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Erdogan Rising

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by Hannah Lucinda Smith




  ERDOĞAN RISING

  The Battle for the Soul of Turkey

  Hannah Lucinda Smith

  Copyright

  William Collins

  An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers

  1 London Bridge Street

  London SE1 9GF

  www.WilliamCollinsBooks.com

  This eBook first published in Great Britain by William Collins in 2019

  Copyright © Hannah Lucinda Smith 2019

  Cover image © Getty Images/Bloomberg/Contributor

  Hannah Lucinda Smith asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

  Maps by Martin Brown

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins

  Source ISBN: 9780008308841

  Ebook Edition © September 2019 ISBN: 9780008308865

  Version: 2019-08-26

  Dedication

  For my dad, who planted so many seeds

  Epigraph

  Yet the school of Turkish politics was so ignoble that not even the best could graduate from it unaffected.

  T. E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of Wisdom

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Maps

  Cast of Characters

  Acronyms

  Timeline

  Introduction

  1 Two Turkeys, Two Tribes

  2 Syria: The Backstory

  3 Building Brand Erdoğan

  4 Erdoğan and Friends

  5 Syria: The War Next Door

  6 The Exodus

  7 The Kurds

  8 Peace, Interrupted

  9 The Coup

  10 Atatürk’s Children

  11 Erdoğan’s New Turkey

  12 Spin

  13 The Misfits

  14 The War Leaders

  15 Erdoğan’s Endgame

  List of Illustrations

  Picture Section

  Select Bibliography

  Index

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  About the Publisher

  MAPS

  Turkey

  Syria and Turkish border region

  Refugee smuggling routes from Turkey to Europe

  Kurdish region of Turkey, Iraq and Syria

  Istanbul

  Areas where Turkish army is fighting in northern Syria

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  Clique

  Recep Tayyip Erdoğan president of Turkey, former prime minister and mayor of Istanbul

  Berat Albayrak Erdoğan’s son-in-law, current economy minister

  Hüseyin Besli Erdoğan’s speechwriter

  Ahmet Davutoğlu foreign minister, later Turkish prime minister

  Necmettin Erbakan leader of the National Salvation Party, Erdoğan’s first party

  Abdullah Gül Erdoğan’s early ally, former president

  I˙brahim Kalın Erdoğan’s spokesman

  Hilâl Kaplan pro-Erdoğan journalist

  Erol Olçok spin doctor

  Opposition

  Mustafa Kemal Atatürk founder of the Turkish Republic

  Selahattin Demirtaş Kurdish political leader

  Muharrem I˙nce Erdoğan’s 2018 presidential rival

  Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu leader of the opposition

  Enemies

  Fethullah Gülen Islamist cleric and accused coup plotter

  Abdullah Öcalan leader of the PKK, Kurdish militant group

  ACRONYMS

  AKP Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi: Justice and Development Party, Erdoğan’s group, centre-right Islamist

  CHP Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi: Republican People’s Party, Atatürk’s group and main opposition, led by Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, left-leaning secularist

  FSA Free Syrian Army: mainstream armed opposition to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad. Originally nationalist, later infiltrated and overtaken by Islamist elements. Supported at various times by Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, US, UK and other European countries

  HDP Halkların Demokratik Partisi: People’s Democratic Party, main Kurdish group, led by Selahattin Demirtaş

  Isis Islamic State of Iraq and Syria: extreme Islamist group comprised mainly of foreign fighters who travelled into Syria via Turkey. Initially tolerated by the FSA, later turned against them and seized huge tracts of rebel-held Syria

  JAN Jabhat al-Nusra: the Support Front, Al-Qaeda’s franchise in Syria. Comprised mainly of Syrian Islamists, largely fought alongside the FSA. Listed as a terror group by the US in December 2012

  MSP Milli Selâmet Partisi: National Salvation Party, main Islamist group in 1970s and Erdoğan’s first party, led by Necmettin Erbakan, anti-Western Islamist. Closed following the 1980 coup

  PKK Partiye Karkerên Kurdistanê: Kurdistan Workers’ Party, Kurdish militia founded by Abdullah Öcalan in 1978, fighting insurgency in south-eastern Turkey since 1984. Banned in Turkey, EU and United States

  RP Refah Partisi: Welfare Party, Erbakan’s new group and main Islamist party in 1980s and 1990s. Closed following the 1997 coup

  YPG Yekîneyên Parastina Gel: People’s Protection Units, Syrian wing of the PKK. Founded in 2004 but rose to prominence during the Syrian conflict. Classed as terror group in Turkey; allied with US in fight against Isis

  TIMELINE

  1923 Atatürk founds the Turkish Republic

  1938 Atatürk dies

  1950 Turkey’s first democratic elections

  1960 First coup of the republic

  1971 Second coup of the republic

  1980 Third coup of the republic

  1994 Erdoğan becomes mayor of Istanbul

  1997 ‘Postmodern coup’ brings down Necmettin Erbakan, Turkey’s first Islamist prime minister

