Turkey Arrests Generals, Confronts Inner Demons

TURKEY ARRESTS GENERALS, CONFRONTS INNER DEMONS

The Daily Maverick
/2010-02-23-turkey-arrests-generals-confronts-inne r-demons
Feb 23 2010

In the past several days, Turkey’s long-simmering military/Islamist
tension surfaced yet again. On Monday night, dozens of serving and
retired officers were arrested, including some of the country’s
highest-ranking former generals and admirals. But while Turkey’s
precious stability may have been temporarily endangered, not everything
is doom and gloom.

The arrests were part of a broader government movement against
a shadowy ultra-nationalist movement accused of plotting the
overthrow of the country’s current secular, but Islamist-inspired
and orientated government. According to government sources, the
plotters hoped to undermine the now-ruling Justice and Development
Party and eventually create an atmosphere that would support a new
coup. Turkey’s Taraf newspaper says that last month it gave criminal
prosecutors a cache of some 5,000 documents, along with CDs, tapes
and PowerPoint presentations all documenting the purported details
of the plot, as well as lists of journalists – alternatively to be
relied upon as supporters or arrested in a coup.

Speaking separately about the plot and the arrests, Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan (on a visit to Spain) and President Abdullah Gul
took pains to wave off any claim of the ruling government’s involvement
in the arrests, putting the responsibility for the investigations
and arrests back on criminal prosecutors.

These most recent arrests and the accusations of a military plot
point to a sharp split in Turkish opinion. According to analysts,
many Turks see this as something that is long overdue – bringing to
heel the unelected officers who have carried out coups, assassinations
and repression over decades. Others, however, see these charges as the
way the government will undermine the key institution that established
and now protects modern Turkey’s secular foundations.

Contemporary Turkey’s political life is in turmoil, but the country
lies on ground that has been home to a progression of some of the
world’s great civilisations. These include the Hittites, Assyrians,
Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, and, finally,
the Seljuk Turks and Ottomans. When the Ottoman star dimmed in the
17th century after the 1683 siege of Vienna was repulsed by Saxon and
Polish armies, the once resplendent, powerful Ottoman Empire began
its downward spiral to become the "sick man of Europe".

Territory after territory was sliced away by its Russian and
Habsburg rivals, independence movements in Greece – and then the
rest of the Balkans – shrank the Ottoman Empire further. The UK,
Italy and France took much of what remained in Ottoman hands. By the
early 1900s, after several traumatic military defeats, the so-called
"Young Turk" movement attempted to re-energise the Sublime Porte’s
flailing government, moved closer to Germany and then disastrously
joined the Central Powers in World War I.

In defeat, the remnants of the Ottoman Empire were handed over to the
Allies. Facing virtual occupation, one of the country’s few successful
generals, Mustafa Kemal (then, later, renamed Kemal Ataturk, "Father
of the Turks") led the effort to establish a modern, secular nation.

He outlawed the traditional fez hat and imposed modern western
dress as a symbol of the country’s break with the past. The Roman
alphabet replaced a mixed Arabic/Persian script and a full range of
western-style governmental institutions were established. Turkey has
evolved since then into a Near East anomaly: a Moslem nation with no
established state religion; a non-Arab nation and ally of Israel;
a Nato member with the alliance’s second-largest military; and a
would-be EU candidate member.

But long-term political stability continues to elude Turkey,
with unresolved issues deeply etched into its social fabric. Turkey
continues to be split between modern secularists and devout Muslims who
press for a religious texture to their state. The continuing effect of
Turkey’s long-term repression of its Kurdish population (derisively
labelled Mountain Turks by the government), a deep, centuries-old
suspicion of Greece and the attendant conflict over Cyprus, and a
continuing animosity between Turks and Armenians that reaches back
(at least in the modern era) to Turkish pogroms against its subject
Armenian population during World War I are further problems.

Foremost, of course, is the unresolved political question of
how to achieve a convincing national consensus on the role of the
country’s military in the contemporary nation – nearly 100 years after
Ataturk’s system was installed. The Turkish military clings to its
role as protector of the modern Turkish state against domestic and
international enemies, intervening to depose three elected governments
and executing prime minister Adnan Menderes, the leader of Turkey’s
first opposition party, in 1961.

The origins of today’s Turkey – economically growing and increasingly
diverse – reach back 30 years to the era of prime minister Turgut
Ozal. Ozal opened up the Turkish economy, creating a manufacturing
boom and encouraging more traditional rural Turks to the cities for
jobs. This population shift, together with growing wealth among the
traditional Muslim middle class, strengthened democracy and reduced
the forces for radicalism.

