There
is already a lot of very good interpretation of last night’s events
in Turkey but I will limit myself for now to this short article that
explains the present state of play.
It
is hard to overemphaisise the significance of a coup (whether by the
military or a False Flag by Erdogan himself in a country that is
right in the centre of the conflict that spreads from Libya, to Syria
and beyond – in a country which has American nuclear weapons
stationed and has been, until now, a close “ally” of the United
States.
We
still have to wait and see.
Events
are only beginning to unfold and whatever happens will not be good.
Hints at a developing western narrative on the failed coup in Turkey?
16
July, 2016
The
fact the Guardian is giving a sympathetic
ear to Fethullah Gülen,
the man Turkish president Erdogan alleges was behind the failed coup,
could be a hint at some of the complex realities and conflicting
loyalties here. As indeed can the media’s sudden and renewed
discovery of the Erdogan
government’s long history of brutality,
which is also being freshly aired by the BBC.
The
Guardian article even suggests the coup may have been staged by
Erdogan to increase his own popularity. Again this is interesting. In
general it’s only regimes we’re being invited to disapprove of or
demonise that are accused of shady dealings and false flags. Any
suggestion that a friendly nation could stage a fake coup would
usually be greeted with cries of “conspiracy theory.”
So
it looks as if Erdogan is in an ambiguous position with his masters
in Washington right now. A development that may not be entirely
unconnected with Erdogan’s recent overtures of conciliation toward
Russia.
Erdogan
is demanding Gülen’s extradition, and the US is requesting
evidence of the latter’s guilt before considering its position,
whatever that will turn out to mean. And the Incirlik air base is
apparently still intermittently
being closed for
use by the Pentagon, for reasons that remain unclear.
Time
will no doubt reveal more. But we can at least detect the broad
strokes of an emerging narrative. Erdogan’s brutality is no longer
inadmissible in the neoliberal media. And Gülen is being sold to us
as a more acceptable potential alternative.
Let’s
see how this develops.
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