Monday, August 12, 2019 - 12:00am
Erdogan’s Way
The Rise and Rule of Turkey’s Islamist Shapeshifter
Kaya Genc
KAYA GENC is the author of Under the Shadow: Rage and Revolution in Modern Turkey [1].
Recep Tayyip Erdogan is the most baffling politician to emerge in the
96-year history of Turkey. He is polarizing and popular, autocratic and
fatherly, calculating and listless. Erdogan’s ideology shifts every few years,
and he appears to make up his road map as he goes along. He is short-tempered:
he grabs cigarette packs from citizens to try to force them into quitting,
scolds reporters who ask tough questions, and once walked off the stage after
an angry exchange with the Israeli president at the World Economic Forum in
Davos. But he can also be extremely patient. It has taken him 16 years to forge
what he calls “the new Turkey,” an economically self-reliant country with a
marginalized opposition and a subservient press.
This mix of anger and calm has made Erdogan increasingly successful at the
ballot box. He became prime minister in 2003 after his party won 34 percent of
the vote, and by 2011, its share had risen to just shy of 50 percent. In 2014,
when he ran for president in order to centralize his authority, more than half
of Turks who cast a ballot voted for him. They did so again in 2018, by which
time they had also voted to do away with the post of prime minister
altogether.
Erdogan has converted his popular mandate into power and used that power to
remake Turkey’s relations with the rest of the world. He has expanded Turkish
influence in Syria and northern Iraq and tilted Turkey [2]—a
NATO member—toward China, Iran, and Russia. His use of power has also generated
dissent among feminists, leftists, and the secular middle class. Under
Erdogan’s watch, Turkey has become the world’s largest prison for journalists.
Filmmakers, novelists, photographers, and scholars are also among the imprisoned.
Turkey has banned gay and transgender pride marches since 2015; Wikipedia has
been blocked since 2017.
In the wake of a financial crisis earlier this year, candidates who were
aligned with Erdogan lost support in local elections. But even as his party’s
allure diminishes, Erdogan may win a third presidential term in 2023. If that
happens, and Erdogan leaves office in 2028, he will go down in history as
Turkey’s second-longest-serving president, a year shy of Kemal Ataturk’s
rule.
Ataturk [3], “father of the Turks,” was an
Ottoman general who abolished the caliphate in 1924 and modernized Turkey by
force over the 1930s. Under his single-party regime, Ataturk forged a modern
nation-state from the ashes of a collapsed empire, built a modern bureaucracy,
supported the creation of a Turkish bourgeoisie, and convinced a Muslim nation
to allow Western modernity into their lives. Erdogan initially criticized
Ataturk’s centralized remaking of Turkey, blaming him for his highhanded style
of rule. But since 2008, when Erdogan started having to balance various
factions of the bureaucracy, and even more so after 2013, when Turks took to
the public squares to protest his policies, Erdogan has adopted strikingly
similar methods. Ironically, the politician he first sought to distance himself
from is the one he has come to resemble the most.
YOUNG TURK
Erdogan was born in 1954, 16 years after Ataturk’s death, in Kasimpasa, a
rough Istanbul neighborhood of open sewers and muddy streets, famed for its
firefighters, pickpockets, and Romani musicians. The son of a ferry captain,
Erdogan made pocket money by selling Turkish bagels when he wasn’t studying at
a religious school. On his way home, as dusk fell in Istanbul, he would use the
deck of a cargo ship anchored in the Golden Horn to practice reciting the
Koran, earning plaudits for his oratory. But Erdogan also played soccer,
dreamed of a career in sports, and rebelled against patriarchy: his fellow
Islamists did not approve of his athletic shorts, and his father asked him to
land a proper job.
Erdogan was 15 years old when, in 1969, the leading Islamist politician in
Turkish history, Necmettin Erbakan, published the manifesto Millî Görüş (National
Vision). Erbakan called on Turkey to sever ties with the European Economic
Community (the precursor of the EU) and align with pan-Islamist leaders in
Bangladesh and Pakistan and across the rest of the Muslim world. From the
moment a teenage Erdogan joined the youth branch of Erbakan’s National
Salvation Party, his political instincts were shaped by this mindset. Erbakan’s
movement supported the mujahideen in Afghanistan in their fight against the
Soviets and Ruhollah Khomeini’s Islamic Revolution in Iran. At political
rallies, party leaders condemned what they termed “the West’s crusader
mentality” and described the International Monetary Fund and the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development as its modern incarnations. Erdogan
and his ilk opposed the absence of Islamic references in the public domain: in
their view, the secular government did not deserve respect as long as it did
not respect Islam.
