Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
The forthcoming July 22 elections highlight the fateful juncture
the Turkish state and nation are facing. Until the moderate
Islamist Justice and Development Party (AK Party) headed by Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan took over in 2001, Turkey was
emphatically a secular state. According to the Turkish
Constitution, religion should have absolutely no legal or political
influence. The military as well is charged with defending the
secular state. The question arises whether the intensifying
clash between secularists and Islamists has placed Turkey on a path
that may undermine its Constitutional foundation laid down by
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the modern Turkish
state. After Prime Minister Erdogan nominated his close
associate Foreign Minister Abdullah Gül to the presidency - a
role reserved for the guardian of the secular order - there have
been million-strong public protests with the military hinting at
intervention. In addition, the tensions between the Turkish
government and the Kurds, resulting in the recent Turkish military
buildup on the border of northern Iraq, are escalating.
How will Turkey emerge from this crisis? Will the July 22
vote indicate an affirmation of secularism or a turn to
Islamism? How will this election affect the delicate
relationship between Turkey and the Kurds of northern Iraq?
Most important, how will these internal political factors affect
strategic U.S.-Turkish relations, both bilaterally and
regionally?
More About the Speakers
Kemal Köprülü
President of the Advisory Board,
ARI Movement
Dr. Ian Lesser
Senior Transatlantic Fellow,
The German Marshall Fund of the United States
Amb. Mark R. Parris
Visiting Fellow,
Foreign Policy Studies,
The Brookings Institution, and
Director,
Brookings-TUSIAD Project on Turkey