Who Sez Sci Fi Can't Predict the Future

*I wonder if there's an English-language version

loose anywhere.

*And the book's a hit – firmly in the long-standing

tradition of George Chesney's BATTLE OF DORKING.

http://www.depauw.edu/sfs/backissues/71/clarke71art.htm

bruces

Tale of US attack hits mark in Turkey

Wednesday 23 February 2005 10:32 AM GMT

The book begins with a US attack on Turkish troops in Iraq

US warplanes relentlessly pound Istanbul and Ankara, killing

hundreds, while the rest of the country is in flames:

Washington has just launched operation Metal Storm against

its former ally, Turkey.

The futuristic novel by two young Turkish writers has sold

more than 100,000 copies since it came out in December - a

huge run in a country where most books get printings of a

few thousand at best.

Metal Storm seems to be riding a wave of strong anti-US

sentiment in the country sparked by the 2003 invasion of

Iraq, which resulted in tensions between the two Nato allies.

The novel, set in May 2007, begins when Turkish troops

deployed in northern Iraq to protect the ethnic Turkish

Turkmen community there, come under attack from US forces.

A huge disinformation campaign launched by Washington has

people thinking that the Turks fired first, while the true

aim of the United States is to seize Turkey's rich borax

mines, which account for 60% of the world's boron production.

Turkey's major cities come under heavy fire, with huge loss

of life, while Ankara, taken by surprise, turns to the

European Union and Russia for help.

Among other things, boron is used in the manufacture of

fibreglass insulation, as an ignition source in rockets, as

a radiation shield and neutron detector in nuclear reactors

and in the aerospace industry because of its high-strength

and lightweight.

Strained relations

Critics have panned the book's literary merits and explain

its success solely by the current strain in ties between the

US and Turkey.

"This novel is not just another conspiracy theory - it is a

possibility theory"

Bilateral relations, forged in the Cold War years, suffered

a major blow two years ago when the Turkish parliament,

dominated by the governing Justice and Development Party

(AKP), refused the US permission to open a northern front to

Iraq through southeast Turkey.

Since then, despite repeated assurances from both sides that

the "strategic partnership" is as strong as ever, the chill

between Washington and Ankara has been evident.

Anti-US sentiment

After a recent visit to Ankara, outgoing US Undersecretary

of Defence Douglas Feith warned, according to the Turkish

media, that the partnership between the two countries would

not survive unless Ankara took steps to defuse anti-US

sentiment among its population.

Turkish newspapers, analysing Metal Storm's success, say the

novel has found a strong readership among politicians –

notably among the AKP, some of whose members have termed US

military actions in Iraq "genocide" – as well as among

high-ranking soldiers.

"The Americans today are just like the crusaders who seized

Jerusalem centuries ago"

The book's authors, science-fiction buff Orkun Ucar and

Burak Turna, a former journalist specialising in defence

issues – do not conceal their opposition to US policy and

say their plot is not as far-fetched as it seems.

"This novel is not just another conspiracy theory – it is a

possibility theory," Turna said in a recent interview with a

magazine.

"The United States today has a crusader mentality," Ucar

added. "The Americans today are just like the crusaders who

seized Jerusalem centuries ago."

In any case, anti-Americanism sells.

The book's publishers, Timas, have just ordered a fresh run

of 50,000 copies, according to company spokeswoman Yasemin Nak.

Why does she think the book is so popular?

"Because it appeals to the subconscious of the Turkish reader."

AFP

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/FF6FC2AA-1876-494E-97E9

-570A22F76B3C.htm