Turkey

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Re: Turkey

Post by blindpig » Sun Jul 06, 2025 5:22 pm

Turkey must leave NATO, expel foreign military bases, says Communist Party

The presence of NATO poses a greater threat to regional and Turkish security as it is dragged into unnecessary wars which promote only the interests of big capital, the TKP claims.

July 03, 2025 by Abdul Rahman

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"NATO is a coup instigator, NATO is an occupier, NATO is a conspirator," said the TKP in a statement. Photo: TKP

Turkey must withdraw from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and end the presence of all foreign military bases in the country immediately, demanded the Communist Party of Turkey (TKP), in a statement on Wednesday, July 2.

Withdrawal from NATO is “essential to ensure the security of our people and the full exercise of sovereignty of our country,” the TKP said, claiming that NATO drags Turkey and its people into unnecessary wars around the globe.

Prior to the statement, the TKP and several other left organizations in Turkey launched a massive mass movement against their country’s membership of NATO. They organized a large protest in Istanbul for the same on Sunday, June 29.

NATO Türkiye’den Çıksın!

NATO’yu sorgulamanın, NATO’dan çıkılması için gerçek hamleler yapmanın zamanı geldi. NATO’nun da Türkiye’den çıkmasının zamanı geldi.

NATO’dan çıkılması için NATO’dan zarar gören halkımız inisiyatif almalıdır. NATO darbecidir, NATO işgalcidir, NATO… pic.twitter.com/gAMT8TflfC

— TKP – İstanbul (@istanbul_tkp) June 29, 2025

On Thursday, the party also launched a social media campaign explaining how NATO has been a threat to global peace for decades now.

In its statement, the TKP claimed that NATO has been making Turkish people “party to all its crimes” around the world without their consent. Turkish people have no interest in wars waged by NATO as they are mainly to save the interest of “international capital” and “multinational corporations.”

NATO has been using Turkey in its pursuit to establish the military dominance of the leading imperialist powers over the rest of the world ever since it joined the military collective in 1952, the party said.

NATO was formed in 1949 as a collective security organization of countries mostly in Western Europe and North America. It was aimed primarily against the Soviet Union and Turkey’s inclusion was linked to the fact that it shared physical borders with it. NATO has remained in existence and ever expanded its membership despite the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 and strong opposition from certain countries. People opposed to NATO question its relevance today. Some countries have called it a major challenge to global peace and security.

Read more: NATO becoming an even greater threat to humanity and global peace, says China
NATO – which has been responsible for the US “occupation of Korea, the dismemberment of Yugoslavia and the destruction of Syria” among so many other wars and conflicts around the world, the TKP argued – is an instrument of imperialism.

By using Turkish soil for its military campaigns in different countries, to provide military support to Israel and for installing a nuclear arsenal, NATO has made Turkey a legitimate target of attacks and put millions of Turkish people at risk, the TKP claimed.

The presence of NATO also favors authoritarian and anti-people regimes all over the world. “In line with the interests of imperialism and international capital, NATO has developed a habit of interfering in the domestic affairs of other countries”, and helps suppress all kinds of dissent to ensure the longevity of the oppressive regimes in power, the party noted.

End of all foreign military bases
There are around 30 NATO and US military bases in Turkey and the government in Turkey has virtually no control over them. This, apart from compromising the country’s sovereignty, also makes it vulnerable in so many ways.

The TKP accuses its so-called NATO allies of being indifferent to Turkey’s own interests and time and again forcing the country to compromise itself.

NATO acts as a “fifth column” particularly within the country’s armed forces and other state institutions and plays a key role in blocking popular assertions and mobilizations for a sovereign and free Turkey through “coups, political assassinations, plots and sabotage,” the TKP claimed.

There are over 2,000 US military personnel in the country in all its bases. Several of its bases, such as one in İncirlik, have been used by the US to launch attacks on Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria in the past. During the Cold War the same base was used to launch surveillance and reconnaissance missions against the Soviet Union.

Another one at Kürecik is a radar base in Malatya. It played a significant role in providing early warnings to Israel about missiles launched from Iran during the recent war. Its AN/TPY-2 radar installed in 2012 “plays a critical role in US military interventions in our region,” the TKP pointed out.

NATO bases are used to defend Israel and provide support to its military operations. NATO’s base in Konya for example is used to train Israeli pilots. Çiğli Air Base in İzmir, the TKP argues, has missiles targeted and intended for Turkish and Greek people.

