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Marietje Schaake

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Could NATO's Second-Largest Army Be Run by Terrorists?

Posted: 04/18/2012 4:33 pm

Turkey's former chief of staff recently walked out of a courtroom in protest of what he considers a sham trial against him. He has been imprisoned for months. So are the former heads of Navy, Air Force and Gendarmerie, as well as deputy chief of staff and hundreds of serving and retired military personnel -- all accused of terrorism or involvement in a coup plot. Yet no coup took place in Turkey over the past decade and the military has receded in influence in line with European norms.
 
In the most famous of Turkey's various ongoing coup investigations, the "Sledgehammer" trial investigates whether or not a 2003 war exercise was in fact a coup plan, around 250 members of the Turkish military are in jail. That includes almost 60 serving generals and admirals -- roughly 16 percent of the generals in the Turkish military. None of the suspects have been convicted.
 
As international concerns over the rule of law in Turkey increase, what do trials against military officials mean for NATO? With tensions along the Syrian-Turkish border rising, can NATO count on its second-largest military to play an effective role in global strategic concerns? For Turkey to play a credible role in the next 60 years of NATO, allegations against Turkey's highest military ranks need to be cleared up.
 
This is not to say generals should be above law or that the Turkish military should not be under civilian control. Turkey's traditionally staunchly secular military has overstepped its jurisdiction on several occasions in the past and tried to engineer politics. Since coming to power in 2002, the moderately Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP) has done marvels to bring the military under civilian control as part of reforms toward EU criteria. But the ongoing investigations have many troubling aspects. What began as an attempt to come clean with the darkest pages of Turkey's history has spun out of control. Instead of bringing the military under civilian control, a chain of accusations and lengthy pre-trial detentions without verdicts in the famous Ergenekon and Sledgehammer cases risk undermining the rule of law and trust in Turkey's state institutions.
 
While Turkey's democratic transformation is important for people in Turkey and also for Europe, a military in paralysis can easily destabilize the country. Additionally, an unprecedented number of journalists are imprisoned, and concerns of the abuse of anti-terrorism laws are growing to alarming levels in Turkey. For Europe, this should be weighed in the context of enhanced cooperation on security as well.
 
Today, many inside and outside Turkey believe that the cases constitute to political processes based on fabricated evidence. It is unclear who benefits but it is clear that the costs and liabilities are rising for Turkey but also for NATO. Take the Sledgehammer case. Turkish and American technical forensic experts established that large amounts of evidence documents were forged. Lawyers who have alleged such forgery of evidence in court found themselves subject of new investigations along with their clients soon after.
 
The credibility of these trials will be of crucial importance for the future of Turkey. The foundations of the state providing NATO's second-largest army have become implicated: the functioning of the rule of law, the separation of powers and the impartiality of the judiciary.
 
I find it hard to believe that NATO's second-largest army and such a significant member of Western security since the Cold War has been run by terrorists all along. But politicians should not take the seat of the judge. It is Turkey's judiciary and government that are responsible for ensuring the rule of law, fundamental freedoms, due process and fair trials.
 
The European Parliament joined the European Commission in proposing to open up negotiation chapters for Turkey on the judiciary and fundamental freedoms. This should boost the stagnated EU accession process and could help Turkey make the necessary transitions and reforms in order to meet international standards of democracy, good governance and the rule of law.
 
But given the grave character of the accusations and the consequences of the verdicts of the trials against military leaders in Turkey, NATO itself should play a role. It should send observers to Turkey and monitor the trials of high-ranking (or retired) military officials. In times of heightened tensions in the Middle East, there is no room for ambivalence about the reliability of NATO's second-largest army.

 

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08:31 AM on 04/20/2012
seems Ergenekon internet troops all of a sudden became interested in Huff Post threads, just look at the number of newbie comments that defend the "Turkish secularist state"

too little, too late, or ati alan uskudari gecti :)
07:45 AM on 04/20/2012
remember folks

Turkeys dont vote for Christians
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Stoopid American
Trooth, justice, and the American way ...
12:40 AM on 04/20/2012
As usual, the west wants to stick its nose in where it does not belong. I see no reason to believe that Turkish democracy is failing. In fact, I see that, for the first time, the democracy holds more power than the military. Why is this a bad thing? (Hint: it's because they're Muslims, isn't it)
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
05:01 AM on 04/20/2012
You see no reason? What about the forged evidence against the generals?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stoopid American
Trooth, justice, and the American way ...
07:10 PM on 04/20/2012
Is there really evidence it was forged?
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06:54 PM on 04/19/2012
Since Ataturk unified Turkey in the post-ottoman chaos, the military has been the safeguard of secular life in Turkey, a role it takes very seriously. There is no analogous situation in the U.S., so it seems to us no different than the standard military coups that are common worldwide. A radically islamic Turkey would be a first order disaster for the world. If the military has lost its safeguard role, the future is considerably more dangerous.
06:54 PM on 04/19/2012
Time to reconsider Turkey's NATO membership. Even The Economist magazine wonders whether it should continue using the adverb "moderately" to describe Turkey's governing AK party. The Economist is reconsidering its position in light of support by Turkey of the Syrian Free Army against the Assad regime. Not that the Assad regime deserves to survive but it's becoming clear that Turkey has decided on alliances with Islamist Sunni political parties emerging from the Arab Spring for the purpose of regional hegemony -- or neo-Ottoman aspirations.

