The AKP’s Agenda in Turkey: Islamization
Middle East Forum published a great, high quality, and well-researched article about Turkey, written by Bassam Tibi. Tibi shows that the country’s leadership, the AK Parti (or Justice and Development Party) of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul may sometimes act as if it respects and even favors secularism but that it has, in fact, a clearly religious goal; the Islamization of Turkey.
As Tibi explains, Erdogan and Gul want to bring the Islam of Anatolia – Turkey’s heartland – to the rest of the country, especially to its major cities. Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir – the three largest cities – are slowly but surely overtaken by conservative Muslims from Anatolia who live in slums, who are often uneducated, and who believe that political Islam is the answer to their problems.
Interestingly enough, the AKP is supported by both the European Union and the United States, because it acts as if it values democracy. It does not do so, however; as Tibi explains, the only reason Erdogan and Gul have embraced democracy is because they believe that they may accomplish their goal (the Islamization of Turkey) by democratic means. Not because they value democracy – they oppress the opposition, they ignore it, vocal opponents are persecuted and so on – but because they understand that they have the advantage because a large part of the Turkish electorate is uneducated, undeveloped and distinctly non-modern.
The author also explains that what Turkey truly needs is a “Europeanization of Islam.” By this he means an “enlightened” and “tolerant” Islam; an Islam most Turks – not just Turks living in Turkey but also Turkic peoples in the rest of the world – already adhere to. Turkish Islam is far more tolerant and modern than “Arab Islam,” which brings me to my only point of disagreement with Tibi: Turkish Islam has historically been quite dominant. Not ‘enlightened’ as such, because the masses were not educated, but tolerant nonetheless, and open to other influences and change. Erdogan et al. are factually reforming Islam in Turkey; they are actively trying to make it less tolerant, less open, less ‘enlightened.’ They want to make ‘Turkish Islam’ similar to the interpretation of it in most Arab countries.
Nonetheless, the article is a good read. Tibi shows what the problem with Erdogan and his AK Parti is, and why secularists in and outside of Turkey should do everything in their power to remove them from power. Europeans and Americans should stop pretending that the AKP is an ally; it is not. In essence, it is the worst leader of Turkey imaginable to the West.
Especially this part of the article is worded perfectly: “The Turkish diaspora in Europe, as well as the population in Turkey itself, is caught between Europeanization and Islamization. The European decision-makers have proven in the past to be incapable of designing policies to address challenges arising from ethnic-cultural diversification of the population. European officials neglect or simply ignore cultural issues such as the identity of Europe and Europeanization.”
So what should Europe (and the U.S.) do? Well, Tibi explains: “The proper solution for crisis-ridden Turkey is neither the tacit Islamic law of the AKP nor a coup by the Turkish secularists. Rather, the European Union and the United States should encourage the strengthening of civil society by making the weak institutions of Turkish democracy stronger. Moderate Islamists want to Islamize, not democratize.[41] They are committed to the procedure of democracy but not to its pluralistic and peaceful political culture. Political Islam in Turkey is an important issue for Europe. Turkey not only has close relations to the West, but it also has a diaspora of more than four million in the European Union.[42] While many moderate Muslims seek to Europeanize Islam, the Islamism practiced by the AKP is an ideology of cultural divide, tension, and conflict, despite all of the pro-Europe rhetoric in which Islamists in Turkey engage in their pursuit to exploit the European Union for their agenda of Islamization.”
I am again somewhat in disagreement because I wonder whether ‘full democratization’ will produce the results we long for. Liberal democracy is, as we know full well in the West, far from a perfect system; it is merely the best system humans have come up with, at least when applied to Western countries. The situation is quite different in Turkey, I am afraid. Here, secularists need to be protected against conservative Muslims, whom we often also call “Islamists” (conservatism does not mean the same in Turkey as it means in the West; it means a bigger role for – what they see as – Islam in the affairs of the state, for instance). Not only do Islamists use the power of the state to force their will on the population at large, they also use public pressure, which is highly effective in a social and even collectivist society. ‘Democratization’ may be less effective than Tibi thinks.










