Hell Hath
No Fury Like a Teflon Sultan
By Pepe
Escobar
July 18, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Sputnik"
-
When Turkish
President/aspiring Sultan Recep Tayyip Erdogan
landed at Istanbul’s Ataturk airport early Saturday
morning, he declared the attempted coup against his
government a failure, and a “gift from God.”
God apparently
uses Face Time. It was via that iconic iPhone
footage from an undisclosed location shown live
on CNN Turk by a bewildered female anchor that
Erdogan managed to call his legion of followers
to hit the streets, unleash People Power and defeat
the military faction that had taken over state TV
and proclaimed to be in charge.
So God does
work in mysterious mobile ways. Erdogan’s call was
heeded even by young Turks who had fiercely
protested against him in Gezi Park; were tear-gassed
or water-cannoned by his police; think the AKP
governing party is disgusting; but would support
them against a “fascist military coup.” Not
to mention that virtually every mosque across Turkey
relayed Erdogan’s call.
Ankara’s
official version is that the coup was perpetrated
by a small military faction remote-controlled
by exiled-in-Pennsylvania cleric Fethullah Gulen,
himself a CIA asset. As much as responsibility
remains debatable, what’s clear is the coup was a
Turk remix of The Three Stooges; the actual stooges
in fact may have been the already detained 2nd Army
Commander Gen. Adem Huduti; 3rd Army Commander Erdal
Ozturk; and former Chief of Air Staff Akin Ozturk.
As
over-excited former CIA ops were blaring on US
networks – and they do know a thing or two
about regime change — rule number one in a coup is
to aim at, and isolate, the head of the snake. Yet
the wily Turkish snake, in this case, was nowhere
to be seen. Not to mention that no top generals
sounding convincingly patriotic went on the TRT
state network to fully explain the reasons for the
coup.
(Erdogan)
love is in the air
The coup
plotters did aim at the intel services – whose top
positions are at Istanbul’s airport, the
presidential palace in Ankara and near the
ministries. They used Cobra helicopters –
with pilots trained in the US – against these
targets. They also aimed at the army’s high command
– which for the past 8 years is designated by Erdogan
and is not trusted by many a mid-ranking officer.
As they
occupied the Bosphorus bridges in Istanbul they
seemed to be in touch with military police – which
is spread out all over Turkey and have a solid
esprit de corps. But in the end they did not have
the numbers – and the necessary preparation. All key
ministries seemed to be communicating
among themselves as the plot developed, as well
as the intel services. And as far as Turkish police
as a whole is concerned, they are now a sort of AKP
pretorian guard.
Meanwhile,
Erdogan’s Gulfstream 4, flight number TK8456, took
off from Bodrum’s airport at 1:43 A.M. and flew
for hours over Turkey’s northwest with its
transponder on, undisturbed. It was from the
presidential plane, while still landed, that Erdogan
had gone on Face Time, and then, on the air, managed
to control the countercoup. The plane never left
Turkish airspace – and was totally visible to civil
and military radars. The coup plotters’ F-16s could
have easily tracked and/or incinerated it. Instead
they sent military choppers to bomb the presidential
abode in Bodrum a long time after he had left the
building.
The head
of the snake must have been 100% sure that to board
his plane and stay on Turkish airspace was as safe
as eating a baklava. What’s even more startling is
that the Gulfstream managed to land in Istanbul
in absolute safety in the early hours of Saturday
morning – despite the prevailing notion that the
airport was occupied by the “rebels”.
In Ankara, the
“rebels” used a mechanized division and two
commandos. Around Istanbul there was a whole army;
the 3rd command is actually integrated with NATO’s
rapid reaction forces. They supplied the Leopards
positioned in Istanbul’s key spots – which by the
way did not open fire.
And yet the
two key armies positioned in the Syrian and Iranian
borders remained on “wait and see” mode. And then,
at 2 A.M., the command of the also key 7th army
based in Diyarbakir – in charge of fighting the PKK
guerrillas – proclaimed his loyalty to Erdogan. That
was the exact, crucial moment when Prime Minister
Binali Yildırım announced a no-fly zone over Ankara.
That meant
Erdogan controlled the skies. And the game was over.
History does move in mysterious ways; the no-fly
zone dreamed by Erdogan for so long over Aleppo or
the Syrian-Turkish border in the end materialized
over his own capital.
