by Caroline B. Glick
Today’s Turkey is a cautionary tale for the West. But Western leaders are loath  to consider its lessons.
Ever since Turkey’s Islamist Justice and  Development AKP party under Recip Tayip Erdogan won the November 2002 elections,  Western officials have upheld the AKP, Erdogan and his colleagues as proof that  political Islam is consonant with democratic values. During Erdogan’s June 2005  visit to the White House, for instance, then-president George W. Bush praised  Turkish democracy as “an important example for the people in the broader Middle  East.”
Unfortunately, nine years into the AKP’s “democratic” regime it is  clear that Erdogan and his colleagues’ embrace of the language and tools of  democracy was a mile wide and an inch thick. They used democracy to gain  power. Now that they have power, they are systematically destroying freedom in  their country.
Turkey ranks 138th in the international media freedom  group Reporters Sans Frontieres country index on press freedom. Sixty-eight  journalists are languishing in Turkish jails for the crime of doing their job.  The most recent round-up of reporters occurred in early March. And it is  demonstrative of Turkey’s Islamist leaders’ exploitation of democratic freedoms  in the service of their tyrannical ends.
As Der Spiegel reported last  week, veteran journalists Ahmet Sik from the far-left Radikal newspaper and  Nedim Sener from the highbrow Milliyet journal were among those rounded up. As  radical leftists, both men oppose the AKP’s Islamist politics. But they shared  its interest in weakening the Turkish military.
The Left opposed the  military’s constitutional role as the overseer of Turkish democracy because the  military used that role to persecute leftists. The AKP party opposed the  military’s power because it blocked the party’s path to Islamizing Turkish  society and politics. When the AKP turned its guns on the military it used  leftist journalists to support its actions.
This collusion came to a head  in 2007. In a bid to destroy the legitimacy of the military, the AKP regime has  engaged in unprecedented levels of wiretapping of the communications of senior  serving and retired generals.
This wiretapping operation preceded the  exposure in 2007 of the so-called Ergenekon conspiracy in which senior military  commanders, journalists, television personalities, entertainers and  businesspeople have been implicated in an alleged attempt to topple the AKP  government. As part of the Ergenekon investigation, over the past four years,  hundreds of non-Islamist leaders from generals to journalists have been arrested  and held without trial.
Ironically, Sik, who is now accused of membership  in the Ergenekon plot, was an editor at the leftist weekly magazine Notka that  “broke” the conspiracy story.
As Der Spiegel notes, the arrest of Sik and  Sener shows that the AKP’s early embrace of investigative reporters and  championing of a free press was purely opportunistic. Once Sik, Sener and the  other 66 jailed reporters had finished discrediting the military, the regime had  no need for them. Indeed, they became a threat.
Both Sik and Sener have  recently written books documenting how Turkey’s version of the Muslim  Brotherhood, the Fetulah Gulen network, has taken over the country’s security  services.
In an interview this month with the opposition Hurriyet Daily  News and Economic Review, former Turkish president Suleyman Demirel warned that  the AKP has established “an empire of fear” in Turkey.
TURKEY’S DESCENT  into Islamist tyranny has not simply destroyed freedom in Turkey. It has  transformed Turkey’s strategic posture in a manner that is disastrous for the  West. And yet, in this arena as well, the West refuses to notice what is  happening.
Earlier this week the US Ambassador to Ankara Francis  Ricciardone gave an interview to the Turkish media in which he romantically  upheld the US-Turkish partnership. As he put it, “Our interests are similar.  Even if we have different methods and targets, our strategic vision is the  same.”
Sadly, there is no way to square this declaration with Turkish  policy.
This week it was reported that NATO member Turkey is opening  something akin to a Taliban diplomatic mission in Ankara. Turkey supports Hamas  and Hizbullah. It has begun training the Syrian military. It supports Iran’s  nuclear weapons program. It has become the Iranian regime’s economic lifeline by  allowing the mullahs to use Turkish markets to bypass the UN sanctions  regime.
In less than 10 years, the AKP regime has dismantled Turkey’s  strategic alliance with Israel. It has inculcated the formerly tolerant if not  pro- Israel Turkish public with virulent anti-Semitism. It is this systematic  indoctrination to Jew-hatred that has emboldened Turkish leaders to announce  publicly that they support going to war against Israel.
The Turkish  government stands behind the al- Qaida- and Hamas- linked IHH group. IHH  organized last year’s pro-Hamas flotilla to Gaza in which IHH members brutally  attacked IDF naval commandoes engaged in a lawful mission to maintain Israel’s  lawful maritime blockade of Gaza’s coast. With the support of the Turkish  government, IHH is now planning an even larger flotilla to assault Israel’s  blockade of Gaza next month.
Actually, in a sign of the intimacy of its  ties to the AKP regime, this week IHH announced it is considering postponing the  next pro-Hamas flotilla in order to ensure that its illegal pro-terror campaign  will not harm the AKP’s electoral prospects in Turkey’s national elections  scheduled for June.
