Τρίτη 30 Νοεμβρίου 2010

Wikileaks -- Erdogan in power...

S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 05 ANKARA 007211




SIPDIS



E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/14/2029

TAGS: PREL PGOV PINS ECON TU

SUBJECT: ERDOGAN AND AK PARTY AFTER TWO YEARS IN POWER:

TRYING TO GET A GRIP ON THEMSELVES, ON TURKEY, ON EUROPE



(U) Classified by Ambassador Eric Edelman; reasons: E.O.

12958 1.4 (a,b,c,d).



¶1. (C) Summary: PM Erdogan and his ruling AK Party seem to

have a firm grip on power -- if for no other reasons that

there is currently no viable alternative and inertia weighs

heavily in politics. Nevertheless, Erdogan and his party

face enormous challenges if they are successfully to embrace

core principles of open society, carry out EU harmonization,

and develop and implement foreign policies in harmony with

core U.S. interests. End summary.



¶2. (C) As PM Erdogan strode through the EU corridors of power

Dec. 16-17 with his semi-pro soccer player's swagger and

phalanx of sycophantic advisors, he may have seemed a strong

candidate for European leader of the year. A regional leader

to be reckoned with for a decade to come. The man who won

Turkey the beginning of accession negotiations with the EU.

Who broke loose three decades of frozen Turkish policy on

Cyprus. Who drove major human rights reforms through

parliament and through constitutional amendments. Whose

rhetorical skill, while etched with populist victimhood, is

redolent with traditional and religious allusions that

resonate deeply in the heartland, deeply in the anonymous

exurban sprawls. Who remains the highly popular tribune of

the people, without a viable or discernible political

rival...outside his own ruling AKP.



¶3. (C) In short, Erdogan looks unbeatable. But is he? And

is he willing to give relations with the U.S. the leadership

and momentum they need from the Turkish side?



¶4. (C) Erdogan has a two-thirds majority in parliament. Main

opposition left-of-center CHP amounts to no more than a bunch

of elitist ankle-biters. There is currently no serious,

broad-based political alternative, owing to Erdogan's

rhetorical dominance and control of the debate on social

questions close to the hearts of the center-right majority in

Turkey; other party leaders' political bankruptcy; and the

stultifying effect of current party and election laws on

entry for younger, untainted political aspirants. AKP argues

that the economy, at least from the perspective of macro

indicators and continued willingness of emerging-market

portfolio investors to buy the expectations and sell the

facts, appears to have stabilized. Moreover, the authority

of AKP's nationwide party machine is blurring with the

Turkish State's executive power at the provincial and

district level and with municipal functions to an extent not

seen since the days of the one-party state. These factors

seem set to continue for the foreseeable future.



¶5. (C) Yet Erdogan and AKP face politically fateful

challenges in three areas: foreign policy (EU, Iraq, Cyprus);

quality and sustainability of leadership and governance; and

resolution of questions fundamental to creation of an open,

prosperous society integrated with the broader world (place

of religion; identity and history; rule of law).



EU

--



¶6. (U) Erdogan indexed his political survival to getting a

negotiation date from the EU. He achieved that goal. The

Wall Street Journal and other Western and Turkish media have

opined that the EU owes Turkey a fair negotiating process

leading to accession, with the Journal even putting the onus

on the EU by asserting that while Turkey is ready the

question is whether Europeans are ready for Turkey.



¶7. (C) But there's always a Monday morning and the debate on

the ground here is not so neat. With euphoria at getting a

date having faded in 48 hours, Erdogan's political survival

and the difficulty of the tasks before him have become

substantially clearer. Nationalists on right and left have

resumed accusations that Erdogan sold out Turkish national

interests (Cyprus) and Turkish traditions. Core institutions

of the Turkish state, which remain at best wary of AKP, have

once again begun to probe for weaknesses and to feed

insinuations into the press in parallel with the

nationalists' assertions. In the face of this Euro-aversion,

neither Erdogan nor his government has taken even minimal

steps to prepare the bureaucracy or public opinion to begin

tackling the fundamental -- some Turks would say insidious --

legal, social, intellectual and spiritual changes that must

occur to turn harmonization on paper into true reform. The

road ahead will surely be hard.



¶8. (U) High-profile naysayers like main opposition CHP

chairman Baykal, former Ambassador Gunduz Aktan, and

political scientist Hasan Unal continue to castigate Erdogan.