  1998 Erdoğan sent to prison for reciting Islamist poem at a rally

  2002 November: AKP voted in for the first time

  2003 March: Erdoğan becomes prime minister

  2007 Abdullah Gül becomes president

  2011 Syrian uprising begins

  2013 March: Turkey begins peace process with the PKK

  May/June: Gezi park protests in Turkey

  December: Corruption scandal rocks the AKP, crackdown on Fethullah Gülen begins

  2014 August: Erdoğan steps down as prime minister and becomes Turkey’s first directly elected president

  2015 Refugee crisis brings more than a million people from Turkey to the European Union

  July: Turkey–PKK ceasefire collapses

  2016 March: Turkey and EU sign 6 billion euro refugee deal

  July: Rogue generals launch coup attempt against Erdoğan

  2017 April: Erdoğan wins constitutional referendum to change Turkey from parliamentary to presidential system

  2018 June: Erdoğan wins presidential elections, triggering constitutional reforms and installing him in the palace until 2023

  INTRODUCTION

  July 2016

  It is less than forty-eight hours since rogue soldiers tried to kill him and here Erdoğan is, back on stage. The sun is setting and the call to prayer is sounding, and the president is wiping a tear from his eye.

  ‘Erol
was an old friend of mine,’ he starts, then breaks. ‘I cannot speak any more. God is great.’

  Erol Olçok: Erdoğan’s ad man, his trusted spin doctor, his loyal friend. One of the first to race to the Bosphorus bridge last night, his corpse now before us in a coffin.

  Nothing will be as it was before, for Olçok’s family, for Erdoğan, or for Turkey. Two nights ago, as Istanbul’s glitterati sat drinking on the banks of the Bosphorus, tanks filled the bridge and war planes split the skies. The army was revolting against Erdoğan – but soon Erdoğan’s own infantry was on the streets, with Erol Olçok at the first line. Bare-chested young men stood side by side with headscarved women in front of machine-gun fire on this midsummer night; others lay down on tarmac in front of rolling tanks. And as fortunes turned against the putschist generals, Erdoğan’s angry, shirtless, sweaty men removed their belts to whip the coup’s surrendering foot soldiers. Their twisted faces were lit with the perfect aura of an early summer’s morning in Istanbul: a glorious backdrop of dawn over the city that spans two continents. The images flew around social media within minutes. They were beautiful, and they were horrifying.

  The coup has been crushed but the toll is huge. Two hundred and sixty-five people have died over the bloody span of this night, more than half of them civilians who came out to resist in Erdoğan’s name. Erol Olçok was shot dead alongside his sixteen-year-old son, Abdullah, as soldiers fired into the protesters on the bridge. Thousands more have been injured. There are still sporadic bursts of fighting as suspected plotters resist arrest; Istanbul’s airspace reverberates with the roar of patrolling F-16 fighter jets. The streets have been hauntingly quiet all weekend, as Turks stay inside, watch the news and pray.

  Among the dead: a local mayor shot point blank in the stomach as he tried to speak with the soldiers; the older brother of one of Erdoğan’s aides; a famous columnist with the pro-government newspaper Yeni şafak. A crack team of special forces soldiers had burst into the Mediterranean resort where Erdoğan was holidaying, ready to kill him if necessary and missing him only by minutes.

  Erdoğan has already bounced back, his close brush with death seemingly leaving no dent. He has returned to Istanbul, banished the soldiers back to their barracks, and called the coup attempt a ‘gift from God’ that will allow him to finally cleanse the state of those trying to destroy it. Six thousand people have been detained by the time he addresses the thousands-strong crowd at Erol Olçok’s funeral, at a mosque on the Asian side of Istanbul. The imam implores God as he leads the prayers for the slain man and his son: ‘Protect us from the wickedness of the educated!’

  A weight is descending on Turkey. Each night Taksim Square fills with huge crowds of Erdoğan’s supporters, turning out to make sure his enemies don’t come back. Within days a state of emergency is declared, and every day thousands more suspected collaborators are arrested. The alleged ringleaders are paraded on state television with black eyes and bandages around their heads.

  Privately, friends tell me they are worried. Goodbye to the Republic, writes one by text message. Goodbye to democracy.

  The heart of my Istanbul neighbourhood, which usually bustles at all hours with street sellers, taxi drivers and prostitutes, is near-silent the morning after the coup; the pavements empty, the traffic thinned down to a few lonely cars. The only people I bump into as I walk around the deserted streets are the women who always stand on the main thoroughfare on a Saturday, selling black-and-white postcards to the shoppers. Usually they ask for five liras for this low-resolution print of Atatürk, father to the Turkish nation. Today, a middle-aged woman with blonde perm presses one silently into my hand.

  ‘Man, this is nothing but a country of cults,’ says my friend Yusuf a few days later, dazed and still trying to make sense of what is unfolding. ‘It’s Jerusalem in the Year Zero.’

  In the years that have passed since July 2016, as I have filled newspaper column inches with stories of Erdoğan’s swelling crackdown on his opponents, his skewed election wins and questionable wars, I have been asked the same question time and again: ‘Why doesn’t the West just cut Erdoğan off? Make him a pariah, and leave him and Turkey to go their own way?’

