{"id":44022,"date":"2011-09-18T14:28:16","date_gmt":"2011-09-18T11:28:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.turkishforum.com.tr\/en\/content\/?p=44022"},"modified":"2014-01-06T15:22:00","modified_gmt":"2014-01-06T13:22:00","slug":"turgut-ozal-visionary-and-builder-of-modern-turkey","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/2011\/09\/18\/turgut-ozal-visionary-and-builder-of-modern-turkey\/","title":{"rendered":"Turgut Ozal: Visionary and Builder of Modern Turkey"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"page\">\n<div>\n<div id=\"cbauthorplug\"><em>By K.Gajendra Singh <\/em><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-44023\" title=\"turgut_ozal\" src=\"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/09\/turgut_ozal.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"309\" height=\"206\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/09\/turgut_ozal.jpg 309w, https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/09\/turgut_ozal-300x200.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 309px) 100vw, 309px\" \/>\u201cYou  know, I am also an engineer\u201d he said to me, looking up from my  bio-data, somewhat to my surprise. He was Turgut Ozal , president of the  republic of Turkey , to whom I had just presented my letters of  credence ( September ,1992) and along with foreign minister Hikmet Cetin  ,I had just set down for the customary audience. This meeting lasted  for nearly 50 minutes, with Hikmet Bay mostly a silent listener. When we  emerged, a worried looking chief of protocol pacing up and down told me  that normally such talks lasted 20 minutes or so.<\/p>\n<p>Curiously three of the most powerful and durable leaders since the  1960s coup until the unexpected triumph and takeover of Turkey in end  2002 by Riyadh financed Islamist Justice and Development party (AKP)  under Recep Tayep Erdogan ,were all contemporaries at Istanbul\u2019s  Technical University\u00a0 and had known each other .The other two being;  Sueleyman Demirel , the eldest and seven times prime minister and the  president and Nacamattin Erbakan , who when refused a ticket for  elections in mid-1960s by Demirel founded his own political party and  injected Islam into Turkish politics. Erbakan became the first ever  Islamist prime minister to head a coalition in 1996, a post he was asked  to vacate by the military for promoting religion in politics .Erbakan\u2019s  prot\u00e9g\u00e9s, Abdullah Gul and Edogan are now entrenched as the president  and prime minister respectively at the head of a secular republic with  help from yesil surmaye (green money) from Saudi Arabia. Gul had worked  at the Islamic Development Bank in Jeddah for 7 years before returning  to join hands with Erbakan in 1991.<\/p>\n<p>Ozal took advantage of  knowing Demirel , who when prime minister in 1960s and 70s helped the  former into key bureaucratic appointments including as his Under  Secretary until the 1980 military takeover .After the 1971 half coup  which forced Demirel to resign, Ozal left Turkey and\u00a0 studied in USA ,  worked in private and state sector , an experience which led to his  being appointed as deputy PM in charge of economy when the military took  over power in 1980 .Leaving Demirel behind , a cause of some heartburn,  Ozal\u00a0 surpassed his mentor ,established his own party ,True Path party  (DYP), won elections in 1983 and became PM (President Gen Kenan Evren  and other generals would have preferred a party they had supported).  Ozal then got himself elected as a civilian president, a first since  1960 in 1989 even though his party\u2019s popularity was declining.<\/p>\n<p>There  were reasons for my long audience with Turgut Ozal .I had first met  with him at a dinner at the Indian embassy in 1971, when he was head of  the state planning department and then in 1986 during his visit to India  as prime minister. While awaiting dates for the ceremony I had been to  our Consulate General in Izmir in west Turkey for the annual trade fair  and had flown to our Consulate General in Istanbul for the independence  day celebrations; again revisiting unmatched museums, bazaars, historic  mosques and Palaces in Istanbul, my most favorite foreign city, laid  across a spectacular Bosporus separating Asia and Europe.<\/p>\n<p>And on  way to and back by car from Izmir, the old Smyrna, Homer&#8217;s birth place  (where Aristotle Onasis too lived) I marvelled anew at nearby richest  architectural site of Ephesus, the Carian city of St Paul&#8217;s church,  Virgin Mary is believed to be buried nearby (Scylax, from whose  navigation of Indus for Persian Emperor Darius, the West knew first of  India, was from Caryanda, also a Carian city); Priene, the spectacular  Ionian city, whose oracle along with neighbouring Didim&#8217;s was as well  known as Delphi&#8217;s.And ofcourse ,one of my favourite sites ,Miletus of  6th century BC, of the first thinkers;Thales, Anneximender, Anneximenes,  spiritual forefathers of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, where the roots  of Greek and Western philosophy germinated.And of course near capital  city Ankara itself ,\u00a0 the Phyrigian Gordion (of its Knot and oracle fame  ), of King Midas of the golden touch, Sardis, the Lydian capital and  Persian Acheamenean Empire&#8217;s outpost in Asia Minor of King Croceaus .