
Turkey was shaken last Friday as a faction of the military tried
unsuccessfully to force President Recep Tayyip Erdogan from
power. The coup attempt failed within a day, and Erdogan was quick to
use the opportunity to solidify his already increasingly
authoritarian rule by
implementing a three-month state of emergency,
temporarily suspending the European Convention on Human
Rights, and
removing tens of thousands of employees from military and
government positions.
And as Turkey continues to takes steps toward increasingly
illiberal democracy, a big winner of the failed coup is Russian
President Vladimir Putin. Anna Borshchevskaya, an Ira Weiner fellow at the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy,
writes in The Hill that the coup attempt will force Erdogan
and Putin toward a closer relationship as Turkey moves further
away from the West and its demands for human rights and open
democracy.













