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A HUNDRED YEARS LATER, THE PATIENT CHECKS IN Almost a century ago, in the dying days of the Ottoman Empire, Turkey was known as the "sick man of Europe." As it lay prostrate, the great powers circled like vultures, jockeying for position besides Balkan hopefuls like Greece and Bulgaria, intent on carving up the dead Turkish beast. Yet at the final hour, the beast was resuscitated by the dashing Kemal Mustafa Ataturk, a military leader who refused the orders of the last Ottoman sultan to disband, and instead drove the foreigners out, in order to establish the secular, modern, and outwardly strong nation that exists today. While Turkey is not currently gripped in the mortal throes of a wasting disease, it is in danger of being eclipsed: of being forgotten, diminished, and generally overlooked at the very moment when its citizens wish to claim their nations rightful heritage. Yet here the Turks are divided into two camps: the pro-Western elite, who see Turkeys future as an EU member state well-integrated with Europe, and the pro-religious populace, who detest Ataturks secular designation, and wish for a Turkish Islamic government – like in Iran, the Arab states, and Afghanistan. Controlling the latter (as well as Turkeys many mostly imagined enemies) has required a constant and costly show of force, in the form of a highly visible military presence. Turkeys military strength works against it on several levels. Paradoxically, even though the army is there to protect and nurture a pro-democratic, pro-European climate, the resulting image of Turkey as a police state run by humorless generals has caused many Westerners to criticize the apparent suppression of dissent and free speech. Besides the political hindrance presented by the military, a second and more basic factor is the inordinate expense of maintaining and outfitting such a force. The vast majority of the Turkish budget goes to defense – thereby reducing the funding for education and social programs that would improve the lot of average Turks, and increase the skills and aptitude of the Turkish labor force. Yet with perceived enemies on every border – the Russians, Iraqis, Syrians and Greeks, not to mention the internal religious separatists and restless Kurdish minority – its unlikely that Turkey will change its policy anytime soon. As we will see, the apparent strength of the Turkish militarily actually conceals the countrys fundamental weaknesses, which continue to spread. Over the next decade, Turkeys eclipse seems almost guaranteed. FOR THE TURKS, TUESDAY USED TO BE THE BEST DAY OF THE WEEK EVEN THE TURKISH CYPRIOTS ARE SHOUTING: "TURKEY, OUT!" Allegiance to Ankara has largely been a given for the Turkish population of Cyprus since the invasion of 1974. Through promises of a better life and macho displays of military might, Ankara maintained the charade that it was really concerned about the lives of its citizens – while really just trying to keep up a military presence on the last Greek island left exposed. For strategic reasons, and to guarantee a diplomatic card, Turkey pursued the military occupation of a sovereign country, and set up a "republic" of Northern Cyprus that has gone unrecognized by every country but Ankara. To strengthen their claims to the island, hundreds of thousands of Anatolian Turks were forcibly relocated to Cyprus, many leaving a life of relative prosperity for one of barren poverty, so that Ankara could play its political games. Now the usually docile Turkish Cypriots are angry; they gaze enviously across the barbed wire at affluent Greek Cyprus, its currency stronger than the British pound, its culture modern, European and forward-looking. Now, with Cyprus being sped along to EU membership by 2004 – whether or not a settlement is reached with Turkey – the Northern Cypriots are beginning to feel betrayed and unjustly hindered by their own leaders. A report in the Guardian of 25 September captures the mood: "Please tell the world that the TRNC is an open prison," Ahmet Barcin, president of the zone's secondary-school teachers' union, said. "It's one big, militarised zone and all the gates are locked. Our only key to freedom is a quick peace settlement [with the Greek south of the island], entry to the EU and reintegration with the rest of the world." DENKTASH: WILL "OUT OF TOUCH" MEAN "OUT OF OFFICE?" "Those who are against Turkey are wrong. There is no Cypriot culture, apart from our national custom of drinking brandy. There are Turks of Cyprus and Greeks of Cyprus, that's all," he snapped. But last year tear gas was used in northern Nicosia to break up supporters of the Group of 41 demonstrating under the slogan "This is our country." Not long after that the opposition newspaper Avrupa (Europe) was bombed, and there was a severe crackdown on all informal contacts with Greek Cypriots. "What's the point of such contacts?" Mr Denktash said. "I've heard the only thing people seem to do at these meetings is have sex." Ouch! In striking quite literally below the belt, Denktash sets himself up for derision and betrays his failure to connect with the modern generation of Turkish-Cypriots. The question is not whether he will be replaced, but when. The warm Mediterranean sun, which should really be shining down equally on Cyrprus as a whole, casts its benevolent rays solely on the Greek section of the island. With EU accession looming, and full integration into Europe becoming more and more likely, the Turkish Cypriots are determined to avoid being frozen out. Unlike their compatriots on the Anatolian mainland, the Turkish Cypriots have a chance – and damned if theyre going to let one cranky old man stand in their way. WHAT A FREE CYPRUS WOULD MEAN FOR ANKARA THINKING THE UNTHINKABLE First of all, such a capitulation on Turkeys part would of necessity engender a similarly major concession