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ANKARA: A General - The unlikely agent of change

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  • ANKARA: A General - The unlikely agent of change

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 30 2007

    Gen. Yaşar Büyükanıt: The unlikely agent of change

    by LALE SARIIBRAHIMOGLU

    Turkey's outspoken and hawkish Chief of General Staff Gen. Yaşar
    Büyükanıt has long been uneasy over what he sees as indifference
    by foreign diplomats to Turkish military deaths from the outlawed
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) terrorist organization. The
    assassination of Turkey's leading Turkish-Armenian journalist, Hrant
    Dink, early this month in Istanbul has reportedly prompted
    Büyükanıt to lodge similar complaints to a group of ambassadors
    from several countries who visited him recently.
    It has become a customary practice for Gen. Büyükanıt to invite
    people who seek individual appointments from him all at the same time
    when his schedule is busy. In one of those meetings full of
    ambassadors, Büyükanıt was again critical of some foreign
    diplomats' decision to attend Dink's funeral but not that of the
    soldiers.
    It is worth mentioning here that Gen. Büyükanıt strongly
    condemned Dink's slaying and one of his top generals in İstanbul
    was at the funeral, while a wreath was sent on behalf of the Turkish
    Armed Forces. I mention this to the readers to prevent a possible
    misunderstanding that the Turkish military was indifferent to Dink's
    slaying.
    But whether we agree or not, the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) have long
    been uneasy over the absence of foreign diplomats at soldiers'
    funerals and apparently seek from diplomats the same sensitivity that
    they show to the slaying of the country's intellectuals and
    journalists.
    Büyükanıt is keen on meeting with foreign diplomats to express
    the military's views on various foreign policy issues, unlike some of
    his predecessors such as retired Gen. Hüseyin
    Kıvrıkoğlu , who imposed a ban during his tenure on
    such meetings. But during his time no major military reforms were
    attempted to reduce the still-existing political power of the
    military.
    Nevertheless, while meeting with the foreign diplomats, Gen.
    Büyükanıt, outspoken by nature, used this opportunity to express
    military views on several foreign policy issues.
    Here are some excerpts from comments made by Büyükanıt during
    his meeting with the diplomats:
    `I want the TSK to become smaller in size, but for this to happen we
    need modern equipment. Our size is big and people find it difficult
    to understand'*
    `We won't send more soldiers to Afghanistan. Turkey has done its bit
    in Afghanistan, such as assuming ISAF command twice.'
    `NATO needs to do more in Pakistan to solve the situation in
    Afghanistan.'
    `The damage has already been done in Iraq's oil-rich Kirkuk, when
    records and deeds were destroyed [by the Kurds] soon after the US
    invasion of Iraq.' Büyükanıt implies, for example, that Turkmens
    cannot prove that they are from Kirkuk since property records were
    destroyed.
    `If the US leaves Iraq, the country will disintegrate. As part of
    the disintegration, Sunnis and Shiites may decide to attack the
    Kurds, who may end up massing on the Turkish border as they did
    following the 1991 invasion of Iraq. If the US and other coalition
    troops withdraw from Iraq, it would cause instability in the entire
    Middle East.'
    `The US should increase focus on other parts of Iraq for the
    possible stability of the country.'
    `Iraqi Kurds [the Kurdish regional government under the Iraqi
    Constitution] should be more cooperative with Turkey, and that will
    make Ankara more cooperative with them.'
    If we put aside the fact that Turkish generals' keenness to speak
    about internal and external politics causes discontent among
    foreigners and Turks alike, we have to accept that, paradoxically, it
    should be someone like Büyükanıt, supported by both junior and
    senior officers, who can teach the powerful military that they must
    accept that political authority is higher than military authority if
    democracy is to mature in Turkey. But for this to happen, we need
    strong a political leadership with the courage to further democratic
    reforms.

    *I, as a journalist, have heard this argument of the military for
    many years, but the main reason behind the military's difficulty in
    downsizing personnel of around 700,000 -- most of whom are conscripts
    -- is political. Through a big army the military maintains its
    political power. We all know that ending conscription is the way to
    reduce its size.
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