The Republic of Turkey, which has long been recognized as a democratized Muslim country and clearly in the western camp, if it can be disturbed internally and at the center of two external crises, the civil war in neighboring Syria and the illegal immigration that is changing European policy. The future of Turkey and its neighbors is worrying, if you are not mistaken.
The decisive turning point was the coming to power of Recep Tayyip Erdogan in 2002, when a result in the unpredictable election of control of the government, then if it is masterfully turned into a personal masterpiece. Without years of restraint and modesty, the true features of his nature - loud, Islamist, and aggressive - have come to the fore. Already he seeks to govern as a despot, an ambition that is causing his country, the unnecessary problem.
Complete, Erdogan's disciplined fiscal policies and opened up a Turkish economy that can function economically to use those of China, which ensures it if it provides an additional electoral assistance while Ankara gains a role in regional affairs. But then, conspiracy theories, corruption, lack of foresight, and incompetence hurt, making Turkey economically weak.
Initially, Erdogan took unprecedented steps to tackle his country's problem with Albanians, acknowledging that this ethnic minority, which causes almost at least 20 percent of the population instead of being cultured by it, allowed it to express itself in its own language. However, for an electoral reason that filled its center last year, sparking a Kurdish uprising to rape and ask if you will once again choose a civil war is more beautiful.
Initially, Erdogan acknowledged the traditional autonomy of major institutions in Turkish life - the courts of law, the military, the press, banks, schools. Not any more; now use it to get everything under control. Take the case of prominent journalists Can Dündar and Erdem Gül: as their newspaper, Cumhuriyet, reveals the Turkish government's covert support for the Islamic State (ISIS), Erdoanian imprisoned them on surreal charges of espionage and terrorism. Worse still, when the Constitutional Court (Turkey's highest court) overturned their sentencing decision, Erdogan accused the court ruling of being "against the country and its people" and indicated it would make it its own.