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The Grand Turk
Turkey’s ruling party expects PKK dissolution, disarmament ‘within days’
2025-05-07
[Rudaw] The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...the decaying remnant of the Ottoman Empire...
’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) expects the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) to dissolve itself and lay down arms within days, the party’s spokesperson said on Monday.

Speaking to journalists in Ankara, Omer Celik said they closely follow the developments regarding the peace talks between the state and the PKK, adding that "We expect the process of the terrorist organization dissolving itself and laying down arms to materialize within days."
Link


Africa North
Morocco anti-Israel activists set sights on ports, alleging arms en route to Israel
2025-05-05
[IsraelTimes] Protesters, seeking reversal of 2020 normalization agreement, call on port officials to block ships carrying military cargo to Israel, but fail to stop F-35 parts passing through

More than a year of protests over Morocco’s decision to normalize ties with Israel has emboldened activists and widened a gap between the decisions of the government and the sentiments of the governed. The fury has spilled into the country’s strategic ports.

Amid shipping cranes and stacked containers, 34-year-old agricultural engineer Ismail Lghazaoui marched recently through a sea of Paleostinian flags and joined protesters carrying signs that read "Reject the ship," in reference to a vessel transporting fighter jet components from Houston
...a city in Texas, named after Sam Houston, who would drop deader than he is now if he could see how it turned out...
, Texas.

Activists are urging Moroccan port officials to try to block ships carrying military cargo to Israel, much like Spain did last year.

Protests often target Danish shipping company Maersk, which helps transport components used to make Lockheed Martin’s F-35 as part of the US Defense Department’s Security Cooperative Participant Program that facilitates weapons sales to allies including Israel.

A similar boycott campaign landed Lghazaoui in prison last year, but that didn’t deter him from turning out again for resurgent protests last month, after his release. Lghazaoui is one of more than a dozen activists pursued by Moroccan authorities for criticizing the government’s ties with Israel.

During a rally in November in Casablanca where Lghazaoui spoke, plainclothes officers beat him and others to prevent them from advancing toward the US Consulate, he said.

He later posted about Maersk on social media and was arrested and charged with incitement. Originally sentenced to a year, he served two months in prison and two on parole after the term was reduced.

"They try to silence people," Lghazaoui told The News Agency that Dare Not be Named. "They were using me to dissuade people or to push people away from what they were doing."

A PUSH TO TOPPLE ’NORMALIZATION’
Morocco is one of four Arab states that normalized ties with Israel as part of the Abraham Accords brokered in 2020 during US President Donald Trump
...Never got invited to a P.Diddy party...
’s first term.

The deal delivered something Moroccan diplomats had chased for years: US support for Morocco’s claims over the disputed Western Sahara. But its cost — growing public resentment toward normalization — has ballooned since October 7, 2023, when the Hamas
..the well-beloved offspring of the Moslem Brotherhood,...
terror group’s assault on southern Israel, in which invaders killed some 1,200 people and took 251 hostages, sparked the ongoing war in Gazoo
...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with a rusty iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppression and disproportionate response...
"I’ve rarely seen such a chasm between public opinion and the monarchy. What the power elites are doing goes completely against what the Moroccan people want," said Aboubakr Jamai, dean of the Madrid Center at the American College of the Mediterranean.

Tens of thousands have taken to the streets of Morocco since the war began. While largely made up of families, students, Islamists, leftists and union members, the protests have also drawn more radical voices. Some have burned Israeli flags or chanted against royal adviser André Azoulay, a Jewish Moroccan.

Clad in riot gear, security forces have stood by and watched as protesters denounce "normalization" and Morocco’s expanding trade and military ties with Israel.

But authorities have shown that their tolerance for dissent only goes so far.

Morocco’s constitution generally allows for freedom of expression, although it is illegal to criticize the monarchy or King Mohammed VI and those who do can face prosecution. Throughout the war, activists who have implicated the monarchy on social media or protested businesses targeted by boycotts due to their operations in Israel have received prison sentences.

The constraints mirror Egypt and Jordan, which like Morocco have publicly sympathized with the Paleostinians, maintained ties with Israel and imprisoned activists who direct their ire toward the government.

However,
a hangover is the wrath of grapes...
unlike in those countries, the arrests in Morocco have done little to quell public anger or activists’ demands.

A HARBOR DRAWS HEAT
In recent weeks, protesters have set their sights on a new target: the country’s strategic ports and the companies using them to move military cargo. Activists and port workers recently demanded that two vessels crossing the Atlantic carrying fighter jet parts that they suspected would end up in Israel be blocked from docking in Morocco.

Port protests gained momentum last month when Morocco’s largest labor union backed the call to block the two ships, and dozens of religious scholars and preachers, many affiliated with the anti-monarchy Islamist movement Al Adl wal Ihsan, issued an edict with a similar message.

While not officially allowed to participate in politics, Al Adl wal Ihsan has mobilized large crowds and helped lead anti-Israel activism throughout the Israel-Hamas war, drawing in young people who feel official parties don’t speak to them. On a recent Friday, the group said Moroccans took part in 110 demonstrations across 66 cities in support of Paleostinians in Gaza.

Both Al Adl wal Ihsan and union members marched portside in Tangier and Casablanca, where the vessels eventually docked April 20.

In a statement, Maersk acknowledged that ships that passed through the two Moroccan ports carried parts used in the fighter jet. But it denied activists’ claims of directly shipping weapons to conflict zones, stating that they require end-use certificates to verify the final destination of military cargo.

A port official in Tangier who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak on the matter said that while cargo docked and unloaded in Morocco undergoes examination, ships docking en route to other destinations do not.

The Israeli military did not respond to questions about the shipments. F-35s are typically assembled in the United States, using components sourced throughout the world, including outer wings and display systems manufactured in Israel.

Morocco’s Foreign Ministry did not respond to questions about normalization or its port policies, though diplomats have previously argued that relations with Israel allow them to press for a two-state solution and facilitate aid delivery to Gaza.

DOMESTIC FAULT LINES EXPOSED
Some observers in Morocco have questioned whether the focus on Gaza has diverted attention from pressing domestic struggles. Voices from Moroccan nationalist circles on social media have instead highlighted the marginalization of the Indigenous Amazigh population and the dispute over Western Sahara, which they argue are more central to national identity and illusory sovereignty.

For others, the prolonged war has prompted clear shifts. The Islamist Justice and Development Party, which once backed normalization with Israel while in power, recently invited senior Hamas officials to its congress in Rabat. However,
a hangover is the wrath of grapes...
the officials were unable to obtain visas to enter Morocco.

"Paleostine will remain our primary cause," said Abdelilah Benkirane, a former prime minister and general secretary of the Justice and Development Party.
Link


The Grand Turk
PKK says expects Ocalan to lead party congress
2025-04-30
[Rudaw] The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) on Monday stated that they expect the group’s incarcerated
Book 'im, Mahmoud!
leader Abdullah Ocalan to lead an upcoming party congress without specifying when said congress is set to be held.

"We hear that Leader Apo is hopeful and continuing his efforts. However,
man does not live by words alone, despite the fact that sometimes he has to eat them...
we have yet to receive anything concrete that would allow the implementation of what was outlined in the February 27 call," read a statement from the PKK, adding, "We hope for a change in this situation - that Leader Apo will achieve conditions where he can live and work freely and be able to lead the party congress that everyone eagerly awaits."

In recent months, The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...a NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It's headquartered in Belgium. That sez it all....
member, but not the most reliable...

’s main pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party) renewed its efforts to mediate peace between Turkey and the PKK. The efforts have included meetings with Ottoman Turkish politicians and with incarcerated
Book 'im, Mahmoud!
PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, who has been held in Imrali prison in northwest Turkey since 1999.

