claimed in one his recent pieces, targeting one of the assumptions of
    "liberal democracy." He also reminded that societies "turn their faces
    from law to politics in eras of critical transformation." Elsewhere,
    he defined Turkey's current "critical transformation" as a "people's
    revolution." The underlying lesson was that we had to put politics
    above law, especially in such glorious moments.

    No one can say such arguments by Mahcupyan are dishonest or shallow.

    But I find them erroneous and dangerous, because they help justify
    the hegemony of politics over values that I indeed consider as
    "supra-political" such as human rights, rules of justice and freedom.

    History teaches us that "revolutions" that disregard these values
    "temporarily," supposedly for the sake of a better future, end
    up rather creating a "permanent revolution." In the meantime, the
    "revolutionary" political power, unrestrained by any higher law, ends
    up creating a Leviathan that recognizes no rights other than its own.

    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/12/turkey-davutoglu-armenian-adviser-corruption.html

Working...
X