Turkey’s Drift Away From the West

It’s been accelerated by the Israel-Hezbollah war, argues the Times’ Bronwen Maddox. Participating in an army in Southern Lebanon has increased the tension. Money quote:

As the columnist Yusuf Kanli put it in the Turkish Daily News: "Things are changing in Turkey. People are becoming more conservative. Conservatives are becoming more nationalist. And nationalists are becoming racist." He asks, like many of Erdogan’s critics, why "Turks [should] die in Lebanon for the security of Israel but not … in northern Iraq for the security of Turkey"? Lebanon is a diversion, some argue, from Turkey’s own battle against Kurdish separatist rebels in the southeast.

Many others say it will distract the Government from the arduous and expensive task of qualifying for EU membership — and of persuading an increasingly sceptical public that this is still in Turkey’s best interests.

Quote for the Day

"Senior administration officials have acknowledged to me that they are considering alternatives other than democracy. Everybody in the administration is being quite circumspect, but you can sense their own concern that this is drifting away from democracy," – a "military affairs expert" who received an Iraq briefing at the White House last month.

I have long wondered whether Cheney and Rumsfeld ever believed that their job was to build a new democracy in Iraq. Rumsfeld had dealt with and supported Saddam in the past; Cheney was extremely suspicious of occupying Iraq in 1990. One subversive theory – which I’m not endorsing, just airing – is that both merely wanted to turn the Saddam regime to rubble, and then play along with neocon democracy supporters, while making sure that the military was never given enough resources to do nation-building. Then Cheney and Rumsfeld could prove their point about the impossibility of reforming the Muslim world, and promote the view that we need merely to pummel enemies, project military fear across the region, and deter Islamo-fascism by "shock and awe." The Likud strategy, in other words.

Under this interpretation, Bush was too trusting or dumb to understand the deviousness of their plan to fail in Iraq; Wolfowitz saw it too late and got out; Rice is stuck managing the debris that a democracy-promoting president and a democracy-hostile Pentagon created. The troops were just pawns in Cheney’s and Rumsfeld’s strategy. This interpretation would mean that incompetence is not the issue. Cheney and Rumsfeld have succeeded: they have turned Iraq into a failed state, removed its capacity to make WMDs, and detonated a regional Sunni-Shi’a war. Now they want to use the same brutalist strategy against Iran. This theory is probably too complex and subtle to be true. The screw-up theory of history is more often the most plausible. But it does make some internal sense – if you assume that Cheney and Rumsfeld are not complete incompetents.

Email of the Day

A reader writes:

Though your blog is frequently insightful, the post about Sri Lanka is idiotic. Why has not the Sri Lankan government received greater scrutiny from the MSM?

Well why have not the Sri Lankan people received any MSM coverage over the past two decades during which they have been victims of a degree of terrorism worse than anything Muslim fundametalists have yet to do. Yet we know about each Israeli who has been killed over the past decade.

The MSM will take interest in the Sri Lankan government probably after it starts taking an interest in Sri Lankan people.

Quote for the Day II

"As a supporter of the peace movement in the 1980s, I could never have imagined that many of the same crowd I hung out with then would today be standing shoulder-to-shoulder with militantly anti-feminist Islamic fundamentalist groups, whose views on women make western patriarchy look like a Greenham peace picnic. Nor would I have predicted that today’s feminists would be so indulgent towards Iran, a theocratic nation where it is an act of resistance to show an inch or two of female hair beneath the veil and whose president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is not joking about his murderous intentions towards Israel and the Jews.
On the defining issue of our times, the rise of Islamic extremism, what is left of the sisterhood has almost nothing to say. Instead of ‘I am woman, hear me roar’, there is a loud silence, punctuated only by remonstrations against Tony Blair and George Bush ‚Äî ‘the world’s number one terrorist’ as the marchers would have it," – my friend and colleague Sarah Baxter in the Sunday Times.

The U.K. Terror Plot II

The usual suspects have deployed the usual rhetorical tropes against my questions about the evidence in the alleged terror plot based in Britain. Jeff Goldstein has me on an AIDS "dementia watch." Another had this charming metaphor:

Hell hath no fury like a man-bitch spurned.

They don’t even need a blood-level of 0.12, do they? A Malkin stand-in writes:

Of course, the fact that [Sullivan]’s hysterically arguing that there was no terror plot out of London makes his charges against me, let’s say slightly less believeable.

Well, read the post. I’m not arguing that "there was no terror plot". I’m asking questions about the evidence provided. So far: none. Maybe there’s an explanation for that – and we’ll find out in due course. But the Malkinian had previously written the following words in defense of torture in Pakistan:

An attack was imminent, and the information had to be obtained, no matter the method.

I have yet to read any evidence that an attack was "imminent". All the stories I’ve read have argued that the plot was for a dummy-run. Maybe Karol Sheinin has sources that I haven’t read. If she has, she should provide them, or correct her post. If she has a different understanding of the term "imminent," then it would be helpful for her to say so. My point about the use of torture is related to the reliability of the evidence. Torture is renowned for providing faulty information, even in totalitarian states whose techniques some conservatives now endorse. My question is about whether the evidence is indeed faulty. We don’t know. If there’s not much there and the British are forced to release the suspects without charging them, the backlash against Blair will be enormous. And that will make future counter-terrorism harder. I should add I don’t think I can be accused of disbelieving the potential of terrorists to strike again. I have a cover-story in the current New York Magazine premised on exactly that – on a far larger scale than anything alleged recently.

Iraq Reconstruction

I guess if Bush and Rumsfeld had really hoped to reconstruct Iraq (and I now find that dubious, given the troop level they assigned), they might have found a better sub-constractor than Halliburton. Like, say, Hezbollah. Still, to give credit where it’s due, Bush has essentially handed what’s left of the Iraqi state to a Hezbollah clone in the Shiite south, so maybe the reconstruction will now actually begin – and serve the enemy’s propaganda message, rather than ours. And the beat goes on.