Ocalan called on the group to disarm and disband in a historic call on February 27, requesting them to take the struggle for Kurdish rights into the political sphere. Nevertheless, despite constantly showing rhetorical support, neither the Ottoman Turkish government nor the PKK has so far leaped towards actual peace.

The PKK has repeatedly stated it is unable to dissolve fully without Ocalan's attendance at an official congress to ratify such a decision.

Ocalan’s message sparked hope for an end to the conflict that has taken 40,000 lives and has been welcomed by many Western countries, including the US.

Despite the ceasefire, Turkey has continued to strike alleged PKK positions in the Kurdistan Region, where the group is headquartered.

On Wednesday, Ottoman Turkish Defense Minister Yasar Guler said that Ankara will later inform the PKK of the designated location where they should lay down their arms.

Omer Celik, spokesperson for Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), said last week that "new developments" could arise later this month regarding the grinding of the peace processor.

Founded in 1978, the PKK initially struggled for autonomy but now seeks broader cultural and political rights within Turkey. It is designated a terrorist organization by Ankara and its Western allies.
Link


The Grand Turk
Erdogan Complains About Protests Hurting Economy
2025-03-27
Consequences, man. You worked hard to earn them.
ISTANBUL (AP) ; Turkey's president on Wednesday accused the political opposition of "sinking the economy" during the country's largest protests in more than a decade over the arrest of Istanbul's mayor, the biggest challenger to Recep Tayyip Erdogan's 22-year rule.

The opposition has called for a boycott of companies that it says support Erdogan's government. The Turkish president accused the opposition of being "so desperate that they would throw the country and the nation into the fire."

In his address to lawmakers with his Justice and Development Party, or AKP, Erdogan added that "sabotage targeting the Turkish economy will be held accountable before the courts."

-------------
Unemployment about 9%, inflation about 40%, deteriorating currency and that was before the protests
Link


The Grand Turk
Erdogan went for broke: why the Turkish leader provoked the 'Maidan' himself
2025-03-22
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited.
by Kamran Gasanov

[REGNUM] Turkey's most popular opposition politician was arrested on March 19. Ekrem Imamoglu, 53, is accused of corruption and supporting terrorist organizations. In addition to being a prominent opposition figure, Imamoglu has held the key position of mayor of Istanbul since 2019.

At one time, the country's president Recep Tayyip Erdogan said: whoever controls Istanbul controls Turkey. Because the current president came to the Olympus of political power from the same position of the mayor of Istanbul. Now the young and ambitious Imamoglu has entered this path.

Imamoglu emerged as the main opposition figure after the 2019 municipal elections. At that time, he ran for the Republican People's Party (CHP), the party of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the Turkish Republic. Imamoglu was able to beat the contender from the ruling Justice and Development Party, former Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, and won by 20,000 votes.

But then Erdogan came on the scene, accused Imamoglu of stealing votes, the Central Election Commission recounted them and awarded the victory to Yildirim. But then the street intervened. Under pressure from protests, the results of the vote were annulled, and Imamoglu won a landslide victory in the re-run.

Imamoglu's triumph, on the one hand, made him the clear leader of the CHP and a direct competitor to Erdogan in the upcoming presidential elections, but on the other hand, it created obstacles for his future career.

After the politician called the Central Election Commission's decision to cancel the first elections in Istanbul "stupid", he was accused of insulting the authorities, judicial investigations were launched and, at the end of 2022, he was sentenced to almost three years in prison.

Imamoglu was also banned from political activity, partly because of this, the alliance of opposition parties did not risk nominating him as their leading candidate in the 2023 presidential elections.

To be fair, it should be acknowledged that Imamoglu is no less disliked within his own party than Erdogan. He was a competitor of former CHP leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and Ankara Mayor Mansur Yavaş. Kılıçdaroğlu even preferred to lose the presidential election rather than follow in the footsteps of the Istanbul mayor.

At the same time, the defeat, not only in the presidential but also in the parliamentary elections, forced the Republicans to think about renewal.

Kılıçdaroğlu was removed from his post as chairman, and the new leader became Özgür Özel, who favored İmamoğlu.

In the spring of 2024, when Erdogan's AKP lost municipal elections for the first time, Imamoglu was re-elected as mayor of Istanbul and further increased his influence in the country and within the party.

The opposition is now insisting on holding early elections and criticizing the government for the ongoing crisis of the national currency. But they need to decide on a candidate, and Ozel proposed holding a "primary" a month ago. Imamoglu has a high chance of winning, so another major opposition figure, Ankara Mayor Yavaş, is against it.

Feeling his strength and the support of party functionaries, Imamoglu officially entered the race for the presidency on March 8–9. He began touring the country, starting with Izmir, which he called “the city of the first shot and the last victory.”

ERDOGAN'S ENEMY NO. 1 IS DEAD, BUT BEHIND HIS DEATH LURKS THE GHOST OF AN IDEA
Imamoglu, who is taking over power and popularity among Republicans, is becoming a "stone in Erdogan's shoe". The current term is the last for the Turkish president; he will have to leave in 2028.

And with the successor, everything is very complicated.

At one time, the head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Suleyman Soylu, was considered such, but he discredited himself during the pandemic. The sons are also no good, because they were involved in various corruption scandals.

They also predicted Berat Albayrak's son-in-law, but in 2020 he resigned as finance minister due to health reasons, although it is more likely that he could not cope with the crisis and inflation.

Last year, Western media focused their attention on another of the president's sons-in-law, drone developer Selcuk Bayraktar. There is also the highly experienced former intelligence chief and current Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan.

But can they compete with Imamoglu?

The ruling party is now talking about the possibility of holding early elections to nominate Erdogan for another term.

On March 1, AKP Chairman's aide and head of the parliament's Digital Media Committee Huseyin Yayman said that snap elections could be held in November 2027, with Erdogan as the AKP's candidate.

Although the latter has a better chance of competing with Imamoglu than the others, even for him, the election fight is a risk. Since 2016 and after the attempted coup, Erdogan has launched a large-scale purge in the country, arresting many journalists, opposition figures and politicians, including the leader of the pro-Kurdish party, Selahattin Demirtas.

Erdogan changed the constitution and expanded presidential powers, making Turkey a presidential rather than a parliamentary republic. An expansionist foreign policy and achievements in Syria, Libya, and the South Caucasus, coupled with Turkey’s opposition to the West, helped Erdogan retain power in subsequent elections.

However, the protracted financial and economic crisis, exacerbated by the 2023 earthquakes and the Syrian refugee problem, have hit the government's reputation. The defeat of the ruling party in the 2024 regional elections is an alarm bell.

Commenting on Imamoglu's detention, Erdogan and the AKP leaders deny their interference and refer to the independence of the judiciary.

The mayor of Istanbul is accused not only of insulting the CEC, but also of large-scale fraud, bribery, manipulation during tenders, abuse of power and cooperation with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which is banned in the republic.

While the first points of the indictment have yet to be proven, there are already concrete facts regarding the PKK's cooperation. In the regional elections, Imamoglu entered into a tactical alliance with the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), many of whose leaders were arrested on charges of collaborating with the PKK.

Along with Imamoglu, another 100 people were arrested on corruption charges, so Erdogan can formally claim that there was no political motive.

However, no matter how hard the government tries to distance itself from the process, all the arrows still point to the very top. Because Yamamoğlu has become a major obstacle for Erdoğan and threatens to destroy the Islamist model of society and neo-Ottoman foreign policy he is building.

The arrest of Imamoglu carried a great risk, because he is the most popular opposition figure, and the secular population of large cities is already unhappy with Erdogan because of low wages and high prices.

One gets the impression that the president himself is provoking a Turkish “Maidan”.