Despite the bases’ locations inside the country, Turkey has no control over them and most of the activities against other countries happen without the knowledge of its government, the TKP claimed.

“Our country constantly faces the risk of being dragged into wars and conflicts beyond our control. Turkey must withdraw from these illegitimate agreements and must immediately terminate all foreign military presence on our soil,” the TKP demanded.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/07/03/ ... ist-party/
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Re: Turkey

Post by blindpig » Fri Jul 18, 2025 1:49 pm

The 2016 Coup Attempt Revisited: Türkiye’s Transformation and Its Regional Impact
Posted on July 17, 2025 by Curro Jimenez

Türkiye is a key regional player in West Asia, Eastern Europe, the Eastern Mediterranean, Central Asia, and East Africa. Its geographical position makes it a unique bridge between Europe and Asia. What happens in Türkiye reverberates throughout the region. Yet it remains a deeply misunderstood country.

One reason for this misunderstanding is that its power structure has been in constant flux since the founding of the Republic. This is not unique to Türkiye—governments everywhere evolve, and sometimes radically.

The U.S. transformed its republic through the Civil War and later through the New Deal. Russia transitioned from tsarist autocracy to Soviet communism to post-Soviet authoritarianism. France is now in its Fifth Republic. Germany has shifted through multiple systems of governance. China evolved from imperial rule to communism, and now blends authoritarianism with capitalism.

Türkiye’s own power structure is undergoing transformation. That is the thesis of Selim Koru in his book New Turkey and the Far Right. According to him, Erdoğan is working to dismantle the Kemalist Republic to establish a new system of governance. This change also affects Türkiye’s perceived role in the Middle East and its relationships with other countries—especially the U.S.

Recently, the PKK—the Kurdish nationalist guerrilla group designated as a terrorist organization by both Türkiye and the West—has begun laying down arms after 40 years of conflict. This follows a relentless military campaign by the Turkish government, but more crucially, it comes after the fall of Assad and the establishment of a new, U.S.- and Türkiye-aligned government in Syria.

The PKK is more than a CIA pawn. Its founder, Abdullah Öcalan, proposed the concept of “democratic confederalism,” which deserves consideration. But he has been jailed since 1999, and the CIA has used the movement as a proxy against both Türkiye and Assad. Now, with the Syrian Democratic Forces—essentially the PKK in Syria—being asked to integrate into Syria’s new national army, the broader PKK structure appears to be disarming.

This development alone merits analysis, but the focus here is its signal: the renewal of U.S.-Türkiye relations. Since the July 15, 2016 coup attempt, ties had been strained. The unresolved issue of the F-35 fighter jet sale to Ankara—linked to Türkiye’s purchase of Russia’s S-400 missile system—exemplifies the tension.

Now, with Trump and Erdoğan calling each other “friends,” the renewed alliance raises a broader question: Is the U.S. considering Türkiye, not Israel, as its future hegemonic ally in the Middle East?

This becomes more plausible if we consider that the U.S. itself may be undergoing a political redefinition. J.D. Vance recently delivered a speech at the Claremont Institute—a California think tank he considers formative—in which he challenged the foundational ideals of the U.S. Declaration of Independence. He dismissed the notion that the country is based on a shared creed, arguing instead for unity rooted in ancestry and land.

This is a fundamental change in how the nation is defined. Such a fundamental change seems to be the aim of Erdoğan and his movement, a central tenet of which has been rewriting the Turkish constitution, especially the opening points, which define Türkiye as a Kemalist, secular republic.

The trend that both the U.S. under the Trump administration and Türkiye are following toward government iteration is not exclusive; it appears to be part of an international shift toward single-party political structures with a powerful figure at the helm. This is the case in Russia, China, India, and others.

In Türkiye, this trend crystallized after the July 15, 2016 coup attempt—though not as many expected. Erdoğan’s largely civilian government had to integrate elements of the secular military elite, resulting in a hybrid civilian-military regime. This had a major consequence: the ruling AKP, Erdoğan’s party, began reviving and paying homage to Mustafa Kemal and Kemalist principles. The goal of dismantling the Kemalist order may have been delayed in the short to medium term for political survival, but the long-term objective might remain unchanged.

The July 15, 2016 Coup Attempt

The coup was real—despite claims that Erdoğan staged it (a theory mostly rooted in personal opposition to him). It was, however, unlikely to succeed. The real questions are when the President and his administration learned of it, and whether they allowed it to unfold as a pretext to eliminate an internal threat.

