Is Erdogan really stronger after failed coup?

The prevailing view among punditry and the media, both Turkish and international, is that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has emerged much stronger from the July 15 coup attempt and is now empowered to steer the country as he likes.
This assumption, however, is less than convincing for those who have closely watched Erdogan’s character, relationship with power and general political style during his 14 years in power. Erdogan’s statements and political behavior since the thwarted coup suggest quite the contrary – that he feels less powerful. The declaration of emergency rule and the draconian purge of the Gulen community – the decision-making and operational center of the putsch – may be projecting power, but that is an illusion.
In fact, Erdogan is readjusting his political behavior in a way that suggests he feels less powerful. The first signs to that effect came not immediately after the coup was suppressed on July 16, but several days later. Judging by the changes in his political attitude, he seems to have recognized a new reality sometime between July 19 and 20 – probably after an assessment of external rather than domestic implications – and decided to step back accordingly.
After the failed coup, Erdogan’s first address to his supporters was on the night of July 18 outside his posh house in Istanbul, perched on the hills of the Bosporus’ Asian shore. In that speech, he seemed confident he was now more powerful, very much in the style of ‘what doesn’t kill me makes me stronger.’ This was evidenced by the fact that only three days after the coup bid he declared he would proceed with a project that did require him to be more powerful than ever. It was none but the project to erase Gezi Park at Taksim Square and replace it with a replica of former Ottoman barracks – the very spark of the 2013 Gezi Park resistance – which he had grudgingly shelved but had since become obsessed with.

This post was published at ALMONITOR