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Turkey faces two uneasy choices in Syria. Neither of them is good #SyriaWar

January 31, 2017 By administrator

Turkish forces invading the northern Syrian town of Jarabulus in August 2016

By David Barchard,

Turks woke up to hear a pleasant and quite unexpected surprise on their morning news last Thursday.

But then, just a few hours later, it was followed by equally unexpected, but to most Turks, unwelcome news.

Taken together, the two developments suggest that any firm agreement between Turkey and the other outside players in the war in Syria may still be far off.

It leaves the Ankara-Moscow partnership vulnerable to upset, while Turkey’s military operations in Syria could be checked, at least temporarily.

Washington and Moscow at odds

The good news, at least initially to Turkish government ears, came from US President Donald Trump, who announced that he intended to help set up safe zones in Syria to act as bases for refugees. Turkey has been pressing for safe zones in northern Syria – originally to be combined with no-fly zones – for nearly four years now.

With a ceasefire now declared in Syria and operations against the regime of Bashar al-Assad currently halted, the zones would presumably no longer be used for military purposes.

Nevertheless, they faced the tacit but unwavering opposition of both the Obama administration in the United States for several years, contributing to the bitter rift which steadily opened up between Washington and Ankara from 2013 onwards, mainly because the US refused to assist a Turkish military operation in Syria.

Trump’s remarks suggested that he sees the zones in terms of relieving pressure from refugees, rather than as having crucial significance for the strategic balance in Syria.

Before floating the idea, Trump has evidently had not taken soundings from Moscow. Within an hour or two, President Vladimir Putin’s press spokesperson, Dimtry Peskov, warned pointedly: “It is important that this does not exacerbate the situation with refugees, but probably all the consequences ought to be weighed up.”

As the day wore on, that message began to sink in. Turks felt uncertain, perhaps even uneasy, about what Trump was actually proposing.

What missing: enclaves

The crucial detail which was missing from his remarks was his attitude to the Syrian Kurds who belonged to the Democratic Union Party (PYD), which rules the Syrian Kurdish enclaves but is an affiliate of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), the militant movement which is fighting an all-out terrorist campaign against the Turkish government.

Ankara views the PYD enclaves as dangerous and unacceptable and would like to see them ended – though how this could be achieved is unclear.

It also wants Syrian Kurdish military advances against IS stopped because this is bringing close the spectre (for Ankara) of a militarily strong independent Kurdish area in Syria. That brought it into confrontation with Obama. Will it do the same with Trump?

Trump’s decision to retain Brett McGurk as “special envoy” (ie de facto organiser) of the US-led coalition against Islamic State (IS) has already disappointed Ankara.

McGurk is regarded as the architect of a military pact between the US and the Peoples Protection Units (YPG), the YPD militia, through which the Syrian Kurds have access to a supply of weaponry which might be used in potential stand-offs with Turkish or Syrian opposition forces.

Alarm bells in Ankara

And then, later on Thursday morning, Turkish TV news reported the bad news.

Till the end of last week almost nothing was revealed about the content of the talks between the Syrian government and opposition groups at Astana in Kazakhstan, though a mood of disappointment seemed to be setting in among the various groups in the Free Syrian Army opponents of the regime.

This is awkward for Turkey, which is seeking to combine them into a single unified political entity, which will be able to act for the opposition in any long-term deal for the future of Syria.

However if Russian press sources are to be believed, a draft constitution was presented to participants at Astana by the Russian delegation. The details that have been revealed are deeply unpalatable both for the regime’s Sunni Arab opponents and for Turkey.

Under the draft, a non-Arab, non-Islamic state would be created. It would be based on cultural and religious diversity, with the non-Sunni group (30 percent of the total based on the country’s pre-war population) holding an entrenched position.

No map has yet been published but obviously Assad would retain the prosperous coastal provinces while the Sunni area would probably be in the north near Turkey.

“The cultural diversity of the Syrian society will be ensured,” the draft stated. The plan would stop just short of outright federalism, something which almost everybody in Turkey is nervous about on principle, regarding it as the prelude to a permanent breakaway by the Syrian Kurdish enclaves known as Rojava along the south of the Turkish border.

