Turkey's constitutional reforms may speed up after failed coup
TURKISH PRESIDENT RECEP ERDOGAN REMAINS in power after the failure of an attempted coup on Saturday. Thepaper.cn analyzes the possible effects on Turkish politics and diplomacy:
Since the 1960s, military officers have successfully staged four coups in Turkey and they all defended the secular regime and civil reform afterwards. Yet all these coups had something in common, namely the military was united, they had popular support, and they responded to the threat of religious radicalization; none of these applied this time and that's why the coup failed.
Turkish President Recep Erdogan has blamed his political rival Fethullah Gulen for having planned the coup. Gulen, now residing in the United States, advocates mild religion and supports Turkey's cooperation with the West. Erdogan has asked the US to extradite him for trial, indicating the reported power struggle between the two political figures will likely continue.