on the part of the Greeks. In terms of what Turkey wants, a guarantee of EU membership would be the absolute minimum required, and they would no doubt win additionally in trade concessions and other economic relief. The second reason why Turkey would benefit is that, as the past decade in the Balkans has shown, being an ethnic minority in someone elses country is much better than having an ethnic minority within ones own country. By championing the rights of the Turkish minority in Cyprus, Ankara would acquire greater leverage (indeed, it gain practically a veto power on all Greek policy decisions) while at the same time winning the affection of Turkish-Cypriots – for, with the heavy-handed, Ankara-imposed government dismantled, and military intervention halted, the Turkish Cypriots would have no reason to curse their own. Yet its unlikely well see a really Greek Cyprus anytime soon – militarily speaking, Turkish testosterone shows no signs of abating. THE OIL PIPELINE – TURKEY GETS SQUEEZED OUT THE FALLOUT, ON TWO FRONTS The traditionally hostile Turko-Russian relationship looks set to get worse, and the outlines of a realpolitik cold war showdown are already emerging in the Caucasus. In the Adjara region of southern Georgia, the Turkish minority is clamoring for independence. A little further to the east, Georgias Armenians are protesting the withdrawal of Russian troops, who they believe are essential to protect them against the Turks. Whether or not there fears are justified nowadays, many of the Armenian Georgians are old enough to remember when they were. THAT DAMN ARMENIA THING JUST WONT GO AWAY! FOR EUROPE, THE CYNICAL VIEW MAY PROVE HARD TO SWALLOW Yet the Greeks know well that if Turkey does join the EU, those ravenous masses wont stop at Athens – no, itll be all the way to Brussels, Stockholm, or London, baby! And then those caring Northern Europeans will have to put their money where their mouth is. To avoid doing this, it is easier to just make Turkey run the gauntlet of "human rights" – a Sisyphisean labor involving prisoners rights, or Kurdish rights, or recognizing the Armenian genocide, or abolishing the death penalty. And so the Turks (the pro-Western elite, anyway) have been rushing around frantically to do their masters bidding. Yet they shouldnt hold their breath. Europe has no intention of ever letting Turkey in, for obvious economic reasons, and unstated cultural ones. Indeed, while Berlusconis controversial words may have been foolhardy, they were also courageous, and they did represent the reality – that Europeans do by and large view Islamic culture as backwards and inferior, though they are too afraid to say so, caught as they are in the web of political correctness that they themselves fabricated in order to ensnare others. It is just Turkeys bad luck to have to be the scapegoat; though Europe will assuredly always speak to it in the politest of tones, it will at the same time keep whispering derisively behind its back. Yet you can bet if the Turks ever make it through, and minarets start going up in Dublin, or the amplified Arabic wailing rings out over Oslo, the whisper will become a roar, and the "cultural war" which bin Laden is presently trying to bring about will happen for real. BUT ARE THEY READY FOR THE ULTIMATE APOCALYPSE? Ever since the major earthquake in Izmit, in August 1999, in which over 20,000 Turks were killed (mostly due to illegally built, poor quality housing), seismologists have been predicting an even worse catastrophe – a massive earthquake in Istanbul. Following the historical progression of seismic activity during the 20th century, it is clear that the Turkish fault line has been steadily activated in a westward direction, with periodic quakes roughly following the contours of the Black Sea coast. Over the past hundred years, subterranean pressure has been slowly building, so that the final rupture, the epicenter of which is anticipated to be the Sea of Marmara, just offshore from Istanbul, is likely to be the most devastating of all. Simply put, a massive earthquake in Istanbul would be catastrophic – and the Turks are completely unprepared for it. That an earthquake here would be so destructive owes to Istanbuls location, construction and also its historic value. Situated on a tiny peninsula jutting into the Bosphorous, this sprawling city of 17 million is a decrepit maze of ancient, tiny streets and ramshackle buildings, flimsy constructions that are hardly strong enough to withstand a major quake. The prospect of oil, gas and chemicals flooding the Sea of Marmara, and the islands of Greece further on, is an almost unimaginable environmental nightmare. Moreover, Istanbuls wealth of historical ruins from Byzantine and Ottoman times make it Turkeys top tourist draw. On any given day, an estimated 2 million tourists throng its streets and shore up the Turkish economy. An earthquake in Istanbul, Turkeys most vibrant and important city, would signal the death of the Turkish economy, livelihood and culture. It would probably signal the start of mass starvation and death. If the earthquake of 1999 is anything to go by, unscrupulous thieves would soon start cutting body organs from the still-warm bodies of the dead, to sell on the black market. In such a scenario the government would probably be toppled, and anarchy would reign. Experts are not optimistic that the inevitable can be avoided. Whether Turkey goes out in a blaze of glory (i.e., a fiery quake), or just sinks into a somnolent and useless old age, it seems likely that the country will diminish in stature over the coming years. Their only hope, really, is for some minor miracle (in terms of US-backed aid), that would derive from the still uncertain fallout of September 11th. It is still possible that the Turks might just somehow, despite all the indications to the contrary, reclaim their lucky day. |