Turkey's Attempted Coup
By
Gwynne Dyer
July 17, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Turkey's democracy is dead. It was
dying anyway, as President Recep Tayyib
Erdogan took over media outlets,
arrested political opponents and
journalists, and even re-started a war
with the Kurds last autumn in order to
win an election. But once part of the
army launched a coup attempt on Friday
night, it was dead no matter which way
the crisis ended.
It
wasn't a very competent coup attempt.
The first rule of coup-making is: arrest
or kill the person you are trying to
overthrow. The coup leaders should have
been able to grab Erdogan, who was on
holiday at the seaside resort of
Marmaris, but they didn’t.
They didn't shut down the internet and
social media either, so Erdogan was able
to use his cellphone to get a message
out on FaceTime, calling on his
supporters to defy the soldiers on the
streets of Istanbul and Ankara. They
didn't even shut down the broadcast
media that sent Erdogan's call out to
the public.
It
was three hours before they occupied the
offices of TRT, the state broadcaster,
and they were chased out again by
Erdogan less than an hour later. They
didn't ever try to shut down the private
television networks, which have a much
bigger audience.
The second rule of coup-making is: act
as if you mean it. This usually means
that you have to be willing to kill
people—but the colonels behind the coup
(the generals were all vetted by
Erdogan's people) were reluctant to use
large amounts of lethal force.
This is laudable, in human terms, but if
you are trying to overthrow the rule of
a ruthless man who aspires to absolute
control, it is a very bad mistake. They
took control of Istanbul airport, but
they were chased out again by Erdogan's
supporters because they were not willing
to shoot them—and Erdogan flew back into
the city.
Maybe the coup-makers were just too
short of troops to grab control of
everything they needed to make the coup
work. Maybe, also, they were afraid to
order their troops to carry out a
massacre because Turkey's is a conscript
army, and many of its young
soldiers—basically civilians in uniform
for one year—might simply refuse to kill
their fellow citizens in large numbers.
At
any rate, they didn't use massive
violence in Istanbul, and so they were
soon in retreat. But there can be no
happy ending to this episode.
Democracy would obviously have been dead
if the rebels had won. Almost exactly
half of Turkey's voters backed Erdogan
in the last election, so a military
regime would have had to stay in power
for a long time. It would not have dared
to hold a free election and risk Erdogan
returning to power.
It
would have been equally dead if the coup
had partially succeeded and the army had
really split, for that would have meant
civil war. Mercifully that possibility
has now disappeared, but democracy is
dead in Turkey even though the coup has
been defeated.
A
triumphant Erdogan will seize this
opportunity to complete his take-over of
all the major state organizations and
the media, and become (as his followers
often call him) the "Sultan" of Turkey.
That is a tragedy, because five or ten
years ago Turkey seemed well on the way
to being the kind of democracy, with
free media and the rule of law, where a
coup like this was simply inconceivable.
When Erdogan won his first election in
2002, promising to remove all the
restrictions that pious Muslims suffered
under the rigidly secular constitution,
it seemed a reasonable step forward in
the democratization process. He kept his
promises about that, but gradually he
went further, trying to Islamize the
country against the strong opposition of
the half of the population that favors a
secular state.
Luckily for Erdogan the Turkish economy
was booming, so he went on winning
elections—and he worked steadily to
concentrate all power in his own office.
He removed any officials who were not
his avid supporters, attacked the
freedom of the media, and committed
Turkey to unconditional support for the
Islamist rebels in neighboring Syria.
The rebel army officers may have been
trying to stop all that, but it was a
terrible mistake for which they will
suffer severe punishment. So will
anybody who is even suspected of having
sympathized with them, and Erdogan will
emerge as the all-powerful "Sultan" of a
post-democratic Turkey.
The coup leaders made the same mistake
as the Egyptian liberals made when they
asked the army to overthrow the elected
president there in 2013. Egypt had a
president whom they feared and hated,
but they also had a democracy which
provided a peaceful means of ousting
him.
Erdogan's popularity would have dwindled
with time. The Turkish economy is
stagnant, his Syrian policy is a
disaster, and the flagrant corruption of
the people around him is getting hard to
ignore. Sooner or later he would have
lost an election. But like the Egyptian
liberals, the officers who led the
Turkish coup didn't trust democracy
enough to wait.