And the first signs of a velvet revolution are already evident. For the second day, thousands of people have been protesting in Ankara, Istanbul and other major cities, while those who stay home are holding flash mobs, turning lights on and off and banging pots.

Why would Erdogan take such a risk?

Most likely, he understands that if early elections are held, Imamoglu may win. The arrest of the oppositionist may escalate the situation, creating the image of a "sacred victim", but if the president can withstand this challenge, then things will be easier.

The Turkish president has extensive experience in fighting coups.

He held on to power during the Gezi Park protests in 2013, and three years later he was able to suppress a military mutiny and defeat Fethullah Gülen. At that time, external support for the opposition and internal resistance to Erdoğan were higher. Now Gülen is dead, opposition media in the country are restricted, and the work of Western NGOs and CSOs is limited.

In the United States, it is not the Democrats who actively support Imamoglu and his party who are in power, but the cynical fighter against the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Donald Trump.

If earlier Europeans interfered with Erdogan and criticized him for violating freedom of speech, human rights and democratic procedures, now the EU is forced to be friends with Turkey to strengthen its defense capability in the face of the “Russian threat.”

In the end, the extreme consequences of the arrest of the main opposition leader are offset by Europe's growing dependence on Erdogan and Trump's anti-globalism. However, it would be short-sighted to overestimate or underestimate either of these two factors.

The “Maidan” sentiments may be neutralized by the activity of the president’s nuclear electorate, which already showed itself once during the military coup of 2016.

On the other hand, despite the arm-twisting of USAID by the Trump administration and Europe's high interest in the Turkish army, globalist structures are still strong and fairly independent.

Trump has only recently begun to strip USAID of its power, but the long-term work of this organization, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) it finances, its “twin brother” in the form of the European Endowment for Democracy (EED), the Voice of America* and many other organizations may continue to influence political processes in the countries of Eurasia for a long time to come, by inertia.

The limited but still important effect of external pressure should not be discounted: Germany, France and many EU countries condemned Imamoglu's arrest. Criticism from Turkey's main trading partner sent the lira plummeting.

So, by arresting Imamoglu, Erdogan has gone all in. Either he will deal a crushing blow and break the back of the opposition by eliminating its most dangerous leader, or he will turn the mayor of Istanbul into a hero.

In the 1990s, Erdogan himself found himself in a similar situation.

He, also the mayor of Istanbul, was jailed for religious poetry, which, however, made him even more popular. After his release, he founded the Justice and Development Party, with which he triumphantly won the 2002 elections. And the similarities do not end there.

Another similarity between Imamoglu and Erdogan is that both wanted to become footballers in their youth. But who will ultimately score the winning goal, no one can predict at this point.

Istanbul Bar Association board dismissed over ‘terror propaganda’

[IsraelTimes] The Istanbul Bar Association’s executive board was dismissed on Friday on grounds of “making propaganda for a terrorist organization” and “publicly spreading false information,” a lawyers’ association says.

Prosecutors had filed suit against the bar association on January 15 after it demanded an investigation into the deaths of two journalists from Turkey’s Kurdish-majority southeast who were killed in northern Syria.

Related:
Ekrem Imamoglu 03/19/2025 Istanbul mayor and Erdogan presidential rival arrested
Ekrem Imamoglu 01/22/2025 Turkey’s opposition faces barrage of arrests, investigations
Ekrem Imamoglu 04/02/2024 Erdogan lost for the first time in 20 years. To preserve his legacy, he needs peace

Link


The Grand Turk
Erdogan will have to try very hard to remain Syria's main partner
2025-02-07
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited.
by Kamran Gasanov

[REGNUM] In 2011, the Turkish and Syrian governments went their separate ways, like ships at sea, and for more than ten years they had no contact, except for meetings at the level of heads of the Foreign Ministry, Defense Ministry, and intelligence services, mediated by Russia. In the last two years, Damascus and Ankara have been preparing to restore ties, and Recep Tayyip Erdogan wanted to meet with Bashar al-Assad. However, to the delight of the Turkish leader, this was no longer necessary.

Now the Turks do not have to negotiate for a long time on unfavorable conditions for establishing diplomatic relations, which depended on the demands to withdraw troops from the northern territories of Syria. If earlier Turkey, with certain exceptions in the form of Kurdish zones, had control only over a thin corridor from the Mediterranean to the border with Iraq, now Ankara can lay claim to broad influence in the capital of Syria.

The head of the Turkish National Intelligence Organization (MIT), Ibrahim Kalin, was praying at the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus just four days after the change of power, and Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan became the first diplomat to visit the Syrian capital.

Turkey's leadership in Syria, it must be said, was deserved. After all, after the introduction of Russian troops in 2015 and subsequent operations by Assad's army, the armed opposition lost significant territories.

Its former sponsors, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, withdrew, and after Turkish military operations in the north against ISIS* and the Kurdish YPG, the rebels either came under full Turkish control (as the Free Syrian Army, later renamed the Syrian National Army) or were heavily dependent on it (as was the case with Hayat Tahrir al-Sham* and smaller groups in Idlib).

The Americans and Europeans have shifted their focus from the fight against Assad to the fight against Iran and the protection of the Kurds, settling in the Euphrates region.

It is therefore not surprising that the first foreign guests in Damascus are Turks, and one of the top priority destinations for the representatives of the new Syria is Ankara and Istanbul. On January 15, a large delegation headed by Foreign Minister Asad Hassan al-Shibani arrived in the Turkish capita . He was also accompanied by Defense Minister Murhaf Abu Kasra and General Intelligence Director Anas Hassan Khattab.

Given that Turkey is Syria's main military supporter, it was expected that the most important person in the Syrian leadership, Ahmad al-Sharaa, would choose Turkey as his first country to visit. But before arriving in Ankara, al-Sharaa left for a two-day visit to Riyadh.

This circumstance, on the one hand, is surprising. After all, the KSA has not been the main player in Syria for a long time, and moreover, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, together with his colleagues from the League of Arab States, has actually legitimized the "dictator" by returning Assad to the LAS.

However, in politics, such steps are called diversification. Al-Sharaa does not want to fall under complete dependence on Turkey and be Erdogan's puppet, like the president of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus. Therefore, he needs to pursue a policy of multipolarity.

High-level Europeans, including the heads of the French and German Foreign Ministries, as well as EU representatives, have come to Damascus, but they demand too much in return – democracy, inclusiveness, an agreement on the creation of Kurdish autonomy. And from the general experience of the Middle East, it follows that the “Westerners” are dangerous and unreliable allies. Al-Sharaa remembers the history of Saddam Hussein and Muammar Gaddafi well.

The Gulf monarchies do not lobby for human rights and democracy, but they have fat wallets that the UK and the US, especially Donald Trump, covet. Half-destroyed Syria needs money. And what about Syria - Erdogan himself went on a tour of the Gulf to save the lira, which was falling into the abyss. Where there is money, there is politics.

Damascus wants to have the support of Arab countries, whose leader Saudi Arabia is trying to position itself not without success. Syria is aiming even wider, hoping to legitimize itself and gain weight in the Islamic world through bin Salman. Such support will strengthen Damascus's independence from Ankara, and at the same time will become, albeit light, but still a bulletproof vest against Israel, which has expanded its occupation of Syrian lands.

What the parties actually agreed on in Riyadh is still unclear. In general, during this transition period there are almost no specifics on any international issue, including the fate of the Russian bases.

At the same time, having flown to Ankara after Riyadh, the interim president of Syria appeared before Erdogan as a much more authoritative leader than he had been just a few days ago. Negotiations with Erdogan are a recognition of both al-Sharaa and the realities “on the ground”. And Turkey is now the most influential of the bordering countries. And al-Sharaa is not averse to monetizing the potential offered by its northern neighbor.