<\/p>\n<p>While  Turkey\u2019s economic and industrial progress when Ozal was prime minister  had been admired and documented in international media, I was pleasantly  surprised at the tremendous strides in agriculture and forestation  .During my first tenure (1969-73) one had to drive a good 50\/60  kilometers from Ankara to find a shady shrub growth for a summer picnic  outing, but by 1992, new highways were well lined with trees and grass.  During winters in Ankara , the only vegetables available were potatoes ,  onions, cabbage and if you rubbed something dusty ,you guessed it might  be carrots .And green chilies were sold like gold .Now, most vegetables  including brinjals ,tomatoes, peas, beans , cucumbers ,okras and others  were readily available year round ,cultivated down south in Antalya ,  Izmir and elsewhere where the Sun shines brightly in winters, under  plastic hot house cultivation. And also attracting millions of tourists  during winter months too on Turkish Rivera along the Aegean and  Mediterranean Seas littered with ancient monuments and antiquities from  Turkey\u2019s forty civilizations.<\/p>\n<p>So after Ozal had mentally  checked the dates of my meetings with him earlier, I told him about the  transformation in Turkey since my last posting .He was very pleased  since he was credited with lifting the Turks by boot straps and putting  them into an industrial age .When Iranian president Ali Akbar Rafsanjani  visited Ankara in early 1993, he joked with Ozal that during his bus  travel from Iranian border to Ankara in later 1970s, he got a dozen  offers for his transistor radio. Ozal proudly gifted him with Turkish  made music systems, TVs, video players. I remember buying terrylene  shirts, mixies and even stationary from Beirut while flying from India  to Ankara during 1969-73.<\/p>\n<p>A relaxed Ozal asked me to report to  him after my visits around Turkey. (Alas he passed away early next year  and was replaced by Suleiman Demirel.) But Ozal was surprised that I had  not visited Turkey since 1973 even though I had been posted nearby at  Amman and Bucharest .I replied that I had wanted a longer stay in Turkey  and not just a fleeting visit .I am sure his press advisor Kaya Toperi  ,a good friend since he was counselor in New Delhi in mid 1960s must  have informed him that my posting to Ankara which all my past friends  were waiting for in 1988 was cancelled at the behest of a feudal Thakur  hating Jat politician bad mouthing me to Rajiv Gandhi for reasons best  known to him (there were some dark allegations connected to his erratic  behavior in London.)<\/p>\n<p>Coming from a conservative and religious  family of average means in Malatya in central east Turkey ,away from  Istanbul and Ankara, Ozal rose from the periphery of the Turkish society  to high echelons of public and private power in 1960s and 1970s and  finally the presidency in 1989 .His conservative Islamist roots are  evident because in 1970s he tried to enter\u00a0 politics as a candidate of  Erbakan\u2019s National Salvation Party (the MSP) but did not win .But his  Islamist outlook subsequently proved to be an advantage in his search  for broad-based public support as a political leader.<\/p>\n<p>While he  would walk hand in hand with wife Semra or publicly sip wine, he said  that a human being needed some spiritual support and solace in this life  .Not for him the dry anti- religious Jacobin crusade against Islam of  Republican Peoples party (RPP).<\/p>\n<p>Ozal was a statesman with great  vision and drive .In a single decade by combing in himself the role of a  technocrat and a reformist politician ,he organized Turkey\u2019s swift  recovery from the deep economic crisis of late 1970s by enhancing the  credibility of the stabilization-cum-structural adjustment program  because of his unusually diverse background in economic bureaucracy,  private business and international organizations by garnering support  from international institutions like the OECD, the IMF and the World  Bank.<\/p>\n<p>Ozal would jokingly relate how he would wear layers of  stockings for his wife when returning from USA in 1970s .With hard  currency shortage Ankara could not afford to import coffee , home of  Turkish coffee, so the first thing he did when he got power in 1980 was  to\u00a0 allow limited import of coffee ostensibly for the tourists .<\/p>\n<p>By  end 1996 Turkish economy had advanced enough to enter into a Customs  Union Agreement with the Europe Union &#8211; i.e., exports and imports are  not subject to duties. Turkey soon captured the white-goods market in  the EU.<\/p>\n<p>There were however some negative aspects of Ozal\u2019s fast  economic transformation. This was because of a tendency to  underestimate the importance of the rule of law and the need to develop a  strong legal infrastructure for a well-functioning market economy.  