skip to main |
skip to sidebar
From
Ellis Washington:
Much
like Stalin used the long-arm of the Soviet Union to execute his hated
rival Trotsky who was hiding in Mexico, Aug. 21, 1940, Erdogan
desperately wants Gulen to be repatriated back to Turkey to torture and
execute him before the people of Turkey, but the Obama administration
officials so far disagree, demanding that Turkey must present legally
verifiable evidence of crimes committed by Gulen before they will agree
to deport him back to Turkey. Of course Erdogan has no evidence of
crimes committed by Gulen—tyrants operate by Robespierre’s aphorism of
expediency—There are no crimes, only criminals.
Erdogan’s paranoia which imprisoned the 58,000 police, judges, clerics
and social workers claim that they were all involved in a grand
conspiracy against him operated by Gulen while living in the mountains
of Pennsylvania. You couldn’t write a better movie script than this. To Erdogan, free speech is terrorism. (Read more.)
And some insights from
Chronicles:
Two weeks after the failed coup and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s
subsequent mass purge, three facts seem clear. Turkey has ceased to be a
democracy in any conventional sense. The army’s reputation and
cohesiveness have suffered a massive blow, with uncertain consequences
for its operational effectiveness. Most importantly, Turkey’s foreign
policy and regional security strategy will become more difficult to
predict and less amenable to Western interests.
The military that has long served as a trusted unifying force for the country is deeply divided, diminished and discredited.
Hundreds of its senior officers are under arrest. Almost 1,700 have
been dishonorably discharged, including 40 percent of all active-service
generals and admirals. That once staunchly Kemalist army, which had
been for nine decades one of the key institutions of the Turkish state
and society, is gone. It is likely to emerge from the purge
as a pliant instrument under Erdogan’s direct control—a hundred
reliable colonels have already been promoted to generals—and not a
suprapolitical institution accountable to the prime minister’s office as
before. This change requires a constitutional amendment, which may well
pave the way for the new constitution which would grant Erdogan
unprecedented executive powers. (Read more.)
Share
No comments:
Post a Comment