  The morality is complex but the answer is simple: we can’t turn our backs on Turkey because Turkey and Erdoğan matter. Forget old clichés about East-meets-West – it is far more important than that. Here is a country that buffers Europe on one side, the Middle East on another, and the old Soviet Union on a third – and which absorbs the impacts of chaos and upheaval in each of those regions. During the Soviet era, it took in refugees from the eastern bloc looking to escape the despotism of communism. When that empire collapsed, it became a place where the poor ex-Soviets went for work, and the rich showed up to party. Now, with the Middle East sinking into ever-greater turmoil, it is the world’s biggest refugee-hosting nation, with five million from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and others.

  Turkey is a member of the G20, and is recognised as one of the world’s largest economies. It has the second biggest army in NATO, the Western military alliance which, with the rising expansionist ambitions of Russian President Vladimir Putin, is finding itself sucked into a new Cold War. More than six million Turks live abroad, the street ambassadors of a country that trades and negotiates with almost every other nation on earth. This is not a far-off hermit-state, isolated from the rest of the world. It is a major player, vital to global security and prosperity.

  For millennia, the ground on which modern Turkey stands has been coveted and fought over because it stands at the nexus of trade routes and civilisations. To see it for yourself, spend an hour people-watching under the soaring ceiling of the new Istanbul airport, the biggest of Erdoğan’s increasingly outlandish vanity construction projects. It was opened in April 2019, and the Turkish government says that more than 200 million people will pass through its halls by the year 2022, making it the biggest and busiest in the world – twice as many passengers as Atlanta Airport, two and a half times as many as Heathrow. Cruise through its duty-free shopping area and you will spot Gulf Arab women wrapped in black fabric with only their eyes showing alongside sunburnt and flustered Brits in ill-advised tank-tops and shorts. There will be dreadlocked backpackers, preened Russian princesses, and, if you time it right, Islamic pilgrims swathed in white sheets making their way to Mecca. There will be people with wide Asiatic faces, and statuesque African women swathed in fabulous prints. Turkey sits at the centre of all of this.

  It sits, too, at the centre of the journeys that the people on the wrong side of globalisation are making – the illicit trafficking routes that stretch from the Middle East and Africa, through Turkey and the Aegean Sea to Europe. In Istanbul’s backstreet tea shops another kind of travel market is flourishing, no less buoyant than that in the ticket halls of the new Istanbul airport. Here, shady men in leather jackets cut deadly deals with desperate people. Survival does not come guaranteed with a smuggler’s ticket to Europe, but it will cost you more than a budget flight from the shiny new airport.

  So let’s think about what might happen if Erdoğan were to turn Turkey’s back on the West entirely, or if the country were to descend into full-on chaos. That surge of people in 2015, travelling from Turkey’s shores to Greece in search of a new life in Europe? That was nothing. There are millions more in the developing world still desperate to make that journey, and a collapsed Turkey could be their back door. What if, even worse, there were to be a major conflict or economic collapse in Turkey itself? Not only would thousands, perhaps millions, of Turks join the flow to Europe, but shrewd leaders like Russia’s Vladimir Putin would be quick to capitalise on the chaos to expand his territories and influence, just as he has done in Syria.

  Erdoğan is no fool. He knows how important he is and he plays on it, often seeming to push his Western allies’ buttons just to see what will happen. He may sometimes look like a man deranged, but he is also a smart political operator who was refining his brand of populism a decade and a half
before Donald Trump cottoned on. If Western countries want to contain and control Erdoğan – as they will have to if they are to keep Turkey stable and engaged in the world – then first they need to understand him. More than that, they need to understand why so many Turks adore him.

  What is there to adore? On the face of it, not very much. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan lives in a thousand-room palace complex, Aksaray (White Palace), that he built almost immediately on becoming president. He and his followers have a taste for outlandish historical dressing-up. In a photo call with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, he posed on the staircase of Aksaray with soldiers decked out in costumes from the various eras of the Ottoman Empire. Despite his constant harping on about his working-class roots, and his apparent championing of the underdog against the elites, his wife and daughters dress in haute couture from the famous fashion houses of Europe.

  The party Erdoğan leads, the Justice and Development Party (Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi, or AKP), is the most successful in Turkey’s democratic history, even though it has never won more than 50 per cent of the vote. Erdoğan himself has stood at the helm of Turkish politics longer than any other leader in the country’s history. Since first becoming prime minister in 2003 he has quashed the power of the military, rewritten the country’s constitution, remoulded its foreign relations and mastered divide-and-rule politics better than any other current world leader.

  Erdoğan’s grip on power might often appear shaky – he only just clinches victory each time he takes his country to the ballot box. But it is this constant sense of threat, this dread that he could be ousted and everything go back to the way it was before he came, that galvanises his supporters. He is not an Assad or a Putin, who use their faked and overwhelming electoral victories to cling on in their palaces. Erdoğan’s continuing dominance over Turkey rests as heavily on those who despise him as it does on those who idolise him. In order to be loved more, he must show his fanbase that there are those who are ready to overthrow him – and could feasibly do so. So, too, must they sense the constant threat in order to feel the wave of overwhelming ecstasy when he comes out on top after yet another crisis – and there have been many of those.

 

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