That threat was Fethullah Gülen’s movement—allegedly supported by the CIA—and defined by Turkish officials as operating as a “state within a state.” To understand the coup, we must understand the deeper shift it triggered in Türkiye’s power structure.

The term “deep state” originally described the post-Atatürk Turkish power structure. After Atatürk’s death, a military junta emerged, committed to preserving a secular, Kemalist republic. While political parties were allowed from the mid-20th century, they had to play by the junta’s rules. If a party deviated, the military would intervene via coups.

This happened several times—most notably in 1960, 1971, 1980, and 1997. The 1997 coup is a good example of the dynamics that led to these coups, as it deposed Necmettin Erbakan, the leader of the Welfare Party, which was based on Islamic values.

Since the foundation of the Republic, Atatürk had waged a war against the Islamic identity of the Turkish people, seeking to replace it with a national identity. This created social tension, given that Türkiye is a Muslim-majority country—a tension still felt today.

Erdoğan’s rise to power was founded on unprecedented popular support based on upholding the Islamic identity of the Turkish people. It’s difficult to understand why without noting that traditional political parties in Türkiye—including the CHP (Atatürk’s People’s Republican Party)—were not founded in grassroots social movements, but rather by Turkish elites in parliament. Erdoğan’s AKP, inheriting the Welfare Party legacy, changed that.

The rise of Erdoğan’s AKP in politics came through an alliance with another organization that did not seek political office but built power through education, media, business, and bureaucratic appointments: Fethullah Gülen’s movement. This alliance helped counterbalance the Kemalist military’s power.

Leading up to the coup, three actors held real power: the AKP, Gülenists, and elements of the Kemalist military. Other actors either coalesced around these three or lacked influence.

Now comes the controversial part. The claim—impossible to document conclusively—is that the Gülenist movement was funded and guided by the CIA. Gülen was connected in the 1960s to a U.S.-backed Turkish “Anti-Communist League” before becoming a state preacher. His meteoric rise to a near cult-like empire spanning the Turkic states, the Balkans, and Africa is difficult to explain without some form of state support—the kind Türkiye could not provide at the time.

The Gülenist movement’s ideology is a mix of Western philosophical principles with Islamic terminology and favors neoliberal capitalism. It promotes the West as a societal model. It’s easy to see how expanding this ideology through schools, universities, and media in Muslim-majority countries—or countries with significant Muslim populations, like South Africa—would be a clever CIA strategy to counter alternative Islamist narratives less favorable to U.S. interests. Gülen’s U.S.-based schools (over 100 at one point) and lobbying activities support this hypothesis.

The CIA’s interest was clear: keep Türkiye aligned with U.S. interests. The military was nationalistic and wary of foreign influence, while Islamist actors like Erdoğan looked East as well as West. That was seen as a threat.

This theory is widely accepted among Turkish intellectuals, politicians, and even the Russian government. The U.S.’s protection of Gülen since 1999, its refusal to extradite him, and its unwillingness to label his movement a terrorist group all add weight to the claim.

The Turkish government has claimed U.S. involvement in the 2016 coup attempt through Gülen. The Turkish press reported that CIA-linked personnel, such as Henri J. Barkey, conducted secret meetings the night of the coup. The U.S., of course, denied this—but it would not have been the first time it meddled in Turkish politics.

Some argue the CIA was not actually linked to the coup—in fact, that they did not expect it. Common wisdom held that, after Erdoğan had conducted extensive purges in the military and judiciary, his party was stronger than ever, and the military would not risk it. The coup was solely the action of Gülenists who felt cornered after years of conflict with the AKP. But if the CIA did not know or approve of it, then it created the conditions for it to happen.

The confrontation between the AKP and Gülen’s movement began around the time of the so-called “Arab Spring.” The Western narrative says that once they had purged much of the secular elite from the judiciary and military, they turned against each other. It’s true that they had very different ideologies from the start—it was a marriage of convenience (it is well known that Gülen and Erdoğan disliked each other)—but the reason becomes clearer when considering Gülen’s CIA links.

The fight began during the Arab Spring and the 2013 Kurdish Peace Process. In both cases, Türkiye’s position ran counter to U.S. interests. Achieving peace with the PKK would have neutralized an important U.S. proxy in the region, and Erdoğan supported Islamist organizations in Tunisia, Libya, and most importantly, Egypt. He tried to export the AKP’s model of an Islamic-political organization. The agenda was to reshape the Middle East under Turkish influence, according to then-Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu’s vision, explained in 2011 at a “Turkey Investor Conference: The Road to 2023” organized by Goldman Sachs.

