Boycott Israel [IslamCity] Generals rattle their sabres in Turkey --from al-ahram weekly

2006-10-14 Thread S A Hannan





Dear members,
 
Assalamu Alaikum. Please see this report on Turkey from Al-Ahram 
weekly. What is the history of this insolance of Turkish Army  and who back 
them from behind for their arrogance?. Obviously not friends  of Islam or 
Turkey.
 
Shah Abdul Hannan
 


  
  

  
Generals rattle their sabres
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan last week scrambled 
to defuse growing tensions with the country's new hardline high command 
as the Turkish military once again began to flex its political muscles, 
reports Gareth Jenkins from Ankara 


Last week, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan announced 
plans to establish a network of formal and informal contacts with the 
country's powerful military in order to try to defuse tensions in the 
run-up to presidential and parliamentary elections in 2007.
Erdogan's announcement follows a series of public statements 
by top commanders in recent weeks warning that the secular Turkish 
republic was under threat. On 3 October, in a speech carried live on 11 
national television channels, the new Chief of Staff General Yasar 
Buyukanit accused leading members of the government of trying to 
undermine secularism and reiterated the military's determination to 
combat what he described as religious fundamentalism. In a country where 
the military has staged four coups in the last 46 years, most recently 
in 1997, few are prepared to treat the warning lightly.
Since it took power in November 2002, the moderate Islamist 
Justice and Development Party (JDP) has been viewed with deep suspicion 
by most of the Turkish military. But Buyukanit's predecessor General 
Hilmi Ozkok, who was chief of staff from August 2002 to August 2006, 
enjoyed a relatively cordial working relationship with the JDP, adopting 
a low-key public profile while Erdogan resisted pressure to push through 
measures demanded by the JDP's grassroots supporters.These include 
easing restrictions on religious education and lifting the ban on women 
in headscarves attending university, or working in state 
institutions.
One of the reasons for Ozkok adopting such a low profile was 
that, unusually for a leading Turkish commander, he was a deeply devout 
Muslim himself and thus less worried by a moderate Islamist government. 
The other was that he was aware that any direct military interference in 
politics could jeopardise Turkey's chances of EU 
membership.
But Ozkok was an exception. Very few in the Turkish military 
share his sanguine view of the JDP. In recent years, most have been 
biding their time, waiting for Ozkok to retire and relying on Turkish 
President Ahmet Necdet Sezer, himself a staunch secularist, to use his 
presidential veto to keep the JDP in line. But Sezer is due to step down 
in May next year and is expected to be replaced either by Erdogan 
himself or by someone else with strong Islamist sympathies. While 
problems in Turkey's relations with the EU mean that not only is 
accession becoming an increasingly distant prospect, but as well, that 
public support for the EU is also plummeting. The most recent opinion 
polls suggest that only around 45 per cent of the Turkish population now 
support EU membership, down from 78 per cent two years ago. With little 
to lose and in the absence of an effective political opposition in 
parliament it is not just hardliners in the military who are looking to 
their commanders to curb the perceived Islamist ambitions of the JDP, 
many civilian secularists are too. 
There is a widespread fear that if a suitable candidate can 
be appointed to the presidency, the JDP government will attempt to push 
through a series of measures to placate its pious grassroots in the 
run-up to parliamentary elections, which are expected to be held in 
early autumn 2007.
When he took over as chief of staff at the end of August, 
Buyukanit was under immense pressure to deliver a stern warning to the 
government. So far, he has not disappointed expectations in this 
direction. After Buyukanit spoke on 3 October, retired General Hussein 
Kivrikoglu, who served as chief of staff from 1998 to 2002, was quoted 
in the Turkish media as declaring that: "At last our four-year silence 
has been broken."
Last week, Erdogan announced that he would try to ease the 
military's concerns by sending ministers to give formal briefings to 
leading generals. Informal contacts have been encouraged meanwhile, 
between members of the government and the military at social o

Re: Boycott Israel [IslamCity] Generals rattle their sabres in Turkey --from al-ahram weekly

