Dear Members,

Assalamu Alaikum.Please see my comments  in third brackets on this highly 
prejudicial article  against Islamic trend and  in particular about Turkish 
islamists.This is a  totally biased article.Fortunately Islamists now can 
decipher their intrigues in the name of psydo scholarship



Shah Abdul Hannan
  Turkey in the throes of Islamic revolution?
  By Spengler    AsiaTimes.com   21/7/08

  Turkey is half pregnant with political Islam, if one believes Western foreign 
ministries and the mainstream press. Its Islamist government last week arrested 
82 alleged coup plotters from Turkey's military and intellectual elite, on the 
strength of a secret indictment of 2,445 pages. Turkish media have offered 
fanciful allegations linking the secular leaders of the alleged "Ergenekon" 
plot to al-Qaeda as well as the violent Kurdish Workers' Party. Among those 
detailed are pillars of the secular establishment, including the head of the 
Ankara Chamber of Commerce and the Ankara editor of the country's leading daily 
newspaper, Cumhuriyet. 

  Before shouting "Reichstag Fire!" in a crowded theater, one should read the 
indictment, when and if it is made public. A few Western analysts, such as 
Michael Rubin at the American Enterprise Institute, are warning [1] that an 
Islamic putsch is possible, after the fashion of ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's 
1979 Islamic revolution in Iran. The question of the moment, though, is not 
whether mass arrests of civic leaders on charges that challenge the imagination 
are compatible with Turkey's image as a democratic nation, but rather why the 
world's media have printed very a harsh word about the administration of Prime 
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. 

  A perfect storm of enmity has come down on the beleaguered Turkish 
secularists, who find themselves without friends. That is a tragedy whose 
consequences will spill over Turkey's borders, for the secular model 
established by Kemal Ataturk after World War I was the Muslim world's best hope 
of adapting to modernity. Many years of misbehavior by Turkey's army and 
security services, the core institutions of secular power, have eroded their 
capacity to resist an Islamist takeover. 


  [This is a biased view.The writer is supporting such un-democratic and 
dogmatic secularism.kamal pasha established a dictatorship and this and his 
abusive rule and secularism he thinks to be best hope for the Muslim world]

  The United States State Department, meanwhile, has found a dubious use for 
what it thinks is a moderate strain of political Islam. Washington apparently 
hopes to steer Turkey into a regional bloc with the short-term aim of calming 
Iraq, and a longer-term objective of fostering a Sunni alliance against Iran's 
ambition to foment a Shi'ite revolution in the Middle East.

   [To foment a Shia revolution in the Middle east is another propaganda ]

  By rejecting Turkey's efforts to join the European Union, France and Germany 
have destroyed the credibility of the secular parties who seek integration with 
the West. Perhaps the Europeans already have consigned Turkey to the ward for 
political incurables, and do not think it worthwhile to try to revive 
Western-oriented secularism. Turkey's liberal intellectuals, who suffered 
intermittent but brutal repression at the hands of the secular military, think 
of the Islamist government as the enemy of their enemy, if not quite their 
friend. 

  Sadly, the notion that moderate Islam will flourish in the Turkish nation 
demands that we believe in two myths, namely, moderate Islam and the Turkish 
nation. Too much effort is wasted parsing the political views of Erdogan, who 
began his career in the 1990s as an avowed Islamist and anti-secularist, but 
later espoused a muted form of Islam as leader of the Justice and Development 
Party (AKP). Whether Erdogan is a born-again moderate or a disguised jihadi is 
known only to the man himself. Islam in Turkey flourishes in full public view. 
At the village level, the AKP draws on the same sort of Saudi Arabian patronage 
that filled Pakistan with madrassas (seminaries) during the past two decades, 
and incubated the Wahhabi forces that have now all but buried the remnants of 
Pakistani secularism. 
  [Erdogan is doing what was possible .The military would not allow any formal 
islamic party, if they would then there would be no problem .Turks have been 
trained with the connivance of the West to worship Kamal Pasha because this 
would serve the West in blocking Islam, howsoever democratic it might be .]

