All the Rage: The New AKP Disinformation Campaign
The Eurasia Monitor has published an excellent article about the campaign of disinformation and deliberate untruths waged by AKP sympathetic media outlets that was written by Gareth Jenkins of the Jamestown Foundation. An interesting question is whether Ergenekon is a game, initially designed by the west, that is now craftily being played against them.
In the wake of the detentions on July 1 of outspoken opponents of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) on suspicion of links to a shadowy ultranationalist organization known as Ergenekon, the pro-AKP media have stepped up their disinformation campaign in an attempt to boost the government’s democratic credentials in the run-up to the AKP’s likely closure by the Constitutional Court later this year (see EDM, June 10).
On July 1, the Turkish police detained 24 hard-line secularists in a series of raids across the country (see EDM, July 1). Those taken into custody included journalists, businessmen and retired military personnel, most notably former Gendarmerie Commander General Sener Eruygur and former First Army Commander General Hursit Tolon. Ten of those detained were subsequently formally arrested, including Eruygur and Tolon. The rest were released.
The raids were part of the 13-month-old investigation of Ergenekon, a small, shambolic ultranationalist organization apparently established by former Gendarmerie General Veli Kucuk, who was heavily involved in the Turkish state’s covert war against the PKK in the 1990s. Ergenekon’s primary purpose appears to have been to destabilize the AKP government through a campaign of violence. Kucuk is believed to have recruited mainly from other former covert operatives and ultranationalist secularists. There is no question that Ergenekon was violent in intent, but there are doubts about whether it was ever violent in practice. The evidence to date suggests that it was rolled up before it could ever stage a major incident and effectively ceased to exist once the leadership was taken into custody in January 2008.
It’s not clear what the author basis his conclusions on in this paragraph since no indictments have issued, much less anyone convicted of any crime. At this point, what Kucuk allegedly thought about or planned is nothing but speculation and should be acknowledged as such.
Following the detentions of 1 July, however, the pro-AKP Sabah daily newspaper published an article, based on unnamed sources, claiming that Eruygur and Tolon had been planning to stage a series of assassinations and violent protests against the AKP and, through the resultant chaos, provide the Turkish military with an excuse to stage a coup (Sabah, July 3). In addition to trying to provide legitimacy for the police raids of July 1, the claims in Sabah were also clearly designed to try to undermine the public prestige of the Turkish military by implying that Eruygur and Tolon were aware of a willingness in the high command to seize power. In fact, if it were ever to contemplate staging a coup, the military would be highly unlikely to do so in mid-summer at a time when one third of the officer corps is preparing to change posts and when the office of the chief of staff is about to change hands (see EDM, July 3).
As alarming as Sabah’s transparent attempt to distort reality has been a series of articles in publications run by supporters of the exiled Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen. Gulen and his supporters have long accompanied condemnations of violence in the name of Islam with attempts to transfer the blame for such acts to non-Muslims. Gulen himself blamed the April 2007 torture and murder in Malatya of three Christians by Sunni Muslim youths on foreign forces trying to destabilize Turkey (see EDM, November 7, 2007).
In the past, Zaman, the Gulen movement’s flagship newspaper, has also attempted to shift responsibility for the atrocities committed by the Turkish Sunni Muslim Hezbollah organization (see Terrorism Monitor, January 24) onto Turkey’s much persecuted, and as a result now almost non-existent, Yezidi religious minority (Zaman, February 10, 2000). On July 3 Zaman published a claim that Ergenekon had been responsible for the massacre of 37 members of Turkey’s Alevi minority by a ten-thousand strong Sunni Muslim mob in the Anatolian town of Sivas on July 2, 1993 (Zaman, July 3). The fact that Ergenekon had not even been established at the time was apparently not regarded as relevant.