For groups which have been fighting to create a unified Sunni state, all this is unlikely to be acceptable.

The really contentious point in the draft, and the one which immediately set alarm bells ringing in Turkey, was the proposal that there could be autonomous Kurdish regions and that in these there would be equality for both the Kurdish and Arabic languages.

Who benefits – and who loses out?

The PYD were excluded from the Astana meeting at Turkey’s request, but a rival group, the Kurdish National Council (ENKS), an offshoot of the Iraqi Kurdish Regional Government, was present.

Contrary to what Ankara hoped, indeed probably expected, Moscow’s sights now seem to be focused on involving the PYD in the settlement.

A PYD delegation was invited to Moscow on 26 January to be briefed on the outcome of the Astana meeting and the new constitution by Sergey Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister. However last Friday, a Russian spokesperson backtracked, denying Russia supported autonomy for the Kurds.

The immediate implication of this is that, regardless of whatever Trump decides on, Russia is not going to acquiesce in a future attempt by Turkey to subdue “Rojava”, as the Syrian Kurdish enclaves style themselves.

What’s more, if there is to be a settlement in Syria along the lines envisaged at Astana, then the Free Syria Army groups will have to co-exist alongside their Kurdish neighbours. 

Turkey has been engaged in an all-out bid to crush its own Kurdish militants since July 2015. The idea of permanent autonomous Kurdish enclaves on its southern border, which are friendly to the PKK, is a nightmare.

The situation might be different if Turkish forces in Syria, which have been besieging the IS-held town of al-Bab since early December, had the upper hand. Then the Turkish army could move on towards Kurdish-held Afrin and Manbij, which are closer to the southern border.

But so far, IS has proved tenacious, though there are reports that it might withdraw from al-Bab. Ankara, which has lost around 50 soldiers in the siege, is unwilling to risk more casualties in an all-out assault on a town which lost most of its strategic importance when east Aleppo fell in December.

Turkey may now face two uneasy choices: remaining bogged down in Syria; or striking a deal with Russia, which would give it far less than it hoped for and leaves it still facing both IS and the PYD.

– David Barchard has worked in Turkey as a journalist, consultant, and university teacher. He writes regularly on Turkish society, politics, and history, and is currently finishing a book on the Ottoman Empire in the 19th century.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurds, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Russia, Turkey

Terrorist State of Turkey launched Investigations into 53 people for ‘insulting’ Erdoğan

February 2, 2016 By administrator

CUMHURBASKANI RECEP TAYYIP ERDOGAN MUHTARLAR TOPLANTISI'NDA KONUSTU. FOTOGRAF: ANKARA (DHA)

CUMHURBASKANI RECEP TAYYIP ERDOGAN MUHTARLAR TOPLANTISI’NDA KONUSTU. FOTOGRAF: ANKARA (DHA)

Administrative and judicial investigations have been launched into 53 people from 20 provinces across Turkey for allegedly insulting President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on social media since the Isparta Governor’s Office sent a notification to all state institutions and organizations in the province, instructing their staff to urgently report all incidents in which Erdoğan or other senior government officials are “insulted” on social media to the police.

The notification signed by Isparta Deputy Governor Fevzi Güneş on behalf of Isparta Governor Vahdettin Özkan asked state staff to report insult incidents to the police so that administrative and legal action can be taken against the perpetrators.

Upon receiving the notification on Monday, police officers from the Isparta Police Department’s Cyber Crime Unit started to scan through social media posts in order to find those that insulted President Erdoğan or other senior government officials.

As a result judicial and administrative investigations were launched into 53 people in 20 provinces, including Afyonkarahisar, Ankara, Antalya, Balıkesir, Çanakkale, İstanbul, İzmir, Kocaeli, Kütahya, Manisa and Van, on suspicion of “insulting the president,” “defaming the government of the Turkish Republic or the institutions of the state,” “inciting people to enmity or hatred or denigration” and “insulting a public officer regarding the performance of his duties.”

The Ankara 32nd Criminal Court of First Instance also sentenced Hüseyin Aygün, former Tunceli deputy for the main opposition Republican People’s Party’s (CHP), to imprisonment of one year, two months on Monday for allegedly insulting Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu.