It is clear from the content of the speeches of the two leaders that the special relations between Syria and Turkey stem not only from the former's great dependence on the latter. Al-Sharaa and Erdogan are also linked by relative ideological closeness.

The Syrian oppositionists who came to power, including armed ones, and various militant groups set the task of establishing an Islamist regime in the country in one form or another. Erdogan and his Justice and Development Party are their model and guide in this direction.

From the very first days of the change of power, Ankara made it clear that it was ready to help Damascus build state institutions. And Erdogan said at a meeting with his guest that he attached "great importance to the creation of the country's administration." Al-Sharaa, for his part, appreciated "Turkey's efforts to ensure the political and economic success of the current Syrian administration."

The Syrian authorities also cannot ignore the fact that Turkey supported the anti-Assad forces almost alone and until the very end. “Turkey did not leave the Syrian people alone in their most desperate and difficult days,” Erdogan said. His guest did not skimp on words of gratitude in response, saying that he would never forget how Erdogan let millions of Syrian refugees into his country, and how “Syrian and Turkish blood mixed in the liberation struggle.”

The refugee issue will also remain a common point of contact for a long time. Türkiye would like to bring millions of Syrians home so as not to burden its economy and reduce social tensions.

For Al-Sharaa, this is a big burden. It is not that Erdogan will terrorize Syria, like Europe, with a “migration baton,” but Damascus will still be obliged to take Ankara’s opinion into account. But money will also be needed to support the refugees, and in this regard, the help of the Arab monarchies becomes even more relevant.

The most painful issue for Erdogan, perhaps even more than refugees, remains the YPG, the Kurds and their separatism.

Since Assad's fall, Turkish troops have carried out several operations against them in Manbij and Tel Rifaat, but Ankara wants the complete destruction, disarmament or evacuation of YPG and SDF fighters, the lead structure in the northeast.

Al-Sharaa is negotiating with Kurdish representatives, the Kurds themselves initiated the talks. However, there are no specifics yet. The Kurds sometimes raise green-white-black flags, sometimes demand autonomy for their political institutions and armed forces.

Erdogan and al-Sharaa share a position on the territorial integrity and unity of Syria, hinting that there will be no independent Syrian Kurdistan. However, the Turkish president wants more practical steps in this direction.

"We discussed the steps that need to be taken against the separatist terrorist organization and its supporters occupying northeastern Syria. I told him that we are ready to provide Syria with the necessary support in the fight against all forms of terrorism, be it Daesh or PKK," Erdogan said after the talks, expressing satisfaction with al-Sharaa's "firm will" in the fight against terrorism.

Ash-Sharaa himself is in no hurry to drive the horses to the east.

He speaks of interest in a strategic partnership with Turkey in all areas. He also noted that Ankara and Damascus are working on "creating a common strategy to counter security threats in the region" and discussing issues of Syria's integrity in the northeast. However, there is still no clarity regarding a military solution to the issue or ultimatums to the Kurds.

What explains such caution?

Perhaps, the hope for a diplomatic solution to the issue, fear of Turkey's strengthening after the next military operations, in which the key player will be the SNA, not HTS*. Also, al-Sharaa is forced to look back at the US and the EU, from which he needs the lifting of international sanctions, without which Arab rials and dirhams will not flood the Syrian market.

In terms of the economy, Turkey depends, firstly, on the lifting of sanctions under the US Caesar Act, and secondly, on funding from the Gulf Cooperation Council.

Turkey understands the scale of the upcoming reconstruction work and is ready to participate in the construction of infrastructure facilities. "Turkey is ready to provide the necessary support for the reconstruction of Syria," Erdogan said, adding that the Arab and Islamic world should provide material support to the Syrians.

To sum up, we can say that Turkey holds the lead in terms of geopolitical influence in Syria. Western countries have only opened embassies, Arab countries can buy Syria, but they need permission from the West.

Turkey has a presence on the ground in the form of military bases and under certain conditions (if Al-Sharaa does not decide to go to war with the YPG) it can increase it. Incidentally, according to media reports, the construction of two permanent Turkish military bases in Syria is currently being discussed.

At the same time, it is worth noting that the competition for influence over the new Syrian leadership has already begun and will only intensify. Al-Sharaa invited Erdogan to visit Syria "as soon as possible", but Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani has already been there. Someone else may appear there before Erdogan arrives.

In short, Ankara has a good starting position, but to play its cards successfully, it needs to take into account a number of other factors, including the West's sanctions toolkit, the Gulf's financial advantages, Arab solidarity, and Israeli pressure. And, of course, one should not discount Ahmed al-Sharaa's still underestimated desire for independence.

Link


The Grand Turk
Turkish media linked to Erdogan claims Iran will send drones to Kurds in Syria - report
2025-01-14
[Jpost] Despite claims of an agreement being reached, the shipment was reportedly delayed due to Turkey’s close monitoring of threats to drone shipments.

Iran has reportedly agreed to supply 1,500 suicide drones to the Kurdish YPG/PKK group in Syria to counter Turkey’s military operations, a journalist of conservative Turkish newspaper Yeni Şafak, known for its support for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erodgan and his Justice and Development Party (AKP), reported on Sunday.
I that likely, or is the Turkish press making stuff up agqin?
The PKK (Kurdistan Workers' Party) is a left-wing militia fighting for Kurdish independence in northeast Syria, northern Iraq, and southeastern Turkey, historically areas populated by ethnic Kurds.

The YPG (People's Defense Units) is a US-backed militia that controls areas of northeast Syria under the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES).

Turkey's AKP views both groups as "terror" organizations.

An alleged meeting between Iranian representatives and the Kurdish organization reportedly took place in a market in Iraq, where the Kurds reportedly requested 2,000 drones. According to the unverified report, Iran clarified it could only provide 1,500 units.

Despite claims of an agreement being reached, the shipment was reportedly delayed due to Turkey’s close monitoring and its threat to intercept any drone transfers into Syria. Determined to block the deal, Turkey’s reported efforts have brought cooperation between Iran and the YPG/PKK to a standstill, as per the report.

The report further claimed that, under Turkish pressure, the YPG/PKK has shifted to an alternative strategy - transporting drones in separate parts to avoid detection. However, the success of this strategy remains in doubt due to Turkey’s continued operations along the border.

A RESURGENCE OF ISIS IN SYRIA?
Abdul Rahman, a Syrian news analyst, cautioned that Yeni Şafak's unverified report could mark the return of ISIS near Damascus for the first time since 2018, when the Assad regime regained control of the area. “The resurgence of ISIS in the capital’s vicinity signals a new threat under the current administration and intensifies Syria’s mounting security challenges,” he warned.

Rahman also noted that a stockpile of weapons from the Assad regime remains hidden and now poses a “ticking time bomb” that threatens Syria’s fragile transition. He further suggested that remnants of militias, once aligned with the regime, are suspected of operating terror cells and maintaining ties with external actors.
Let us all pause to be grateful that the IDF has already destroyed so much of the Syrian stockpile accumulated by the Assads, père et fil.
The situation on the ground is particularly troubling amid the growing spread of ISIS cells across various regions in Syria. There is mounting concern that the resulting security chaos could undermine the country’s stability during this sensitive period of political transition.
Link


The Grand Turk
Erdogan has dual strategy for Kurds in Turkey and Syria
2025-01-13
[DW] Turkey's government is reaching out to the Kurdish population at home while backing militias fight Kurds in Syria. What is behind Recep Tayyip Erdogan's approach?

