It wasn't so long ago that the Turkish leader was seen as a model democrat
in the Islamic world. What happened?
· JUL 21, 2016
It wasn’t supposed to be
like this. In October 2004, the European Commission offered Turkey a formal
invitation to begin negotiations for membership in that exclusive club of
democracies, the European Union. The Justice and Development Party (AKP), which
had been in power for just two years at the time, hailed the commission’s offer
as validation of its self-described Muslim Democrat worldview.
Yet only a few years
after that triumphant moment, Recep Tayyip Erdogan—who was prime minister for
11 years before becoming president in 2014—began to veer away from the
political reforms that were a condition of the EU’s offer, and away from the
promise of a democratic transition in Turkey. The authoritarian approach to
politics that Erdogan has pursued for the better part of the last decade seems
destined to accelerate after last week’s failed coup d’état, as the president
directs a widespread crackdown against his enemies, both real and perceived.
Turkey today looks less like a liberal European democracy and more like the
kind of one-man autocracy commonly found in the Middle East. How did this
country, which so many journalists, government officials, and analysts had once
believed to be a model for the Arab world, become a case study in
“re-authoritarianization”?
The story begins 53
years ago, in 1963, when Turkey signed an association agreement with the
European Economic Community in the hopes of becoming a member of Europe. For
Turkey’s leaders at the time, the prospect of joining Europe represented the
fulfillment of the secularizing and modernizing reforms of the country’s
founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. Turkey was then a country that featured some
democratic practices, but only three years before had experienced the first of
four coups d’état that the military would undertake in the ensuing 35 years.
Despite the association
agreement, Turkey’s integration advanced at a glacial pace. There were spurts
of progress that punctuated the ambivalence of European leaders leery of a
country where the rule of law was weak and human rights were routinely
violated—one, moreover, that lagged behind European levels of socio-economic
development and that was overwhelmingly Muslim. The 1974 Turkish invasion and
occupation of the northern part of Cyprus—now an EU member—that continues to
this day did not help Turkey’s cause either. Turkey’s leaders for their part
were frustrated with what they perceived to be European double standards when
dealing with a Muslim society.
In 1996, there was a
breakthrough when a Customs Union agreement provided an important link between
Turkey’s economy and that of Europe; and, in 2001, the two sides agreed to the
Accession Partnership for Turkey, which laid out a cooperative framework for
Turkey’s eventual EU membership. The following year, the Turkish parliament
passed three “harmonization” packages that made important changes to the penal
code, the codes of criminal procedure, and the anti-terror law. The legislation
also abolished the death penalty in peacetime—Erdogan’s supporters are now
demanding its reinstatement—strengthened freedom of expression, and permitted
broadcasts in Kurdish. (Kurds had previously been banned from speaking their
own language because the Turkish state did not recognize them as an ethnic
group. For years, Turkish officials referred to Kurds as “mountain Turks.”)
The liberalizing trend
looked set to continue when Erdogan’s party first came to government in 2003.
The AKP-dominated parliament passed an additional five reform packages—concerning,
among other things, minority rights and the judiciary—in its first year
and a half. This was a significant shift from past Islamist parties that
regarded Turkish efforts to integrate with predominantly Christian Europe as a
form of cultural abnegation. The reformists who founded the AKP, Erdogan among
them, rejected this idea and, at the time of their election, claimed that
membership in Europe was consistent with their own values. The practical effect
of all these reform packages was substantial. The European Commission
recommended that Ankara begin membership negotiations, though its endorsement
was hedged. By Europe’s own metrics Turkey had taken important steps toward
fulfilling the EU requirements for negotiations, but had not fulfilled them in
their totality. Rather, the commission argued that the negotiation process
itself would spur further reforms. Negotiations began in March 2005, but slowed
down almost immediately as some European countries balked at the prospect that
Turkey might actually become a member of the EU.
Erdogan once
declared that democracy was “a vehicle, not a goal,” implying that one could
disembark at any point.
Ankara’s
reforms began to slow down after that, but Turkey’s transition really began to
go downhill in the spring of 2007 when the Turkish military’s General Staff
made it clear, via a statement on its
website, that the military did not want the AKP’s favored candidate for
president, then-Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, to assume the office because he
was an Islamist. This was a critical moment in Turkish politics and one in
which previous Turkish leaders would have folded almost immediately. Erdogan,
sensing his party’s popularity and how much Turkish society had changed in the
nearly five years since the AKP had come to power, refused to be intimidated.
He called for new elections, which the party won with a broad coalition of
pious and average Turks, Kurds, liberals, and big business that gave the AKP 47
percent of the vote. With his party’s renewed popular mandate, Erdogan
nominated Gul to be Turkey’s 11th president.
In the midst
of this showdown, the Istanbul police uncovered an alleged plot to overthrow
the government. This was what came to be known as the Ergenekon case, which
captivated Turkey from 2007 until verdicts were rendered in 2013. Initially,
the investigation promised to root out Turkey’s “deep state”—an alleged network
of military, intelligence, and civilian officials along with policemen,
journalists, academics, business people, and mafia figures. Working in the
shadows and beyond the law, the group’s goal was, Turks believed, to subvert
the government and any centers of power that would challenge “the system” and
this coalition’s interests in it. A few years after the Ergenekon case began,
prosecutors pursued what was called the Sledgehammer investigation, which
ensnared large numbers of senior military commanders in a suspected effort to
bring down the government.
