Adventures in Thailand

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Too Many Things to Report…..

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Man, where do I start.  Obviously it’s been a really long time since I last put anything up on this blog.  I guess I’ll start by commenting on the previous post, the one about us going to Pretoria.  We’re not going there anymore.  Instead, we’re on our way to Bangkok, Thailand.

 The short story of what happened is that the position I was assigned to in Pretoria was abolished as a cost-cutting measure, but no one informed the people who put the bid list together.  So it was listed as a possibility, but whoever was assigned there wasn’t going to end up going.  Another shining example of bureaucracy at its finest… 

In order to get us an assignment, my Career Development Officer (CDO) told me he was going to give me a list of posts comparable to Pretoria to choose from.  The problem with that is whose definition of comparable is he going to use?  The region?  Differential? 

He ended up giving us 3 posts to choose from: Bangkok Thailand, Sana’a Yemen, and Luanda Angola.  What would you do?  Meredith and I thought we were going to get 5 or so that were similar, which would have required us to do some research to make our selection.  We were wrong.  I got the email with the choices, and not 10 seconds after reading it, we knew we were going to Thailand.  Some people might like the hardship posts, and every Foreign Service person I’ve talked to has said their best tours have been in small hardship posts.  I don’t deny that and would like to do one of those one day.  In fact, I have to if I want to get promoted.  But you don’t pass on Bangkok.  It’s one of those ‘flagship’ postings, one where people compete furiously to get there.  Had we not taken it now, getting it in the future would have been a tall order.

 We are very excited about Bangkok.  It is one of the great cities of the world, and Thailand a very exotic locale to live in for 2 years.

In other news, I was tenured the other day!  This means that the State Department thinks I can serve effectively for my entire career.  Basically, they think I’m good enough to keep me on.  This is a good thing.

 Check out our Flickr site (link on the right hand side) soon, we’ve been on several trips since the last post on this blog.  We’ve had a ball.

The last thing we need to do before we leave Turkey: visit Istanbul one more time.

The title of this blog will soon change to ‘Adventures in Thailand.’  The Foreign Service is pretty cool…

Written by Doug

November 2, 2007 at 7:21 am

Interesting Times in Turkey

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The past few weeks have been particularly interesting here in Turkey. The government has been brought to its knees after the secular establishment of the country, which is basically the upper class elite, threw up their arms when the ruling party nominated Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul as its candidate for the presidency. The reason for their reservations is because of Gul’s previous ties to Islamist parties, not to mention his current conservative party, the AKP. The secularists are afraid that Gul and the Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, have a hidden Islamic agenda to turn the country into a fundamentalist bastion.

It seems like you can’t go a day with out hearing about Gul and Erdogan’s wives wearing headscarves. After living here for a little over a year, I have learned that to many Turks, Islamic headscarves are a symbol for the fundamentalist Islamic movement. Women in this country are not allowed to wear them in public institutions, which includes schools and government buildings. This is a vestige of the radical (at the time) policies of the founder of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. He was a rapid modernizer and made the country into what it is today. Since I have been here, it seems like more and more women are electing to wear headscarves, possibly signaling a rise in conservative Islamic views. The fact remains that 98% of the country is Muslim. I can’t help but wonder how we as Americans would view this situation had it happened in our country. Indeed something similar has happened, I’m sure. While we are a secular nation, we try carefully to be sensitive to people’s right to religious freedom, which includes the wearing of religious garments and symbols. But to me, it’s just a scarf! I guess I’m thinking too American-like…

The Turkish military has become the keeper of Ataturk’s secularist legacy, and has defended that legacy several times, staging coups when it felt the secular base of the government was being threatened. A stark and chilling reminder of the military’s power was given when top generals released a statement following the announcement of Gul’s candidacy which said they would defend Turkey’s secularist history if need be. Thankfully, they have backed off and the threat of another coup happening seems to be minimal.

Since Gul’s candidacy was announced, there have been many demonstrations, mostly in Ankara and Istanbul, by the secularists voicing their displeasure at the prospect of having a conservative with Islamist ties as their president. What makes this whole thing so interesting and illogical to me is that the president of this country has very limited power. It’s the Prime Minister who actually runs the country. Why does it matter so much if the President can’t change anything? It is a largely symbolic position and the highest level in the protocol chain. All he does is entertain! (That’s probably not true…)

So where do they stand now? Well, as parliament actually elects the president, the secularists have been boycotting every vote, so there haven’t been enough MPs present to have a valid vote at all. PM Erdogan has been forced to dissolve Parliament and call for early elections, which are scheduled to happen July 22nd instead of November. Erdogan has also announced reforms to the constitution that would let the people elect the president instead of Parliament, and also reforms that would limit the Prime Minister’s term to 5 years, with the option of running for a second term. Also, he wants to change parliamentary terms to 4 years instead of 5. Whether or not those reforms get passed is another question, of course.

So July 22nd is the first day of the future of Turkey, which I think might be a little bumpy in the beginning, but ultimately will turn out just fine. Turkey has come a long way. There’s no way they should give it all up now, just like that.

What a great first post in the Foreign Service!

Written by Doug

May 8, 2007 at 10:47 pm

Posted in Politics, Turkey