In 1985, Erdogan had a chance to prove his organizational skills to
Islamist elders when he arranged a boxing match occasioned by the visit of
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the leader of a CIA-backed mujahideen group, who was in
Turkey to celebrate Erbakan’s return to politics five years after being
banished from political life. Erdogan also aligned himself with the Naqshbandi
Sufi order in Istanbul, an influential movement that provided the religious
connections that would aid his rise to power. In those years, Istanbul’s city
government had hired Erdogan as a player on its soccer team, but the team’s ban
on Islamic beards forced him to resign. After completing his mandatory year of
military service, Erdogan [4] worked
as an administrator at a sausage factory; soon, Islamists invited him to work
full time for Erbakan’s party—now rebranded as the Welfare Party after previous
incarnations were banned—and there he raised funds from members to pay his
wages. As the party’s provincial head in Istanbul, Erdogan delivered speeches
against “the evil new world order,” protested the Gulf War, and defended the
cause of Islamic rebel groups in the Algerian civil war.
Erdogan distinguished himself from other Islamists through his calculated
pragmatism, ushering in a tectonic shift in Turkish politics over the 1990s.
“We don’t need bearded men who are good Koran reciters; we need people who do
their job properly,” Erdogan would later say. As part of this drive, Erdogan
established a network of volunteers who could put tens of thousands of party
posters on walls in a few hours and distribute handouts to voters during
morning commutes. These were his “nerve ends,” he said, capable of sending
signals from the Welfare Party’s administration to voters. Erdogan also used
another analogy to describe his organization: a “brick wall,” carefully laid and
difficult to break.
These grass-roots efforts paid off in 1994, when Erdogan was elected
Istanbul’s mayor. He made public transportation free of charge during Islamic
holidays, banned alcohol in municipal facilities, and lifted employment
restrictions on women who wore headscarves. When a reporter asked him to
explain his success, he replied, “I am Istanbul’s imam.” Erdogan’s bravado
alarmed secularists and generals, and his rising career was soon endangered: in
1998, Turkey’s highest court shut down the Welfare Party, and after a fiery
speech at a rally, Erdogan was charged with inciting hatred and sentenced to
ten months in prison. The legal stain, which the judiciary planned as a way to
terminate his career, maximized Erdogan’s popularity, since pious Turks now
viewed him as their voice, which the state wanted to silence. By the time he
left prison, Erdogan was ready to take the path to power.
It was then that Erdogan moved from local to national politics, defying the
ban on his political activities and leading a breakaway group from Erbakan’s
party. (He explained the rift with his mentor by repeating a maxim attributed
to Aristotle, “Plato is my friend, but truth is a better friend.”) The vehicle
for Erdogan’s ambitions was the Justice and Development Party—known by its
Turkish abbreviation, AKP [5]—which he
formed in 2001. At a press conference announcing the new party, Erdogan listed
democratization and pluralism as its ideological cornerstones. His movement, he
claimed, was based on power sharing: “A cadre will run the party, and decisions
won’t be taken under the shadow of one leader.” He described his own role as an
“orchestra chief,” proclaiming that the “age of me-centered politics is over.”
Erdogan founded the AKP with two other veterans of the Welfare Party, Abdullah
Gul and Bulent Arinc, and the troika had charisma, support from Turkey’s
Anatolian heartland, and a novel idea: that European integration and the
protections of religious freedom offered by the EU were good for the pious and
that democratization was in the interest of conservative Turks. “We used to see
the Turkish state as a leviathan that oppressed the religious and the poor,”
Arinc recalled. “Now, the EU negotiation process convinced us the Turkish state
can be democratized.” Erdogan also noted that because of the undemocratic
nature of the Turkish establishment, his “conservative democratic” party could
be considered “antiestablishment” without calling itself an Islamist party,
reaping the benefits of outsider status while maintaining wide appeal. It would
become a winning formula for years to come.
