Recep Tayyip Erdoğan:
Terrorist Unleashed
By James Petras
October 20, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
The October 12,
2015 terror bombing in Ankara, resulting in the death of 127
trade unionists, peace activists, Kurdish advocates and
progressives, has been attributed either to the Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
regime or to ISIS terrorists.
The Erdoğan regime’s ‘hypothesis’
is that ISIS or the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) was responsible for
the terrorist attack, a position echoed by all of the NATO
governments and dutifully repeated by all of the Western mass
media. Their most recent claim is that a Turkish member of
ISIS carried out the massacre – in a ‘copy-cat action’ after his
brother, blamed by the Turkish government for an earlier bombing
which left 33 young pro-Kurdish activists dead in July in Suruc, on
the Syrian border.
The alternative
hypothesis, voiced by the majority of the Turkish opposition, is
that the Erdoğan regime was directly or indirectly
involved in organizing the terrorist attack or allowing it to
happen.
In testing each
hypothesis it is necessary to examine which of the two best accounts
for the facts leading up to the killing and who benefits
from the mayhem.
Our approach is to
examine those behind various acts of violence preceding,
accompanying and following the massacre in Ankara. We
will examine the politics of both the victims and the
Erdoğan regime, and their conception of political governance,
especially in light of the forthcoming November 2015 national
elections.
Antecedents
to the Ankara Terror Bombing
Over the past several
years the Erdoğan regime has been engaged in a violent crackdown
of civil society activity. In 2013, massive police action broke-up
a major social protest in the center of Istanbul, killing 8
demonstrators and injuring 8500 environmental and civil society
activists defending Taksim Gezi Park from government-linked
‘developers’. In May 2014, over 300 Turkish coal miners in Soma
were killed in an underground explosion in a mine owned by an
Erdoğan supporter. Subsequent demonstrations were brutally
suppressed by the state. The formerly state-owned mine had been
privatized by Erdoğan in 2005 – many questioned the legality of the
sale to regime cronies.
Prior to and after
these violent police actions against civilian demonstrators,
thousands of officials and public figures were arrested, fired and
investigated by the Erdoğan regime for allegedly being supporters of
a legal Islamic social organization – the so-called Gülen
movement.
Hundreds of
journalists, human rights activists, publishers and other media
workers were arrested, fired and blacklisted at the behest of the
Erdoğan regime, for criticizing high level corruption in the Erdoğan
cabinet.
The Erdoğan regime
escalated its domestic repression of the secular opposition in
order to concentrate power in the hands of an Islamist cult-ruler.
This was particularly the case after the government deepened its
support of thousands of foreign jihadi extremists and mercenaries
streaming into Turkey on their way to the Syrian jihad.
From the beginning of
the armed uprising in Syria, Turkey became the main training ground,
arms depot and entry-point for armed Islamist terrorists
(AIT) entering Syria. The Erdoğan regime directed the AIT to attack,
dispossess and destroy the Syrian and Iraqi Kurds whose fighters had
liberated a significant section of northern Syria and Iraq and
served as an ‘example of self-government’ for Turkish
Kurds.
The Erdoğan regime
has joined the brutal Saudi monarchy in financing and arming AIT
groups and especially training them in urban terror warfare against
the secular government in
Damascus and the
Shiite regime in Baghdad. They specialized in bombing populated
sites occupied by Erdogan’s enemies or the Saudi targets especially
secular Kurds, leftists , trade unionists and Shiites allied with
Iran.
The Erdogan regime’s
intervention in Syria was motivated by its desire to expand
Turkish influence (neo-Ottomanism) and to destroy the successful
Kurdish autonomous government and movement in Northern Syria and
Iraq.
To those ends,
Erdoğan combined four policies:
(1) He vastly expanded Turkish support for and
recruitment of Islamic terrorists from around the world, including
Libya and Chechnya.
(2) He facilitated their entry into Syria, and
encouraged them to attack villages and towns in the ethnic Kurdish
regions.
(3) He broke off peace negotiations with the PKK and
re-launched a full-scale war against the militant Kurds.
(4) He organized a covert terrorist campaign
against the legal, secular, pro-Kurdish electoral party, the
People’s Democratic Party (HDP).
The Erdoğan regime
sought to consolidate dictatorial powers to pursue and deepen its ‘Islamization’
of Turkish society and to project his version of Turkish hegemony
over Syria and the Kurdish regions inside and outside Turkey. To
accomplish these ambitious and far reaching goals, Erdoğan needed to
purge his Administration of any rival power centers.
He started
with the jailing and expulsion of secular, nationalist Kemalist
military figures. He continued with a purge of his former
supporters in the Gülen organization.