Fetullah Gulen is comparable to Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini. Gulen, however, unlike the Iranian Ayatollah, while working toward the revival of an Islamic regime in Turkey, presents a pro-western ”I am the new tolerant moderate face of Islam” to the unassuming English-speaking public. Meanwhile, he has preached to the fanatical religious segment of Turks that they should, slowly without raising alarms, take Turkey step by step toward Sharia law. Western leaders have foolishly engaged Gulen in his dance of deception, a dance in which western leaders have repeatedly had their foots stomped on if not lopped off (does anyone remember U.S. support for the Taliban and where that led?).
In a country where much is believed but little trusted, such pernicious absurdities will have served to distract public attention from some of the disturbing questions raised by the police raids of July 1.
It is possible that some of those taken into custody on July 1 were connected with Ergenekon and likely that, even if they were not directly involved, one or two were at least aware that Kucuk had established a covert organization committed to violence. The majority, however, appear to have been detained merely because they were outspoken opponents of the AKP. Following his release on July 5, Mustafa Balbay, the Ankara representative of the secularist daily Cumhuriyet, said that the police who had interrogated him appeared to have no evidence of his involvement with Ergenekon except that he had conducted interviews with hard-line secularists. He was also told that his alleged suspicious activities included attending a dinner at the U.S. Embassy in Ankara.
“It has come to the point where the AKP is saying you are either with us or a terrorist,” said Balbay (Milliyet, July 7).Trying to label all those who hold similar views to a violent organization as “terrorists” is nothing new in Turkey. In the 1990s in particular, even the most moderate, non-violent Kurdish nationalists were routinely accused of being members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). But the use of the judicial system to defame and intimidate opponents of a ruling political party by accusing them of being terrorists is a new and disturbing development.
Yes, it is a new development and not one that should be tolerated. This Ergenekon debacle hopefully is something that the court in the closure case will take into account.
Depriving people of their freedom without cause is called “hostage” taking, and so far, the authorities have not shown cause with evidence, only with unsubstantiated innuendo. While the AKP promoted prosecutor in charge of the case promises day after to day to issue an indictment, every day there is a new excuse for delay: the justice department’s computer system needs updating, they want to add the newly detained individuals to the indictment, the indictment is 1500 pages long, no now its 2500 pages long (but doesn’t yet include the 10 newly detained “suspects”), etc.
The AKP has long argued, with considerable justification, that the case filed for its closure with the Constitutional Court is based more on political than legal considerations. But the police raids of July 1 have reinforced the impression that Turkey’s deepening political crisis is not, as the AKP would have observers believe, a struggle for democracy but a trial of strength between two essentially undemocratic forces who are both prepared to use sympathizers in the judicial system for their own political ends.
This last statement is a bit puzzling. Two essentially undemocratic forces? Which is the second? The courts? From all appearances they’ve followed the rule of law in the closure case. Those who support secular democracy and oppose the insidious infiltration of Sharia law? Ridiculous. Ergenekon? If such a thing exists as represented, yes.
However, anyone who knows anything about NATO, the “left-behinds” and operation Gladio knows that they are a creation of western democratic governments. And, Ergenekon is nothing more than Gladio renamed–get it? Ergenekon’s concept is actually a construct of western democratic governments. Could it be the Islamists are playing a game with the west? Using an invention that was supposed to protect democracies from the creep of Russian communism to snuff out democracy in favor of Sharia law? Think about it …
Lastly, as between EU membership and the AKP, in light of the hypocrisy and contemptuous arrogance of the former and the oppression of the latter, Turkey needs neither.










Kemal, thanks for the article. I completly agree with your last statement! One can only see the US/EU arrogance through the media analysis that involve Turkey in any shape or form. What they do not see or understand is Turks are very much aware of this fact and are getting pretty sick of it!
Thank you Nevbar. People who are opposed to the AKP need to speak up to counter the campaign of disinformation, or else the western media will just keep promoting the AKP’s drivel and no one will be the wiser.
The language barrier works as a huge impediment to western understanding of Turks, Turkey, its politics, culture, society, values, etc. The only way to teach them is for Turks who speak English, French, German, etc. to speak up.
test