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Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
Fri Jul 15, 2016, 05:13 PM Jul 2016

RT: Turkish Military Declares Takeover Of Country, Top Officials Reportedly Taken Hostage

Turkey’s government appears to have been overthrown in a coup, as the military claimed taking control over the country.

Heavily armed soldiers and military vehicles closed the two main bridges in Istanbul Friday evening, and while low-flying military jets could be heard overhead.

Tanks have been posted outside Istanbul’s Ataturk International Airport and in other locations in the city.

Access to Twitter, Facebook and YouTube is being blocked, while the state-owned TRT television has gone off the air, according to reports from inside Turkey. It's website shows weather.

President Recep Erdogan is reportedly on vacation in the southern Turkish resort town of Bodrum. His status is currently unknown.

MORE...

https://www.rt.com/news/351343-turkey-coup-military-attempt/

Turkish Army Take Over State TV, Impose Martial Law

https://www.rt.com/news/351363-turkey-army-invades-tv/

14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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RT: Turkish Military Declares Takeover Of Country, Top Officials Reportedly Taken Hostage (Original Post) Purveyor Jul 2016 OP
Holy shit! Squinch Jul 2016 #1
Martial Law imposed... Cooley Hurd Jul 2016 #2
No expert, here, but if it's really the military's idea, it won't end well. lindysalsagal Jul 2016 #3
Historically the Turkish military has pushed back against attempts to tblue37 Jul 2016 #5
The military are secularists fighting Erdogan's islamization of Turkey ansible Jul 2016 #6
Right SCantiGOP Jul 2016 #8
Yes, Erdogan was a virtual dictator Arazi Jul 2016 #14
"What's Going on in Turkey" from The Atlantic: Hortensis Jul 2016 #4
:/ Go Vols Jul 2016 #7
Alerted? SCantiGOP Jul 2016 #9
Its been 5+ min since Go Vols Jul 2016 #10
Not surprised. Some just can bring themselves to look outside the 'box'... Purveyor Jul 2016 #11
Some random data. Glassunion Jul 2016 #12
This message was self-deleted by its author Mosby Jul 2016 #13

lindysalsagal

(20,638 posts)
3. No expert, here, but if it's really the military's idea, it won't end well.
Fri Jul 15, 2016, 05:22 PM
Jul 2016

Hoping a Du expert on the area will help us out.

tblue37

(65,269 posts)
5. Historically the Turkish military has pushed back against attempts to
Fri Jul 15, 2016, 05:26 PM
Jul 2016

undo the secularization accomplished during Ataturk's reforms.

But just generally, coups and civil wars are scary as heck, and there is already plenty of scary going on in that region.

SCantiGOP

(13,867 posts)
8. Right
Fri Jul 15, 2016, 05:29 PM
Jul 2016

There is a long history of the military stepping in to prevent any pushback against Turkey being a secular country.

Hortensis

(58,785 posts)
4. "What's Going on in Turkey" from The Atlantic:
Fri Jul 15, 2016, 05:25 PM
Jul 2016
Erdogan returned to politics with the AKP, or Freedom and Justice Party, a more moderate party that melded Islamism with modernizing impulses. Erdogan became prime minister in 2003. The rise of the AKP initially fed speculation that the military, a staunchly secular institution loyal to the precepts of the founder of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, might launch a coup, as it had done many times in the past.

But Erdogan managed to strike a middle path, ... His “Turkish model” was highly lauded abroad, with Western leaders and analysts hoping it might represent a successful fusion of Islamist politics with liberal democratic principles—a fusion that came to be seen as ever more necessary as Islamism became entrenched across the Middle East. President Obama in particular grew close to Erdogan, holding up him as a model.
...
From American Enterprise Institute on possibility of a coup: His outbursts are raising eyebrows both in Turkey and abroad. Even members of his ruling party whisper about his increasing paranoia which, according to some Turkish officials, has gotten so bad that he seeks to install anti-aircraft missiles at his palace to prevent airborne men-in-black from targeting him in a snatch-and-grab operation.
...
By earlier this year, reporters were referring to Erdogan as being “on a march to dictatorship.” Even if Erdogan is able to survive the coup and reassert control, the Turkish model is dead—and so are any hopes that Erdogan might be a liberalizer or a democrat.

http://www.theatlantic.com/news/archive/2016/07/turkey-government/491579/


Turkey is, of course, a member of NATO.

Glassunion

(10,201 posts)
12. Some random data.
Fri Jul 15, 2016, 05:38 PM
Jul 2016

As part of NATO's nuclear umbrella, Turkey continues to host approximately 60 to 70 U.S. tactical nuclear weapons on its territory at Incirlik Air Base.

Response to Purveyor (Original post)

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