"In future, we will take decisive steps to realize our vision for The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...just another cheapjack Moslem dictatorship, brought to you by the Moslem Brüderbund...
and an entire region without terror," Ottoman Turkish President His Enormity, Sultan Recep Tayyip Erdogan the First
...Turkey's version of Mohammed Morsi but they voted him back in so they deserve him. It's a sin, a shame, and a felony to insult the president of Turkey. In Anatolia did Recep Bey a stately Presidential Palace decree, that has 1100 rooms. That's 968 more than in the White House, 400 more than in Versailles, and 325 more than Buckingham Palace, so you know who's really more important...
said in his New Year's Day speech.

These words were a reference to the current reconciliation process between Turkey's government and Kurds, which was initiated about three months ago by Erdogan's coalition partner Devlet Bahceli, chairman of the ultranationalist Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).

In October, Bahceli mastered a political turnaround when he shook hands with politicians from the Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party (DEM).

Beforehand, Bahceli had claimed that the left-wing, pro-Kurdish DEM was an extension of the banned
...the word banned seems to have a different meaning in Pakistain than it does in most other places. Or maybe it simply lacks any meaning at all...
organization
Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), and should be banned.

In the past, Bahceli's party had also called for the reintroduction of the death penalty
, primarily to execute the imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan.

The paramilitary PKK is classified as a terrorist organization in the EU and the US and has been in armed conflict with the Ottoman Turkish state since 1984.

Around 40,000 people are said to have been killed during the violent mostly peaceful conflict between Turkey and the Kurdish PKK between 1984 and 2009.

AN OCCASION FOR HOPE?
Ocalan, who founded the PKK in 1978, has been serving a life term in prison on Imrali Island off Istanbul since 1999.

Accordingly, Bahceli's next suggestion, namely that Ocalan could be released in exchange for renouncing violence and dissolving the PKK came as an even bigger surprise.

Shortly afterward, Bahceli also publicly commented on the "millennial brotherhood" between Turks and Kurds, saying, "Turkey's problem is not the Kurds, but their separatist terrorist organization."

Ocalan replied in a statement that "I possess the necessary competence and determination to contribute positively to the new paradigm."

On December 28, two representatives of the pro-Kurdish DEM visited Ocalan in Imrali prison and said they were "full of hope."

DEM politicians are currently holding consultations with representatives of the Erdogan government and the opposition.

ALL TO BENEFIT ERDOGAN?
According to some observers, however, there is more realpolitik than love for the PKK behind the current initiative.

Erdogan seeks to secure a new term in office after 2028, which would be impossible under the current constitution.

Technically, there are two ways for Erdogan to run again: Either the constitution can be amended or parliament can opt for early elections.

The sticking point, however, is that the ruling alliance is 45 seats short to win such a vote.

DEM, with its 57 seats in parliament, could tip the balance in favor of an early election.

However,
a poor excuse is better than no excuse at all...
Berk Esen, a political scientist at Istanbul's Sabanci University, also sees another possible reason for this push.

Erdogan and Bahceli need more support to change the constitution or call for early elections to secure a next term for ErdoganImage: DHA
Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP) can no longer win elections because it lacks the Kurdish vote, he told DW.

According to various estimates, Kurds make up between 15% to 20% of the Ottoman Turkish population.

"The Erdogan system is in a major political and economic crisis," Esen said. "We saw that in the local elections in spring 2023 and under the current conditions, Kurdish voters prefer to vote for opposition candidates."

In turn, Esen believes that the ruling alliance had to do something to stop the downward spiral.

FALSE OPTIMISM?
It is not the first time the Ottoman Turkish government has attempted to reconcile with the Kurds in Turkey.

Initiatives have been launched to meet Kurds' demands of the Ottoman Turkish state. These attempts were called an "opening up," "solution" or "normalization process," and, so far, have all failed.

"If politicians say in public that they are full of hope, implying that peace is closer than ever, there must have been some progress behind closed doors and the process must be reasonably advanced," political scientist Deniz Yildirim told DW.

However,
a poor excuse is better than no excuse at all...
he also added a warning against premature optimism.

"Turkey needs to solve this chronic problem by peaceful means so that no more blood is shed," Yildirim told DW. "Yet, it would be naive to expect this to take place in a time of authoritarian centralization, while at the same time freedom of the press and freedom of expression are being uprooted in the country and universities are being disempowered."

NO RECONCILIATION OUTSIDE TURKEY
After the end of the First World War, the Kurds' settlement area was divided between Turkey, Syria, Iran
...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneously taking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militias to extend the regime's influence. The word Iran is a cognate form of Aryan. The abbreviation IRGC is the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA). The term Supreme Guide is a the modern version form of either Duce or Führer or maybe both. They hate Jews Zionists Jews. Their economy is based on the production of oil and vitriol...
and Iraq.

Since then, the Kurds have been fighting for their own state — or at least for more power to decide their own affairs.

In Turkey, they have been denied autonomous status to this day despite Erdogan's push for reconciliation with Ocalan and the PKK.

Across the border in Syria, Ottoman Turkish-backed militias continue to fight Kurdish YPG fighters.

Turkey considers them as a threat to its territorial integrity.

Yet, while Turkey regards the YPG as a Syrian offshoot of the PKK, the Kurdish YPG fighters in Syria are supported by the US, which makes the balance of power in the region even more complicated.

Meanwhile,
...back at the pond, the radioactive tadpoles grown into frogs. Really big frogs, in fact...
Turkey demands that Syria's transitional government disband the Kurdish militia YPG, which controls large parts of northern Syria.

However,
a poor excuse is better than no excuse at all...
Turkey's demands are not realistic from a Kurdish perspective, political scientist Esen said.

"After many years of bloodshed, the YPG has established itself as a power factor in north-eastern Syria. Regardless of what kind of agreement could be reached in Turkey, it is extremely unlikely that they will lay down their arms," he told DW.

Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Rojava says 250,000 people without electricity after 685 Turkish strikes
2024-10-28
Punishment for the PKK attack on TUSAS.
[Rudaw] Ottoman Turkish strikes on vital infrastructure in northeast Syria (Rojava) this week have left hundreds of thousands of people without water or electricity, the local administration said on Friday.

"In the areas of Kobani, Tirbespi, and Amuda, the attacks destroyed the electricity sector, leaving more than 250,000 families without power... In al-Darbasiyah, with a population of over 50,000, residents suffer from water shortages and livelihood challenges due to the aggression," read a statement from the department of foreign relations of the Kurdish-led Democratic Autonomous Administration in North and East Syria (DAANES).

Ottoman Turkish strikes also targeted the Shahba and Afrin region in northwest Syria, coupled with ground attacks by The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...the only place on the face of the earth that misses the Ottoman Empire...
-backed militia groups, the statement added. Oil facilities and refineries have also been attacked.

The DAANES statement labeled the Ottoman Turkish attacks "genocide" and criticized the international community for not speaking out.

Kurdish security forces (Asayish) in Rojava said on Friday that over the past few days, Ankara attacked 685 times with drones, warplanes, and artillery, killing 17 people - three soldiers, and 14 civilians.
"We condemn the international silence, which stands as a disgrace as we strive for stability and democratic solutions within the unity of Syria and its people," the statement read.

Locations in northern Iraq have also been hit.

The strikes were in retaliation for Wednesday’s attack on Ottoman Turkish Aerospace Industries Inc. (TUSAS) facilities in northern Ankara that killed five people and injured 22 others. The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) grabbed credit for the attack.

The Ottoman Turkish defense ministry said that in its strikes, 32 "targets belonging to murderous Moslems were neutralized" and that measures were undertaken to ensure civilians and the environment were not harmed. Turkey uses the term "neutralized" to denote adversaries captured, maimed, or killed.

Kurdish security forces (Asayish) in Rojava said on Friday that over the past few days, Ankara attacked 685 times with drones, warplanes, and artillery, killing 17 people - three soldiers, and 14 civilians. Another 48 people have been injured, including 39 civilians.