But theirs is a routine whine. More significant for us is

that many of our contacts cloak their lack of self-confidence

at Turkey's ability to join in expressions of skepticism that

the EU will let Turkey in. And there is parallel widespread

skepticism that the EU will be around in attractive form in

ten years.



¶9. (C) The mood in AKP is no brighter, with one of FonMin

Gul's MFA advisors having described to UK polcounselor how

bruised Turkey feels at the EU's inconsistency during the

final negotiations leading to Dec. 17 (EU diplomats in Ankara

have given us the other side of the story). Gul was

noticeably harder-line than Erdogan in public comments in the

lead-up to the Summit, and was harder-line in pre-Summit

negotiations in Brussels, according to UK polcounselor.

There was noticeable tension between Erdogan and Gul in

Brussels according to "Aksam" Ankara bureau chief Nuray

Basaran. She also noted to us that when negotiations seemed

to have frozen up on Dec. 17, Erdogan's advisors got phone

calls from Putin advisors urging Turkey to walk. Basaran

says that at least some of Erdogan's advisors urged him to do

so.



¶10. (C) AKP's lack of cohesion as a party and lack of

openness as a government is reflected in the range of murky,

muddled motives for wanting to join the EU we have

encountered among those AKPers who say they favor pursuing

membership...or at least the process. Some see the process

as the way to marginalize the Turkish military and what

remains of the arid "secularism" of Kemalism. We have also

run into the rarely openly-spoken, but widespread belief

among adherents of the Turk-Islam synthesis that Turkey's

role is to spread Islam in Europe, "to take back Andalusia

and avenge the defeat at the siege of Vienna in 1683" as one

participant in a recent meeting at AKP's main think tank put

it. This thinking parallels the logic behind the approach of

FonMin Gul ally and chief foreign policy advisor in the Prime

Ministry Ahmet Davutoglu, whose muddy opinion piece in the

Dec. 13 International Herald Tribune is in essence a call for

one-way multi-cultural tolerance, i.e., on the part of the EU.



¶11. (C) Those from the more overtly religious side of AKP

whinge that the EU is a Christian club. While some assert

that it is only through Turkish membership and spread of

Turkish values that the world can avoid the clash of

civilizations they allege the West is fomenting, others

express concern that harmonization and membership will water

down Islam and associated traditions in Turkey. Indeed, as

AKP whip Sadullah Ergin confided to us recently, "If the EU

says yes, everything will look rosy for a short while. Then

the real difficulties will start for AKP. If the EU says no,

it will be initially difficult, but much easier over the long

run."



¶12. (C) AKP also faces the nuts-and-bolts issue of how to

prepare for harmonization. In choosing a chief negotiator

Erdogan will need to decide whether the risks that the man he

taps will successfully steal his political limelight outweigh

the political challenge his choice will face since it will be

the Turkish chief negotiator's responsibility to sell the EU

position to a recalcitrant Turkish cabinet. It is because

the chief negotiator is likely to be ground down between EU

demands and a prickly domestic environment that some

observers speculate Erdogan might give the job to his chief

internal rival Gul.



¶13. (C) At the same time the government must reportedly hire

a couple thousand people skilled in English or other major EU

languages and up to the bureaucratic demands of interfacing

with the Eurocrats who descend on ministries as harmonization

starts. If the government continues to hire on the basis of

"one of us", i.e., from the Sunni brotherhood and lodge

milieu that has been serving as the pool for AKP's civil

service hiring, lack of competence will be a problem. If the

government hires on the base of competence, its new hires

will be frustrated by the incompetence of AKP's previous

hires at all levels.



Questions About AKP Leadership and Governance

---------------------------------------------



¶14. (C) Several factors will continue to degrade Erdogan's

and AKP's ability to effect fair and lasting reforms or to

take timely, positive decisions on issues of importance to

the U.S.



¶15. (C) First is Erdogan's character.



¶16. (C) In our contacts in Anatolia we have not yet detected

that Erdogan's hunger for absolute power and for the material

benefits of power have begun to erode his grassroots

popularity. Others disagree. Pollster and political analyst

Ismail Yildiz has asserted in three lengthy expositions to us

late in Dec. that the erosion has started. We note that (1)

Yildiz expressed frustration to us that the AKP leadership

did not respond to his offer to provide political strategy

services; (2) he is currently connected to mainstream

opposition figures; and (3) he also runs a conspiracy-theory

web site. So we treat his view cautiously. However, judging

by his references and past experience in the Turkish State,

he appears to have maintained conncetions with the State

apparatus and to have a network of observers and data

collectors in all 81 provinces.