Ozal\u2019s preference was for rule by decrees, hence bypassing normal  parliamentary procedures and constraints. His vision was some what  typical presidential characterized by the absence of checks and balances  and grant of enormous powers to key individuals. While this is useful  in terms of the ability to undertake decisions rapidly and overcome  powerful interest group pressures, it undermines longer-term viability  of the process. Indeed, the origins of the significant increase in  corruption in the Turkish economy during the course of the 1990s might  be considered as a direct result of the Ozal era of the 1980s, specially  the failure to penalize the misuse of export subsidies during the mid-  1980s. It had rather devastating consequences later on.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Ozal and Turkey\u2019s Kurdish Problem<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Ozal also tried to resolve Turkey\u2019s serious problem with its Kurds,  who form 20% of the population and are concentrated in south east, north  of Iraqi Kurdistan. A rebellion since 1984 against the Turkish state  led by now imprisoned Abdullah Ocalan of the Marxist Kurdistan Workers  Party (PKK) has cost nearly 40,000 lives, including 5,000 soldiers. To  control and neutralize the rebellion, thousands of Kurdish villages have  been bombed, destroyed, abandoned or relocated; millions of Kurds have  been moved to shanty towns in the south and east or migrated westwards.  The economy of the region remains shattered. A third of the Turkish army  remains tied up in the southeast, the cost of countering the insurgency  at its height amounted to between $6 billion to $8 billion a year.<\/p>\n<p>The  rebellion died down after the arrest in Kenya and trial of Ocalan in  1999, but has not been eradicated. It erupts from time to time .Recently  tens of Turkish soldiers were killed in south east Turkey by PKK  raising the ante. But most of the PKK cadre is now ensconced in north  Iraq mountains. Sources in Kurdish nationalist circles indicate that  Washington is letting them there to be used as pawns against Ankara.  Ocalan was used by Syria, where he was resident, before under Turkish  threats, he was expelled in 1999 and also by Greeks and other European  states to extract concessions from Ankara. This is realpolitik!<\/p>\n<p>Basically  the British as in many other countries are responsible for creating the  Kurdish problem. They had occupied oil rich Kirkuk now in Iraqi  Kurdistan in the wake of WWI in spite of a ceasefire .London then helped  and organized ethnic and religion based insurgencies and conspiracies  against the new secular Turkish republic in its south east. So Kemal  Ataturk, founder of the state, to concentrate on building his nascent  nation, who had talked of various ethnicities and people in the Turkey  including Kurds, opted for a unitary state of Turks. Kurdish rebellions  in Turkey were ruthlessly suppressed .The word Kurd was banished and  disenfranchised .Kurds had to call themselves mountain Turks. In mid  1980s a minister in Ankara was charged when he said that he was a Kurd  .The Turks manifest a pervasive distrust of autonomy or models of a  federal state for Iraqi Kurds as it would affect and encourage the  aspirations of their own Kurds.<\/p>\n<p>To tackle this Gordian Knot like  problem, Ozal, who had Kurdish blood declared his ancestry publicly and  used the word Kurd in mid 1980s. However, before he could take any  further measures to heal the wounds and suspicions , he died suddenly  .His wife claimed that he was poisoned .Many nationalist Kurds too  allege that he was a victim of a conspiracy by vested interests in  continuing the rebellion.<\/p>\n<p>After the collapse of the Soviet Union  ,Washington US wanted Turkey to be promoted as a model for Central  Asia&#8217;s newly independent states and to reach out to ethnic Turkic  central Asian republics (CARs) recently freed from Moscow\u2019s domination ,  willingly or unwillingly to counter Iran\u2019s influence. But provided  little financial help\u00a0\u00a0 .Summits held to bring CARs closer to Ankara did  not achieve much. But Turks have invested in CARs and provided  administrative personnel, teachers, scholarships and other educational  and cultural facilities .But the new Turkic presidents wanted to keep  all options open .Most wanted to follow the Chinese model but have not  succeeded in the economic advancement. Perhaps if Ozal had lived, he  might have done something dramatic.<\/p>\n<p><strong>India \u2013Turkish Relations: Turgut takes the initiative<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In  the mid-1980s, when prime minister ,Ozal was flying back from the East  .During a transit halt at the Indian metropolis of Bombay, now known as  Mumbai, he was very much taken by the drive and bustle along glittering  Marine Drive, which in many ways reminds Turks of their Istanbul on the  Bosporus. Ozal was also impressed with Maharashtra\u2019s young and  intelligent protocol minister.<\/p>\n<p>Before emplaning for Ankara, Ozal told his ambassador, &#8220;Perhaps we  have neglected this country.