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On Sunday, Turkey will     hold a referendum on constitutional changes that would increase the     president’s power. The media’s narrative about this referendum     is that a vote in favor of the changes would amount to the death of Turkish     democracy. Some have even suggested that Turkish democracy is already dead     and the referendum is the final nail in the coffin. Opponents of the     changes believe a “yes” vote would elevate President Recep     Tayyip Erdoğan to the position of dictator in chief, and     that Turkey’s turn to the dark side would be complete. 
 
This line of thinking has     one small problem. The decision to change the Turkish government’s     structure will be based on a democratic vote. Dictators and authoritarians     come in many shapes and sizes, and some have come to power by democratic     means before crushing all opposition. But rarely are dictators concerned     with the finer points of constitutional law and democratic legitimacy. If     Turkish citizens vote in favor of the proposed changes, Turkey’s parliament     will retain the right to impeach the president with a two-thirds majority.     A “yes” vote on Sunday would not be a coronation; it would be a democratic     expression of the will of the Turkish nation, or at least the portion that     decides to vote. 
 “EVET” (Yes) campaign banners showing     the portrait of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan are seen hanging on     April 10, 2017 in Rize, Turkey. Chris McGrath/Getty Images 
  
People may not like what     Erdoğan has to say, but he is campaigning to the Turkish people, not     forcing them into the voting booth at gunpoint. This is a real vote, and     there is no better indicator of this than the fact that polls are split on     which side will win. Reuters, for instance, reported last month that an ORC     poll showed around 55 percent of Turkish voters would cast ballots in favor     of the changes. Polling company Gezici told Reuters that none of its 16     polls saw a victory for the proposed amendment. The only thing that can be     said with certainty is that the vote will be close. If this is not     democracy, it is unclear what is. 
 
Ultimately, this     referendum is about politics, and superficial politics at that. Turkey is a     society in transition and a country emerging as a regional power. Such     processes do not unfold smoothly. Think of France on the eve of the French     Revolution. Its economy was in shambles, and it had recently lost the Seven     Years’ War (and most of its colonial possessions in North America). But     French society was transforming from the inside while foreign challenges     were pressing on it from the outside. The result was a bloody revolution     that featured beautiful declarations on the rights of man alongside liberal     use of the guillotine. Those who would criticize Turkey for abandoning liberal democracy     by voting to give its president increased powers want liberal democracy     only if it produces the outcome they prefer. They forget how liberal     democracy came to the West in the first place. 
 
Some will say this is a     misreading of Turkey’s assault on the basic principles of liberal     democracy. They will point to jailed journalists, fired academics and the     Kurdish situation in the southeast as evidence of Turkey’s fall from grace.     Some of these concerns are valid. However, it is also true that, a year     ago, a significant faction in the Turkish military was planning a coup     against Erdoğan and the democratically elected     government. If the U.S. military attempted a coup against the U.S.     president, a series of arrests and investigations undoubtedly would follow     to protect the institutions of the state. Erdoğan may very well be using     the attempted coup to consolidate his power bases and to rebuild Turkey’s     institutions with people he can trust. But this does not make him evil, nor     does it make Turkey a budding totalitarian regime. 
 
Of course, in a country     like the United States, the military has never attempted a coup against the     civilian government. The difference between a country like the U.S. and     Turkey is their geopolitics. The modern Turkish republic was founded in     1923. It was both a weak power and an heir to a proud and illustrious     imperial history that went up in flames after the Ottoman Empire collapsed     following World War I and lost some of its former territories. Political     power in the ghost of the country that emerged in 1923 was centered in     Istanbul, even if the capital was Ankara, and Anatolia was weak,     underdeveloped and underrepresented. Military officer Mustafa Kemal Atatürk     became the country’s leader. For a long time, the military was the dominant     force in Turkish politics, and it would intervene when it felt it was     necessary. 
 
  
The rise of Erdoğan and     the Justice and Development Party is part of the evolution of the weak,     defeated country that was created in 1923. The current constitution, which     sets out the framework for the Turkish government, was adopted in 1982     under a military regime that took power in the 1980s coup. During this     decade, Anatolia, which had not been a major priority in either the Ottoman     era or in the first decades of the Turkish republic’s existence, saw     benefits from the Turkish government’s economic and political reforms. The     influx of capital and industry into Anatolia created a new class of Turkish     citizens, who had grown up more conservative and religious than the elites     in Istanbul but preferred a more laissez-faire economic approach. The old     power centers encountered the periphery in a way they never had before.     This divergence between the two groups changed Turkish politics and     continues to shape them today. 
 
As this internal     transformation has taken place, Turkey’s power as a nation has also     increased. Turkey has the largest GDP in the Middle East. Only Saudi     Arabia’s economy is comparable, and Saudi Arabia is     in deep trouble. Geopolitical Futures has written     extensively in the last year about the Saudi regime’s     weakness: It is almost literally a castle made of sand     built on a foundation of oil and little else. According to the World Bank’s     latest figures, Turkey’s economy     is almost double the size of Iran’s, yet Tehran continues to garner an     inflated level of world attention relative to its power. From a military     perspective, Turkey has one of the largest armies in the Middle East.     Although the army was in need of reforms and modernization even before the     attempted coup, Turkey’s ability to project military force is greater than     most of its neighbors’. Its potential far outstrips the potential of other     countries in the region. 
 
For a while after 1991,     Turkey was content to develop slowly and methodically. It pursued a policy     of “zero problems” with its neighbors. But the Middle East has reverted to     its normal state, somewhere between civil war and general chaos. The Syrian civil     war and Iraq’s instability are not abstract issues for     Turkey: They are happening on Turkey’s borders. Spillover violence is a     fact of life for the country, as are the millions of refugees fleeing Iraq     and Syria. Iran is attempting to assert its interests to the extent that it     can, and Russia – one of Turkey’s historical enemies – is playing around in     the region with limited force but in direct opposition to Turkey’s     interests. 
 
When Turks go to the     polls on Sunday, they will be making a collective decision about the type     of government they want. A “yes” vote may very well mean that Erdoğan will     become a strong, authoritarian-style president until as far out as 2029. At     that point, he would have to step aside due to term limits or his inability     to continue governing, or change the constitution again. A “no” vote could     mean Erdoğan’s power will wane, but it could also mean that he will remain     powerful within the context of the current system or that some new force     will rise in Turkish politics. Geopolitics is not sentimental about     personalities. It dictates that Turkey will rise, not the name of the     person who will lead it. 
 
Regardless of whether     Erdoğan stays in power or another leader takes over, Turkey will continue     maturing as a nation and becoming a regional power surrounded on almost all     sides by unenviable threats. If the referendum passes, Erdoğan’s authority     will still be subject to checks and balances, but none will be as     determinative as the geopolitical constraints forcing Turkey back into the     pantheon of the world’s major powers. On that, Turkey doesn’t get a vote –     and its increase in power will define the country’s future more than     any referendum can. | 
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