Turkey alleges that gangs in Rojava are a front for the PKK and have carried out several cross-border air and ground operations.

This surge of attacks came as there is growing expectation that Turkey may restart peace talks with the PKK to bring an end to the 40-year conflict.

On Tuesday, Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) leader Devlet Bahceli proposed allowing the PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, who has been imprisoned since 1999, to address the Ottoman Turkish parliament and declare that the PKK has been dissolved.

Bahceli, whose ultranationalist party is an ally of Ottoman Turkish President His Enormity, Sultan Recep Tayyip Erdogan the First
...Turkey's version of Mohammed Morsi but they voted him back in so they deserve him. It's a sin, a shame, and a felony to insult the president of Turkey. In Anatolia did Recep Bey a stately Presidential Palace decree, that has 1100 rooms. That's 968 more than in the White House, 400 more than in Versailles, and 325 more than Buckingham Palace, so you know who's really more important...
’s Justice and Development Party (AKP), said that Ocalan should benefit from the "right to hope" principle that provides for the possibility of conditional release for prisoners, taking their behavior into account.

On Friday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey would continue to fight terrorism.

"Terrorists are puppets. Our goal is a Turkey without terrorism... We will not compromise on this," he told news hounds on board his flight returning from the BRICS summit in Russia, Anadolu Agency reported.
Related:
Rojava: 2024-10-25 Ankara aerospace facility attackers belong to PKK: Turkey
Rojava: 2024-10-10 Multiple explosions heard in Rojava’s Qamishli
Rojava: 2024-10-09 Iraq to repatriate 700 nationals from Rojava camp
Related:
Kobani: 2024-09-17 Russian and Turkish forces conduct a joint patrol in Syria
Kobani: 2023-10-30 26 killed in clash between SDF, pro-Syrian regime armed group
Kobani: 2023-10-07 Turkish air forces target the vicinity of the city of Kobani in northern Syria
Related:
Tirbespi: 2022-11-24 Suspected Turkish airstrikes target al-Hol camp, ISIS families flee: Local media
Tirbespi: 2022-07-25 SDF commander vows to avenge fighters killed in drone strike
Tirbespi: 2022-04-02 One killed, two injured in suspected Turkish drone attack in Hasaka
Related:
Amuda: 2024-08-31 One killed in suspected Turkish attack on Rojava
Amuda: 2024-01-16 In Syria, Turkish air strikes knock out two power substations
Amuda: 2023-12-30 Turkey conducted 48 airstrikes in Rojava over two days: War monitor
Related:
Darbasiyah: 2023-05-27 SDF arrests 2 men accused of being Turkish agents
Darbasiyah: 2022-02-25 Turks dronezap 3 in Qamishli
Darbasiyah: 2022-02-13 Alleged Turkish drone strike injures a civillian in Rojava
Related:
TUSAS: 2024-10-25 All Turkish airports have been placed on orange alert for terrorist attacks
TUSAS: 2024-10-25 Ankara aerospace facility attackers belong to PKK: Turkey
TUSAS: 2024-10-24 Explosion at Turkish aerospace facility ruled a terror attack
Link


The Grand Turk
Ankara aerospace facility attackers belong to PKK: Turkey
2024-10-25
Follow up to this report yesterday’s attack on the Turkish Aerospace Industries (TUSAS) headquarters.
[Rudaw] The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...the decaying remnant of the Ottoman Empire...
’s interior ministry said on Thursday that it has confirmed that both assailants killed during an attack on an aerospace facility in Ankara the day before are members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said in posts on X that "Ali Orek, codename Rojger, a member of the PKK terrorist organization" was identified as the male attacker, while "Mine Sevjin Alcicek" was the female attacker and belonged to the same organization.

The Ottoman Turkish Aerospace Industries Inc. (TAI) facilities in Ankara’s northern Kahramankazan district were attacked on Wednesday. Ottoman Turkish authorities said two attackers were "neutralized" and an investigation was being launched.

"It became clear that both turbans who attacked TAI were members of the PKK," Yerlikaya added, saying that Ankara is determined to "eradicate from our lands the treacherous terrorist organization that threatens the unity, solidarity and peace of our country."

No group has grabbed credit for the attack. The attack occurred as efforts have been discussed for a resumption of stalled peace talks to end decades of conflict in Turkey.

On Tuesday, Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) leader Devlet Bahceli proposed allowing the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan, who has been imprisoned since 1997, to address the Ottoman Turkish parliament and declare that the PKK has been eradicated and dissolved.

Bahceli, whose ultranationalist party is an ally of Ottoman Turkish President His Enormity, Sultan Recep Tayyip Erdogan the First
...Turkey's version of Mohammed Morsi but they voted him back in so they deserve him. It's a sin, a shame, and a felony to insult the president of Turkey. In Anatolia did Recep Bey a stately Presidential Palace decree, that has 1100 rooms. That's 968 more than in the White House, 400 more than in Versailles, and 325 more than Buckingham Palace, so you know who's really more important...
’s Justice and Development Party (AKP), added that Ocalan should benefit from the "right to hope" principle that provides the possibility of conditional release for prisoners, taking their behavior into account.

Turkey’s largest opposition party leader Ozgur Ozel later in the day expressed support for Bahceli’s comments and "any efforts to end terrorism."

"If no more soldiers will die, if no more blood will be shed, if mothers’ tears will no longer flow, and if guns will no longer be pointed at soldiers, then every word said to achieve this is valuable to us as CHP," Republican People’s Party’s (CHP) leader Ozel said to his parliamentary group.

On Wednesday, the PKK leader’s nephew, Omer Ocalan, a pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party) politician, met with him at Turkey’s Imrali Island prison, face-to-face for the first time since March 2020.

"The isolation continues," Abdullah Ocalan said through a post on X by his nephew. "If the conditions are right, I have the theoretical and practical power to pull this process from the ground of conflict and violence to the ground of law and politics."

In 2013, the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) government entered into peace talks with the PKK, paving the way for an unprecedented opening towards Kurds in the country. Kurdish politicians were able to speak freely about their rights, a topic that was previously taboo.

The peace talks, mediated by the DEM Party predecessor - the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) - collapsed in 2015 and were followed by intense urban fighting in the country’s southwestern Kurdish areas

Turkey quickly retaliated for Wednesday’s attack in Ankara by striking alleged PKK positions in Iraq and Syria. It claimed that 32 "targets belonging to turbans were neutralized" and that measures were undertaken to ensure civilians and the environment were not harmed. Turkey uses the term "neutralize" to denote adversaries captured, maimed, or killed.

In a statement on Thursday, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), the partnered local ground forces in Syria of the US-led international anti-Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not really Moslems....
(ISIS) coalition, said that Turkey’s Arclight airstrike
...KABOOM!...
s killed 12 civilians, including two children, and injured 25 others.

Ankara considers the Kurdish-led SDF and other groups in northeastern Syria (Rojava) to be offshoots of the PKK.
Related:
Kahramankazan district: 2017-02-27 Yes to referendum will end all terrorism in Turkey: PM
Link


The Grand Turk
Erdogan's Enemy No. 1 Is Dead, But Behind His Death Lurks the Ghost of an Idea
2024-10-22
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited.
by Kamran Gasanov

[REGNUM] Prominent Islamic cleric Fethullah Gulen has died in the United States at the age of 83. Can Erdogan breathe a sigh of relief?

Purely symbolically, one can say that the main enemy of the Turkish president is gone. At the same time, since 2016, the influence of the Gulenists in Turkey has been significantly undermined.

Gulen and Erdogan started out as ideological allies.

Both supported Islam, criticized Ataturk's secularism, aimed to introduce an Islamic model of society, and both were victims of the secular model and its iron fist in the form of the military.