¶17. (C) Inside the party, Erdogan's hunger for power reveals

itself in a sharp authoritarian style and deep distrust of

others: as a former spiritual advisor to Erdogan and his wife

Emine put it, "Tayyip Bey believes in God...but doesn't trust

him." In surrounding himself with an iron ring of

sycophantic (but contemptuous) advisors, Erdogan has isolated

himself from a flow of reliable information, which partially

explains his failure to understand the context -- or real

facts -- of the U.S. operations in Tel Afar, Fallujah, and

elsewhere and his susceptibility to Islamist theories. With

regard to Islamist influences on Erdogan, DefMin Gonul, who

is a conservative but worldly Muslim, recently described Gul

associate Davutoglu to us as "exceptionally dangerous."

Erdogan's other foreign policy advisors (Cuneyd Zapsu, Egemen

Bagis, Omer Celik, along with Mucahit Arslan and chef de

cabinet Hikmet Bulduk) are despised as inadequate, out of

touch and corrupt by all our AKP contacts from ministers to

MPs and party intellectuals.



¶18. (C) Erdogan's pragmatism serves him well but he lacks

vision. He and his principal AKP advisors, as well as FonMin

Gul and other ranking AKP officials, also lack analytic

depth. He relies on poor-quality intel and on media

disinformation. With the narrow world-view and wariness that

lingers from his Sunni brotherhood and lodge background, he

ducks his public relations responsibilities. He (and those

around him, including FonMin Gul) indulge in pronounced

pro-Sunni prejudices and in emotional reactions that prevent

the development of coherent, practical domestic or foreign

policies.



¶19. (C) Erdogan has compounded his isolation by constantly

traveling abroad -- reportedly 75 foreign trips in the past

two years -- with a new series of trips planned for 2005 to

Russia, "Eurasia", the Middle East and Africa. Indeed, his

staff says 2005 is the "year of Africa", but they provide no

coherent reason why. This grueling cycle of travel has

exhausted him and his staff and disrupted his ability to keep

his hand on the tiller of party, parliamentary group, and

government. He has alienated many in the AKP parliamentary

group by his habit of harshly chewing out MPs. Moreover, we

understand that MUSIAD, an Anatolia-wide group of businessmen

influential in Islamist circles who gave Erdogan key

financial support as AKP campaigned prior to the 2002

elections, is disaffected by Erdogan's unapproachability.

Judging by comments to us of insiders in the influential

Islamist lodge of Fethullah Gulen such as publicist

Abdurrahman Celik, the lodge, which has made some inroads

into AKP (Minister of Justice Cicek, Minister of Culture and

Tourism Mumcu; perhaps 60-80 of 368 MPs; some appointments to

the bureaucracy), has resumed the ambivalent attitude it

initially had toward Erdogan and AKP.



¶20. (C) Second is the coalition nature of AKP, the limited

number of ministers whom Erdogan trusts, and the efforts of

some -- principally FonMin Gul but from time to time Cicek --

to undermine Erdogan. No one else in AKP comes close to

Erdogan in grassroots popularity. However, Gul's readiness

to deprecate Erdogan within AKP and even to foreign visitors

(e.g., Israeli deputy PM Olmert) and his efforts to reduce

Erdogan's maneuvering room with hard-line criticisms of U.S.

policy in Iraq or EU policy on Cyprus have forced Erdogan

constantly to look over his shoulder and in turn to prove his

credentials by making statements inimical to good

U.S.-Turkish relations. We expect Erdogan to carry out a

partial cabinet reshuffle early in 2005, but he will be

unable to remove the influence of Gul.



¶21. (S) Third is corruption. AKP swept to power by promising

to root out corruption. However, in increasing numbers

AKPers from ministers on down, and people close to the party,

are telling us of conflicts of interest or serious corruption

in the party at the national, provincial and local level and

among close family members of ministers. We have heard from

two contacts that Erdogan has eight accounts in Swiss banks;

his explanations that his wealth comes from the wedding

presents guests gave his son and that a Turkish businessman

is paying the educational expenses of all four Erdogan

children in the U.S. purely altruistically are lame.