The AKP won Turkey’s 2002 elections with 34 percent of the vote; the
runner-up received 19 percent. Earlier conservative parties had also won
landslides—the Democrat Party in 1950, Justice in 1965, and Motherland in
1983—but the leaders of those movements fared poorly once in power. Turkish
generals hanged one on the gallows, ousted another in a coup, and attempted,
unsuccessfully, to keep the third away from power. Erdogan was determined to
avoid a similar fate. In 2004, he pledged to curtail the military’s
long-standing dominance of politics and demote the chief of the Turkish general
staff, once a demigod, to a public servant. These promises won him support from
liberals. But Turkey’s military tutelage wasn’t replaced by democracy; rather,
as the scholars Simon Waldman and Emre Caliskan [6] have
written, it gave way over the 2010s to “AKP patrimony.” “Instead of consensus
politics and pluralism,” they point out, “the Erdogan years . . . have often
been highly divisive and autocratic in style.” Around this time, Erdogan parted
ways with liberals and started making moves toward establishing a presidential
system, which would present fewer obstacles to his exercise of power.
OUTSOURCING THE STATE
Erdogan, who is six feet tall, walks with a confident stride: his right
shoulder faces forward, while the left shoulder waits in the back. The walk,
known as “the Kasimpasali march,” after his boyhood neighborhood, sums up the
man. Following his imprisonment, Erdogan resisted pleas to become a Turkish Nelson
Mandela and instead cultivated the image of a külhanbeyi, a
roughneck who prowled the streets of Istanbul during the Ottoman period. By
evoking that figure, he was able to emphasize his humble beginnings and
consolidate his pious base, the disenfranchised Islamists who supported him not
for his perceived reformism but for the conservative values he had defended
early in his career.
“In the heart of every Turkish citizen lies the desire to become
president,” Suleyman Demirel, a poor shepherd boy who fulfilled that desire in
1993, once said. Erdogan’s rise, like Demirel’s, is an inspiring example of
upward mobility. Yet as with most good coming-of-age stories, the hero in
Erdogan’s bildungsroman has another character trait: vulnerability. In the
tradition of wronged conservative politicians before him, Erdogan has presented
himself as a precarious leader who needs to be defended. In 2006, when he
fainted inside his car after his blood pressure fell, panicked advisers rushed
out for help before the armored Mercedes automatically locked its doors. Guards
had to break the windshield with hammers to rescue him. The episode only added
to the myth of a wronged man, betrayed by those closest to him.
Yet Erdogan has also changed his self-presentation over time, from anti-Western
Islamist to conservative democrat. As the Turkish journalist Rusen Cakir has
written, Erdogan, when he moved from local to national politics in the late
1990s, “wasn’t comfortable with the ‘liberal’ moniker, which he considered a
swearword,” but because he had been marginalized by the old guard, liberals
thought of him as a bridge between the establishment and “the organizational
power and dynamic voting-base of Islamists.” To realize its vision of an
Islamist movement compatible with the global order, the AKP joined the Alliance
of Conservatives and Reformists in Europe, a Europe-wide political party aimed
at reforming, rather than rejecting, the EU. Back home, the AKP developed a
strategy of forming alliances to control the Turkish state. In exercising his
power, Erdogan worked with both competent bureaucrats and Islamists with
political aspirations but little technical know-how. “Other parties have
voters,” his teacher Erbakan famously said. “We have believers.” The challenge
for Erdogan was to retain the believers even as he pushed for market reforms
and accession to the EU.
But therein lay a problem. Erdogan had no cadres to fill the state bureaucracy.
Competent functionaries mostly belonged to other political camps. Although the
Islamist bureaucrats tended to be skilled at providing public health and
transportation services, they showed little interest in education, policing, or
intelligence work. And so Erdogan resurrected the Ottoman tradition of indirect
rule. He outsourced different components of the state—the judiciary, the police
force, and the military—to different power players. Between 2003 and 2013, the
old-school bureaucrats who opposed the AKP’s globalist agenda were replaced in
the Foreign Ministry and the judiciary by ambitious new cadres. Most had
backgrounds in the network of religious schools run by Fethullah Gulen, an
Islamic preacher who has lived in exile in Pennsylvania since 1999, after being
accused of seeking to undermine Turkey’s secular order. Gulenists also infiltrated
the police and the military.
But outsourcing power came with the price of losing control. Like Ottoman
sultans, omnipotent in their palaces but ruling at the mercy of local feudal
lords, Erdogan saw his decentralized authority become open to usurpation. In
the military, secular, nationalist generals resigned in protest of the Gulenist [7] takeover
of the civil administration. Those who didn’t quit were purged in massive court
cases in 2008 and 2010; some received life sentences. In the judiciary, newly
appointed prosecutors and judges who supported the purge were promoted around
2010 and 2012. The press approved: one liberal paper, since bankrupted,
compared the prosecutions to the Nuremberg trials. But nationalist Turks were
angry, and the AKP lost their votes in Anatolia. To regain control, Erdogan
broke with the Gulenists, cutting his support for their educational
institutions and purging its members from the bureaucracy.
