- Home
- Topics
- Publications
- Multimedia
- Briefings
- Press Room
- Events
- Young Professionals
Soli Ozel writes: What is happening in Turkey is a transformation of the old order and a radical shift in the balance of power from the military towards the civilians. The military, until recently, provided the backbone for the Turkish political system, and it was the custodian of the existing order as well as the provider of its ideology. Urban middle classes for far too long relied on the military to fight their secularist battles for them and abdicated their responsibilities. These days are over and the Turkish political system needs a new institutional arrangement and a new ideological framework. The fierceness of the battle reflects the magnitude of the stakes and the increasing mobilization of the civilian forces. This is no less than a battle for the soul and the identity of a new Turkish republic. Turkey passed an important threshold in the great power shift from the military to civilian authorities that started at the beginning of the decade. Whether this deepening civilianization will lead, as expected, to a rule-based democratic consolidation and finally finish the “second transition” from democratic government to democratic regime remains to be seen. – World Affairs Journal
Brief Topic:
Middle East
SIGN UP
Sign up to receive FPI emails, including the FPI Overnight Brief, a concise daily compendium of essential foreign policy information and analysis.
Featured Video
Follow FPI
FPI on your site
FPI is Reading
- AfPak Channel on Foreign Policy
- AsiaEye from Project 2049
- Breitbart
- AEI Center for Defense Studies
- Checkpoint Washington
- Contentions
- The Commentator
- Critical Threats Project from AEI
- Democracy Digest Bulletin
- Drudge Report
- Economist's Eastern Approaches
- Elliott Abrams Pressure Points