By Andreas Kluth
31 October,
2020
Almost
three decades after the late Samuel Huntington hypothesized a coming “clash of
civilizations,” there are those who — for their own cynical purposes — would
actually welcome exactly that. Among them is Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan.
Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan (L), and French President Emmanuel Macron (R) | Commons
------
This month,
he has once again picked a fight with Europe, and specifically France. The
country is constitutionally Islamophobic, he claims. President Emmanuel Macron
should get a mental-health check-up, he has said repeatedly. And Muslims
everywhere should boycott French goods, Erdogan has urged, pretending to speak
on behalf of an entire faith.
But Erdogan
is picking this fight, like so many other unnecessary conflicts, only to
distract Turks from his failure to govern, so that he can keep posing as the
restorer of Turkish greatness, defined in opposition to the West. Neither
Muslims nor Europeans of other faiths should fall for the provocation. It would
be like stooping to the taunts of a bully in a sandbox — pointless, unedifying,
and yet dangerous.
To recap: In a suburb of Paris this month, a teenager
born in Chechnya beheaded Samuel Paty, a schoolteacher. Paty had shown his
students caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed in a civics lesson on free speech,
which included a discussion of the terrorist attack five years ago on the
satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. In an apparent copycat crime this week, a
Tunisian in Nice decapitated a woman and killed two other people.
In
response, Macron has been cracking down on some of the extremist breeding
grounds that produce such terrorists. Erdogan seized on this reaction to
pretend that Macron, France and implicitly all Europe are enemies of Islam,
like latter-day Crusaders.
Let’s
separate the strands of action and reaction. The decapitations and other
murders are barbaric crimes in France just as they would be in Turkey or any
other country. They must be prosecuted accordingly. Furthermore, Macron or any
other leader is justified in clamping down on the extremism that motivates such
atrocities, just as governments must pursue any variety of terrorism.
Macron was
also right to defend freedom of speech, which in his proudly secular country
includes, as he put it, the “right to blaspheme.” But he then arguably
overshot, as is his wont. It wasn’t for him to assert that Islam is “in crisis
all over the world today.”
And yet I
must disagree with my colleague Pankaj Mishra, who assigns more blame to Macron
than to Erdogan for the current escalation. The worst that can be said about
Macron is that he’s tone deaf. By contrast, Erdogan is cynical in a more
malevolent way.
There was a
time when Erdogan didn’t see the West as Turkey’s enemy and even wanted to join
the European Union. But, feeling spurned by Brussels, Berlin, Paris and other
Western capitals, he has turned populist, irredentist and belligerent. He used
a failed coup attempt at home as his pretext to stamp out civil liberties
including the freedom of speech for which France now stands. And he’s
mismanaged Turkey’s economy.
To distract
Turks from these failures, he tries to claim the mantle of former Ottoman and
Islamic grandeur. So he rejects the secular legacy of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk
(“father of the Turks”). That’s why, for example, Erdogan has turned Istanbul’s
Hagia Sophia into a mosque. Built by the Byzantine emperor Justinian I in the
sixth century, it was for centuries the largest church in Christianity, until
the Ottoman sultan Mehmed II in 1453 converted it into a mosque. In 1934,
Ataturk turned it into a museum. By making it a mosque again, Erdogan signals
that he’s a new sultan.
In his
mind, Erdogan wants Turkey to replace Saudi Arabia and Egypt as the guardian
power of Sunni Islam, as the Ottoman Empire once was. And he wants to project
power in all directions, toward Moscow as to the West. This is why he’s meddling
in conflicts around the region, from Syria to Libya and the eastern
Mediterranean, and now also in the battles between (ethnically Turkic)
Azerbaijanis and Armenians. In several of these conflicts he faces France on
the opposing side.
Nominally,
Turkey is a member of NATO and still officially interested in applying to join
the EU. In reality, Erdogan needs to portray Europe as the enemy. Because he’s
weak at home, he’ll seize on any propaganda opportunity he gets. The danger is
that in the process he might unleash passions and hatreds far beyond his, or
anybody’s, control, potentially causing more violence, suffering and perhaps
war. Europeans and Turks of any faith should see through Erdogan’s vanity and
cynicism — and tactically ignore him. –Bloomberg
Original Headline: Erdogan’s assault on Macron
is the height of cynicism
Source: The Print
New
Age Islam, Islam Online, Islamic Website, African Muslim News, Arab World News, South Asia News, Indian Muslim News, World Muslim News, Women in Islam, Islamic Feminism, Arab Women, Women In Arab, Islamophobia in America, Muslim Women in West, Islam Women and Feminism