This interesting article is from Sunday's Zaman.
Documents retrieved from computers of the Information and Support Unit
of the General Staff clearly reveal how a pro-coup junta nested within
the Turkish military, the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK), has engaged in
propaganda to discredit the government and faith-based groups in the
eyes of the people.
The documents are currently being examined by a group of computer
experts at the İstanbul 13th High Criminal Court, which is involved in a
trial against anti-government websites allegedly established by the
military. The General Staff recently sent hard disks of its computers,
used by the Information and Support Unit between 2005 and 2009, upon a
request from this court. After examining the documents, the computer
experts prepared a preliminary report about their findings and sent it
to the İstanbul court. The court is now awaiting a final report from the
experts.
Weekly news magazine Aksiyon has devoted its latest cover story
to details emerging from the preliminary report. According to the
report, the documents show that the pro-coup junta carried out three
kinds of propaganda against the government and faith-based
organizations: white, gray and black. In military terms, white
propaganda seeks to inform people. Black propaganda, on the other hand,
works to discredit something or someone. And gray propaganda is a
mixture of the two.
Special unit to fight ‘harmful elements’
According to the documents, the TSK set up a unit to carry out the
propaganda campaign against groups or individuals that the military
thought were harmful to its existence. This unit was established in the
1950s and had branches both in the Special Warfare Department of the TSK
and the General Staff’s department of intelligence. The documents said
the unit did not initially work effectively in the years after it was
established, but it began to be more active as of 1980 when the military
staged a coup d’état and set up some institutions, such as the National
Security Council (MGK), to put the civilian will under the control of
the armed forces. The unit was called the Information and Support Unit
in 1995. “Even though the unit carried out some effective operative and
tactical activities at those times [after 1995] when acts of terror and
religious fundamentalism reached their peak, it failed to turn into an
establishment to act in line with the national strategy and in the light
of science. And its scope of psychological warfare has been further
narrowed since 2002 as part of plans to curb the role and effectiveness
of the TSK in the social and administrative areas. And the psychological
warfare unit [or the Information and Support Unit] has become a
formation taking passive measures [against acts of terror and religious
fundamentalism] and failing to even protect the dignity of its name,”
according to the documents.
The latest activity of the Information and Support Unit of the General
Staff’s Mobilization Department is the setting up and running of a
number of websites to support the unit’s propaganda campaigns against
the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government and civilian
groups. A deepening investigation into the websites shows that the unit,
led by jailed Col. Dursun Çiçek, established 42 websites to back their
psychological warfare campaign against civilian groups they deemed
“religious fundamentalist,” “separatist,” “pro-AK Party” and “anti-TSK.”
Former Chief of General Staff retired Gen. İlker Başbuğ was arrested in
2012 as part of the investigation.
Documents retrieved from the hard disks of the General Staff also included information gathered by the military staff about the Hizmet movement inspired by internationally renowned Turkish and Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen.
According to one such document, the movement is well respected among
the people in Turkey because “its followers stay far away from conflicts
or clashes with others, serve peaceful purposes, live in harmony with
other groups and do not seek to work against the interests or welfare of
others.” “There is a widespread conviction [among people] that the
Gülen group [as the Hizmet movement is referred to by some circles in Turkey] poses no threat to Turkey,” said the document.
In the documents, the General Staff’s Information Support Unit discussed how to bring the financial sources of the Hizmet movement
under control so that the movement would be unable to work. The
documents also suggested that a conflict that would emerge for
leadership after Gülen dies would lead the movement to collapse.
In attempts to prevent the Hizmet movement
from working, the General Staff suggested that its harmony with the US
and other countries should be damaged. “The US should end its policy of
supporting moderate Islam, documents and required information should be
seized and shared with the media to show the real faces of Gülen
followers to the people, and a widespread conviction should be created
in Turkey and Muslim countries that the movement is controlled by the US
and serving the purpose of imperialism,” the document notes and adds
that schools and other educational institutions currently operating in
roughly 50 countries worldwide should be shut down.
The documents seized from the hard disks also feature plans by the
General Staff to launch a propaganda campaign to allege that the Hizmet
movement and its followers are the driving force behind some ongoing
trials in Turkey that aim to cleanse the country of anti-democratic
formations.
“Propaganda should be spread that the news [of anti-coup investigations]
is leaked to the media by Gülen followers who are nested in the police
force and that there is a large number of senior officers in the police
force,” according to one of the documents. The same document also
reveals plans to discredit the investigations against clandestine
networks nested in various state bodies, an alliance that is often
referred to as the “deep state.” “We should spread claims that people
captured as part of the ongoing fight against the deep state are indeed
too weak to be members of the deep state and that the deep state in fact
has nothing to do with those weak people, that Gladio is controlled by
the US, that the deep state [in Turkey] was rooted out with Turkey’s
alliance with NATO, that groups, individuals and institutions that seek
to protect national rights have become [by their opponents] a center of
accusations and that the US has helped the pro-Gülen formation
infiltrate the police force.”
The General Staff, at this point, sought the help of some media outlets
to help it spread those claims. Officers at the General Staff wrote news
stories and columns to downplay the investigations launched against
coup plotters and the deep state and sent them to some newspapers to
publish them as if staff members at those newspapers wrote them. “The
said campaigns are being carried out by sending documents to columnists,
newspaper administrators, editors-in-chief and civil servants via
e-mails that feature an imaginary username and e-mail addresses,” one of
the documents retrieved from the hard disks of the General Staff
indicates.
‘Less than psychological warfare’
Such activities were, however, not psychological warfare, according to
the General Staff. “Having a place in the media [creating news reports
and columns published by some newspapers] does not mean launching
psychological warfare. Carrying out psychological warfare requires us to
make our activities in a manner to impact the opinions, feelings and
stance of the target group.”
In one other document, the General Staff complains that websites are not
an effective means to carry out a propaganda campaign because it is
very easy for computer experts to find out who set up and administered
the websites. “The virtual network is an area where covert and
semi-covert psychological warfare methods may effectively be applied. It
is not appropriate for open methods. For this reason, we are carrying
out white propaganda campaigns on our websites. And this decreases the
yield we may derive from the websites [and propaganda campaigns].
Websites run by us are subject to bureaucratic transactions, and we
always face the risk of being exposed as the administrators of those
websites.”
The documents go on to state that the General Staff sought to cooperate
with secularist civil society groups and individuals who also oppose the
trial against Ergenekon, a clandestine criminal network accused of
working to overthrow the government, in attempts to discredit the trial
in the eyes of the people. The documents indicate the General Staff
should prepare books and brochures about the risk of rising religious
fundamentalism in the country and send them to those civil society
groups. “In addition, important writings and opinions [denouncing the
Ergenekon trial] could be sent to opinion leaders, editors-in-chief of
newspapers, leading columnists, civil society organizations and websites
of those organizations and deputies,” the documents add.