Round up the usual suspects
The US
position was extremely ambiguous from the start. As
the coup took over, the American embassy in Turkey
called it "Turkish uprising". Secretary of State
John Kerry, in Moscow to discuss Syria, also hedged
his bets. NATO was royally mute. Only when it became
clear the coup was in fact smashed President Obama
and the “NATO allies” officially proclaimed their
“support for the democratically elected government”.
The Sultan
went back to the game with a vengeance. He
immediately went live on CNN Turk demanding
Washington hands over Gulen even without any
evidence he masterminded the coup. And that came
with an inbuilt threat; “If you want to keep access
to Incirlik air base you will have to give me Gulen”.
It’s hard not to be reminded of recent history –
when the Cheney regime in 2001 demanded the Taliban
hand Osama bin Laden over to the US without offering
proof he was responsible for 9/11.
So the number
one eyebrow-raising possibility is a go; Erdogan’s
intel services knew a coup was brewing; and the wily
Sultan let it happen knowing it would fail as the
plotters had very limited support. He also arguably
knew – in advance — even the pro-Kurdish Peoples’
Democratic Party (HDP), whose members Erdogan is
trying to expel from parliament, would support the
government in the name of democracy.
Two extra
facts add to the credibility of this hypothesis.
Earlier last week Erdogan signed a bill giving
soldiers immunity from prosecution while taking part
in domestic security ops – as in anti-PKK; that
spells out improved relations between the AKP
government and the army. And then Turkey’s top
judicial body HSYK laid off no less than 2,745
judges after an extraordinary meeting post-coup.
This can only mean the list was more than ready
in advance.
The major,
immediate post-coup geopolitical consequence is that
Erdogan now seems to have miraculously reconquered
his “strategic depth” – as former, sidelined Prime
Minister Davutoglu would have it. Not only
externally – after the miserable collapse of both
his Middle East and Kurdish “policies” – but also
internally. For all practical purposes Erdogan now
controls the Executive, the Legislative and the
Judiciary – and is taking no prisoners to purge the
military for good. Ladies and gentlemen, the Sultan
is in da house.
This means
the neo-Ottoman project is still on – but now
under massive tactical reorientation. The real
“enemy” now is Syrian Kurds – not Russia and Israel
(and not ISIS/ISIL/Daesh; but they never were in the
first place). Erdogan is going after the YPG, which
for him is a mere extension of the PKK. His order
of the day is to prevent by all means an autonomous
state entity in northeast Syria – a "Kurdistan" set
up like a second Israel supported by the US. For
that he needs some sort of entente cordiale
with Damascus – as in insisting that Syria must
preserve its territorial integrity. And that also
means, of course, renewed dialogue with Russia.
So
what's the CIA been up to?
Needless
to add Ankara and Washington are now on a certified
collision course. If there is an Empire of Chaos
hidden hand in the coup – no smoking gun yet — that
certainly comes from the Beltway neocon/CIA axis,
not the lame duck Obama administration. For the
moment Erdogan’s leverage only amounts to access to Incirlik.
But his paranoia is ballooning; for him Washington
is doubly suspicious because they harbor Gulen and
support the YPG.
Hell hath no
fury as an underestimated Sultan as well. For all
his recent geopolitical follies, Erdogan’s
simultaneous ballet of reconnecting with Israel and
Russia is eminently pragmatic. He knows he needs
Russia for the Turkish Stream and to build nuclear
plants; and he needs Israeli gas to consolidate
Turkey’s role as a key East-West energy crossroads.
When we
learn, crucially, that Iran supported Turkey's
"brave defense of democracy", as tweeted by Foreign
Minister Zarif, it’s clear how Erdogan, in a mater
of only a few weeks, reconfigured the whole regional
picture. And that spells out Eurasia integration and
Turkey deeply connected to the New Silk Roads – not
NATO. No wonder the Beltway – for whom,
overwhelmingly, Erdogan is the proverbial “erratic
and unreliable ally” — is freaking out. That dream
of Turkish colonels under direct CIA orders is over
– at least for the foreseeable future.
So what
about Europe? Yildirim already said that Turkey
might reinstate the death penalty – to be applied
to the coup plotters. This means, in essence, bye
bye EU. And bye bye to the European Parliament
approving visa-free travel for Turks visiting
Europe. Erdogan after all already got what he wanted
from chancellor Merkel; those 6 billion euros
to contain the refugee crisis that he essentially
unleashed. Merkel bet the farm on Erdogan. Now she’s
talking to herself – while the Sultan is able
to dial God on Face Time.
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