&#8221; (Jawaharlal Nehru&#8217;s visit to Ankara in  1960 had been the first and last by an Indian prime minister to Turkey)  At the subsequent United Nations General Assembly session in New York,  Ozal and Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, both leaders with a modern  outlook, met and took a liking for each other. Ozal was duly invited to  India, an offer that he took up the following year, 1986. Thus  high-level exchanges were renewed between India and Turkey, two secular  republics with much in common.<\/p>\n<p>Rajiv visited Turkey in 1988 .To  give a start to industrial and economic cooperation, Ozal awarded a  railway electrification project to Indian RITES with price to be settled  bilaterally (During my tenure -1992-96, after the completion of the  project, an extension was also won by India)<br \/>\nHistory of Indian-Turkish relations<\/p>\n<p>After its independence in 1947, India found Turkey on the other side  of the Cold War divide, so there were few exchanges between them. Indian  minister Maulana Abul Kalam Azad did visit Ankara in the 1950s, and  signed agreements on educational, cultural and scientific cooperation.  Nehru&#8217;s visit in 1960 turned out to be ill-timed because a few days  later the government of prime minister Adnan Menderes was overthrown by  the Turkish armed forces. Nehru had insisted and met with Ismet Inonu,  Ataturk&#8217;s right-hand man and successor, then the opposition leader, but  only at an embassy reception as the government would not fix an official  meeting.<\/p>\n<p>Menderes and his delegation came to the reception only after Inonu  had left (after the coup, Menderes was tried and hanged). Inonu had told  Nehru not to trust the communists (Chinese), and sent guns to India  after the 1962 Chinese invasion of India, despite Pakistani objections.<\/p>\n<p>The Turks maintain that they have always been the ones to take the  initiative to normalize bilateral relations with India. As part of  widening foreign relations, prime minister Demirel sent his foreign  minister, Ihsan Sabri Caglayangil, to India in 1968. This was basically  to soften up non-aligned movement leader India&#8217;s support of Archbishop  Makarios on Cyprus, as Turkey&#8217;s relations with Arab and other Muslim  countries had not improved enough on the basis of religious and economic  interests. The Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) had not yet  been founded to garner Muslim support against Makarios. But within a  decade, India and Turkey became engrossed in their own affairs.<\/p>\n<p>Ozal\u2019s visit to India in 1986 and Rajiv Gandhi\u2019s visit to Turkey in  1988 were like Demirel attempt in the late 1960s, to broaden and expand  Turkey&#8217;s political and economic relations. Since then there have been  regular exchanges of high-level visits, including that of president  Shankar Dayal Sharma to Turkey in 1993 and Demirel&#8217;s return visit in  January 1995 to India. Another important visitor in 1996 was Turkey&#8217;s  chief of general staff, General I H Karadayi. The military, then, along  with politicians and the secular elite, form the third power center in  Turkey&#8217;s ruling triangle. Sanskrit- and Bengali-literate former prime  minister Bulent Ecevit was invited to India during Sharma\u2019s visit. A  poet and a trade unionist, Ecevit followed the Bhagavad Gita&#8217;s teachings  in his political life and also translated some poems from Tagore&#8217;s  Geetanjali into Turkish.<\/p>\n<p>It is the considered opinion of the  author , who has kept a watch over Turkey for over 4 decades ,including  ten years stay as a diplomat and accredited journalist ( 2 years ),  after Kemal Ataturk ,the founder , stabilizer and modernizer of the  secular republic of Turkey, Turgut Ozal comes third as the most  important leader ,after Ismet Inonu , Ataturk\u2019s right hand man and  successor as the president of the republic .Inonu kept Turkey out of the  WWII , and then helped in laying foundations of multiparty democracy in  Turkey.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By K.Gajendra Singh \u201cYou know, I am also an engineer\u201d he said to me, looking up from my bio-data, somewhat to my surprise. He was Turgut Ozal , president of the republic of Turkey , to whom I had just presented my letters of credence ( September ,1992) and along with foreign minister Hikmet Cetin [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":83,"featured_media":44023,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[89],"tags":[6100,5341,6983],"class_list":["post-44022","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-turkey","tag-indians","tag-kurds","tag-turgut-ozal"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/44022","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/83"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=44022"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/44022\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/44023"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=44022"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=44022"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=44022"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}