http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/2010/09/16/turkish-referendum-neo-ottomans-victorious/

Turkish Referendum: Neo-Ottomans
Victorious<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/2010/09/16/turkish-referendum-neo-ottomans-victorious/>

*by Srdja Trifkovic*
September 16th, 2010

Over the past eight years, Prime Minister Rejep Tayyip Erdoğan’s Islamist
government<http://www.balkanstudies.org/articles/neo-ottoman-turkey-hostile-islamic-power>and
his AKP (Justice
and Development
Party<http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/6563,news-comment,news-politics,stranglehold-of-turkey039s-islamic-akp>)
have been successful in undermining Mustafa Kemal’s legacy and the character
of the state founded upon that legacy. What remained, until last Sunday’s
referendum <http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20100912/wl_csm/325252>, was an
increasingly empty shell of constitutional secularism. That shell was
nevertheless an obstacle to the formal grounding of the new legitimacy in
Islam at home and neo-Ottomanism abroad. Erdoğan and his team were
determined to remove it, and on September 12 they succeeded. Turkey’s voters
approved, by a large margin, a 26-article package which will end the Army’s
role as the guardian of
secularism<http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/columnists/vote-foils-ataturks-vision-102841249.html>.
On current form, there is but little doubt that Erdoğan will be reelected
with a simple majority when he calls the general election next spring.

We are witnessing the end of a process that could be predicted with
precision. Seven and a half years ago I wrote in *Chronicles* (*The American
Interest*, April 2003) that the Bush Administration was mistaken to
pretend<http://books.google.com/books?id=55h7U32X3CIC&pg=PA83&lpg=PA83&dq=wolfowitz+indispensable+partnership+with+the+United+States+turkey&source=bl&ots=eUjKQ4pgUo&sig=en1v33gvQRZtPXiZpH_hDgJzrbg&hl=en&ei=vt-QTJXTEYWFnQfooo20DA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&sqi=2&ved=0CB8Q6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=wolfowitz%20indispensable%20partnership%20with%20the%20United%20States%20turkey&f=false>that
Turkey was “a truly indispensable nation” with an “indispensable
partnership with the United States,” a nation “central to building peace
from Southeastern Europe to the Middle East and eastward to the Caucasus and
Central Asia . . . crucial to bridging the dangerous gap between the West
and the Muslim world”:

In his pitch to the West Mr. Erdoğan is unsurprisingly eager to minimize his
party’s Islamic connections by stressing his “secular” and “conservative”
credentials. His assurances were keenly accepted in Washington . . . During
a recent trip to Turkey by The Rockford Institute’s fact-finding team we
were repeatedly warned that things were no longer as they used to be a
decade ago . . . The escalating crisis of Turkey’s economic and political
system over the past decade reflected a deeper malaise, the loss of
confidence of the old Kemalist elite. The implicit assumption in
Washington—that Turkey would remain “secular” and “pro-Western,” come what
may—should have been reassessed after the Army intervened to remove the
previous pro-Islamic government in 1997. Since then many voices . . . have
warned that “democratization” would mean Islamization, and that America
needed alternative scenarios and regional strategies.

*Plus ça change . . .* Erdoğan and his team now claim that the
constitutional reform approved last Sunday heralds the country’s
democratization. Practicing the Islamic art of the taqiyya in its purest
form, foreign minister Davutoğlu claims that the referendum was all about
advancing civil rights and Western-style
liberties<http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=fm-referendum-results-sign-of-nation8217s-will-for-more-democracy-and-freedom-2010-09-14>,
that it reflects “the Turkish nation’s will to live in a freer and more
democratic environment in compliance with European Union standards.” It is
“an important turning point for democracy in Turkey,” he says, and “a result
of the Turkish nation’s interest in the reform process carried out in light
of universal and European norms.” With an eye to Brussels, he also noted
that the amendments introduced “constitutional guarantees for positive
discrimination for women, children, the elderly and the disabled.”