As a result, Turkey’s key political fissure now is between politicians
from the older, traditional and more pious middle class, and an elite
bureaucracy and increasingly cosmopolitan population in big cities.

The latter argue Turkey has outgrown the need for the military to
intervene in politics, while the military’s supporters continue to
maintain that politicians cannot be trusted to keep Islam out of the
running of the state.

But this time around, assuming the plot was real, elements of the
military may well have fatally overreached themselves. The swiftness
and emphatic way the state dealt with those involved could well
mean that, in future, this will be remembered as the moment when
the political balance of power in Turkey decisively moved from the
soldiers to the civilians.

By J. Brooks Spector

Read more at the New York Times here and here, the AP, the CIA World
Fact Book and Wikipedia

Main photo: Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul (R) talks to Land Forces
commander General Ilker Basbug (L) during the funeral of Turkish army
officer Major Ercument Turkmen at Kocatepe Mosque in Ankara April 26,
2008. REUTERS/Umit Bektas

http://www.thedailymaverick.co.za/article

The 23rd Of February Is The RF Day Of Fatherland Defender

THE 23RD OF FEBRUARY IS THE RF DAY OF FATHERLAND DEFENDER

mp;p=0&id=1205&y=2010&m=02&d=24
23 .02.10

In the Russian Federation the 23rd of February is celebrated as the
Day of Fatherland Defender. In Armenia, as well as in a number of
CIS states some events are organized on this day to celebrate the
Day of Fatherland Defender. And although in Armenia the Day is not
officially celebrated, every year, according to a fixed custom,
the Victory Park is crowded on the 23rd of February.

In the morning of the 23rd of February the RA Minister of Defence
Seyran Ohanyan, the ambassador of the RF to Armenia V. Kovalenko,
high-ranked officers and servicemen of the RA and RF armed forces,
and representatives of diplomatic mission visited the Park. Garlands
were put at the memorial of the Unknown Soldier commemorating the
victims for the protection of the fatherland. The ceremony was closed
by the ceremonial marching of the Armenian and Russian soldiers.

RA MoD Department of Information and Public Affairs

http://www.mil.am/eng/index.php?page=2&a

For Eastern and Western Armenians to Understand Each Other

FOR EASTERN AND WESTERN ARMENIANS TO UNDERSTAND EACH OTHER

ml
16:12:06 – 19/02/2010

Today, Serge Sargsyan met with the staff of the internet multilingual
translation project which cooperates with the RA Ministry of Diaspora.

The project does translations from Western Armenian into Eastern
Armenian and vice versa, as well as into English. The project supposes
for involvement of professional specialists for further perfection.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/society16899.ht

Armenia’s Chess Players At Caspian Cup Chess Tournament

ARMENIA’S CHESS PLAYERS AT CASPIAN CUP CHESS TOURNAMENT

Aysor
Feb 18 2010
Armenia

The 8th International Caspian Cup Chess Tournament, held under
management of the Gilan Chess Association in Iranian Rash city,
is nearing completion.

The Tournament involves 80 chess players from Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Georgia, Turkmenistan, and Iran.

Armenia’s Arthur Chibukhchian, Levon Babujian, and international
master Robert Hovhannisian at 5,5 points out of 8 are registering
quite good results, just a point behind the tournament’s leaders,
a spokesperson for Armenia’s Chess Federation reported.

"To Ratify Beforehand Means To Surrender Completely"

"TO RATIFY BEFOREHAND MEANS TO SURRENDER COMPLETELY"

Aysor
Feb 18 2010
Armenia

"The expressions expressing the initiative are usually mixed with
the concession. If Armenia concedes something beforehand we try
to present it as the best way to express the aggression", – told
Armen Rustamyan the Chairman of the NA Standing Committee on Foreign
Relations, referring to the statements of the politicians who say that
"Armenia should ratify the protocols before Turkey would do it."

According to A. Rustamyan such kinds of statements "show that there
is no concept, we are making situational steps, and we do not hold
the situation." He believes that the only way to influence on the
situation is "leaving the process."

"The statements, on accelerating the ratification, mean complete
surrender, mean that you depend on the kindness of the international
community, the caprice of Turkey and there is no guarantee that after
the ratification Turkey will not point out all the issues which are
important for him", – A. Rustamyan stressed recalling the Turkish
statement in Zurich after the signing the Armenian – Turkish protocols.

According to the chairman it was clear beforehand what would be
written in that statement.

Turks Again Worry…

TURKS AGAIN WORRY…

NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY
FEBRUARY 17, 2010
ANKARA

ANKARA, FEBRUARY 17, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Turkish
parliamentarians who visited Sweden expressed concern with the bill
on recognition of the Armenian Genocide that again appeared in the
Swedish parliament.