Failing to gain a
majority in national elections because of the growth of the HDP, he
proceeded with a systematic terror campaign: organizing street mobs
made up of his followers in the ‘Justice and Development Party’,
who burned and wrecked HDP offices and beat up activists. Erdoğan’s
terror campaign culminated with the July 2015 bombing of a leftist
youth meeting in Suruc whose activists were aiding Syrian Kurdish
refugees and the beleaguered fighters resisting Islamist terrorists
in Korbani, a large Syrian town across the border controlled by the
Erdoğan-backed ISIS. Over 33 activists were murdered and 104 were
wounded. Two Turkish covert intelligence officers or ‘policemen’,
who knew in advance of the bombing, were captured, interrogated and
executed by the PKK. This retaliation for what was widely believed
to be a state-sponsored massacre provided Erdoğan with a pretext to
re-launch his war on the Kurds. Erdoğan immediately declared war on
both the armed and unarmed Kurdish movements.
The Erdoğan regime
trotted out the claim that the Suruç terrorist attack was committed
by ISIS suicide bombers, ignoring the regime’s ties to ISIS. He
announced a large-scale investigation. In fact it was a perfunctory
round up and release of suspects of no consequence.
If ISIS was involved
in this and the Ankara massacres, it did so at the command and
direction of Turkish Intelligence under orders of President Erdoğan.
The Suruç
Massacre: A Dress Rehearsal for Ankara
Suruç was a ‘dress
rehearsal’ for Erdoğan’s terrorist attack in Ankara, three
months later.
Once again the main
target was the Kurdish opposition electoral party (the HDP) as
well as the major progressive trade unions , professional
associations, and anti-war activists.
Once again Erdoğan
blamed ISIS, without acknowledging his ties to ISIS. Certain facts
point to Turkish state complicity:
1) Why were the bombs placed in the midst of
the unarmed demonstrators and not next to the police and
intelligence headquarters within a block of the carnage?
2) Why did Erdoğan’s police attack and
prevent emergency medical assistance to the demonstrators in the
immediate aftermath of the bombing?
3) Why did he block popular leaders, independent
investigators and representatives from targeted groups from
examining the bombing site?
4) Why did Erdoğan immediately reject a
cease-fire offer from the PKK and launch a vast military operation
while promoting rabidly chauvinistic street demonstrators against
Kurds engaged in legal political campaigning?
5) Why did the police attack mourners at the
subsequent funerals?
Who Benefited
from the Terror Attacks?
The terror attacks
benefited Erdoğan’s immediate and long-range strategic political
goals – and no one else!
First and foremost,
they killed activists from the HDP party, anti-war leftists
and trade unionists. The violent government attacks against the
HDP in the aftermath of the massacre has increased Erdoğan’s chances
of securing the electoral majority that he needs in order to change
the Turkish constitution so he can assume dictatorial powers.
Secondly, it was
aimed at (1) reducing the ties between the Turkish and Syrian Kurds;
(2) breaking the ties between progressive Turkish trade unions,
secular professionals ,peace activists and the Kurdish Democratic
Party; (3) mobilizing the rightwing ultra-nationalist Turkish street
mobs to attack and destroy the electoral offices of the HDP; (4)
intimidating pro-democracy activists and progressives and silencing
dissent to Erdoğan’s domestic power grab and intervention in Syria.
To the question of
who is responsible for serial violent attacks on civil
society organizations, opposition political parties, and purges and
arrests of independent officials in the lead-up to the terror
attack? The answer is Erdoğan.
Who was behind the
campaign of violence and bombing in Kurdish neighborhoods in
Istanbul and elsewhere leading up to the Suruç and Ankara terrorist
attacks? The answer is Erdoğan.
Conclusion
We originally counter -posed two
hypotheses regarding the terrorist attack in Ankara: The Erdoğan
regime’s hypothesis that ISIS – as a force independent of the
Turkish government -or even the PKK were responsible for brutally
killing key activists in Turkish and Kurdish civil organizations;
and the opposite hypothesis that the Erdoğan regime was the
mastermind.
After reviewing the
motives, actions, beneficiaries and interests of the two
hypothetical suspects, the hypothesis, which most elegantly and
thoroughly accounts for and makes sense of the facts is that the
Erdoğan regime was directly responsible for the planning and
organization of the massacres through its intelligence operatives.
A subsidiary
hypothesis is that the execution – the placing of the bombs –
may have been by an ISIS terrorist, but under the control of
Erdoğan’s police apparatus.
James Petras is a Bartle Professor (Emeritus) of
Sociology at Binghamton University, New York.