Given
Turkey’s history of coups, the alleged schemes seemed entirely plausible. In
time, however, it came to light that significant portions of the evidence in
both Ergenekon and Sledgehammer were flimsy or fabricated, allegedly at the
hands of prosecutors who were followers of the self-exiled cleric Fethullah
Gulen. (Until 2013, the Gulenist movement—which Erdogan blames for last
Friday’s attempted coup—and the AKP were partners.)
After that,
Turkey’s democratic reversal expanded and accelerated. Erdogan was emboldened
by the decapitation of the military and imprisonment of other opponents, at the
same time that he was unrestrained by the now-dim prospect of EU membership. He
moved to consolidate his personal power and in the process transform Turkish
society. In addition to the trials, during which large numbers of officers were
detained and civilian prosecutors armed with search warrants entered military
bases searching for incriminating evidence, the government arrested
journalists, often on specious charges of supporting terrorism; sued critics of
Erdogan; imposed massive fines on businesses whose owners failed to support the
AKP; and intimidated social-media companies like Twitter and
Facebook to
share data on their users. Through the pressure the AKP brought to bear on
companies wanting to do business with the government, firms were encouraged to
purchase media properties that could be counted on to faithfully report what
the prime ministry wanted. The Turkish Radio and Television Corporation,
Turkey’s national public broadcaster, and the Anadolu Agency, the state-run
wire service, also became part of the AKP’s political operation. The result was
a virtual ministry of information in the service of Erdogan and his party.
Then there were the courts.
Less than a year after the military’s failed effort to prevent a Gul
presidency, Turkey’s chief prosecutor brought a case to the country’s
Constitutional Court in March 2008, alleging that the AKP had become a center
of anti-secular activity and thus should be closed. When it rendered its
verdict, the high court found evidence supporting the charge, but fell just one
vote short of the seven (out of 11) needed to close the party. Instead, it was
forced to pay a fine of $20 million. This was too close a call for Erdogan. The
AKP’s genealogy included four parties that had been closed as a result of either
a coup or a court order, and Erdogan was determined never to allow his party to
meet the same fate.
Erdogan, unlike
Turkish leaders before him, refused to be intimidated by the military.
The result was a constitutional
amendment that Erdogan brought before the Turkish people in a September 2010
referendum that gave the AKP greater ability to pack the courts with
sympathetic judges. The amendment, which was combined with other constitutional
changes including protection of children’s rights, freedom of residence, and
the right to appeal, passed by a wide margin. A little more than a month before
last Friday’s failed coup d’état, Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim sent
legislation to the parliament that would give the government a freer hand in
placing AKP supporters on the bench, further compromising the independence of
the judiciary.
This authoritarian turn
has made it relatively easy for critics to charge that the AKP was never and
could never be a genuine force for democratic change. In hindsight, that is
likely true. Erdogan is, after all, the man who declared when he was
mayor of Istanbul in the 1990s that democracy was “a vehicle, not a goal,”
implying that one could disembark whenever it suited one’s purposes. At the
same time, it would be disingenuous to overlook the AKP’s first term from 2002
to 2007, when pragmatism and consensus marked Turkish politics. There were
controversies, of course, but the five constitutional reform packages that
Erdogan oversaw seemed to augur a more open, and even democratic, Turkey.
In time, however,
confronted with challenges real and perceived from the military, the judiciary,
and Gulenists, Erdogan and the AKP pursued a political strategy based on polarization.
By the time the Gezi Park protests—which began as a demonstration to save green
spaces, but became an outpouring of anger over police brutality, crony
capitalism, and the arrogance of power—rocked the country in the summer of
2013, there seemed to be two Turkeys: supporters of Erdogan who revered the
leader, and his opponents who were intimidated or repressed. There was very
little middle ground. The situation deteriorated further when, in late 2013,
Gulenists in the police and prosecutor’s office accused four government
ministers, members of their families, and associates of Erdogan of mass
corruption. The move transformed what had been a manageable political skirmish
between Erdogan and Gulen into all-out warfare that is reaching is moment of truth
this week.
The coup in Turkey, had
it succeeded, would have toppled a government that was most recently elected
with 49.5 percent of the vote in November 2015, and a president who garnered
51.7 percent support in August 2014. It would not have brought an end to
Turkey’s democracy, as Turkish officials and some analysts have suggested, if
only because Erdogan and his partners within the AKP had already undermined
whatever progress the country made in the early 2000s. The current government
itself is the product of an election that had to be rerun last November because
Erdogan was not satisfied with the party’s results the previous June, when
elections had taken away the AKP’s parliamentary majority. Erdogan’s widening
purge and crackdown are just the logical conclusion of a story that has been
unfolding for the better part of a decade. Turkey’s democracy has not been
lost—there was no democracy for it to lose.
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