This was not in the interest of the U.S.—nor of Israel—because it excluded Israel and positioned Türkiye as the hegemonic power. In February 2012, a prosecutor accused Hakan Fidan, then head of Turkish intelligence, of having ties to the PKK and ISIS and summoned him to court. Erdoğan objected and told him not to go. This was the beginning of a war involving legal cases, corruption charges, and arrests of powerful pro-government figures (including Erdoğan’s son), street protests, and the closure of institutions.

It climaxed with the July 15, 2016 coup attempt. Gülenist military officers, calling themselves the “Peace at Home Council,” attempted to seize power. They bombed parliament and tried to kidnap Erdoğan. Thousands of citizens responded to Erdoğan’s televised call to resist. Crucially, the Kemalist military factions did not join.

Why? Some speculate a last-minute deal was made: Erdoğan would share part of the government with the army, especially the defense ministry and the intelligence services, and would not go against Kemalist principles—meaning, he would not attempt to change the constitution’s declaration of Türkiye as a secular republic based on Kemalist values.

After the Coup

Following the failed July 15, 2016 coup attempt, Erdoğan initiated mass purges of Gülenist elements from the military and bureaucracy. Simultaneously, he rehabilitated secular-nationalist officers previously sidelined in the Ergenekon and Balyoz trials—trials now viewed as Gülenist ploys. Since 2018, the defense ministry has been led by generals, not politicians.

Erdoğan also revived public displays of respect for Atatürk and Kemalism—appealing to nationalist, secular, and far-right Islamist audiences alike.

The result is a hybrid regime: a fused civilian-military state, combining Kemalist and Islamist elements under Erdoğan’s leadership. This has consolidated his power, even if it meant ideological compromise.

Türkiye’s post-coup relationship with the U.S. soured. Washington refused to extradite Gülen or label his group as a terrorist organization. U.S. liberals disapproved of Türkiye’s new political system. Middle East interests diverged.

But things may be changing. Gülen died in 2024. Trump’s second term appears to favor centralized power. And with Assad gone, U.S.-Türkiye interests are converging again.

Only one obstacle remains: Israel.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025/07 ... mpact.html
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Re: Turkey

Post by blindpig » Thu Sep 18, 2025 1:48 pm

Erdogan's ‘domestic front’: The dismantling of democracy in Turkiye

By targeting the opposition and courting the Kurdish movement, Ankara is laying the groundwork for a post-electoral authoritarian system


Fatih Yasli

SEP 17, 2025

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Photo Credit: The Cradle

On 15 September, Turkiye witnessed the third hearing in a case to annul the opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) congress, Turkiye’s main opposition party, in which Kemal Kilicdaroglu was ousted by Ozgur Ozel as new leader.

The lawsuit, widely expected to succeed, was postponed until 24 October, prolonging a manufactured crisis designed to paralyze the country’s main opposition force.

This judicial maneuver is part of what the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) has effectively turned into state policy: a strategy of "de-electoralization." While not abolishing elections outright, this approach seeks to render the ballot box meaningless. It aims to ensure President Recep Tayyip Erdogan remains in power for life, and that his chosen successor can continue to rule unchallenged.

Criminalizing opposition, consolidating control

To facilitate this, the main opposition party, the CHP, has been reclassified as an “internal enemy” and subjected to a kind of “enemy law.” Last month, Burhanettin Bulut, a deputy leader of the CHP, was quoted by the Associated Press (AP) as saying the AKP party "politically named the new enemy on March 19 – (and) the new enemy is the CHP."

The primary front of this campaign has been the CHP-led municipalities. Numerous provincial and district municipalities governed by the CHP have been subjected to operations under the pretexts of “corruption” and “collaboration with terrorism.” Many mayors and bureaucrats have been arrested and imprisoned.

Most prominently, Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu – also the CHP’s former presidential candidate – was imprisoned after his university diploma was retroactively annulled, disqualifying him from holding office.

Imamoglu was then detained on corruption charges, with a separate case opened accusing him of links to terrorism. Neither he nor the other detained CHP officials have been formally indicted. They remain behind bars, without trial dates.

This strategy has been replicated across Turkiye, with elected officials pressured or blackmailed into defecting to the ruling party, thereby flipping control of local governments without a single vote cast.