Equally true to form, Washington’s self-deception is continuing. On Sunday
afternoon President Barack Obama praised the “vibrancy of Turkish democracy”
by citing high turnout in the referendum during a telephone conversation
with Erdoğan. On Monday State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said the
United States 
hopes<http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/news-221676-102-us-hopes-reforms-will-enhance-turkish-democracy.html>the
reforms endorsed on Sunday will “further enhance Turkey’s democratic
process and human rights protection.” Asked if he disagrees with the claims
of Turkish secularists that the changes will inhibit the judiciary’s ability
to “oversee” the executive, Crowley replied that this was, in fact, a
“decisive vote to move towards greater civilian oversight of these
democratic institutions . . . We respect that statement by the Turkish
people. And we hope that the government will, again, use this mandate to
deepen democratic processes in Turkey as well as guarantee human rights
protections.” Crowley ended by reiterating the US support for Turkey’s
membership in the EU. Obama’s and Crowley’s statements are insane,
confirming that those whom the gods wish to destroy, they first make mad.

The terminal loss of confidence of the old Kemalist elite is somewhat more
surprising. The lack of support in Washington is a factor, but more
important is the manner in which Erdoğan and the AKP had succeeded in
obtaining the compliance of the secularist elite in the crucial early years.
Turkey’s activist foreign policy has seduced them with the vision of an
autonomous sphere of Turkish influence in the old Ottoman domains in the
Middle East, the Caucasus, and the Balkans. It has enabled the Islamists to
co-opt into the project many senior civil servants, diplomats and generals
who are not sympathetic to the ideological assumptions of the neo-Ottoman
paradigm, but who were ready and willing to support its “quantitative”
aspects. They subscribed to the ostensibly traditional, nationalist
components of Davutoğlu’s neo-Ottoman concept of strategic
depth<http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_7057/is_3_9/ai_n28498505/>,
without realizing that it was a Faustian pact.

On the day of his appointment as Turkey’s foreign minister in May 2009,
Davutoğlu asserted that Turkey had an “order-instituting role” in the Middle
East, the Balkans and the Caucasus, quite apart from its links with the
West: “Turkey is no longer a country which only reacts to crises, but
notices the crises before their emergence and intervenes in the crises
effectively, and gives shape to the order of its surrounding region.” He
further declared that Turkey had a “responsibility to help stability towards
the countries and peoples of the regions which once had links with
Turkey”—thus explicitly referring to the Ottoman era, in a manner
unimaginable only a decade ago: “Beyond representing the 70 million people
of Turkey, we have a historic debt to those lands where there are Turks or
which was related to our land in the past. We have to repay this debt in the
best possible manner.”

For the sake of Turkey’s status as a first-rate regional power—pleasing to
their Kemalist-nationalist sensibilities—the secularist elite were prepared
to close their eyes to the fact that Islam is the all-encompassing
denominator of the project. Back in the fragile early days of 2002-2003 the
AKP leadership wisely grasped the need for the secularist nationalists to be
given a slot in the national consensus on Turkey’s multi-layered identity.
Those days are now over.

Many inherited Weimar officials, Wilhelmstrasse diplomats and top officers
of the Reichswehr were likewise not supportive of the Nazis when Hitler came
to power. During the crucial early years of the Third Reich (January
1933-January 1938), they were likewise willing to offer their services to
his *de facto* revolutionary project in the name of promoting traditional
German national interests and objectives. In early 1938 they were inevitably
swept away in a fresh wave of *Gleichschaltung*, heralded by the removal of
General von Blomberg and foreign minister Konstantin von Neurath.

With last Sunday’s referendum, Turkey’s Islamists are finally able to do the
same to the Kemalist civil service and army cadres. Their replacements,
steeped in Islamism and neo-Ottomanism, are being groomed at the lower
levels of the hierarchy as we speak. Their dilemma, for many decades before
Erdogan, had been to resist the lure of irredentism abroad, and at home to
turn Islam into a matter of personal choice separate from the state and
distinct from the society. It could not be done.


Dr. S. Trifkovic, Foreign Affairs Editor
CHRONICLES: A Magazine of American Culture
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?cat=4
www.trifkovic.mysite.com
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