Gwynne Dyer: Will Turkey stop backing the Islamists in Syria?

    1 of 1 2 of 1

      For Turks, the burning question after last weekend’s election is whether they will now get the fully democratic, pluralist country that so many of them want. The defeat of President Tayyip Recep Erdogan’s AK Party does open that prospect, although translating it into reality will be very difficult. But for everybody else, the question is whether Turkey will stop backing the Islamist insurgents who are on the brink of winning in Syria.

      Compared to the head-choppers of ISIS and the only slightly less extreme Al Nusra Front that now dominate the military campaign against Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria, Erdogan—the “Sultan”, as his devoted supporters often call him—is a very moderate Islamist. But his support for those two organizations is the main reason that they have been winning so many battles recently.

      Turkey shares a 800-kilometre border with Syria, and for four years Erdogan’s government has left it open for arms, supplies, and foreign recruits to flow to the Syrian Islamists. When Al Nusra seized most of the strategically important Idlib province last March after three years of trying, Damascus claimed that a major reason for its loss was that Turkey had jammed the Syrian army’s telecommunications.

      In March, according to reports by the pro-rebel Al Jazeera network, Erdogan even made a pact with Saudi Arabia to coordinate assistance to the Syrian rebels—most of which flows through Turkey. But all that could change quite quickly if Erdogan’s party cannot form a government that supports this policy—and the signs are that it cannot.

      The Turkish election was not about Erdogan’s policy in Syria. It was, above all, about his ambition to become a mini-Putin who would dominate Turkey into the foreseeable future. In order to achieve that goal, he gave up the prime ministership and got himself elected to the relatively powerless and ceremonial office of president in 2014. But his intention was to transform the presidency into the all-powerful centre of political power in Turkey.

      Changing Turkey from a parliamentary system to a country ruled by an executive president would require a constitutional change, which can only be done by a “super-majority” of three-fifths of the votes in the 550-seat parliament. Since 2002 Erdogan’s party had won three successive elections with ever-increasing majorities, so he was confident that he could pull it off. He was wrong.

      Turkish voters didn’t even give him a majority of the seats in parliament. Too many people had turned against this always angry and abusive man who condemns his political opponents as “terrorists, marginals, gays and atheists,” and who now wanted to consolidate his position as the unchallengeable “Sultan” of Turkey.

      Erdogan began as a reformer whose entirely reasonable and legitimate goal was to end the Turkish state’s open hostility to the more pious members of its overwhelmingly Muslim population. It was an historical leftover from the time, some 90 years ago, when Kemal Ataturk trying to build a modern, secular state in the face of huge opposition from religious conservatives, but it had no place in a 21st-century democracy.

      Erdogan broke the power of the army, which had repeatedly carried out coups in alleged defence of the “secular” state, and deeply conservative and religious Turks who had felt excluded from that state rewarded him with their votes in three successive elections. But as his confidence grew he stopped bothering to accommodate the views of the younger and mostly urban half of the population whose values were liberal and secular.

      The Turkish media, once relatively free, came under such concentrated attack that by 2012 there were more journalists in jail in Turkey than anywhere else in the world. The government’s response to public protests became more and more violent, and Erdogan’s determination to gather all power into his own hands became more and more evident.

      More than one-fifth of AK Party’s voters abandoned the party in this election. They weren’t abandoning their religion; they were just still committed to the party’s original aim of a democratic Turkey that respected everybody’s rights (including their own). Most of them migrated to the new People’s Democratic Party, which also welcomes Kurds, gays, and non-Muslim religious minorities and strongly promotes gender equality.

      Erdogan will find it hard to form a coalition with any of the three big opposition parties in parliament—none of which support his policy of backing Islamist extremists in the Syrian civil war. He will have 45 days to try to form a government, and if that fails Turkey will probably face another election before the end of the summer.

      It is unlikely that the AK Party can improve its position in a second election: once the illusion of invincibility has been shattered, it is very hard to rebuild. What follows may be a coalition government made up of opposition parties that find it hard to agree on most things—but none of them share Erdogan’s fondness for ISIS and its friends. If Assad can hang on in Syria until the end of the summer, he may yet survive.

      Comments

      5 Comments

      P.Peto

      Jun 10, 2015 at 1:22pm

      I think Dyer has correctly sized up Erdogan, he's a power hungry destructive fanatic with visions of constructing a new Ottoman empire in the region at the expense of Syria. My complements to some of the Turkish people for clipping his wings.

      Uncle Jack

      Jun 10, 2015 at 1:50pm

      Mr. Peto forgot to mention that Erdogan is also a vicious anti-Semite.

      As was reported by the world and local media, the days before the elections, knowing that the opposition was ahead, he tried to inflame the situation by blaming the "Jews" for his problems. The same way Hitler acted some eight decades ago.

      Thanks God, the Turkish people did not buy this canard and rejected his bigoted party.

      Good for them!!

      Kai Anne

      Jun 11, 2015 at 8:46am

      Interesting. Note that Islamic State sees itself as an apocalyptic force that will fight a devastating war with Turkey, as per prophecy. Even more interesting is noting that biblical prophecy seems to say something similar, identified as the forces of the North. An Islamic "sultan" in Turkey would not match these expectations, but a Turkish government that does not support IS and takes steps to curtail its activities, would.

      I am not attempting to prophesy here, but merely pointing out, that to religious extremists, this is extremely important. Take note that a secular-oriented government in Turkey could cause an Islamic explosion.

      SH

      Jun 11, 2015 at 6:43pm

      Looking for Erdogan's ouster in summer and the (hopefully) subsequent withering of Da'ish. If a more secular government takes power in Ankara, we could see things take a sharp turn for the better in Iraq and Syria. The Iraqi's are halfway to Mosul now.

      I Chandler

      Jun 12, 2015 at 8:01am

      "He will have 45 days to try to form a government... abusive man who condemns his political opponents as “terrorists, marginals, gays and atheists,”

      He might be an abusive man - but is he our abusive man? It will be interesting to see if the next government stops the Turk Stream project - that is the question.