  If political Islam prevails in Turkey, what will emerge is not the same 
country in different coloration, but a changeling, an entirely different 
nation. In a 1997 speech that earned him a prison term, Erdogan warned of two 
fundamentally different camps, the secularists who followed Kemal, and Muslims 
who followed sharia. These are not simply different camps, however, but 
different configurations of Turkish society at the molecular level. Like a 
hologram, Turkey offers two radically different images when viewed from 
different angles. Turkish Islam, the ordering of the Anatolian villages and the 
Istanbul slums, represents a nation radically different than the secularism of 
the army, the civil service, the universities and the Western-leaning elite of 
Istanbul. If the Islamic side of Turkey rises, the result will be 
unrecognizable. 

  Modern Turkey is a construct, not a country in the sense that Westerners 
understand the term; it is the rump of a multi-ethnic empire that perished in 
World War I, and the project of a nation advanced by a visionary leader who 
could not, however, pierce the sedimentary layers of ethnicity, language and 
history that make modern Turkey less than the sum of its parts. Turkey's army 
prevailed as the dominant institution of the secular state simply because no 
other entity could carray the poor farmers of the Anatolian highlands according 
to the secular program.

   [ Unfortunately West would hardly condemn this disguised military 
dictatorship and interference in political affairs]

  The trouble is that there are not that enough Turks in Turkey. To replace the 
imperial identity of the Ottoman Empire, Kemal proposed Turkum, or Turkishness, 
an Anatolian national identity founded on the many civilizations that had ruled 
the peninsula. Ethnic identity in the sense of European nationalism informed 
neither the Ottoman Empire nor the Kemalist state. The Orghuz Turks who 
conquered the hinterlands of the Byzantine Empire during the 12th century never 
comprised more than a small minority of the population. At the height of their 
conquests during the 17th century, the Ottoman Empire ruled over more 
Christians than Muslims. 

  Kemal created modern Turkey by thwarting the attempts of Western powers to 
partition his country after its defeat in World War I, but at terrible cost. 
The 20 million population of the Ottoman Empire was reduced to perhaps 7 
million (by a French government estimate) in 1924. Up to a million and a half 
Armenian Christians were murdered in 1914-1918 at the instigation of the 
Turkish government, to neutralize a population considered sympathetic to 
wartime adversaries. Most of the killing was done by Kurdish tribesmen. Between 
1.5 million and 3 million Greek Orthodox Christians, whose ancestors had 
settled Asia Minor thousands of years before the Turks arrived, were expelled 
in 1924 at the conclusion of the Greek-Turkish War. 

  Modern Turkey thus began not only with the rump of an empire, but with the 
turnover of nearly half its 1924 population. Because Kemal's concept of Turkum 
requires suspension of disbelief in favor of a nonexistent national identity, 
Turkey has avoided a census of its minorities since 1965. Perhaps 30% of its 
population are Kurds, whose integration into the Turkish state is uncertain. 
Kurds are concentrated in eastern Turkey in an area that before 1918 was known 
as Western Armenia - because ethnic Kurds replaced the slaughtered Armenians. 
In addition, there are 3 million Circassians, 2 million Bosniaks, a million and 
a half Albanians, a million Georgians, and sundry smaller groups. But even 
within the majority characterized as "ethnic Turks", the sedimentary layers 
remain of millennia of contending tribes and civilizations. 

  The Kemalists had mixed results in their efforts to pack this ethnic and 
cultural jumble into a newly-designed national identity. What sometimes is 
called the "deep state" - the secretive Kemalist hold over military and 
intelligence services - may turn out to be shallow as it is brittle. One 
Turkish historian told me, "Like the Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid, who fell 100 
years ago this week because of an explosion of popular unrest, the Turkish 
military are the victims of their own success in creating a diversified and 
modern society which wants to live in a freer system. The hard hand they turned 
against intellectual dissenters drove sections of the westernized 
intelligentsia into the arms of the Islamists - and it is that alliance which 
is now at work to demolish both the military's influence in politics and 
(perhaps) the entire heritage of Kemal Ataturk." 

  Like its Ottoman predecessors, the Kemalist establishment recognized its 
danger far too late. This year, the country's Constitutional Court attempted to 
ban Erdogan's AKP for attempting to undermine the secular state. It seems 
probable that the suppression of the supposed coup plot constitutes the AKP's 
response, as well as a pre-emptive action against the last-resort tactic of the 
secularists, namely military intervention to prevent Turkey from sliding into 
Islamism. 