The Swedish parliament plans within two weeks to put to vote a bill
on recognition of the genocide committed by Turks against Armenians
and Assyrians.

According to Turkish media, the delegation led by Chairman of
Turkish parliament’s Committee of Foreign Relations Murad Mercan
warned the Swedish side that if the mentioned resolution is adopted,
difficulties will emerge in the Turkey-Sweden relations and will
hinder the ratification process of the Armenian-Turkish protocols by
the Turkish parliament.

ANKARA: US Extends Full Support To Process Between Turkey And Armeni

US EXTENDS FULL SUPPORT TO PROCESS BETWEEN TURKEY AND ARMENIA

Today’s Zaman
Feb 16 2010
Turkey

US Ambassador in Ankara James Jeffrey said on Tuesday that United
States extended full support to the process between Turkey and Armenia.

Turkish Parliamentary Foreign Affairs Commission chairman Murat Mercan
and commission members met with Jeffrey in Ankara.

Speaking prior to the meeting, Mercan said the commission would inform
the ambassador on its views about the bill regarding 1915 incidents,
expected to be discussed in US House of Representatives Foreign
Affairs Committee on March 4.

Mercan said, "we will also discuss the recent developments regarding
Turkey-US relations."

Jeffrey said meetings between Turkey and the United States in a
democratic system were very fruitful, noting that relations with
Turkey were always at the forefront for the United States.

Asked if the bill would undermine the process which began with the
protocols signed by Turkey and Armenia, Jeffrey said that the United
States extended full support to the process.

Stepanakert Commemorate First Chairman Of NKR Supreme Council Artur

STEPANAKERT COMMEMORATE FIRST CHAIRMAN OF NKR SUPREME COUNCIL ARTUR MKRTCHYAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
16.02.2010 20:07 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On February 16 NKR Parliament Speaker Ashot Ghulyan
accompanied by MPs visited the Memorial of Stepanakert and laid
flowers at the monument of the first Chairman of NKR Supreme Council
Artur Lazarian in connection with his birthday.

The event was attended by representatives of republic’s acting
leadership, friends and relatives of Artur Lazarian, as well as
representatives of the ARF Dashnaktsutyun in Artsakh, press office
of NKR NA reported.

Arthur Lazarian was born in 1959 in the district of Gadrut of NKAR.

He was a historian, director of the regional museum. Before Jan. 8,
1992 elections to the post of NKR Supreme Council chairman he was a
commander of self-defense detachment of Hadrut district. A veteran
of the Karabakh movement. Supporter of unconditional recognition of
NKR statehood. In the elections he was supported by the Radical Party
Dashnaktsutyun, claiming to political leadership in Nagorno Karabakh.

On February 16 Artur Lazarian would have turned 50 years.

Diplomatic Academy Opens In Yerevan

DIPLOMATIC ACADEMY OPENS IN YEREVAN
Anna Nazaryan

"Radiolur"
15.02.2010 18:43

President Serzh Sargsyan today attended the official opening ceremony
of the Diplomatic Academy in Yerevan.

The opening of Diplomatic Academy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
opens a new page in the field of preparation of diplomats.

In his opening remarks Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian expressed
gratitude to President Sargsyan for his support to the idea of opening
of the Academy.

Lecturers from famous educational establishments of Russia, Europe,
the United States, Japan and China will be invited to teach at the
Diplomatic Academy.

During the 2010 academic years the students will have an opportunity
to study international relations and provisions of international law,
the activity of international and regional organizations, negotiating
skills and peculiarities of the work at diplomatic representations.

The establishment of the Diplomatic Academy has been supported by
the European Union, the OSCE and the UN Offices in Yerevan.

His Holiness Karekin II Leaves For Jerusalem

HIS HOLINESS KAREKIN II LEAVES FOR JERUSALEM

Aysor
Feb 15 2010
Armenia

Catholicos of All Armenians, His Holiness Karekin II is paying
a two-day visit to the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem. The
delegation involves leader of the Armenian Apostolic Church Diocese
of Tatev in Brazil, Archbishop Garibian, leader of the Armenian
Apostolic Church Diocese of Gysak in Argentina, Archbishop Muradian,
and other churchmen.

On his visit, His Holiness Karekin II will hand Order of St. Mesrop
Mashtots to Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem, Archbishop Torgom
Manoukian. It’s worth mentioning, that by Armenian President Serzh
Sargsyan’s decree, Archbishop Torgom Manoukian was awarded with
Order of St. Mesrop Mashtots in occasion of the 20th anniversary of
his enthronement.