Cover Image: The New Sultan

The New Sultan

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Member Reviews

Fascinating and horrifying account of the Turkish President's rise to power. At a time when democracy is under assault in Turkey, this is essential reading.

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I was looking for quite a long time for a book which explains extensively the victorious power take of Erdogan in the last decade. This book is exactly what I needed to understand the roots of his movement as well as his political personality. From his versatility in using Gulen for his own purposes and ending up considering him his enemy no.1, until his more subtle dramatic shaking of the Kemalism, Erdogan is an interesting personality, but that bad kind of interesting. With a clear aim for power - the more the better - and a machiavellianism and hunger for recognition typical for people with very modest origins, he is hard to stop and even harder to avoid as an important political pawn on the world map.
But will his will for power lead the country in a direction where salvation from the religious extreme is still possible? Or he is rather one step before being the victim of the system he created?
The book goes into deep analysis of the social and political roots of the current situation in Turkey, with interesting insights and powerful features of the main episodes of Erdogan's raise to power. Recommended to anyone curious to find out more about the latest political evolutions in the Middle East and the changes underwent by Turkey in the last decades.

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Cagaptay's work could not have come at a better time. As Turkey reaches several major crossroads and faces major challenges both inside and outside its borders, he gives us an excellent, although also admittedly unnerving insight into the possible paths it can take now that Erdogan has clawed has way to the top of his nation and will stop at nothing to relinquish power or tolerate any challenges to it.

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‘Erdoğan has become the most powerful leader in the country, and he wants to shape it in his image.’

I finished reading this book on the 16th of April, 2017: the day that Recep Tayyip Erdoğan won the Turkish constitutional referendum. The 18 proposed amendments to the Turkish constitution were brought forward by the governing Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP). Approval means that the office of the Prime Minister will be abolished and the existing parliamentary system of government will be replaced with an executive presidency and a presidential system. The referendum was held under a state of emergency declared after a failed military coup attempt in July 2016. Other amendments include raising the number of seats in Parliament from 550 to 600 while the president will be given more control over appointments to the Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK).

So, who is Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and how has he risen to be the most powerful leader in the Turkish republic since Mustafa Kemal Ataturk? What does this mean for both Turkey and the rest of the world?

In this book, Dr Cagaptay writes of the factors that shaped Erdoğan’s early life, his introduction to politics, his rise in the AKP, and how he has consolidated his power over the last 15 years. The contrast with the direction in which Ataturk wanted to lead Turkey couldn’t be greater: Ataturk’s vision was for a secular, Westernised nation, while Erdoğan seems to want a conservative, Islamic state. The crisis of modern Turkey is the culmination of a number of different issues: Turkey has become polarised. Erdoğan has played off different groups against each other to achieve his political aims while consolidating Turkey as a regional power. But can Erdoğan’s approach work in the longer term? And at what cost? Turkey is a diverse country, with a number of different ethnic, political and religious groups. In the meantime, journalists and some high-ranking military officers have been arrested, and some academics have been banned from leaving the country.

One of the reasons why I chose to read this book was to try to understand how Turkey has changed in the past 20 years. This book gave me some answers, while raising more questions and issues to consider. Not all that long ago, Turkey was considered to be a wonderful (albeit somewhat flawed) example of a middle eastern democracy. Is it possible to still consider Turkey as a democracy? Of what value are democratic institutions if a president has (almost) unfettered power?

What will happen next?

Note: My thanks to I. B. Tauris and NetGalley for providing me with a free electronic copy of this book for review purposes.

Jennifer Cameron-Smith

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Thank you to NetGalley, Publlisher and author for a copy of this book.

This was quite an interesting read ( and I don't normally read books about current politics) . It certainly provides a good background around the rise of Erdogan in Turkey over the last few decades. Middle Eastern and Turkish politics are very complex and this book helps put some of the current atmosphere in the area into context.

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This is a really handy brief recap of 20th century Turkish politics, used to explicate the formative years and political rise of Erdogan--from conservative student to Istanbul mayor to head of state, all the while using Ataturk tactics to produce anti-Ataturk outcomes. Cagaptay is clear-eyed about Turkey's potential futures, especially Erdogan's control of a country that is deeply divided and dependent on continued economic growth to sustain its middle-class transformation.

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