Michael;
I read the article and have these comments (from a decided “non-expert” and christian American citizen with a decidedly American view of democracy)
1. As with other articles regarding the Islamist movement in Turkey the “head scarf” is the key example. I will continue to have difficulty seeing this as the first step away from Democracy. Help me understand how its no different than me wearing a cross around my neck in the US
2. I hate to say it but such articles beg the question of “what is the religion and religious practices of the author(s)”. I would feel more comfortable with an analysis by a practicing Muslim. I’m not saying the author isn’t, but it seems so often in the US that the critics of religious encroachment on democracy are secularist who IMHO struggle to understand a religious worldview
3. The article addresses this but I find the overall tenor of the article to once again beg the question: “Is Islam incompatible with democracy?” I hope not.
This article is spot on. The author obviously understands the dynamics of Turkey. The AKP is an Islamic fascist movement and is a sworn enemy of secularism. It will not take too long before Turkey is fascist dictatorship ruled by Islamic head-cases.
Turkey is heading for an implosion and the West has to stop emboldining the Erdogan government. Unless of course the current situation is what the West wanted in the first place.
As a Turkish Cypriot, I fear the problems of Turkey are being exported to Northern Cyprus as well.
It’s a tricky path you propose to walk. How does Turkey or any country espouse democracy on one hand and deny its application on the other? If the vast majority of citizens want to be governed like Iran is, for instance, is that not the will of the people?
I’m not saying you’re wrong – an Iranian-style theocracy in Turkey would be a disaster for that country and the rest of the world. But philosophically how do you deny voters what they want, particularly in the long-term?
My answer has always been to educate young people like crazy so that they will learn to appreciate the freedoms of a democratic state. But what if that doesn’t happen, the masses remain largely ignorant and desirous of Sharia, and internal pressures become uncontrollable?
As one that has lived in Turkey, I can assert without hesitation that Turkey has become an Islamic state. It has been deluding the USA, Europe and the rest of the world That it is a “Secular Democratic Republic”. Those are not the aims of Erdogan nor Gul. Shaaria law is the ultimate objective and nothing short of that will do.
It is being implemented systematically across State and local governments with unseen and unforeseen impunity.
Erdogan and Gul are wolves in sheep clothing
If you are not the U.S. or Europe you may not have a lot of money to do this. You kick off such a project, of course, but it will take a long before you have the money necessary in order to truly educate the population. What if an Islamist party comes to power in the meantime and messes with the education system you put in place?
Of course, you will say, they can borrow from the West. But what if history has shown you that the West is not trustworthy? What then?
Well, in such a case, ‘democracy’ in the long term may not be in the country’s interest.
Aside from that, I firmly believe that countries in different parts of the world, with different cultures and histories need different approaches. The ‘democracy’ thing may work reasonably well in the West, but that does not automatically mean that we should just copy our own system and implement them everywhere else.
Michael, my question is more sociological than political. To paraphrase an old saw: You can keep some of the people under control all of the time and all of the people under control some of the time. But you can’t keep all of the people under control all of the time.
I understand that secular Turks rely on the military to counter Islamic popularism. Can that balance really last? Or is it a short-term solution? If so, what is needed to create long-term stability?
I have been living in Turkey for 15 years. During these years, I have been desperately and sadly watching the drastic changes in the social and political life of Turkey. It is heading with full speed towards an Iran-style Sharia country. It is really disappointing to see the already immature secular and democratic system, that Ataturk for years tried to implant in Turkey, disappear and leave its place to a despotic Islamist system. The Islamist AKP might have come to power through elections, but that does not mean that it is right; Nazis and Fachists also came to power through elections. However, there is the bitter reality that most of Turkish people are undereducated and underdeveloped to an extent that even the secularist military would not be able to save them from the Islamist drift; an ideology which grows best in underdeveloped, undereducated, non-modern and poor environments. Unfortunately, you cannot change the minds of every single person of Turkey even with military force! Too sad for a country that some years ago was the example of a modern Muslim – not Islamist – country, although it has never reached a full democratic stage.
Please get a copy of Koran and read it. Thanks!!!!