The National Police Department on Jan. 6 sent a circular to the police departments of all 81 provinces across Turkey about “insult crimes” against senior state officials, particularly Erdoğan. The circular advised the police departments to take immediate action against individuals who engage in “any insult crime” against Erdoğan and other senior state officials.

Article 299 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK) states that anyone convicted of insulting the president will serve a jail term of between one and four years. Article 125 of the TCK states that any person who acts with the intention to harm the honor, reputation or dignity of another person through concrete performance or giving impression of intent can be sentenced to a period of between three months and two years in prison or be given a fine.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Fevzi Güneş, Isparta, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Turkey

Turkey: Kılıçdaroğlu: We were asked not to prosecute Erdoğan and his family during the coalition talks

October 1, 2015 By administrator

(Photo: Cihan)

(Photo: Cihan)

Republican People’s Party (CHP) leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu has reportedly stated that during the coalition talks held after the June 7 election, the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) asked him for an assurance that President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his family members would not be charged with corruption and sent to trial.

“During the [coalition] talks, we were asked to give a guarantee that we would not touch Erdoğan or his family members. Of course we rejected this request and told them [AK Party officials] that this had nothing to do with us. This is the work of the judiciary, not us,” CHP leader Kılıçdaroğlu claimed, according to a report that appeared in the Cumhuriyet daily on Thursday.

Police investigations made public on Dec. 17 and 25, 2013 revealed what was allegedly the biggest corruption and bribery scandal in the history of the republic and which implicated some top officials of the AK Party government as well as President Erdoğan and members of his family. Prosecutors ultimately dropped the investigations.

“During the talks, I told [interim Prime Minister Ahmet] Davutoğlu that the CHP would give absolute support to the reopening of the corruption investigations. I also told him that we would also support any proposal to reduce or completely cancel the presidency’s budget. Those words of mine were immediately conveyed to the presidential palace, he [Erdoğan] interfered and the talks reached a dead end,” Kılıçdaroğlu added.

The budget of the presidency has been increased by 99 percent, to TL 397 million for 2015, according to the government’s recently announced Middle-term Economic Program (OVP).

Erdoğan’s son, Bilal, is a member of the executive board of the Foundation of Youth and Education in Turkey (TÜRGEV), and was accused of receiving unlawful donations TÜRGEV was at the center of the corruption investigation, which included several serious allegations of bribery and irregularities within the foundation.

In one of numerous recorded telephone conversations that were anonymously leaked online, then-Prime Minister Erdoğan and Bilal are allegedly heard talking about a plan how to get rid of huge sums of money stashed at several houses. Erdoğan, at the beginning of the conversation, briefs Bilal about a police operation going on at the time, including the search of suspects’ homes, and asks him to “zero” money by distributing it among several businessmen. Toward the end of a series of conversations that day, Bilal tells his father that he and others have “finished the tasks you gave us,” implying that the money was removed from the premises.

In another recorded conversation, Erdoğan was allegedly heard accepting two villas from businessman Mustafa Latif Topbaş in return for easing zoning restrictions in İzmir’s Urla district.

Erdoğan has claimed that the corruption investigations were an attempted coup conducted by influential international groups and their proxies in Turkey seeking to topple the AK Party government.

Report: ZAMAN

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ak party, coalition talks, corruption, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

Turkey: Killed police officer leaves letter behind, doesn’t want Erdoğan or Davutoglu to attend funeral

September 3, 2015 By administrator

Hakkari on Wednesday. (Photo: DHA)

Hakkari on Wednesday. (Photo: DHA)

Mehmet Akif Hatunoğlu, one of four police officers who were killed on Thursday when explosives planted by Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) terrorists were detonated as they passed by, left behind a letter stating he does not want President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan or interim Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu to attend his funeral.
The slain police officers — İbrahim Halil Aksoy, Mehmet Hüseyin Balta, Ahmet Akalın and Hatunoğlu — were traveling in a vehicle in the Dargeçit district of southeastern province of Mardin on Thursday morning, when the terrorist staged the bomb attack against the vehicle.
According to media reports, the attacked police vehicle was patrolling the district on Thursday morning to ensure the security of firefighters who were trying to extinguish a fire in an educational institution in the district that was started earlier by the PKK. Security forces have launched a large-scale operation in the district to capture those perpetrators who fled the scene following the bomb attack. Report by Zaman
Security forces later found a letter of testamentary on Hatunoğlu. In the letter, Hatunoğlu says if he is killed, he does not want Erdoğan, Davutoğlu, any ministers, deputies or governors to attend his funeral ceremony as the state officials turned a blind eye to PKK terrorist acts during the settlement process launched in 2012 to end Turkey’s long-standing Kurdish problem.
Expressing his love for his family, wife and daughter, the slain policeman also says he firstly entrusts his daughter to his wife and then his parents, but will never entrust his daughter to the state.