Gülen followed the religious path from childhood, consciously. At the age of 10, he became a professional reader of the Koran, then a teacher of the Koran. The country's spiritual administration sent him on the hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca. - Ed.) as an official.

In the 1970s, Gülen created his own movement, Hizmet, which translates from Turkish as “service.” He preached service to society and the state, called for interreligious dialogue, and exalted the role of education (“school before mosque”). These ideas became the harbinger of the creation of hundreds of schools and lyceums in Turkey, the CIS, and other countries.

Politically, Gülen advocated a more modern Islam, rejected extremes and radicalism. He believed that Islam was not in conflict with democracy, and supported Turkey's European integration. His teachings welcomed dialogue between Islamic movements.

By 1980, Gülen had become one of the most influential Muslim preachers in Turkey.

If he tried to establish an Islamic model through the creation of horizontal connections, education and cultivation of the future elite (teachers, judges, politicians, etc.) in his schools, Erdogan waged an active political struggle. First under the leadership of the founder of political Islam in Turkey, Necmetdin Erbakan, thanks to whom he became mayor of Istanbul in 1994. Then, after another military coup and the ban on the Welfare Party, he founded his own Justice and Development Party (AKP).

With it, Erdogan won the parliamentary elections in 2002 and began to gradually transform the secular republic into an Islamic one. This is where he needed strong allies from the Hizmet organization.

Gulen, who had been in the United States for medical treatment since 1999, supported the AKP. Gulenists saw Erdogan as a force capable of implementing their views.

During Erdogan's premiership, Hizmet strengthened its position. Lyceums and schools were established both inside and outside the country. By spreading the Turkish language, Islam and the positive image of the Ottoman Empire, they strengthened Turkey's soft power and, accordingly, benefited the AKP's foreign policy.

The second motivation for the alliance was the fight against the remnants of the Ataturk era - secular bureaucrats and generals. The former irritated Erdogan by limiting Islam in the country, the latter - by constant military coups, as a result of which Erbakan and Erdogan himself suffered.

By not interfering with and even helping Gulenists take up positions in the military, judicial and educational systems, the Turkish prime minister tried to weaken the secular elite. Erdogan did not hide his support for Gulen, calling him nothing less than "hodja" (mentor, teacher).

The Gülenists paid handsomely for such sympathy. They voted for the AKP in elections. The Gülen-controlled rating media (Zaman, Cihan, Samanyolu) extolled Erdogan and denounced the opposition. In 2008, as part of the Ergenekon affair, Erdogan carried out a purge of the Armed Forces and security agencies. The Gülenists welcomed these measures.

As Erdogan began to triumph over his secular opponents, competition emerged between yesterday's allies.

Erdogan headed the government, his party controlled the parliament, but Gulen influenced the youth, society, had a number of major media outlets at his disposal, including the Zaman newspaper, controlled financial flows through the same schools and the large bank Bank Asya. There was an official state, but in parallel to it there was also a Gulen state with people in all spheres of society - from mosque parishioners to diplomats.

As the Eastern proverb says: "You can't cook two sheep's heads in one pot." The prime minister began to fear the excessive influence of the Gulenists and decided to rein them in.

The beginnings of the conflict appeared back in 2010.

Then Erdogan sent the Freedom Flotilla to Gaza, eight Turkish sailors were killed when the ship was stormed by an Israeli coast guard unit. Gulen called the operation an adventure that led to a rupture in strategic relations with Israel.

Three years later, the prime minister encroached on the “sacred.” He proposed closing the private schools of the “djemaat” (as members of the “Hizmet” movement were called, in other words, the “Muslim community.” — Ed.). The Turkish newspaper Taraf published an article under the headline “A plan to finish off Gulen.” It cites an excerpt from a 2004 document of the Turkish National Security Council, which outlines the goal of cleansing state structures of the “djemaat.”

Gulen did not remain in debt.

In December 2013, thanks in large part to the media under his control, a corruption scandal was provoked. The Gulenists had a dossier on almost every official in Turkey.

As part of Operation Big Bribe, the Financial Crime Department conducted searches in the homes of the sons of Foreign Minister Muammer Güler, Economy Minister Zafer Çağlayan and Urban Development Minister Erdoğan Bayraktar. The named ministers, as well as the Minister for European Integration Egemen Bagış, were accused of corruption. Moreover, $4.5 million in cash was found during the search at the head of the largest bank, Halk Bankası, Suleyman Aslan.

Erdogan had to change the government, which was a huge blow to his reputation. Critics thought that Erdogan's more than 10-year premiership was coming to an end. Six months before that, the biggest protests since his rise to power had died down in Gezi Park, where Gulen also criticized the actions of the prime minister and the police.

But it was the events of 2014 that really got Erdogan mad and showed him that Gulen was an enemy. That was where he got to the quick.

Not just ministers, but also the prime minister's son, Necmeddin Bilal, began to be accused of corruption. Turkish newspapers published photos of Bilal's meeting with a certain Saudi businessman, Yasin al-Qadi. Allegedly, under the cover of the prime minister's security, they negotiated the sale of a plot of land in a prestigious area of ​​Istanbul, the price of which could reach a billion dollars.

An even more scandalous piece of material has leaked online via Gülen-controlled media: an audio recording of a conversation between the Turkish prime minister and his son, in which they discuss what to do with $30 million. A voice resembling Bilal asks whether Erdogan wants to keep some of it for himself, to which the other person replies: “Better not over the phone.”

Erdogan accused police and prosecutors of a plot orchestrated by " dark forces from abroad."

Turkey began to close down schools sponsored by Gulenists. Already in December 2014, an Istanbul court issued an arrest warrant for their leader. The arrest documents were forwarded to Interpol, but it did not reciprocate.

The conflict, which had gained momentum, reached its peak in 2016.

Two months before the July coup attempt, Erdogan shut down two major Gülen media outlets, the Cihan news agency and the Zaman newspaper. Then came July 15, the day the attempt to overthrow Erdogan arrived.

He placed all responsibility for this on Fethullah Gulen and his people. For his part, the preacher denied his guilt and said that Erdogan himself had faked the coup in order to deal with his opponents.

Be that as it may, the facts indicate the following.

During the uprising, 250 people were killed and more than 2,000 were wounded in a confrontation between supporters of the Turkish president and the putschists. As part of the “purge,” Erdogan’s government arrested more than 200,000 people, convicted 50,000 and fired about 140,000 civil servants.

The Hizmet movement was declared a terrorist organization and has since been known in Turkey as FETÖ. The prosecutor's office has requested two life sentences and 1,900 years in prison for Gülen.

In 2017, the preacher was stripped of his Turkish citizenship. Until his death, Erdogan had been trying to get the US to extradite Gulen, but the Americans refused. Since the coup, the Turkish president has been accusing Gulenists of all mortal sins, and their traces are found in almost every crime.

For example, in 2016, Erdogan admitted that Gulenists were connected to the pilots who shot down a Russian bomber in Syria. They were also accused of organizing an assassination attempt on the Russian ambassador to Ankara, Andrei Karlov.

Gulen's death may make Erdogan both sad and happy at the same time.

Who knows how the political fate of the Turkish president would have turned out if not for the founder of Hizmet?

Erdogan owes his success partly to the Gulenists, and the latter have much to thank the former prime minister for. However, the events of 2013-2014 and 2016 made Gulen an eternal enemy of the 70-year-old Turkish president. So even if he remembers the bright periods of their friendship, hatred probably outweighs nostalgia. One powerful enemy less.

However, it is too early for Erdogan to relax.

Gülen's power was not only in his name, but also in his movement. It is not difficult to kill a person, but it is much more difficult to kill an idea. Gülen's ideas are followed secretly and openly by millions of people in Turkey and beyond.

