Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

Heroin, Organized Crime, and the Making of Modern Turkey Reprint Edition

October 12, 2017 By administrator

By Ryan Gingeras

Heroin, Organized Crime, and the Making of Modern Turkey explores the history of organized crime in Turkey and the roles which gangs and gangsters have played in the making of the Turkish state and Turkish politics. Turkey’s underworld, which has been at the heart of several devastating scandals over the last several decades, is strongly tied to the country’s long history of opium production and heroin trafficking. As an industry at the center of the Ottoman Empire’s long transition into the modern Turkish Republic, as important as the silk road had been in earlier centuries, the modern rise of the opium and heroin trade helped to solidify and complicate long-standing relationships between state officials and criminal syndicates. Such relationships produced not only ongoing patterns of corruption, but helped fuel and enable repeated acts of state violence.

Drawing upon new archival sources from the United States and Turkey, including declassified documents from the Prime Minister’s Archives of the Republic of Turkey and the Central Intelligence Agency, Heroin, Organized Crime, and the Making of Modern Turkey provides a critical window into how a handful of criminal syndicates played supporting roles in the making of national security politics in the contemporary Turkey. The rise of the “Turkish mafia”, from its origins in the late Ottoman period to its role in the “deep state” revealed by the so-called Susurluk and Ergenekon scandals, is a story that mirrors troubling elements in the republic’s establishment and emphasizes the transnational and comparative significance of narcotics and gangs in the country’s past.

Ryan Gingeras is the author of Fall of the Sultanate: The Great War and the End of the Ottoman Empire 1908-1922 and Sorrowful Shores: Violence, Ethnicity, and the End of the Ottoman Empire, which received short list distinctions for the Rothschild Book Prize in Nationalism and Ethnic Studies and the

Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: Heroin, modern-Turkey, organized-crime

Heroin, organized crime and the making of modern Turkey

January 28, 2015 By administrator

BY William Armstrong,

n_77563_1‘Heroin, Organized Crime, and the Making of Modern Turkey’ by Ryan Gingeras (Oxford University Press, 290 pages, £65)

On the morning of Nov. 4, 1996, Turkey woke up to news of a car crash near the small town of Susurluk, just south of Istanbul. The accident on a quiet country road seemed ordinary enough, but it was the four passengers inside the new model Mercedes – three dead and one seriously injured – who made national headlines. They included a former beauty pageant winner, an Istanbul police chief, a Kurdish member of parliament, and an ultra-nationalist contract killer who was on Interpol’s red list. The scandal lifted the lid on the murky alliance between the Turkish military, members of the ruling party, security officials, and organized crime, and commanded the news agenda for weeks.

But for many the exposure wasn’t so shocking. As described in this deeply researched new book by Ryan Gingeras, an associate professor at the Naval Postgraduate School in California, such shadowy links have a heritage going back to the late Ottoman era. Gingeras makes bold claims for the centrality of narcotics trafficking (particularly opium) and organized crime in the development of the Turkish state. “Like the role of oil in constructing such states as Saudi Arabia, Iran, or Azerbaijan,” he writes, “one cannot fully understand the modern Republic of Turkey without gauging the local, national, and transnational forces related to the flow of heroin in, through, and out of Asia Minor.” Although the book perhaps doesn’t live up to those ambitious claims, it does demonstrate that organized crime is a crucial – and generally under-examined – prism through which to consider Turkey’s state-building process from the late Ottoman era to the present day, “a testament to the steady integration of the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey into the global economy.”

Cultivated in Central Anatolia since the 19th century, opium, morphine and heroin became staple products critical to Anatolia’s economy, and ^710EB070D148F98660AD191A9609004904948D732FAFC4117E^pimgpsh_thumbnail_win_distrby the early years of the Turkish Republic the country ranked among the chief opium suppliers for the world narcotics market. Naturally, Ankara was reluctant to regulate production of its lucrative opium business, but international pressure eventually forced it to take steps in the early 1930s. Turkey was a key battleground in the U.S. Federal Bureau of Narcotics’ (FBN) struggle to enforce the international embargo on opium and other drugs – the heart of a web of smuggling routes emanating across the Mediterranean and the North Atlantic. Based on exhaustive study of FBN files, much of Gingeras’ book is taken up with the complex cat and mouse game as the bureau tried to combat the opium trade in Turkey.