The bomb blast in the Dargeçit district of Mardin is the latest in a succession of frequent attacks against security forces by PKK terrorists since a two-year-long cease-fire ended in July, leaving in tatters the settlement process launched by the government with imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan to end the Kurdish problem.
Furthermore, two other police officers were injured in another terrorist attack staged by the PKK in Mardin province on Wednesday night. The terrorists detonated mines planted on a road in the Derik district of Mardin while a vehicle carrying a group of police officers was passing by. According to media reports, two police officers were slightly injured and are receiving treatment at Derik State Hospital.
Turkish warplanes also bombed PKK targets on Wednesday after one soldier was killed in the same region. State media said 20 militants were killed in those air strikes.
More than 70 members of the security forces have been killed since the PKK attacks began. The media says more than 900 PKK militants have been killed in that period in southeast Turkey and Iraq, where the terrorist PKK has bases.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ahmet Davutoglu, mardin, Mehmet Akif Hatunoğlu, PKK, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Turkey

Erdoğan to slain soldier’s grieving sister: Then, your brother shouldn’t have chosen this job

August 27, 2015 By administrator

A funeral ceremony was held for Spec. Sgt. Hakan Aktürk on Aug. 20. (Photo: DHA)

A funeral ceremony was held for Spec. Sgt. Hakan Aktürk on Aug. 20. (Photo: DHA)

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan reportedly told the sister of a special sergeant who was recently killed in a PKK attack  that her brother should not have chosen to join the army after the woman criticized him for fueling the Kurdish conflict for political gains during a recent phone talk. 

The conversation between the sister of Spec. Sgt. Hakan Aktürk, who was killed in an attack by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in Siirt last week, was made public by the soldier’s mother-in-law, Emine Küçüktamer, during a visit paid by a group of Republican People’s Party (CHP) deputies to Aktürk’s family in Osmaniye.

Küçüktamer said Erdoğan called her daughter, the wife of Aktürk, after a funeral ceremony held for the slain soldier last week. “My daughter did not respond to the call, the sister of the martyr did. It was President Erdoğan calling. ‘Who are you? The president or the prime minister?’ the sister asked. He said he is the president. ‘If your son Bilal is also wrapped in a Turkish flag like this one day, you can understand us. Should our sons pay the price for decreasing votes for you?’ she also asked. And then the president told her that her brother should not have chosen this profession then,” Küçüktamer quoted Erdoğan and Aktürk’s sister as saying during the phone talk.

“Is this something that can be uttered by anyone who is 60 years old, let alone a president?” Küçüktamer continued. 
Turkey faces wave after wave of attacks by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) since the June 7 elections. 
After the June 7 general election, the AK Party lost its majority in Parliament and the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) passed the 10 percent electoral threshold, winning 80 seats in Parliament. This led to the collapse of the Kurdish settlement process that was launched in 2011 to resolve the country’s decades-old Kurdish problem, which has seen Kurds’ cultural and political rights unrecognized by the state as equal to those of other ethnic groups.

Critics accuse Erdoğan of trying to benefit from an environment of chaos and an approaching snap election and to win back voters who had drifted away in the June general election and cost the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) he founded its parliamentary majority.

Erdoğan and the AK Party is accused of planning to use controlled chaos to “direct” people who may fear political and economic instability into voting for the AK Party in an early election scheduled for Nov. 1.

source: Zaman

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: PKK, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Siirt

EP’s Lambsdorff: Fair elections no longer possible in Turkey

June 4, 2015 By administrator

Turkey rapporteur for the ALDE Group Alexander Graf Lambsdorff. (Photo: Cihan)

Turkey rapporteur for the ALDE Group Alexander Graf Lambsdorff. (Photo: Cihan)

A senior member of the European Parliament (EP) and Turkey rapporteur for the ALDE Group, Alexander Graf Lambsdorff, has said it is no longer possible to hold fair elections in Turkey following threats recently made by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to the Turkish press.

