The Star Early Edition

Erdogan reasserts power

More than 40 contradict­ions point to 2016 coup being a staged intelligen­ce operation

- MIRZA AYDIN Aydin is a journalist and political analyst based in South Africa

TURKEY is still a developing country, but its strategic location and military power make it a focus of interest as well as a point of concern in the global arena.

With Turkey’s military power – it has the second largest standing military force in Nato after the US – and its geopolitic­al location, a proper analysis of Turkey’s failed coup on July 15, 2016, and its impact on the country, is needed.

The failed coup gave Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan the ammunition he needed to increase his grip on power and silence all of his critics at home.

At the time of the coup Erdogan was struggling to rein in discontent over his fake university degree and the corruption allegation­s that had surfaced in 2013, which implicated him and his family. The coup was nothing short of a godsend for Erdogan, his family and his close inner circle.

Up until then, Turkey’s army had successful­ly resisted all attempts by Erdogan and his cohorts for the country to become embroiled in the Syrian civil war.

But what the coup has done is it has allowed Erdogan to purge tens of thousands of key people from state institutio­ns – those viewed as most likely to be critical or not look favourably on his actions.

By doing this he has managed to effectivel­y eliminate the corruption case against him and his family.

And to further make sure that he and his cohorts would remain off the hook and control what happens in the country, Erdogan managed to end Turkey’s 98-year parliament­ary system and created an executive presidency that wields extensive power with very few checks and balances in place.

Erdogan’s regime still plays the victim card, even though it is now close to five years since the failed coup.

But was this coup real? Or is it simply a false flag? In Monopoly terms, was it a fake “get out of jail” card that he has now ruthlessly exploited?

There are more than 40 contradict­ions that point to the July 2016 coup being a Turkish Intelligen­ce operation for Erdogan to reassert his power.

The first and biggest contradict­ion is that Turkish Intelligen­ce (MIT) claim they had no inkling that a coup attempt was about to take place on July 15, 2016. However, amazingly, within the 48 hours following the coup attempt, at least 35 000 individual­s were rounded-up or dismissed from their positions.

From having no informatio­n to being able to implicate 35 000 people within 48 hours is a feat that even North Korea would be hard-pressed to match.

While MIT is without doubt a very capable and ruthless organisati­on, it did not, and does not, have the manpower to investigat­e and implicate 35 000 people within 48 hours. The lists could only have been prepared before the coup.

Erdogan himself says he learnt of the coup attempt from his brother-inlaw, but he has contradict­ed himself by mentioning four different times about when he learnt of the coup. One hardly forgets such an important event in one’s life.

On the day of the coup, Erdogan, who is a practising Muslim, inexplicab­ly and without reason decided to miss the important and compulsory Friday afternoon prayers.

What is more interestin­g is that the so-called coup-plotters never arrested any politician­s from the ruling party.

During previous coups in Turkey, the plotters swiftly took control of key nodes of power and shut down the government­s’ ability to communicat­e with the security forces and with the public as soon as possible.

During the July 2016 coup attempt, the coup-plotters made a very feeble attempt and only seized the national broadcaste­r, but left the private broadcaste­rs totally alone.

Erdogan blames exiled cleric Fetullah Gulen and his followers for the failed coup, but with so many anomalies in what happened during that strange coup, even Kemal Kilicdarog­lu, the leader of the secular Republican People’s Party (CHP), has repeatedly said that the failed coup was a controlled coup and helped Erdogan to build his authoritar­ian regime.

The Pro-Kurdish HDP’s jailed former co-leader Selahattin Demistas has also pointed to the fact that Erdogan did not attempt to prevent the coup attempt but effectivel­y waited and plotted his own coup that usurped the constituti­onal order by declaring emergency rule and running the country without the rule of law.

Recently the SA portfolio committee on defence in Parliament questioned why the National Convention­al Arms Control Committee allowed six Turkish military aircraft to take arms from South Africa.

Daily Maverick and IOL articles raised questions over whether these arms might end up in Libya.

President Cyril Ramaphosa and Internatio­nal Relations Minister Naledi Pandor warned their Turkish counterpar­ts not to deploy the army to Libya.

Erdogan’s former finance minister and president of the newly formed Deva Party, Ali Babacan, has urged that the December 17-25 corruption case which targeted Erdogan should be re-investigat­ed in accordance with the rule of law.

South Africa, which knows all too well the suffering that totalitari­an and authoritar­ian regimes can inflict on their own citizens, should also support internatio­nal calls for the July 2016 coup to be properly investigat­ed. It should not supply arms to the Erdogan regime, as it may find itself inadverten­tly prolonging the Syrian and Libyan civil wars – a stain on its record that it surely does not want.

 ?? | BURHAN OZBILICI AP ?? PEOPLE wearing face masks to protect themselves against the spread of the coronaviru­s, walk past a billboard depicting the failed July 15, 2016, coup in Ankara, Turkey, at the weekend.
| BURHAN OZBILICI AP PEOPLE wearing face masks to protect themselves against the spread of the coronaviru­s, walk past a billboard depicting the failed July 15, 2016, coup in Ankara, Turkey, at the weekend.

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