I would consider this report to both important and reliable. Patrick Cockburn is one of the best on-the-ground correspondents in the western media.
Sibel Edmonds is another who thinks another coup is on the way.
Turkey's government fears second coup attempt as purge removes many army commanders
A
third of generals detained as President Erdogan finds plot reaches
into his inner circle, says Patrick Cockburn
19
July, 2016
Turkish
leaders are fearful that there may be a second attempt at a military
uprising in Turkey following the failure of the recent coup. Several
important military units are confined to their bases and President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been slow to return to Ankara from Istanbul,
apparently because the capital has not been deemed completely secure.
Fears
of a second coup attempt stem from the realisation by the Erdogan
administration that the infiltration by pro-coup forces of the senior
ranks of the 600,000-strong armed forces and intelligence apparatus
went far deeper than originally suspected. Some 85 generals and
admirals or almost a quarter of the total of 375 were jailed on
Tuesday by a court, a sign that the government privately believes
that the plot involved many more senior officers than the small
clique it has publicly claimed was behind the abortive putsch. Other
sources suggest that the true figure for generals detained is 125.
Arrests
at a high level are continuing with Mr Edrogan’s advisor on the air
force, Lt Col Erkan Krivak, arrested on Tuesday. Soldiers from the
Second Army, which is fighting a widespread Kurdish rebellion in the
south east of the country, have been ordered to stay in their camps
in the embattled region. The Second Army commander, General Adem
Huduti, is the most senior military commander arrested. The gates
into the main base of the 3rd Corps in Istanbul, theoretically part a
Nato rapid reaction force, are blocked by municipal dump trucks and
heavy vehicles according to eye witnesses.
“They
are fearing another attempt at a coup,” says Asli Aydintasbas of
the European Council on Foreign Relations in Istanbul, pointing to
the extensive nature of the purge of the senior officer corps and
judiciary, a quarter of whose members have been dismissed. Those
arrested for secretly backing the original coup include some from Mr
Erdogan’s inner circle such as Ali Yazici, his military secretary.
Soli Ozel, professor of internationals relations at Kadir Has
University in Istanbul and a columnist at Haberturk newspaper, says
that “the number of Manchurian Candidates” in the upper ranks of
the government is extraordinary – a reference to the film about
secret agents and “sleepers” who infiltrated the top political
leadership in the US in the 1950s at the height of the Cold War.
The
sweeping purge carried out by Mr Erdogan and his administration is
being interpreted by many Turks and foreign governments as an
opportunistic attempt to get rid of everybody not obedient to Mr
Erdogan and the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). The Board
of Higher Education dismissed 1,577 university deans on Tuesday and
the Ministry of National Education said that it had sacked 15,200 for
connections to the movement of the self-exiled Muslim cleric Fetullah
Gulen which is accused of orchestrating the original coup. Mr Gulen
and his supporters have publically denied any connection to the
attempted coup.
It
is true that Mr Erdogan and his administration evidently see the coup
as an excuse to cleanse the army, state apparatus and civil service
of all who are not loyal to them. But government officials genuinely
believe that there is a very widespread conspiracy by Gulenist
“sleeper” agents, not all of whom have been detected and may
still be capable of armed action. When the Gulenists were allied to
the AKP seven or eight years ago, they were at the cutting edge of a
purge of the armed forces of secular sympathisers and were well
placed to replace those dismissed or jailed by their own cadres. The
AKP appears to have known about some but not all of these Gulenist
networks which is why it is now casting the net so wide.
Turkey
warned it can't join the EU if it reinstates the death penalty
While
the government wants to give the impression that the pro-coup forces
have been wiped out, its restrictions on the movement of military
formations are a sign that it is not yet confident that this is so.
“The government has committed all the resources it is left with to
deal with the fall out from the coup,” says Prof Serhat Guvenc of
the Department of International Relations at Kadir Has University.
“The country looks very vulnerable.” He believes the coup on 15
July was bound to fail once soldiers had fired on the protesters and
bombarded the parliament building in Ankara, but says the present
situation is chaotic and difficukgt to undertsand.
Prof
Ozel says that Mr Erdogan may be a stronger leader because of what is
seen as his heroic behaviour during the coup attempt, but he will be
leader of a weaker state. He says that the Turkish Army “is like a
man who has suffered a serious stroke and will be weakened for a long
time afterwards”. Many senior military commanders may have
equivocated during the critical hours of the coup while they waited
to see which side would come out the winner.
The
Erdogan government may not be giving much long term thought to its
relations with the US and the EU, while it focuses on its long term
survival. Mr Erdogan may get his wish for an all-powerful executive
presidency run by himself in the wake of the foiled coup, but the
over-all strength of Turkish state is visibly diminished. “This
army, the second biggest in Nato, is now a broken army,” says Prof
Ozel. Other state institutions have been hollowed out or rendered
ineffective by years of purges,of which the latest is only the most
all-embracing. They will take time to rebuild. Prof Gunec says that
the problem is “not just a broken army, but a broken country”.
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