Ruling Party Well Ahead In Turkish Elections


Crossposted from The Newshoggers

The AP reports that the Justice and Development Party of Prime Minister Erdogan is winning by a comfortable margin in today's election, according to polls.

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - Turkey's Islamic-rooted ruling party led parliamentary elections Sunday with 39.2 percent of the votes counted, CNN-Turk television reported. channel. The election is viewed as pivotal in determining the balance between Islam and secularism in the nation of more than 70 million.

The Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan won 49.5 percent of the votes, the station said after polls closed.

Turkey's NTV television had similar results.

The main opposition group, the Republican People's Party, was in second place with 17.2 percent.

 
Agonist background here and here~ editors


There are some major differences in ideology bubbling under this election. Erdogan's party is markedly Islamic which has created some clashes with the predominantly secular military - and even rumors of a coup to preserve Turley's secular character. However, there's one issue on which all the major parties and the military agree - if Iraq and the US will not curb incursions by the terrorist PKK, then Turkey will invade Kurdish Iraq and do the job itself. Once the elections are decided, there's going to be a rapidly narrowing window to prevent that invasion, which would end any hopes the Bush administration have of describing Iraq as anything other than a complete disaster.

But while the Bush administration have looked the other way for four years, hypocritically ignoring their own rhetoric about fighting all terrorism everywhere and trading PKK safe haven for a quiet Kurdish North, their enabling WormTongues are already preparing to blame others for that impending disaster. Reuters, in a report today on the strength of the PKK, says that:

In Washington, conservatives place the onus for defusing the potentially explosive border tension on Masoud Barzani, the president of the KRG.

A few days before the Turkish vote, Michael Rubin, a Middle East scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, told a session of the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee that Barzani "should expel PKK terrorists" from their strongholds.

A typical sidestep.

Steve Hynd July 22, 2007 - 6:29pm
( categories: Miscellany )

...and in particular for the Iraqi Kurds?

Petronius July 22, 2007 - 5:52pm

There's broad cross-party agreement on the PKK danger and that Turkey shgould cross the border if Iraq/The US don't do something about them quickly. Moreover, the nationalists who are most supportive of the military's calls for an invasion gained seats.

Regards, C

Steve Hynd July 22, 2007 - 7:21pm

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