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Ankara: Turkey To Set Up Professional Anti-Terrorism Units

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  • Ankara: Turkey To Set Up Professional Anti-Terrorism Units

    TURKEY TO SET UP PROFESSIONAL ANTI-TERRORISM UNITS

    Today's Zaman
    07 October 2008, Tuesday
    Turkey

    The government has plans to launch a new strategy in the fight against
    terrorism. Under the new plan, only professional teams will fight
    terrorists and a temporary security zone in northern Iraq may be set
    up along the Iraqi border.

    Turkey's search for a new strategy to fight terrorists of the Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK) in the Southeast has taken a decisive turn
    following an attack at the Aktutun military outpost in Hakkari last
    Friday in which 15 soldiers were slain. PM Tayyip Erdogan announced
    on Saturday that Turkey will implement a new strategy, without giving
    any further details.

    Prime Minister Erdogan immediately called a meeting of the Higher
    Counterterrorism Board (TMYK) after Friday's attack and consulted
    with top representatives from Turkey's security forces. Yesterday he
    met with some of his Cabinet ministers to lay out the structure of
    the new strategy, which will be finalized at the next TMYK meeting,
    scheduled for Thursday.

    The key feature of the new strategy, according to a senior security
    official who asked not to be identified, is having professional
    troops conduct operations against terrorist organizations. The idea
    of establishing a professional army, first proposed in June 2007
    by then-Land Forces Commander Gen. Ä°lker BaÅ~_bug, will become a
    reality under the new plan, the same source said. A new special
    force, initially of 7,000 privates from gendarmerie operation
    battalions and ranger brigades, will be deployed in the region as
    soon as possible. In the following year, an additional 8,000 will
    be recruited to the new force. The recruitment process will be on a
    voluntary basis. The minimum salary will be $2,000. In other words,
    no longer will unprofessional soldiers deployed in the region after
    a short period of basic military training be conducting military
    campaigns against terrorism. Conscription soldiers will be acting in
    the background as supporting units. The professional units will be
    deployed along Turkey's eastern frontiers, from the Armenian border
    to the Syrian border.

    A special operation command already established under the National
    Police Department will be fortified to protect against potential
    urban terrorist attacks. Another possibility, according to the same
    source, is that governors of the provinces hit worst by terrorism
    will be granted special authorities to allow garrison commanders
    to conduct operations against terrorists at any time. However, the
    government is not warm to the idea, which is reminiscent of the
    Emergency Rule Regions (OHAL), areas placed under martial law in
    Turkey's Southeast that remained so well into the beginning of the
    2000s. The military is also demanding certain temporary amendments
    to restrictions established in the Criminal Procedures Law. Justice
    Minister Mehmet Ali Å~^ahin is expected to brief Prime Minister
    Erdogan on the military's demands. The government is determined not
    to step back from the democratizing reforms Turkey has made during
    the European Union harmonization process.

    One of Turkey's greatest concerns in fighting terrorism is PKK camps
    located in the Zap, Avashin, Hakurk and Basyan regions of northern
    Iraq. The government is set to ask northern Iraq to set up temporary
    security zones in these areas, where the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK)
    will be in charge of ensuring security. President Abdullah Gul is
    expected to take up the issue very soon with Iraqi President Jalal
    Talabani.

    According to this plan, which heavily relies on Iraq's consent,
    Turkish troops will provide security across an area extending 40
    kilometers into northern Iraq from the southeastern province of
    Hakkari. Large military outposts will be set up along the border,
    protected by large steel barriers, not unlike the NATO missions'
    posts in Afghanistan. The government is also determined to deal with
    European countries, which have been inactive over the sale of arms
    to the PKK, which usually gets its weapons from Europe.

    The TMYK determined that a delay in the delivery of Heron unmanned
    air vehicles (UAVs) ordered from Israel has also caused difficulties
    in obtaining intelligence in northern Iraq. Turkey will work to speed
    up the delivery process to ensure enhanced intelligence gathering in
    the region.

    --Boundary_(ID_tLO3/ESUnkLy3lIwrWqBxQ)--
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