What conflicts will Turkey drag NATO into as it pursues its imperial goals? "No problems with the neighbours" might be better described as "no problems with the neighbours as long as they're not Shia, or Jewish or Armenian or Azeri or Christian."
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Baghooli
Immortals!
06:23 PM on 04/19/2012
What is important; Turkiye citizens collective will which in part entails justice and prosperity among other rights for all, power to Turkish people!
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MarcEdward
likes all cats more than most people
05:29 PM on 04/19/2012
Troubling, but nothing we can do about it but wait and see.
I'm more disturbed by how our country's last President fired or promoted generals based upon if they'd lie about how great his plans were. Tell the President we don't have enough troops to hold Iraq - you get fired. Promote the useless "Surge", get a promotion.
04:28 PM on 04/19/2012
So, all these evidence show one direction. US is trying to eliminate the pro-European members of Turkish Army. The coalition member and powerfull hodja FG has been in the States for more than 12 years under the protection of FBI. FG has gained broad control over the Police and Justice. This is basicly his operation under the curtain of so-called democratic transformation. Not only the Army members, but around 2000 students, several poticians, 100s of journalists, academic staff, artists were in jail for several years. They are accused by helping the Coup(!) or active member!!!

Mam, this is an operation to eliminate all opposition in Turkey. If happens, there would be no obstacle in front of the Greate Middle East Project governed by the States. Infact, this will determine the future of EU. It is the undeclared war between the States and EU in Middle East and Anatolia.
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tallen
panem et circenses
02:46 PM on 04/19/2012
The secular Turkish military was the firewall designed by Attaturk to prevent Turkey from sliding back into Islamist religious rule.

The events of the past decade, the rise of the Islamists, does not bode well for Turkey, NATO, or the region, and these mass arrests and sham trials are the Islamist's way of solidifying their power.
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10:53 AM on 04/19/2012
As in fundamentalist Islamist government , the belligerent paranoia and conspiracies are primary engines driving its domestic and foreign policies.
Exhibit 1. Top echelon of Turkish politicians admit to begin their day by reading Vakit, radical Islamist tabloid banned in Germany for intolerance and hallucinatory rumor-mongering.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,345889,00.html
Rosin the Bow
Palestine doesn't want peace. Meshaal said so
10:22 AM on 04/19/2012
Terrorist state.
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Ramkshrestha
Welcome to Nepal - the birthplace of Buddha
09:53 AM on 04/19/2012
Nuclear power was developed in the name of establishing peace and now this is threatening the whole human race. Current existing amounts of nuclear power are enough to destroy not a single earth but dozens of equivalent earths. What will happen if the nuclear power will get into terrorists’ hand? This is today’s one of the biggest concerns for world leaders.
http://ramkshrestha.wordpress.com/2011/03/27/overcoming-new-decade-challenges/
04:33 PM on 04/19/2012
Sorry but is this really relavant with the article?
06:58 AM on 04/19/2012
This is such a pity. When I visited Turkey, the people I spoke to were proud of their secularist state, and the fact that their Army had intervened on several occasions to ensure that the religious fanatics didn't gain power. If the Army is weakened, who then will be able to resist the march of extremism ..... or perhaps that's the idea...... and maybe that's why Turkey are still not in the EU, and long may it be so... a huge Islamic-led vote in the EU is not in our interests.
04:59 AM on 04/19/2012
Turkish military had this habit of toppling elected governments every 10 yrs. Terrorism was often used as an excuse. The typical excuse was "weak" governments not responding properly to terrorist attacks. It is now common knowledge that those attacks were many times encouraged, and even perpetrated by some rogue military officers. Similar plots were unearthed in previous NATO armies, such as Italy and Spain.

Nothing difficult to understand here...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bi-partizan
citizen with integrity
08:47 AM on 04/19/2012
Mr. Yavuz, you must be a very young person reading the history from one side only...Turkish military was not and is not banana republics armed forces.That organization and institutions history goes back thousands of years. Imagine your Mehter band is over 800 years old. I totally object to the authors article where analysis is so weak and it is obvious there is "Dutch Touch" in it.
It reminds me the days we trusted them in Bosnia and you and the world have seen the results. at any rate Turkish Armed Forces is the most dependable armed forces in NATO. Idea of "If you can not trust them" is absurd and it turns many Turkish soldiers who died for UN and Nato actions in their grave....Have respect and READ and learn before you state something that will make a....of of you amongst the readership. Respectfully.
08:27 AM on 04/20/2012
keep your "have respect" to yourself newbie, seems you need that yourself
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bi-partizan
citizen with integrity
10:54 PM on 04/20/2012
Yavuz, Oglum saygiyi ogren lazim olur hayatta. Translation is verbatim "Dear Yavuz, Son, you should learn RESPECT in life in may come handy"
Respectfully,
09:55 AM on 04/19/2012
Yavuz bey, not sure if you were around in the 70s. There was a real civil war going on in Turkey, up to 30 people were being killed in a day, professors were being shot in class rooms, and country was deeply divided and economy had collapsed. Army did not cause that. Politicians only thought of gainig one more seat, ruling one more month. Army gave plenty of warning. One can not just hold generals accountable for Sept 12 without holding those politicians responsible for Sept 11. Crooks like Demirel and Erbakan were just as culpable. This is not about justice. That much is clear.
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03:43 AM on 04/19/2012
"Turkey's traditionally staunchly secular military has overstepped its jurisdiction on several occasions in the past and tried to engineer politics." Comically remarkable understatement. :)))