2006-10-16 Thread Shaikh Hyder



Turkish generals and politicians are trying to compromise with the commands of Allah and Allah has humiliated them.  They have been called the "sick man of Europe" after the dissolution of Khilafat.       Now they are licking the boots of Western Europeans for the last 20 years to be made full member of Europe, and they have failed, while new comers from the former Communist countries are embraced as brothers -- because they are their christian cousins.     Allah will bestow upon  all those who sell the Din of Allah, more humiliations.  "S A Hannan"@yahoo.com wrote:Dear members,     Assalamu Alaikum. Please see this report on Turkey from Al-Ahram weekly. What is the history of this insolance of Turkish Army  and who back them from behind for their arrogance?. Obviously not friends  of Islam or Turkey.     Shah Abdul Hannan     Generals rattle their sabres  Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan last week scrambled to defuse growing tensions
 with the country's new hardline high command as the Turkish military once again began to flex its political muscles, reports Gareth Jenkins from Ankara   Last week, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan announced plans to establish a network of formal and informal contacts with the country's powerful military in order to try to defuse tensions in the run-up to presidential and parliamentary elections in 2007.  Erdogan's announcement follows a series of public statements by top commanders in recent weeks warning that the secular Turkish republic was under threat. On 3 October, in a speech carried live on 11 national television channels, the new Chief of Staff General Yasar Buyukanit accused leading members of the government of trying to undermine secularism and reiterated the military's determination to combat what he described as religious fundamentalism. In a country
 where the military has staged four coups in the last 46 years, most recently in 1997, few are prepared to treat the warning lightly.  Since it took power in November 2002, the moderate Islamist Justice and Development Party (JDP) has been viewed with deep suspicion by most of the Turkish military. But Buyukanit's predecessor General Hilmi Ozkok, who was chief of staff from August 2002 to August 2006, enjoyed a relatively cordial working relationship with the JDP, adopting a low-key public profile while Erdogan resisted pressure to push through measures demanded by the JDP's grassroots supporters.These include easing restrictions on religious education and lifting the ban on women in headscarves attending university, or working in state institutions.  One of the reasons for Ozkok adopting such a low profile was that, unusually for a leading Turkish commander, he was a deeply devout Muslim himself and thus less worried
 by a moderate Islamist government. The other was that he was aware that any direct military interference in politics could jeopardise Turkey's chances of EU membership.  But Ozkok was an exception. Very few in the Turkish military share his sanguine view of the JDP. In recent years, most have been biding their time, waiting for Ozkok to retire and relying on Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer, himself a staunch secularist, to use his presidential veto to keep the JDP in line. But Sezer is due to step down in May next year and is expected to be replaced either by Erdogan himself or by someone else with strong Islamist sympathies. While problems in Turkey's relations with the EU mean that not only is accession becoming an increasingly distant prospect, but as well, that public support for the EU is also plummeting. The most recent opinion polls suggest that only around 45 per cent of the Turkish population now support EU membership, down from 78
 per cent two years ago. With little to lose and in the absence of an effective political opposition in parliament it is not just hardliners in the military who are looking to their commanders to curb the perceived Islamist ambitions of the JDP, many civilian secularists are too.   There is a widespread fear that if a suitable candidate can be appointed to the presidency, the JDP government will attempt to push through a series of measures to placate its pious grassroots in the run-up to parliamentary elections, which are expected to be held in early autumn 2007.  When he took over as chief of staff at the end of August, Buyukanit was under immense pressure to deliver a stern warning to the government. So far, he has not disappointed expectations in this direction. After Buyukanit spoke on 3 October, retired General Hussein Kivrikoglu, who served as chief of staff from 1998 to 2002, was quoted in the Turkish media as
 declaring that: "At last our four-year silence has been broken."  Last week, Erdogan announced that he would try to ease the military's concerns by sending ministers to give formal briefings to leading generals. Informal contacts have been encouraged meanwhile, between members of the government and the military at soc