Erdogan and EU Go Off Rails – a Plague
on Both Their Houses
By
Finian Cunningham
March 17, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "SCF"
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The
extraordinary war of words erupting
between Turkey and the European Union is
pushing already strained relations to
breaking point. Ankara has banned all
Dutch diplomats from its territory after
the Netherlands banished Turkish
ministers from holding political
rallies, while deploying heavy-handed
policing to break up the rallies.
Now with the rest of the
EU expressing solidarity with the
Netherlands and Ankara threatening more
sanctions, or even walking away from a
controversial refugee-holding deal with
the bloc, the political schism seems set
to become an irreparable chasm. For
sure, the long-delayed talks over
Turkey’s accession to the EU bloc can be
said to be finished. Forever.
The
Turkish government has dismissed calls
by EU foreign policy chief Federica
Morgherini for restraint in the
escalating row, saying that such appeals
were «worthless». Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan double-downed on
his invective attacks by labelling
German Chancellor Angela Merkel a
«supporter of terrorism».
Earlier, Erdogan and
several of his government ministers had
slammed the Netherlands and Germany as
«Nazi remnants» and «fascists». Both
Dutch prime minister and Germany’s
Merkel responded angrily, denouncing
Ankara’s inflammatory rhetoric and
demanding an apology.
Erdogan then went even further with
inflammatory rhetoric. He accused Dutch
UN peacekeepers of complicity in the
Srebrenica massacre in 1995, when some
8,000 Bosnian muslim men were killed by
Serb forces.
In truth, it is hard to
feel sympathy for either side in this
spat. It’s a case of plague on both
houses.
For Erdogan and his
ruling Justice and Development Party
(AKP) to castigate EU members as a
«Banana Republic» and «fascist» is
beyond irony.
Since the failed coup in
Turkey last July, the Ankara government
has embarked on a wave of repression,
sacking over 100,000 civil servants,
judges, academics and journalists. Up to
15o media outlets have been shuttered
and some 90,000 suspected coup
supporters detained in Turkish prisons.
Erdogan is fast turning
Turkey into a one-party state ruled with
an iron fist. In a referendum to be held
next month, on April 16, his ruling
party is pushing for a constitutional
change to give greater powers to the
presidency. It is part of a drift
towards Erdogan assuming dictatorial
powers.
So for the staunch
Islamist and autocratic Erdogan to label
the EU as «fascist» is like the pot
calling the kettle black.
But, as usual, the
Turkish leader thrives on polarization.
His brandishing of the nationalist and
Islamist card in the bust-up with the EU
is designed to drum up support at home
for the referendum to grant him more
centralized powers. Polls indicate that
up to recently, most Turks were opposed
to granting any constitutional change.
But by whipping up public anger against
the EU over its seemingly anti-Turkey,
anti-Islamic stance, Erdogan is
mobilizing chauvinistic support in the
referendum for his cause.
Turks who are not backing
his desired constitutional amendments
can be maligned as unpatriotic or on the
«side of terrorists». Erdogan claims
that the new powers will give him a
freer hand to wage war against Islamic
State terrorists in Syria, as well as
Kurdish separatists belonging to the
outlawed Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) and
their Syrian affiliates (YPG).
This kind of reasoning
lies behind the political rallies that
the Turkish government has tried to
organize across Europe. There are some
5.5 million Turkish expatriates living
in Europe, with major population
clusters in Germany, Netherlands,
Belgium, Austria and Switzerland. In
Germany alone, there are 1.4 million
Turkish nationals who are eligible to
vote in the forthcoming referendum in
Turkey. This significant constituency
could be decisive in swinging the
referendum vote in Erdogan’s favor.
However, European
governments have lately moved to ban
political rallies on their streets
addressed by Turkish politicians in
support of Erdogan’s cause.
In the latest flare-up,
the Netherlands banned Turkish foreign
minister Mevlut Cavusolgu from entering
the country to speak at a rally in
Rotterdam last the weekend. His stand-in
replacement, Turkish social affairs
minister Fatma Betül Sayan Kaya, who was
already in the country, was then
forcibly deported by Dutch police back
to Germany from whence she came.
The ensuing clashes
between Dutch police using water
cannons, horse-mounted officers and
dogs, against Turkish protesters, were
fodder for Erdogan and his supporters
back in Turkey to accuse Europe of using
Nazi practices. «Those who attack my
people with dogs will pay the price,»
declared Erdogan.
Angry crowds jostled
outside the Dutch embassy and consulate
in Ankara and Istanbul, with their flags
reportedly ripped down.
Netherlands prime
minister Mark Rutte said: «Dutch public
spaces are not the place for other
countries’ political campaigns.» His
view was echoed by leaders in Germany,
Denmark and Austria, as well as France’s
National Front presidential candidate
Marine Le Pen, and the European
Parliament’s vice president Alexander
Graff Lambsdorff.
On this score, it is hard
to disagree with the EU ban on the
Turkish political rallies. Such foreign
political intrusion is an unimaginable
infringement on national sovereignty
that would not be tolerated by Turkey
nor most other countries.
This is partly why one
surmises that Erdogan has deliberately
contrived a confrontation on the issue.
Knowing that such a provocative move on
his part would be met with antagonism
from European authorities, which in turn
can be portrayed by Erdogan in a
patriotic and religious cause.
Nonetheless, on both
sides it is a carnival of reactionary
politics with deep-seated complicity.
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On the Turkish side,
Erdogan wants to accrue more
authoritarian powers at home partly
because of the military quagmire he has
created from regime-change intrigues
against Syria. Erdogan’s subterfuge in
Syria to oust the government of
President Bashar al Assad has involved
covert sponsorship of Islamist terror
groups, against whom he now says he
needs extra powers for his presidency to
combat against. Well, if Erdogan hadn’t
fomented the monster of terrorism
haunting his country in the first place,
then he wouldn’t be in a position of
requiring greater presidential powers.
Also, let’s not forget
that Turkish military forces have been
fighting on Syrian territory since last
August. This is a blatant violation of
international law and an aggression
against Syrian sovereignty. Again, the
charge made by Erdogan denouncing
European governments as «fascist» is
richly absurd.
On the European side too
it is fraught with reactionary
contradictions pointing to its own grave
complicity. The public apprehension over
immigration and Islamism are major
issues driving the rise of populist
political parties who are mounting
campaigns that are undermining the
European Union.
This week in the Netherlands’ general
election, the anti-Islamist,
anti-immigration, anti-EU Freedom Party
(PVV) of Geert Wilders did not win an
outright victory over the incumbent
center-right ruling party of Mark Rutte
(VVD). Nonetheless, Wilders’ party did reportedly make
a significant gain in parliamentary
seats, increasing its quota by nearly a
third.
The same dynamic is
operating behind Britain’s historic
Brexit departure from the EU and in the
surge in support for Le Pen in France
and similar parties in Germany, Austria,
Italy, Denmark, Slovakia, Hungary and
elsewhere.
This partly explains why
European governments under pressure from
the populist opposition are compelled to
take an even tougher line on the Turkish
political rallies. As in Holland, it is
feared that the issue is garnering
support for the populist parties.
But the bigger picture
here is that the European governments
and the EU bloc are complicit in stoking
the immigration crisis from their
support for illegal wars in Syria and
across the Middle East. Britain and
France in particular have been key
players in abetting Washington’s agenda
of illegal regime-change wars in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Yemen
and elsewhere.
The whole disastrous mess
corroding the EU and its entanglement
with a reckless Turkey is a plague on
both their houses.
Finian Cunningham, Former
editor and writer for major news media
organizations. He has written
extensively on international affairs,
with articles published in several
languages