Conspiratorial minds, authoritarian politics

Mustafa Akyol
Mustafa Akyol


Date posted: December 25, 2013

 MUSTAFA AKYOL

In the year 2007, one of the bestselling books in Turkey was a weird title by a conspiracy theorist: “The Children of Moses” by Ergün Poyraz. The book’s cover presented Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan and his wife within a Star of David. Its pages argued, seriously, that Erdoğan was a “secret Jew” who collaborated with “international Jewry” to destroy the secular republic of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. The writer, Mr. Poyraz, was a hardcore secular-nationalist (aka Kemalist) who seemed pretty convinced that Turkey was targeted by a Zionist global plot, of which Erdoğan’s AKP (Justice and Development Party) was a mere pawn.

Six years have passed since the publication of that insane book. Its writer, Ergün Poyraz, was arrested in late 2007 in the “Ergenekon” coup trial, and was sentenced last August to a staggering 29 years in prison. His crime was to “conspire” against the AKP government, with his conspiracy theories, at the orders of a would-be military junta.

Now, fast forward from 2007 to 2013, and look at Turkey again. You will see that the conspiracy theories that were once the propaganda tools of the enemies of the AKP and have now become the propaganda tools of the AKP itself. First during the Gezi Park protests, the government blamed “global dark forces” and “the Jewish diaspora” as the master of the “conspiracy against Turkey.” These days, the same argument is used again to explain why four ministers of the government are targeted in a corruption probe: Israel and its lobby in the United States want to punish Turkey for its trade with Iran, and “an illegal organization within the police and judiciary” (formed by Fethullah Gülen Movement) acts as the pawn of this plot.

In other words, while Erdoğan was accused of being an agent of Zionism in 2007 by paranoid Kemalists, today Erdoğan’s supporters accuse the Gülen Movement of being an agent of Zionism.
Political actors have changed, but the conspiratorial political mind has not changed.

This passionate indulgence in conspiracy theories, I believe, is the biggest obstacle to nurturing a liberal, democratic culture in Turkey. Because when you see your political opponents not as mundane people with mundane motives but wicked agents of an evil plot, you lose all grounds to communicate with them. Consensus becomes impossible, as all you need to do is to “stay strong” and even fight back.

This is what we are witnessing these days, especially in the government’s response to the corruption probe. Instead of helping clear the charges and dismissing the accused ministers as a sign of goodwill, the government instead uses the the-best-defense-is-offence strategy: They depict the probe not as a legitimate investigation by a legitimate Turkish prosecutor, but the act of a global conspiracy that involves Israel, the neo-cons, the Israeli lobby, the “interest rate lobby,” and all the “enemies of Turkey,” whomever they are.

The politics produced by such a conspiratorial reading of reality can only be authoritarian, as it clearly is. Of course, this is not a problem that is specific to the AKP. It is rather a “national” problem that pervades Turkish politics, as recently proven by the enemies of the AKP as well. I just had hoped that the AKP would break free from this bad tradition, but it clearly does not. And thus we keep seeing the same boring script over, and over, and over.

Source: Hurriyet Daily News , December 25, 2013


Related News

Turkish women make a difference in Africa

“Kimse Yok Mu has been very active in Africa providing humanitarian and development assistance. State-level or diplomatic presence has occasionally followed the NGO presence in Africa,” Cevik told SES Türkiye.

Government plans to unlawfully take over aid organization

The Justice and Development Party’s (AK Party) efforts to undermine the largest aid organization in Turkey, Kimse Yok Mu (Is Anybody There?) reached a new level with alleged preparations to dissolve the board of the organization and appoint a trustee instead, although no legal grounds exist for such a move.

Turkey’s Reichstag Fire

When tanks blocked bridges in the heart of Istanbul and F-16s bombed Turkey’s parliament in Ankara on July 15, Western diplomats were caught by surprise. So too were U.S. forces stationed at the Incirlik Air Base in southern Turkey. The U.S. intelligence community had not an inkling that anything was amiss until the troops started moving.

Don’t draw us into your family fight: Washington

The United States has told Ankara it has no any intention of getting involved into what it calls “a family fight,” denying conspiracy theories suggesting Washington’s role in the ongoing struggle between the government and the powerful Gülen community that has exploded with a new corruption probe. “Please don’t draw us into your family fight here. We don’t want one side or the other to feed this conspiracy idea that we are against the prime minister or against Fethullah Gülen Hocaefendi,”

Qatar deports 45 Turkish nationals over Gülen links

Pro-government Sabah daily newspaper claimed on Saturday that 45 Turkish nationals were deported from Qatar for having links to the Gulen movement. The daily said two of those 45 people — academic Zekeriya Özşevik and his wife Derya Özşevik — were detained upon their arrival to Istanbul, giving no detail about the whereabouts of the others.

Turkey’s Changing Freedom Deficit

Erdoğan’s government is by no means the first to compel Turkish citizens to hide their preferences and beliefs. Under the secular governments that ruled Turkey from the 1920s to 1950, and to some extent until 2002, pious Turks seeking advancement in government, the military, and even commerce had to downplay their religiosity and avoid signaling approval of political Islam.

Latest News

Sacramento leaders gather for Iftar dinner in celebration of Ramadan

SEO Skill Suite: Tools for Keyword Research, Technical & Backlink Analysis

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

In Case You Missed It

Galaxy International School in Uganda educates thinkers, innovators

EU Criticizes Kosovo, Turkey Over Deportation Of Six Erdogan Political Foes

University refuses admission to woman jailed over Gülen links

Kosovo investigates seizure of Turkish nationals

Main opposition brings plans to sink Bank Asya to Parliament

Albanian lawmakers reject Erdoğan’s call to close Turkish schools

Construction of Turkish hospital in Haiti begins

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News