But the campaign has now extended beyond municipalities to the CHP's national leadership. Through its grip on the judiciary, the government is attempting to nullify the results of the party's last congress and reinstall Kilicdaroglu at the helm – a move intended to fracture the opposition and neutralize its electoral threat.

De-electoralization meets disarmament

This push to hollow out Turkiye’s electoral system coincides with another development: a renewed attempt to resolve the Kurdish issue through disarmament of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK). The two tracks, far from unrelated, are deeply intertwined.

Last year, Erdogan launched a rhetorical campaign to "strengthen the domestic front" against alleged Israeli threats. He invoked Israeli attacks on Gaza and Lebanon as a prelude to an impending assault on Turkiye. But the real aim of this call for unity was not to confront Tel Aviv, but to reconfigure domestic power balances.

In Erdogan's new equation, the CHP was cast as the internal enemy, while the Kurdish political movement, historically aligned with the opposition, was invited to the negotiation table via the PKK’s dissolution and disarmament.

It was the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) – Turkiye’s largest Turkish nationalist party and the ruling party’s unofficial coalition partner – that carried this call forward. On 1 October last year, during the opening of parliament, MHP leader Devlet Bahceli shook hands with members of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party), which had been founded to replace the People's Democratic Party (HDP), a party he had recently called to be shut down.

Bahceli said he did so in support of Erdogan’s call to strengthen the domestic front. Not long after, he made the startling suggestion that PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, imprisoned for 26 years, should be brought to parliament to call on the PKK to disarm.

State officials had already resumed secret contacts with Ocalan, signaling the early stages of a new resolution process. This time, the scope expanded beyond Turkiye’s borders. The disarmament of the PKK's Syrian offshoot, the People’s Protection Units (YPG), was also placed on the table. Ankara hoped that by leveraging Ocalan’s authority, both the PKK and YPG could be compelled to lay down arms.

In late February, Ocalan re-emerged from isolation with a letter, read by a DEM Party delegation, calling on the PKK to disarm and abandon all demands outside democratic channels.

The PKK publicly complied, holding a symbolic disarmament ceremony in Iraq's northern Kurdish region, and stating that complete demobilization would follow if the state honoured its side of the agreement. A parliamentary commission was subsequently formed to prepare a legal framework.

A manufactured threat reshapes the home front

Despite official rhetoric, this new political realignment has little to do with “Israeli threats.” The NATO member lacks the autonomy to directly confront Tel Aviv, given its strategic dependence on the US. The invocation of Israel serves primarily as a domestic rallying tool, a means of projecting nationalist resolve and manufacturing legitimacy.

In practice, Turkiye has been unable and unwilling to counter Israeli actions in Syria, where Tel Aviv has regularly bombed positions linked to Turkiye-backed Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) forces. Nor could Ankara respond meaningfully when Israel targeted Hamas members in Qatar, a red line even for US-aligned Arab states.

Far from preparing for war with Israel, Erdogan is preparing the battlefield at home. And the Kurdish question sits at the heart of that terrain. By turning the CHP into a pariah and drawing the Kurdish movement into its orbit, the government hopes to break the opposition’s electoral spine.

Whether the PKK and YPG will comply remains uncertain. Both have rejected Ankara’s claim that the call to disarm applies to them equally, insisting that Ocalan's appeal was directed only at the PKK. Earlier this year, Turkish officials threatened renewed operations in Syria if YPG refuses to dissolve.

The process could unravel over Syria. Or it could pause there, with Kurdish factions disarming within Turkiye, but retaining arms in Syria. Either way, the government’s goal is clear: secure Kurdish political backing for one final Erdogan presidential term.

Rebuilding power through fragmentation

Ultimately, the de-electoralization drive and the Kurdish peace track form two pillars of the same project: preserving the status quo. They are not mere crisis responses, but a deliberate architecture for a post-electoral, semi-authoritarian system in Turkiye.

Whether this plan succeeds depends on the opposition. Will the courts annul the CHP congress? Will a state-appointed trustee take over the party? Can the government engineer a CHP split and render elections meaningless?

These questions hinge not on legal outcomes, but on political resistance. Reports say that Ozel and Kilicdaroglu may hold a meeting this week, with MP Murat Emir possibly hosting to help resolve internal party tensions. If the opposition, and its popular base, can mobilize an effective counter-strategy, they may yet block this authoritarian pivot. If not, Turkiye will enter a new political era, one shaped not by the ballot, but by decree.

https://thecradle.co/articles/erdogans- ... in-turkiye
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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