¶22. (S) Among the many figures mentioned to us as prominently

involved in corruption are Minister of Interior Aksu,

Minister of Foreign Trade Tuzmen, and AKP Istanbul provincial

chairman Muezzinoglu. As we understand it from a contact in

the intel directorate of Turkish National Police, a

continuing investigation into Muezzinoglu's extortion racket

and other activities has already produced evidence

incriminating Erdogan. In our contacts across Anatolia we

have detected no willingness yet at the grassroots level to

look closely at Erdogan or the party in this regard, but the

trend is a time bomb.



¶23. (S) Fourth is the poor quality of Erdogan's and AKP's

appointments to the Turkish bureaucracy, at party

headquarters, and as party mayoral candidates. A broad range

of senior career civil servants, including DefMin Gonul,

former Undersecretary of Customs Nevzat Saygilioglu, former

Forestry DirGen Abdurrahman Sagkaya, and many others, has

expressed shock and dismay to us at the incompetence,

prejudices and ignorance of appointees such as Omer Dincer,

an Islamist academic whom Erdogan appointed Undersecretary of

the Prime Ministry, THE key position in the government/state

bureaucracy. Dincer is despised by the TGS. Many

interlocutors also point to the weakness of Erdogan's deputy

party chairmen. The result is that, unlike former leaders

such as Turgut Ozal or Suleyman Demirel, both of whom

appointed skilled figures who could speak authoritatively for

their bosses as their party general secretary and as

Undersecretary of the Prime Ministry, Erdogan has left

himself without people who can relieve him of the burden of

day-to-day management or who can ensure effective, productive

channels to the heart of the party and the heart of the

Turkish state.



Two Big Questions

-----------------



¶24. (C) Turkey's EU bid has brought forth reams of

pronouncements and articles -- Mustafa Akyol's

Gulenist-tinged "Thanksgiving for Turkey" in Dec. 27 Weekly

Standard is one of the latest -- attempting to portray Islam

in Turkey as distinctively moderate and tolerant with a

strong mystical (Sufi) underpinning. Certainly, one can see

in Turkey's theology faculties some attempts to wrestle with

the problems of critical thinking, free will, and precedent

(ictihad), attempts which, compared to what goes on in

theology faculties in the Arab world, may appear relatively

progressive.



¶25. (C) However, the broad, rubber-meets-the-road reality is

that Islam in Turkey is caught in a vise of (1) 100 years of

"secular" pressure to hide itself from public view, (2)

pressure and competition from brotherhoods and lodges to

follow their narrow, occult "true way", and (3) the faction-

and positivism-ridden aridity of the Religious Affairs

Directorate (Diyanet). As a result, Islam as it is lived in

Turkey is stultified, riddled with hypocrisy, ignorant and

intolerant of other religions' presence in Turkey, and unable

to eject those who would politicize it in a radical,

anti-Western way. Imams are for the most part poorly

educated and all too ready to insinuate anti-Western,

anti-Christian or anti-Jewish sentiments into their sermons.

Exceptionally few Muslims in Turkey have the courage to

challenge conventional Sunni thinking about jihad or, e.g.,

verses in the Repentance shura of the Koran which have for so

long been used to justify violence against "infidels".



¶26. (C) The problem is compounded by the willingness of

politicians such as Gul to play elusively with politicized

Islam. Until Turkey ensures that the humanist strain in

Islam prevails here, Islam in Turkey will remain a troubled,

defensive force, hypocritical to an extreme degree and

unwilling to adapt to the challenges of open society.



¶27. (C) A second question is the relation of Turkey and its

citizens to history -- the history of this land and citizens'

individual history. Subject to rigid taboos, denial, fears,

and mandatory gross distortions, the study of history and

practice of historiography in the Republic of Turkey remind

one of an old Soviet academic joke: the faculty party chief

assembles his party cadres and, warning against various

ideological threats, proclaims, "The future is certain. It's

only that damned past that keeps changing."



¶28. (C) Until Turkey can reconcile itself to its past,

including the troubling aspects of its Ottoman past, in free

and open debate, how will Turkey reconcile itself to the

concept and practice of reconciliation in the EU? How will

it have the self confidence to take decisions and formulate

policies responsive to U.S. interests? Some in AKP are

joining what is still only a handful of others to take

tentative, but nonetheless inspiring, steps in this regard.

However, the road ahead will require a massive overhaul of

education, the introduction and acceptance of rule of law,

and a fundamental redefinition of the relation between

citizen and state. In the words of the great (Alevi)

Anatolian bard Asik Veysel, this is a "long and delicate

road."



¶29. (U) Baghdad minimize considered.

EDELMAN

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