Releasing a press statement on Thursday, Lambsdorff stated: “President Erdoğan’s constant threats against journalists and publishers show that either he does not understand democratic principles, or that he consciously disregards them. Ahead of [June 7 parliamentary] elections on Sunday, the state of democracy in Turkey is deplorable.”

He further added: “Even if the ballot itself will most likely be free, it won’t be fair, considering the intimidation against any critical press. It’s not just newspapers such as Zaman and Cumhuriyet, whose editor-in-chief has been threatened with a life sentence, who have been targeted, but also the publishing group Doğan, to whom Hürriyet belongs.”

Recalling that the European Parliament criticized the impairment of the press and freedom of expression in Turkey in January this year, Lambsdorff warned that things have since deteriorated. Lambsdorff also called on Erdoğan to cease his polarizing and confrontational rhetoric, especially since he is supposed to exercise a non-partisan, neutral role as a president according to the Turkish Constitution.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ALDE, Alexander Graf Lambsdorff, European Parliament, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Turkey election 2015

Turkey Cumhuriyet journalists draw front page battle line against Erdoğan

June 2, 2015 By administrator

he front page of Cumhuriyet published on Tuesday. (Photo Today's Zaman)

he front page of Cumhuriyet published on Tuesday. (Photo Today’s Zaman)

With their names and photographs accompanying a headline that reads “We are responsible [for the story],” journalists at the Cumhuriyet daily have responded to a threat made by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan against the paper’s editor-in-chief for running a story and photos that provided proof of illegal arms shipments to Syria.  report ZAMAN

Speaking during a live broadcast on the state-run TRT Haber news channel on Sunday night, Erdoğan said: “I have filed a lawsuit [against the editor-in-chief]. … And the person who did the exclusive report about it will pay a heavy price for it. I won’t let him go [unpunished].”

The Cumhuriyet article said “We employees at Cumhuriyet assume responsibility along with our editor-in-chief for the story revealing the truth about an incident that was denied by state officials for months.” It is a journalist’s duty to inform the public about the dangers and threats of an arms smuggling incident whose political, legal and diplomatic remifications the public is not aware of, the article added.

In a headline story on Friday, Cumhuriyet published images from a video in the investigation file proving that National Intelligence Organization (MİT) trucks had carried weapons, contradicting the government’s earlier claim that they were only carrying humanitarian aid to Turkmens in war-torn Syria.

Erdoğan, who claimed the daily’s sole aim in publishing the report on the trucks operated by MİT was to tarnish Turkey’s image, accused the daily of being involved in spying by having published the report.

Dündar also challenged Erdoğan in a message on Twitter on Monday, saying: “The person who committed this crime will pay a heavy price for that. We will not let him go [unpunished],” also maintaining that Erdoğan is the one who is involved in crime by arranging arms-laden trucks to be sent to rebel groups in Syria.

On Jan. 19 of last year, three trucks bound for Syria — which the government admitted were operated by MİT — were intercepted by gendarmes in the southern province of Adana after prosecutors received tip-offs that they were illegally carrying arms to Syria. Shortly after top officials gave statements about the trucks, Syrian Turkmens denied that any such truck had arrived from Turkey.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Can Dündar, Cumhuriyet, MİT trucks, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Syria, Turkey

Turkey’s Erdoğan “bark but cannot byte” slams nations recognizing Armenian ’genocide’

April 25, 2015 By administrator

210032_newsdetailTurkey’s president has lashed out at country leaders who have recognized the killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as genocide on the centenary of the massacres.

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Saturday accused France, Germany, Russia and Austria – whose leaders or parliaments recently described the killings as genocide – of supporting “claims constructed on Armenian lies.” He accused the United States of siding with Armenia although President Barack Obama stopped short of using the term in his annual message.

Erdoğan said: “They should first, one-by-one, clean the stains on their own histories.”

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

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