Erdoğan’s
Coup: Purging Domestic Critics, Gaining External
Allies
By James
Petras
“President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
prepared a list of targets for arrest even
before the coup (sic) was launched”,
European Commission official on Turkey (FT
7/19/2016).
August 07,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
For the past decade, the US
intelligence agencies operating in Turkey have
worked closely with the increasingly influential
parallel government of Fethullah Gulen. Their
approach to power was, until recently, a
permeationist strategy, of covertly taking over
political, economic, administrative, judicial,
media, military and cultural positions gradually
without resort to elections or military coups. They
adopted flexible tactics, supporting and shedding
different allies to eliminate rivals.
In 2010 in support of Erdogan, they played a major
role in arresting and purging 300 Kemalist –
military officials. Subsequently the Gulenists moved
to prosecute and weaken the Erdogan regime via
revelations of family corruption uncovered by their
intelligence officials and publicized by its mass
media outlets.
The Gulenists shared several important policies with
Washington which favored “the convergence” that led
up to the July 15, 2016 coup.
The Gulenists backed US-Israeli policies in the
Middle East; opposed the ‘independent’ and erratic
power projections of Erdogan; favored pro-Western
free market policies; accepted US relations with the
Kurds; rejected any accommodation with the Russians.
In other words, the Gulenists were far more
reliable, dependent and subject to the dictates of
EU-NATO-US policy throughout the Middle East than
the Erdogan regime.
Erdogan was aware of the growing power of the
Gulenists and their growing links to Washington.
Erdogan moved decisively and successfully, to
pre-empt the Gulenist power grab by forcing a
premature coup.
Erdogan Power Bloc Defeats Gulenist Presence
The Gulenists were a powerful force
in the Turkish state and civil society. They had a
strong presence in the civil bureaucracy; among
sectors of the military, the mass media and
educational installations; and among technocrats in
the financial agencies. Yet they were defeated in
less than twenty-four hours, because Erdogan had
several undeniable strengths.
First and foremost, Erdogan was an unmatched
political leader with a strategy to retain power and
a powerful active mass popular base. The Gulenists
had nothing comparable.
Erdogan had a superior intelligence and military
command which infiltrated and undermined the
Gulenists who were totally unprepared for a violent
confrontation.
The Gulenists ‘permeationist’ strategy was
unprepared and totally incapable of seizing power
and mobilizing ‘the street’.
They lacked the cadres and organized grass roots
support which Erdogan had built from the bottom-up
over the previous two decades.
Erdogan’s insider and outside Islamic-Nationalist
strategy was far superior to the Gulenist
insider-pro-US liberal strategy.
US Miscalculations
in the Coup
The Gulenists depended on US support,
which totally miscalculated the relations of power
and misread Erdogan’s capacity to preempt the coup.
The major flaw among the US advisers was their
ignorance of the Turkish political equation: they
underestimated Erdogan’s overwhelming party,
electoral and mass support. The CIA overestimated
the Gulenists support in their institutional elite
structures and underestimated their political
isolation in Turkish society.
Moreover, the US military had no sense of the
specifications of Turkish political culture – the
general popular opposition to a
military-bureaucratic takeover. They failed to
recognize that the anti-coup forces included
political parties and social movements critical of
Erdogan.
The US strategists based the coup on their
misreading of the military coups in Egypt, Libya,
Iraq and Yemen which ousted nationalist and Islamic
civilian regimes.
Erdogan was not vulnerable in the same way as
President Mohamed Morsi (June 30, 2012 – July 3,
2013) was in Egypt – he controlled intelligence,
military and mass supporters.
The US-Gulenists military intelligence strategy was
unplanned, uncoordinated and precipitous – Erdogan’s
counter-coup forced their hand and struck decisive,
sweeping blows that demoralized the entire Gulenist
super-structure. Thousands of supporters fell like
clay pigeons.
The US was put on the defensive – the rapid
dissolution of their followers forced them to disown
their allies and fall back on general, unconvincing
‘humanitarian’ and ‘security’ criticisms of Erdogan.
Their claims that the Erdogan purge would weaken the
fight against ISIS had no influence in Turkey.
Washington’s charges that the arrests were
‘mistreating and abusing’ prisoners had no impact.
The key political fact is that the US backed an
uprising which had taken up arms and killed Erdogan
loyalist military personnel and innocent unarmed
civilians opposed to the coup undermined
Washington’s feeble protests.
In the end the US even refused refugee status and
abandoned their Gulenist General’s to Erdogan’s
fate. Only Fethullah Gulen himself was protected
from extradition by his State Department handlers.
Consequences of the
US-Gulen Coup
Washington’s failure to bring down
Erdogan could have enormous repercussions throughout
the Middle East, Western Europe and the United
States.
Erdogan ordered seven thousand troops to encircle
the strategic NATO airbase in Incirlik, Turkey, an
act of intimidation threatening to undermine NATO’s
major nuclear facility and operational base against
Syria, Iraq and Russia.
Turkish intelligence and cabinet officials have
called into question ongoing political alliances,
openly accusing the US military of treason for its
role in the coup.
Erdogan has moved to reconcile relations with Russia
and has distanced his ties with the European Union.
If Turkey downgrades its ties with NATO, the US
would lose its strategic ally on the Southern flank
of Russia and undermine its capacity to dominate
Syria and Iraq.
Washington’s leverage in Turkey has been
dramatically reduced with the decimation of the
Gulenist power base in the civilian and military
organizations.
Washington may have to rely on the anemic, unstable
and servile Syriza – Tsipras regime in Greece to
‘anchor’ its policies in the region.
The failed coup means a major retreat for Washington
in the region – and a possible advance for Syria,
Iran, Lebanon and Russia.
There are two caveats to this proposition. After
Erdogan ‘completes’ the purge of Gulenists’ and
condemns Washington, will he be willing and able to
pursue a new independent policy or will he simply
tighten internal control and ‘renegotiate’ a NATO
agreement?
Will Erdogan consolidate political control over the
army or will the defeat of the Gulenists be a
temporary outcome which will unleash new military
factions which will destabilize the political
regime?
Finally, Erdogan depends on Western finance and
investment which is highly resistant to backing a
regime critical of the US, the EU and NATO. If
Erdogan faces economic pressures from the West can
he turn elsewhere or will he, in the face of
capitalist ‘realities’ retreat and submit?
Erdogan, temporarily may have defeated a US coup,
but history teaches us that new military, political
and economic interventions are on Washington’s
agenda.
James
Petras is a Bartle Professor (Emeritus) of Sociology
at Binghamton University, New York. |