Turkey accused of widespread attempt to undermine European democracy
Ankara’s attempt to silence dissidents abroad appears to affect almost every Western country – and most of those countries struggle to keep up their protections of free speech and protests.
JPOST
To illustrate how Turkey seeks to make sure that there can be no protests in Europe against Ankara’s policies, the Turkish government intervened in Austria, with the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs releasing a statement claiming that they were “rallies which were organized by the PKK-terrorist organization.” Ankara often claims that anyone who protests or is critical on social media is a “terrorist.” Turkey slammed Austria, claiming it was “allowing PKK propaganda through these rallies” and saying that these protests were “unacceptable.”
There is no evidence that any of the peaceful protesters in Vienna engaged in terrorism. Turkey has invaded northern Syria and Iraq, also claiming it is fighting terrorism. In Syria it accused the US of arming “terrorists” even though there was no evidence of any “terrorism” from Syria targeting Turkey. More than 367,000 Kurds had to flee Turkey’s invasions in 2018 and 2019 in Syria.
Ankara has now condemned the Austrian police for protecting protesters in Vienna, claiming they “used violence against Turkish youth.” The statement appears to indicate Ankara was involved in monitoring and perhaps planning the far-right attempt to block the protests in Vienna.
IN GERMANY, Turkey is accused of sending intelligence agents to track down dissidents. The Berlin-based European Centre for Counterterrorism and Intelligence Studies reportedly “accused Ankara of using Islamic organizations and public institutions to spy on its opposition in Germany.” These reports claim Turkey’s intelligence group, the MIT, has “expanded activities in Germany for years,” according to the Arab weekly. According to Ahval media, Turkey also developed an app that “used to track dissident exiles and mid-sized companies, Germany’s domestic spy agency said in an annual report.”
This conjures up images of how Saudi dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi was tracked. Ankara may be applying the same methods. In addition, the use of European soil by foreign intelligence services is similar to a spate of assassinations carried out by Iran, which is currently working closely with Turkey on foreign policy issues. In 2014, Iran’s IRGC met with the Muslim Brotherhood in Turkey to coordinate policies. Turkey’s ruling AKP party has roots in the Brotherhood. And Ankara supports other Brotherhood-linked groups, such as Hamas.
THE OVERALL picture is that Turkey is one of several countries that seek to undermine European democratic institutions and the EU’s commitment to freedom of expression. Iran, Russia and Turkey have all been singled out by critics for these attempts. Turkey is different than Iran and Russia, however, because it is a member of NATO and was once considered a candidate to join the EU. It has increasingly used its membership in NATO to demand the EU play a greater role in Turkey’s militarist adventurism, including invasions of Syria, Iraq and Libya.
Turkey is now in a spat with France over Libya, subjecting France’s president to insults. Ankara has tried to pressure NATO to do more for Turkey by refusing to agree to NATO plans for the Baltic states. Ankara is also constantly in friction with Greece over Mediterranean energy rights and refugees. On June 17, Reuters reported that Turkey was still blocking a NATO plan for Poland and the Baltics apparently as leverage for concessions it wants.
Across Europe, this multi-layered approach of Ankara has now increased – of tracking dissidents, using intelligence agencies, carrying out renditions, attempting local prosecutions, activating local far-right activists, use of soft-power media such as the state TRT broadcaster, refugee threats and NATO leverage, along with detaining members of Western embassies in Turkey and constantly insulting European countries by calling them “Nazis.”