In foreign policy, another field in which his cadres lacked expertise,
Erdogan handed the reins to Ahmet Davutoglu, a scholar of international
relations often described as “the Turkish Henry Kissinger,” and named him foreign
minister in 2009. The AKP foreign ministers who preceded Davutoglu had
preserved Turkey’s Western-focused foreign policy doctrine. As a member of
NATO, a U.S. ally, and a candidate for EU membership since 1999, Turkey had
kept its distance from China, Iran, and Russia. Now, the bespectacled,
soft-spoken professor proposed a different route. Turkey was the inheritor of
the Ottoman caliphate, Davutoglu wrote, and it needed to move from a “wing
state” of the West to a “pivot state.” Taking advantage of its location at the
intersection of the Black Sea, the Caucasus, the Middle East, and Europe, it
was poised to lead Islamic nations.
Erdogan relished these grandiose ambitions, and as the Arab Spring
unfolded, Turkey set its sights on Syria, where it hoped for a regime change
instigated by the Free Syrian Army, and on Egypt, where it placed all its chips
on the Muslim Brotherhood. The Davutoglu doctrine allowed Erdogan to reinvent
himself as a global Islamic leader, someone who could improve the lot of Muslims
not only in Turkey but elsewhere, too. “Believe me, Sarajevo won today as much
as Istanbul,” he said after winning a third term as prime minister in 2011.
“Beirut won as much as Izmir. Damascus won as much as Ankara. Ramallah, Nablus,
Jenin, the West Bank, Jerusalem won as much as Diyarbakir.”
Two events shattered those dreams. The first was the unraveling of Erdogan’s foreign policy [8] in
the Middle East. In Egypt, President Mohamed Morsi and other leaders in the
Muslim Brotherhood refused Erdogan’s call to look to secular Turkey as a “model
democracy,” and after Morsi was toppled in a coup, Erdogan’s hopes for a
secular version of the Muslim Brotherhood across the region began to look
fantastic. In Syria, the Kurds formed a breakaway region in the country’s
north, leading Kurds in Turkey, who had long been seeking a separate state, to
pull out of the ongoing peace process with the central government. The second
event was a domestic uprising. In 2013, millions of leftists and
environmentalists marched in Istanbul’s Gezi Park and in city squares across
Turkey. It was then that Erdogan, having lost support from the Gulenists, the
Kurds, and the liberals, turned to Turkish nationalists to remain in power. He
now spoke admiringly of Ataturk and his politics, described his own critics as
“rabble-rousers,” and claimed that Turkey was under siege by the West.
The Gezi protests and Ankara’s isolation in the Middle East unsettled the
leader who, as the scholar Soner Cagaptay writes in Erdogan’s Empire,
“had been a master of reading the global zeitgeist and responding to it with a
public relations executive’s craftiness.” In 2014, Davutoglu became prime
minister, but soon, his warm relations with the leaders of other European
states angered Erdogan, who now considered him a challenger to his authority.
In May 2016, Erdogan forced him to resign and replaced him with a low-profile
placeholder. Even as the presidential palace moved to the center of Turkish
politics, however, Erdogan struggled for control. Less than two months after
Davutoglu’s ouster, disgruntled Gulenist cadres in the military staged a failed coup [7], in
which 250 people were killed. As fighter jets bombed the parliament, Erdogan
appeared on CNN Turk via FaceTime and asked Turks to defend democracy by
fighting off soldiers in public squares.
The failed putsch gave Erdogan a further excuse to centralize power.
Announcing a state of emergency, Erdogan suspended the European Convention on
Human Rights, detained tens of thousands of civil servants, closed more than
100 media outlets, and canceled the passports of 50,000 Turks suspected of
having links to Gulenists to prevent them from leaving the country. It was in
this atmosphere of chaos and fear that Turks voted in a 2017 referendum to
adopt a presidential system of government. Only Erdogan could will Turkey back
into order during this “new war of independence,” he argued; some opposition
parties, he claimed, were allied with the enemy. Such polarizing rhetoric
seemed anachronistic a century after World War I, but as a political strategy,
it worked, allowing Erdogan’s vote to reach 53 percent in the 2018 presidential
election. Again, however, Erdogan was at the mercy of another political
movement, this time not the Gulenists but the far-right Nationalist Movement Party [9],
with which he formed a coalition government. In doing so, Erdogan worried
fellow Islamists by handing key positions in the bureaucracy to their main
right-wing rival.
