From A World to Win News
Service;
By Ishak Baran.
The parliamentary elections
held in Turkey on 7 June resulted in a major setback for President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan's efforts to consolidate the grip of his AKP (Justice and Development
Party), which had been in ascension since 2002. He had hoped the election would
bring an even bigger majority and further legitimacy, or, in other words, a
mandate to push through a constitutional reform that could include the legal
framework for replacing the current parliamentary system with a presidential
system, vastly increasing his powers and the further Islamisation of public
life. These plans were dramatically upset when the HDP (People's
Democratic Party) drew votes from former AKP supporters, particularly in Kurdistan , and gained entry into parliament.
The HDP has positioned itself
as both the main opposition to Erdogan's power ambitions and the strongest
voice demanding the resumption of the peace talks between the PKK (Kurdistan
Workers Party) and the government. By assembling the leftist parties and organizations
in Western (non-Kurdish) Turkey around them, the HDP has been transformed from
a pro-PKK party into an umbrella organization aiming to represent "the
excluded" – all opposition identities – the forces of a real
"democraticization" of the political system– against the
authoritarian AKP.
No party now has a
parliamentary majority to form a government. A coalition seems to be necessary
to resolve this problem. But Erdogan is not backing off. He is blaming his
opponents for creating this potential crisis and calling on them to assume
their responsibility for ensuring and protecting political stability. Even
though this is addressed to all parties, it is particularly levelled at HDP.
The assistant prime minister has already started articulating this, warning,
"Mouthing the word honey doesn't sweeten your mouth, and repeating the
word peace does not produce peace." Now that HDP has 13 percent of the
votes and 80 seats in parliament, "they should call on Imrali (the island
prison where PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan is being held) and Kandil (the mountain
headquarters of the PKK military commanders) to put down their guns." This
is raising the bar for peace negotiations by demanding, as a precondition for
moving forward in this process, that the PKK decommission their weapons. HDP is
to be held responsible for making sure that this happens. It is being told that
if it is to be allowed to function within parliament, it must act as a
representative of the interests of the Turkish state. And rival parties to the
AKP are being told that only the AKP is capable of leading this process. In
response to the criticism that Erdogan is acting out of personal ambition, and
the denunciation of him by Turkish ultra-nationalists for negotiating with
"terrorists", he is appealing to his rivals to close ranks behind him
in the broader interests of the state.
Despite the euphoria among
HDP supporters and other opposition forces following Erdogan's electoral
setback, these are the terms in which political infighting is being carried out
among the ruling class and its representatives, and HDP will be obliged to be a
part of this.
The Turkish ruling class is
making very clear allusions to Ocalan's defence at his trial following his
capture in 1999, when he argued that in hindsight, taking up arms was not the
right thing to do but the Kurds were provoked and forced into it because of the
denial of their national identity – because they needed to be heard and plead
their case. Now there is a growing chorus, starting on the eve of the
elections, saying, "No more excuses. Now you've been heard. Now you have
to distance yourselves from the terrorists in the mountains." This is the
insidious underside of HDP leader Selahattin Demirtas being called "the
Kurdish Obama". The AKP and others are saying that now that the Kurds have
been gifted with democracy by being given a place in the Turkish parliament,
they have to represent the whole of the Kurdish population, meaning the
burgeoning capitalist class in Kurdistan , and
the interests and concerns of Kurdish political bigshots who have been
supporting the AKP. This is an effort to bring Kurdish resistance into
"the mainstream", which means the existing reactionary political
structure.
This is made acceptable to
the people by presenting it as the "victory of democracy", the
expression of the will of the masses in Kurdistan and the rest of Turkey through
the electoral process. Yet in reality, what is going on is more than just a
demand for Kurdish forces to definitively capitulate and be integrated into the
state. It is also part of a countrywide effort to muffle and manage various
manifestations of resistance to the economic, social and political system, as
seen, for instance, in the Gezi Park protests that spread like wildfire from Istanbul to other major
cities in June 2013. The same potential explosiveness has also been seen
in the angry reaction to the deaths of miners in Soma in 2014, and the growing
outrage and struggle by women to traditional patriarchal relationships and the
brutality against women and a wave of murders in the context of the increasing
Islamisation of society. The AKP has used violent repression, but has faced
serious difficulties. Now the HDP, claiming that its policies like requiring 50
percent of its deputies to be women and 10 percent LGBT (gay, lesbian,
bi-sexual, transgender and intersex people), make it a representative of all
the oppressed and excluded, is contributing to the encirclement and taming of
protest, bringing potential forces of revolt back into the fold, and reassuring
people that this system can be made to alleviate its irresolvable
contradictions.
Further, numerous forces that
consider themselves revolutionaries and even communists have been enlisted into
this process, because they are convinced that the overthrow and radical
transformation of the system is impossible and are lured by the prospect of
obtaining a place in the system and the possibility of some reforms.