After the Second World War, the FBN sought to establish a more fixed, engaged presence in the country. This took place within the emerging Cold War framework, and the author suggests that the degree to which Washington pursued the fight against organized crime at home and abroad was symptomatic of a broader pattern of Cold War thinking. The trade and production of narcotics was an element found in a variety of strategically important anti-Communist battlegrounds, and Istanbul was one of the most significant. Undercover FBN agent Sal Vizzini captured the popular image of Istanbul as a seedy Cold War outpost of skullduggery in his memoirs, describing it as “a city of unending intrigues, half-Asian and half-European, an ancient metropolis where corruption had been a way of life for a thousand years.”

Among the most interesting sections of the book center on Gingeras’ suggestion that the work of the FBN in Istanbul often blurred with that of the CIA. The accounts of a number of FBN operatives make clear that the FBN’s presence allowed for the execution of clandestine operations undertaken by the CIA. Narcotics agents, the author writes, were useful in providing a veneer of legitimacy for gathering intelligence:

The activities of the FBN, which included both pursuing criminals as well as defining the nature of the crimes and criminals involved, served to amplify the growing hegemonic influence and reach of the United States during the Cold War … Combating the drug trade in Turkey, in the words of Sal Vizzini, provided an essential ‘cover within a cover’ for both American and Turkish officers tasked with executing covert operations in the service of Western interests.

After Richard Nixon became president in 1969, combating heroin trafficking into the U.S. became the centerpiece of Washington’s foreign policy. Some claimed that 80 percent of heroin consumed in the U.S. was sourced from Turkey, and the Nixon administration demanded that Ankara crack down on opium production in Anatolia, offering financial aid as a way of speeding up the transition and softening the blow.

Turkey agreed to tighten measures in 1971, but the real story of the 1970s was the budding relationship forged between its National Intelligence Agency (MİT) and the criminal underworld. The country faced mounting instability throughout the decade, marked by politically-motivated street violence and internal and external threats that appeared to endanger the existence of the state. In this paranoid atmosphere, Gingeras writes, “the gangsters of the 1970s and beyond became the instrument of a robust and paranoid government apparatus committed to the preservation of the state at all costs.” Desperate times cemented relationships between outlaws and officers of the peace, and the lines between legitimate and illegitimate business operations were also blurred. But organized crime was not only the preserve of statist or right-wing groups. The outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), for example, long relied on the heroin trade to finance its war against Ankara, largely mediated by a figure called Behçet Cantürk, who was one of the most notorious heroin traffickers of the 1970s.

The Susurluk scandal of 1996 offered a glimpse into Turkey’s tangled web of smugglers, politicians, policemen, thugs, spies, diplomats, and hitmen, but unfortunately that is where Gingeras’ study ends. Contemporary political-criminal connections in Turkey are certainly no small subject, and in an “advanced democracy” it would be the job of local journalists to uncover such shady business. But there are few with the courage, skill or inclination to pursue those links – to say nothing of the political feasibility for investigative journalism at the present moment. Perhaps in 20 years we can expect a book as detailed as this one on the subject.

Source: hurriyet daily news

January/29/2015

Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: Heroin, modern-Turkey, organized-crime

Support Gagrule.net

Subscribe Free News & Update

Search

GagruleLive with Harut Sassounian

Can activist run a Government?

Wally Sarkeesian Interview Onnik Dinkjian and son

https://youtu.be/BiI8_TJzHEM

Khachic Moradian

https://youtu.be/-NkIYpCAIII
https://youtu.be/9_Xi7FA3tGQ
https://youtu.be/Arg8gAhcIb0
https://youtu.be/zzh-WpjGltY





gagrulenet Twitter-Timeline

Tweets by @gagrulenet

Archives

Books

Recent Posts

  • Pashinyan Government Pays U.S. Public Relations Firm To Attack the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Breaking News: Armenian Former Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan Pashinyan is agent
  • November 9: The Black Day of Armenia — How Artsakh Was Signed Away
  • @MorenoOcampo1, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, issued a Call to Action for Armenians worldwide.
  • Medieval Software. Modern Hardware. Our Politics Is Stuck in the Past.

Recent Comments

  • Baron Kisheranotz on Pashinyan’s Betrayal Dressed as Peace
  • Baron Kisheranotz on Trusting Turks or Azerbaijanis is itself a betrayal of the Armenian nation.
  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in