  Turkey presently is composed of 70 million people who do not quite know who 
they are. If the hologram rotates towards Islam, that is, a return to sharia 
and traditional life in opposition to modernity, Turkey will no more resemble 
the "moderate Muslim" state of 2008 than Kemal's Turkey resembled the Ottoman 
Empire of 1908. According to one Turkish analyst, "The Islamic movement in 
Turkey is a vast and varied coalition of which the AKP is only the nose cone. 
It was designed to look studiously moderate and allay the suspicions both of 
the military and of world opinion. Some sections of the AKP are undoubtedly 
moderates or pragmatists and deserve their moderate reputation. But alongside 
the party, there is an enormous groundswell of Islamic movements, at work 
transforming Turkish society and institutions. Successful revolutionaries tend 
to be those who conceal their intentions until the hour of victory: if anyone 
in the AKP intends to move towards sharia it is unlikely that they would be 
shouting this from the rooftops." 

  It should be no surprise that the State Department looks favorably on 
Turkey's Islamist drift: that is precisely how Foggy Bottom viewed Iran in 
1979, when it sped the overthrow of the shah. It appears that the United States 
and Saudi Arabia, each for its own reasons, are doing their best to propel 
Turkey on the way to Islamism. Saudi Arabia's support for Islamist 
organizations at the grassroots level is an open secret in Turkey, and the 
influence of Erdogan's AKP at the village level stems to a great extent from 
Saudi patronage. 

  Less subtle is the burgeoning importance of Gulf state contracts for the 
Turkish economy. Turkey has two main sources of external business: consumer 
goods exports to Europe, and contracting as well as exports in Dubai in the 
United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. Economic conditions are deteriorating in 
Turkey, and the country's stock market is the worst performer this year among 
emerging markets. With Europe in recession, and prospects fading for Turkish 
entry into the European community, Saudi Arabia looms larger in the Turkish 
economy, strengthening Erdogan's hand among the business elite. 

  Washington's immediate concern is the appearance of stability in Iraq, which 
will influence the November presidential elections in the US. As a self-styled 
moderate Sunni, Erdogan seems to be Central Casting's idea of an Iraqi ally. 
Erdogan received an extraordinary welcome when he visited Iraq last week, with 
the promise of an economic and political alliance with the country. 

  An Iraqi spokesmen, Ali al-Dabbagh, declared after Erdogan's visit that 
"Turkey is Iraq's door to Europe", adding that Turkey "can be the best trade 
partner of Iraq", according to the BBC on July 13. Even more, "The security and 
political dimensions are also of paramount importance because the two countries 
are on the road to democracy. Turkey is a democratic country and democracy has 
started to take roots in Iraq ... I think this relationship will be a large 
nucleus around which other countries will rally so that the region will develop 
into a common market benefiting its peoples." 

  Less dramatic, but perhaps more important than the mass arrests, was another 
development in Turkey. The country's Supreme Court dismissed all charges 
against the exiled Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, the man Michael Rubin 
believes will be Turkey's answer to Khomeini. State prosecutors had accused 
Gulen of founding an illegal organization with the objective of undermining the 
secular structure of the state. An elderly diabetic, Gulen has lived in exile 
in the United States since 1998. "We expect Gulen here any day," a Turkish 
analyst told me. Whether Rubin is correct to view Gulen as the Turkish Khomeini 
is of secondary interest. Gulen's movement is one of a number of entities that 
might form the kernel of an Islamic Republic in Turkey. 

  The Sorcerer's Apprentices of the State Department do not understand the sort 
of objects that they are animating. Political Islam will not merely change 
coloration of the country, but transform its character from the grassroots 
upward. For all the crudeness of the Kemalists, American diplomats will regret 
their failure as much as the fall of the Shah.


   [ I do not want to comment further on this totally biased 
article.Fortunately Islamists now can decipher their intrigues in the name of 
psydo scholarship]

  Note 
  1. Turkey's Turning Point National Online, April 14, 2008.
  
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