Ironically, they justify their unconscionable activity theoretically by
claiming that Turkey
is fascist and their entry into parliament is a blow for democracy – when in
fact promoting illusions about bourgeois democracy is just as necessary to the
ruling class as more openly brutal means of protecting their class
dictatorship.
The jubilation in the streets
of Diyarbakir
and the squares of other Kurdish cities celebrating the HDP's electoral advance
was sharply contradictory. There was the joy of being able to overcome some of
the limits set by the system, such as the election threshold requiring parties
to win a minimum of 10 percent of the vote countrywide to enter
parliament, which was established to keep out Kurdish parties. But at the same
time people who hate what this system does to themselves and others find
themselves hemmed in by its horizons. For instance, thousands of people waved
the flag of the Turkish state and portraits of its founder Ataturk, who
brutally repressed Kurdish rebellion, along with portraits of Ocalan, robbing
the Kurdish struggle of its revolutionary and emancipatory potential.
What makes the reformist
efforts even more out of touch with reality is the underlying assumption that
Turkish society can be protected from the clash between Western imperialism and
Islamic fundamentalism that is raging throughout the region, including right on
the country's borders, reflecting contradictions that certainly run through
Turkey itself. Many Western imperialist political counsellors and spokespersons
understand this much better. They were generally unanimous in hailing the
setback dealt to Erdogan, and many even called for the HDP to enter parliament
before the elections that made this the "will of the people".
While representing and
promoting the flourishing of capitalism in Turkey
in subordination to the imperialist system, Erdogan's Islamisation drive and
ambition to put himself at the head of a resurgent Moslem world are problematic
for the U.S.
Also, Islamist forces whose rise is fuelled by the development of capitalism
itself are seeking to legitimize their claims for their due place in the global
system of exploitation and are mobilizing people under their leadership who are
in conflict with the political and ideological models imposed by the West. Erdogan
has been compelled to support Islamist forces throughout North Africa and the
Middle East , including Syria ,
because his legitimacy, the ideological cohesion that holds his movement
together and the political strength of his regime, depend on it. Erdogan may
not be Taliban, Bin Laden or Daesh, but his project is both a product and an
agent of the clash between these two "outmodeds" (Western imperialism
and Islamic fundamentalism) in the region and globally, a clash that engenders
drives and tendencies that cannot be controlled. For instance, Erdogan could
not avoid offending Kurdish voters with his refusal to aid the Kurdish forces
fighting Daesh in Kobani (in northern Syria ). He is inevitably brought
into conflict with the U.S. 's
plans and efforts in the region. This sharpening polarization between
imperialism and Islamic fundamentalism is generating new alignments throughout
Kurdish cities in Turkey and
all of Turkey .
Erdogan's policies, often wrongly reduced to simple signs of personal ambition,
such as his moves to increase the powers of the presidency and reduce the
independence of the judiciary, reflect the same polarization and its
necessities. These contradictions, like all the other fault lines in Turkey , cannot
be resolved by elections. Framing the question as a fight between
"liberal, pluralist democracy" and "authoritarianism"
ignores the real forces at work and leads people into a trap.
The shadow of the U.S. looms at
least as large here as that of Islamic fundamentalism. The PKK, HDP and most of
the Turkish Left looked favourably upon the U.S. 's
criminal role in the war tearing Syria apart, including its bombing
raids. Whatever the U.S.
does in Kobani or anywhere else is part of its fight to preserve and extend its
empire. The positive evaluation of and even praise for the U.S. in relation to
Kobani now has been followed by even more outrageous capitulation – people are
tolerating statements such as "the Left should learn a few things from
imperialism instead of rejecting it wholesale". The long insurgence
against national oppression in Kurdistan is being enlisted in an effort to
modernize and reinforce the Turkish state, which is totally linked to
imperialism, and even to serve the world's number one oppressor power, the U.S. In turn,
Erdogan uses this to strengthen his regime and its ideological appeal by crying
that he is the victim of a foreign "plot".
Along with the extremely
tragic fact that so many people are dragged and driven into the arms of one or
the other of these outmoded forces, there is another tragedy: that some people
are not only dreaming of mitigating the conflict between these two outmodeds
but are making this the foundation of a political programme and doing their
best to inflict their blindness on millions of others, including those who are
now awakening to political life and struggle and searching for a way to a
different world. In reality, what practical alternative is there to imperialist
and fundamentalist mass murder and murderous ideologies except the
revolutionary overthrow of the entire social order and the total reorganization
of society and eventually the world? However, these same contradictions are
also the potential basis for a different solution if people with a thoroughly
scientific, communist understanding of the problem and solution work to
transform the struggles around the basic, burning contradictions in society and
the people waging them into streams converging into a movement capable of
actually making a revolution.
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