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ANKARA: Turkey: Column Censures Land Forces' Decision To Suspend Rel

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  • ANKARA: Turkey: Column Censures Land Forces' Decision To Suspend Rel

    TURKEY: COLUMN CENSURES LAND FORCES' DECISION TO SUSPEND RELATIONS WITH FRANCE

    Yeni Safak, Turkey
    Nov 17 2006

    [Column by Ali Bayramoglu: "Do the Soldiers Make the Decisions?"]

    There have been two incidents that have drawn my attention in
    recent days. The first of these was what Rahsan Ecevit [wife of the
    recently deceased former Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit] said about the
    organization of her husband's funeral in the interview that she had a
    few days ago on NTV with Can Dundar. Mrs Ecevit said: "When General
    Staff Chief [Yasar] Buyukanit, when he came to express condolences,
    said that the commanders had met together regarding the arrangement
    of the funeral, I deferred to them, and the military arranged the
    funeral."

    For the state ceremony to have been organized directly by the military
    is, to put it frankly, a rather strange state of affairs.

    In parallel with this, the second such incident occurred the day
    before yesterday.

    Ground Forces Commander General Ilker Basbug announced that "all
    military relations with France have been suspended in response to the
    French Parliament's passage of a bill that punishes the denial of the
    'Armenian genocide'."

    The very next day, that is, yesterday, a response to this announcement
    came from the French Ministry of Defence; it declared that the French
    Defence Ministry "did not see Turkey's decision to suspend its military
    ties with France as the sign of a crisis or an important problem
    between the two countries." Additionally, French Defence Ministry
    Spokesman Jean-Francois Bureau, stating that they had "taken note of"
    the statement made by Ground Forces Commander Ilker Basbug, said:
    "This was not a statement by the political authorities."

    What had attracted my attention was thus evidently noticed and utilized
    by the French...

    They are saying that the statement did not come from the Turkish
    Ministry of Defence, and that they have their doubts as to whether
    the statement reflects Turkey's political will.

    Certainly the natural thing is just what the French have done... The
    response to Ilker Basbug's statement did not come from the [French]
    Ground Forces Commander or the Chief of the General Staff. The
    response was given by the Defence Ministry, which has both the
    political authority and the responsibility for this matter.

    Let us now pose the question:

    How is it that, on a topic that involves Turkey's official stance, and
    thus requires political will, and consequently on a topic that entails
    bearing political responsibility on the basis of the decision made,
    the military bureaucracy makes this decision and then so comfortably
    announces it?

    How, and with what right?

    Just yesterday, we were talking about the existing "confusion in
    authority, responsibility, and legitimacy", which blocks the natural
    lines of communication in Turkey. Even if some of the decisions
    taken are proper ones, the way in which they are taken, or else the
    situation in which those who take them are not "responsible", contain
    clues regarding the direction the regime is going to hold to in the
    days ahead.

    The decision in question -and let us assume it was the right one,
    since a good many of us believe it was -is of this sort; it is of an
    essentially political nature.

    Because it is a decision that could have an impact on, and determine
    the orientation of, Turkey's international relations. And the
    institution that according to the laws possesses the authority to
    take steps in this regard is the institution that has the obligation
    and responsibility to account for the steps that it takes, that is,
    the political administration.

    For this reason, the subordination of both the military authority
    and the civilian bureaucracy to the political administration is one
    of the most fundamental principles of democracy.

    Otherwise, the mechanism of representation, authority, and
    responsibility is impeded.

    But in this country, everything runs backwards...

    Since those who bear no responsibility for the political decisions
    that they make are able to make them, we are unable to get out of
    our difficulties, and the country is unable to escape from chaos...

    What statement is the Ministry of National Defence going to make now,
    I wonder?

    It will probably say that the statement by the military was known
    to it.

    But it seems that this game no longer convinces even the French...

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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