President Recep Tayyip Erdogan |
The
failed coup in Turkey on July 15-16 has done exactly what many
experts predicted: It’s given Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan a green light to implement the next stage of his plan to turn
the country into an Islamic state. After quelling the insurgent
military rebels, Erdogan did the following in short order:
Detained
42 journalists.
Arrested
or suspended 57,000 soldiers, police, judges and civil servants
suspected of complicity in the coup.
Arrested
62 children for treason from a military school. They were jailed and
not allowed to speak with their parents.
Tortured
detainees, according to Amnesty International.
What’s
at stake is a long-time strategic relationship that has been pivotal
to U.S. national security interests for decades.
Turkey
has been a particularly important NATO ally of the United States
because of its strategic geographic location between the Black Sea
and the Mediterranean. It was a key military base for the U.S. in the
Middle East from the start of the Cold War up to the fight against
ISIS. Turkey’s Incirlik air base was used by U.S. warplanes
launching attacks against Iraq after its invasion of Kuwait.
Incirlik
was also used to enforce the no-fly zones in Iraq before the 2003
invasion.
More
recently, the U.S. and Turkey have been at odds over the use of
Incirlik in the war against ISIS. Erdogan was worried that strikes in
Iraq would benefit the Kurds, who have long sought independence from
Turkey. The relationship cooled but quickly recovered, even though
the U.S. watched with dismay as the democratically elected Erdogan
began to act as an autocrat after he was elected in 2014.
Turkey
has escalated its purge of government officials in the aftermath
of the failed coup, with nearly 50,000 public servants now affected
as of July 20, 2016.
Erdogan’s
Islamic Rule
For
about 80 years, Turkey’s army maintained a dominant role in its
politics. It organized coups to force the country’s politicians to
adhere to the army’s secular vision of Turkey. But in 2001, a
conservative Islamic party founded by the current Turkish president
Recep Tayyip Erdogan won the election.
Gradually,
Erdogan intensified Turkey’s Islamic identity and removed many
secular generals and colonels from the army. In the meantime,
Turkey’s economy experienced steady growth, which enhanced
Erdogan’s popularity. Turkey’s status as a main player in the
Middle East has been boosted as well. Erdogan was considered by many
Turks and foreigners as an able statesman who earned his people’s
and the world’s respect.
Erdogan
had an ally who was, in a way, a spiritual leader for many Islamist
Turks. Fethullah Gulen, who now resides in Pennsylvania, helped
Erdogan erase the secular influences by trying and convicting army
officers, judges, police officers, academics and journalists for
alleged conspiracy against the government. Gulen’s men replaced the
secularists in these many sectors.
The
inevitable power struggle between the two men resulted in a broken
alliance and by 2013, Gulen and Erdogan were enemies. Gulen’s men
started fixing cases against Erdogan’s men in power. Erdogan
started a house cleaning to remove Gulen’s men from the army,
police, judiciary and the press.
Gulen
built what 60 Minutes called “‘The Gulen Movement’ -- with
millions upon millions of disciples who compare him to Gandhi and
Martin Luther King. Gulen promotes tolerance, interfaith dialog, and
above-all: he promotes education. And yet he's a mystery man -- he's
never seen or heard in public -- and the more power he gains, the
more questions are raised about his motives and the schools.”
Who
Was Behind the Coup
In
any coup, the rebels need to arrest or kill the country’s leaders,
take control of the main radio or TV stations, and seize key
locations and facilities to prevent any countercoup forces from
mobilizing.
The
coup failed to arrest or kill Erdogan, who managed to mobilize his
supporters to take to the streets, and only partially succeeded in
the second and the third tasks. It also lacked national and foreign
support.
The
Turkish government has accused Gulen of masterminding the coup and
has demanded that the U.S. hand him over, but Kerry has refused. The
failed coup has further soured the Turkish-American relationship. But
the coup is simply not Gulen’s style. His movement’s signature
strategy is to set the stage for its followers to occupy key
positions, not to take power by force.
Conspiracists
accuse Erdogan himself of orchestrating the coup to solidify his grip
of power, arrest all of his remaining opponents, and pass
constitutional amendments that gives the president more executive
powers.
However,
it’s hard to imagine that Erdogan would risk shaking the security
of his government for these gains. More than 230 people were killed,
and 1,500 others were injured during the coup. The Incirlik air base
was shut down. Turkey ’s future has never been at risk in the way
it is today.
The
most likely scenario is that some followers of the Gulen movement
staged an ill-prepared coup without consulting with their leader
because they felt threatened by Erdogan. The latter’s recent steps
of revoking the sentences against secular army officers and
academics, consolidating with Russia and Israel among others, and
granting the army officers immunity from prosecution may have been
badly interpreted by some of Gulen’s followers.
What
Next for Turkey and the United States?
Even
before the failed coup, the Obama administration signed a defense
agreement with the Iraqi Kurds to support the Kurdish forces in
return of their participation in liberating Mosul in northern Iraq
from ISIS. The agreement will boost the Kurdish aspiration of
independence. This is the last thing Turkey wants.
In
the aftermath of the coup, a major ally of the United States that was
once considered a model of harmony between Islam and the West is
almost completely lost to an authoritarian religious dictatorship.
The country will move further away from the West and closer to the
sectarian conflicts of the Middle East.
Source: Riyadh
Mohammed,The Fiscal Times
Turkey’s Erdogan Cleans House to Form a More Perfect Islamic State
Reviewed by E.A Olatoye
on
July 26, 2016
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