American and other Western officials have argued that  it would be wrong to distance their governments from Turkey or in any way  censure the NATO member because doing so will only strengthen the anti-Western  forces in the anti- Western government. Instead, Western leaders have done  everything they can to appease Erdogan.
The US even allowed him to invade  Iraqi Kurdistan.
Unfortunately, this appeasement policy has only harmed  the West and NATO. Take the behavior of NATO’s Secretary-General and former  Danish prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen. As Denmark’s prime minister,  Rasmussen stood up boldly to the Islamists when they demanded that he apologize  for the Danish newspaper Jyllands Posten’s publication of caricatures of  Muhammad in 2005. Yet when Turkey threatened to veto his appointment as NATO  secretary-general in 2009 over the Islamists’ rejection of free speech,  Rasmussen abandoned his strong defense of Western liberal values to placate the  Turks.
In a humiliating speech Rasmussen said, “I was deeply distressed  that the cartoons were seen by many Muslims as an attempt by Denmark to mark or  insult or behave disrespectfully towards Islam or the Prophet Muhammad... I  respect Islam as one of the world’s major religions as well as its religious  symbols.”
Rasmussen then proceeded to appoint Turks to key positions in  the alliance.
Far from reining in Turkey’s anti-Western policies, by  maintaining Turkey in NATO Western powers have been forced to curtail their own  defense of their interests.
NATO’s incoherent mission in Libya is case in  point. It can be argued that Germany’s large and increasingly radicalized  Turkish minority played a role in German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s decision to  risk her country’s good ties with Britain and France and refuse to support the  Libyan mission. So, too, it was reportedly due to President Barack  Obama’s deference to Turkey that the US failed to support the anti-regime forces  until Gaddafi organized a counteroffensive against them. So if as appears  increasingly likely, Gaddafi is able to survive the NATO-backed insurgents’ bid  to overthrow him, he will owe his survival in no small measure to  Erdogan.
TURKEY IS a cautionary tale for the West, which is now faced  with the prospect of AKP-like regimes from Egypt to Tunisia to Jordan to the  Persian Gulf. And the real issue that Western leaders must address is how things  in Turkey were permitted to deteriorate to the point they have without any US or  European official lifting a finger to stem the Islamist tide? The answer, it  would seem, is a combination of professional laziness and cultural weakness.  This mix of factors is also on display in the US’s behavior toward the  revolutionary forces active throughout much of the Arab  world.
Professional laziness stands at the root of the West’s decision  not to contend with the unpleasant truth that the AKP is an Islamist party whose  basic ideology has more in common with Osama bin Laden’s values than with George  Washington’s. This truth was always available. Erdogan and his colleagues  did not make any special efforts to hide what they stand for.
The West  chose not to pay attention because its senior officials knew if they did, they  would have to do something. They would have had to distance themselves from  Turkey, remove Turkey from NATO and seek to contain the power of the Erdogan  regime. And this would have been hard and unpleasant.
So, too, they knew  that if they noticed the nature of the AKP they would have to throw themselves  deep into Turkish society and defend the superiority of Western values over  Islamist values. They would have had to locate and support Turkish  leaders who are willing to adopt Western values and then cultivate, fund and  empower them. This also would have been hard and unpleasant.
Likewise, in  post-Mubarak Egypt, it is easier to believe fairy tales about Facebook  revolutions and Westernized student leaders than face the harsh truth that from  Amr Moussa to Mohamed ElBaradei to Yousef Qaradawi there are no leaders in  post-Mubarak Egypt who support the peace with Israel or believe that Egypt has  common interests with Israel and the US. There are no potential leaders in Egypt  who share Western values of individual liberty and human rights.
And as  in Turkey, the price for recognizing these inconvenient facts is taking  effective action to counter them. As in Turkey, the West will be forced to do  hard things like develop a policy of containing rather than engaging Egypt, and  of identifying and cultivating forces in Egyptian society that are willing to  embrace John Locke, John Stuart Mill and Adam Smith over Hassan al-Banna and  Qaradawi.
Rather than do any of these hard things, Western leaders have  lied to themselves about the nature of these forces and regimes. They have told  themselves that there is no problem with the likes of Erdogan and his Egyptian  cohorts, and opted to limit their meddling in the internal affairs of others to  endless attempts to undermine and overthrow successive pro- Western, democratic,  non-leftist governments in Israel. These governments, they have argued, must be  replaced by leftist parties in order to feed the West’s fantasy that all the  problems of the region, all its Qaradawis and Erdogans, will magically become  Thomas Jeffersons and John Adamses if Israel would just cut a deal with the  PLO.
This fantasy is convenient for lazy Western cultural cowards. They  know that there will be no pushback for their policies. Israel won’t attack  them. And by pretending the Islamists share their values and strategic interests  they are free to take no action to defend their values and strategic interests  from Islamist assault.
But while this strategy has been convenient for  policymakers, it has done great damage to their countries. The growing menace  that is Islamist Turkey teaches us that professional laziness and cultural  squeamishness are recipes for strategic  disasters.
Original URL: http://www.jpost.com/LandedPages/PrintArticle.aspx?id=216704
Caroline B. Glick
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors. 
 
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