And besides, even if the Gülenists are weakened, it cannot be ruled out that they could form an alliance with those who now pose a great danger to the extension of the president’s power: the Republican People’s Party and the Kurds.

And if you add foreign funding to this – the Democrats in the US, for example, are not giving up their attempts to overthrow Erdogan,
…the Democrats, really? I had no idea…
who has declared war on Zionism – then the result could be quite unpredictable.

It is not for nothing that the head of the Turkish Foreign Ministry and former intelligence director Hakan Fidan said that “ the leader of this dark organization is dead,” but his death “ will not lead to complacency,” since FETÖ is an organization that “ recruits youth.”
Related:
Fethullah Gulen 10/02/2023 Inclusion to European Union: Erdogan says Turkey 'no longer expects anything'
Fethullah Gulen 09/28/2023 Turkey slams ECHR for ruling in favor of teacher convicted for Gulen affiliation
Fethullah Gulen 05/18/2023 Ankara slams arrest of two Turkish journalists in Frankfurt

Related:
Ergenekon 09/09/2024 Turkish 1937
Ergenekon 09/03/2024 Turkey arrests 15 for attack on US personnel in Izmir
Ergenekon 12/09/2023 Turkey calls for uniting with Russia and Syria to fight terrorism

Related:
Freedom Flotilla: 2024-08-17 Activists prepare to defy Israeli naval blockade of Gaza
Freedom Flotilla: 2024-04-29 Gaza aid flotilla halted after vessels flag removed, activists say
Freedom Flotilla: 2024-04-28 Gaza ‘Freedom Flotilla' blocked in Turkey after being denied use of 2 ships

Link


-Obits-
US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, accused of Turkish coup, dies at 83
2024-10-22
[Rudaw] US-based Moslem holy man Muhammed Fethullah Gülen
>... a Turkish preacher living in Pennsylvania whom the current govt of Turkey considers responsible for all the ills afflicting Turkey and possibly the entire world. Gülen and Erdogan used to be really good friends, but only one of them could be sultan, and Gülen lost...>
, who was accused of orchestrating the attempted coup against the Ottoman Turkish government of President His Enormity, Sultan Recep Tayyip Erdogan the First
...Turkey's version of Mohammed Morsi but they voted him back in so they deserve him. It's a sin, a shame, and a felony to insult the president of Turkey. In Anatolia did Recep Bey a stately Presidential Palace decree, that has 1100 rooms. That's 968 more than in the White House, 400 more than in Versailles, and 325 more than Buckingham Palace, so you know who's really more important...
in 2016, died on Monday, sources close to the holy man announced.

"Dear Friends, Our teacher passed away on October 20, 2024, at 21:20 [US time] in the hospital where he had been receiving treatment for a while," read a post on X from Herkul Nagme, a website dedicated to publishing updates on Gulen’s life and his videos where he addresses his followers.

"His doctors will make a statement about the hospital process in the coming hours," it added

He was 83 years old.

Gulen and his transnational Hizemt [Service] movement, have been accused by Erdogan and the Ottoman Turkish government of orchestrating the 2016 failed coup attempt in The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...the decaying remnant of the Ottoman Empire...
that killed more than 240 people. His movement was declared a terrorist organization just two months before the incident and a countrywide crackdown ensued to capture his followers.

"Fethullah Gulen, the traitor and enemy of religion, who spent his entire life plotting against the Republic of Turkey, has died," Ottoman Turkish state television
... and if you can't believe state television who can you believe?
TRT said on X.

Gulen moved to Pennsylvania in 1999, and has been residing there since then despite calls by Erdogan to return to Turkey in 2013.

In 2000, Gulen was tried in absentia and was charged with attempting to embed his supporters into civil service and important governmental positions to overthrow the government.

The charges were reversed in 2008 under the rule of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) and then-prime minister Erdogan, who enjoyed good relations with the holy man until an abrupt end in 2013 after a corruption scandal involving Erdogan’s closest circles pitted the two men against one another. The Ottoman Turkish president accused Gulen of creating a "parallel state" within Turkey.

Erdogan’s consolidation of power has been denounced by Gulen, who has referred to the Ottoman Turkish president as a "dictator" and encouraged the US and European governments to do more to restore political freedoms in Turkey.

Gulen was stripped of his Ottoman Turkish nationality in 2017.

Gulen’s Hizmet movement has focused on establishing schools across the globe, claiming to increase the quality of education. The movement established its first schools in central Asia and later spread globally.

The movement established the first schools in the Kurdistan Region in 1994 in Erbil, and three years later in Sulaimani. The schools teach English, Kurdish, Arabic, and Ottoman Turkish languages.

Gulen’s followers claim the founding of the schools is in line with the vision of Kurdish Islamic scholar Said Nursi and his teachings, who had a vision of establishing schools to spread Islamic teachings.
Gulen was a one-time ally of Erdogan but they fell out spectacularly, and Erdogan held him responsible for the 2016 attempted coup in which rogue soldiers commandeered warplanes, tanks and helicopters. Some 250 people were killed in the bid to seize power.

Gulen, who had lived in self-imposed exile in the US since 1999, denied involvement in the putsch.

According to its followers, Gulen’s movement — known as “Hizmet” which means “service” in Turkish — seeks to spread a moderate brand of Islam that promotes Western-style education, free markets and interfaith communication.

Since the failed coup, his movement has been systematically dismantled in Turkey and its influence has declined internationally.

Known to his supporters as Hodjaefendi, or respected teacher, Gulen was born in a village in the eastern Turkish province of Erzurum in 1941. The son of an imam, or Islamic preacher, he studied the Quran from infancy.

In 1959, Gulen was appointed as a mosque imam in the northwestern city of Edirne and began to come to prominence as a preacher in the 1960s in the western province of Izmir, where he set up student dormitories and would go to tea houses to preach.

These student houses marked the start of an informal network that would spread over the following decades through education, business, media and state institutions, giving his supporters extensive influence.

This influence also spread beyond Turkey’s borders to the Turkic republics of Central Asia, the Balkans, Africa and the West through a network of schools.

FORMER ERDOGAN ALLY
Gulen had been a close ally of Erdogan and his AK Party, but growing tensions in their relationship exploded in December 2013 when corruption investigations targeting ministers and officials close to Erdogan came to light.

Prosecutors and police from Gulen’s Hizmet movement were widely believed to be behind the investigations, and an arrest warrant was issued for Gulen in 2014, with his movement designated as a terrorist group two years later.

Soon after the 2016 coup, Erdogan described Gulen’s network as traitorsh and “like a cancer,” vowing to root them out wherever they are. Hundreds of schools, companies, media outlets and associations linked to him were shut down and assets seized.

Gulen condemned the coup attempt “in the strongest terms.”

“As someone who suffered under multiple military coups during the past five decades, it is especially insulting to be accused of having any link to such an attempt,” he said in a statement.

In a crackdown after the failed putsch, which the government said targeted Gulen’s followers, at least 77,000 people were arrested and 150,000 state workers including teachers, judges, and soldiers suspended under emergency rule.

Companies and media outlets regarded as linked to Gulen were seized by the state or closed down. The Turkish government said its actions were justified by the gravity of the threat posed to the state by the coup.

Gulen also became an isolated figure within Turkey, reviled by Erdogan’s supporters and shunned by the opposition which saw his network as having conspired over decades to undermine the secular foundations of the republic.

Ankara has long sought to have him extradited from the US.

Speaking in his gated compound in Pennsylvania’s Pocono Mountains, Gulen said in a 2017 Reuters interview that he had no plans to flee the US to avoid extradition. Even then, he appeared frail, walking with a shuffle and keeping his longtime doctor close at hand.

Gulen had traveled to the US for medical treatment, but remained there as he faced a criminal investigation in Turkey.
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