RESENTMENT ON THE RISE
Akif Beki, a tall, sleekly dressed political operative with movie-star
looks, was Erdogan’s chief adviser and spokesperson from 2005 to 2009. Today,
he speaks critically about his former boss and his team. “The feedback
mechanisms of AKP’s first years no longer work,” Beki told me earlier this
year. “The party’s old sensitivities disappeared. Instead of conducting
dialogue with voters, the AKP insists on a one-way propaganda monologue.
Instead of facing problems, it conceals them.”
Disgruntled former allies such as Beki are pebbles in Erdogan’s shoe.
Erdogan can afford to ignore communists and environmentalists, who garner
little support at the ballot box, but disillusioned Islamists, who have talked
about forming a new party, pose a challenge to the AKP’s reign. Recently, two
of the three founding members of the AKP raised their voices against Erdogan’s
strongman politics: Arinc strongly denounced the polarizing tone of the party,
and Gul came close to running as the opposition candidate in the 2018 election.
Davutoglu, for his part, published a manifesto opposing the presidential system
on Facebook.
The alarming state of Turkey’s economy is a more threatening problem. Last
year, the Turkish lira lost 28 percent of its value, and this year, food prices
have increased by 30 percent. From July 2018 to July 2019, the unemployment
rate rose by four percent, swelling the ranks of unemployed Turks from 3.2
million to 4.5 million. Further aggravating Turks has been the rise in the
number of Syrian refugees making their home in
Turkey [10] (more than 3.6 million of them, as of June
2019). It was thus little surprise that in local elections held in March and
June, the AKP saw its share of the vote fall dramatically in numerous cities,
including the capital, Ankara.
In spite of these cracks, the “brick wall” Erdogan has patiently built
remains intact. The AKP has around 11 million party members, ten times as many
as the Republican People’s Party, the party Ataturk founded in 1923. Aligning
with the AKP today opens up career opportunities for Turks from different
social classes, much as aligning with Ataturk’s party did in the 1930s.
Recently, as if to assist future biographers, Erdogan periodized his reign.
In a television interview, he named his Islamist years, in the Welfare Party
and as mayor of Istanbul, as an “apprenticeship.” His time as a reformist prime
minister was his “journeymanship.” But it is his years in the presidency that,
in Erdogan’s view, deserve the privileged title of “mastership.” Now 65,
Erdogan rules with little separation of powers; that was inevitable, he
believes, after the very public betrayal of former allies. In the presidential
palace, plasma screens track which news stories are most widely read in the
country, requiring specialists to rapidly address the snowballing problems that
people care about, but a few dozen officers are hardly sufficient for a nation
of 82 million. For almost a century, elected ministers tackled the concerns of
their constituents; today, appointed members of boards specializing in
education, culture, and technology have been made responsible for developing
policy. A corporatist economy and a culture of favoritism in politics, the
media, and the public sector are on the rise. Majoritarianism increasingly
defines domestic politics. In the AKP’s view, these tactics of control are
necessary to keep a multiethnic and polarized country in order. But they in
fact deepen the systemic failings of Turkish democracy: the weakness of
institutions, the lack of press scrutiny, and the ruthless pace of cultural
shifts over the past century. Instead of solving these problems, the AKP has
chosen to be victimized by them.
Despite such challenges, Turkey’s civil society remains strong. Turkey has
52 million active social media users. In recent years, initiatives focusing on
the security of ballot counting, fact checking in the media, LGBTQ rights, and
violence against women have gained traction. As the Turkish novelist Orhan
Pamuk has noted, “Once a country gets too rich and complex, the leader may
think himself to be too powerful, but individuals also feel powerful.”
Erdogan’s great challenge over the next decade, as individualism grows in
Turkey and Islamophobic populism rises in Europe, will be to convince voters
that his mixture of anger and patience is still a model to follow, that his
formation story can continue to inspire, and that only his unassailable ability
can steer Turkey to safety. Erdogan will no doubt do everything in his power to
succeed at this daunting task.
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