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ANKARA: TSK members displeased over latest detentions

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  • ANKARA: TSK members displeased over latest detentions

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jul 05, 2008

    TSK members displeased over latest detentions

    Some members of the politically powerful Turkish Armed Forces (TSK)
    have neither approved of the latest detentions of former senior-level
    generals nor been happy about the silence of their top active
    commanders over this development.


    "The right thing should have been to invite the ex-generals to the
    security department instead of detaining them in such a manner. Top
    commanders should have reacted sharply to the way they were detained
    as did a top businessman in reaction to a detention of his colleague,"
    said a retired colonel, speaking to Today's Zaman. The Turkish
    authorities detained 21 people early in the morning of July 1,
    including three former generals as well as businessmen, academics and
    journalists, over the alleged planning of a coup. Those detained
    included retired Gen. Å?ener Eruygur, the former commander of
    the Gendarmerie General Command and the head of the Atatürkist
    Thought Association (ADD), and retired Gen. Hursit Tolon, former
    commander of the 1st Army.

    The Office of the Chief of General Staff, meanwhile, stated on July 2
    that the detentions of top generals and searches made at their
    military lodgings were conducted by military authorities upon a
    request from and with the participation of public prosecutors in line
    with the Turkish Penal Code (TCK).

    Gen. Ä°lker BaÅ?buÄ?, the Land Forces commander --
    expected to become the new chief of general staff during the August
    meetings of the Supreme Military Council (YAÅ?) -- denied press
    reports on July 2 that he was informed about the latest detentions of
    ex-senior generals during a surprise meeting with Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip ErdoÄ?an last week. He, however, did not make any comment
    on the detention of former generals.

    "TSK members expected him to make some remarks of disapproval over the
    way the ex- generals were detained, but he did not. We are not happy
    about it," said a retired colonel.

    He recalled the reaction of Rifat HisarcıklıoÄ?lu,
    head of the powerful Turkish Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchange
    (TOBB) on July 3, strongly criticizing the detention of Sinan
    Aygün, head of the Ankara Chamber of Commerce (ATO) over
    charges of connections with Ergenekon.

    The retired colonel linked what he termed the indifference of
    BaÅ?buÄ? to the way former commanders were detained to the
    fact that BaÅ?buÄ? would stay in office for two years
    instead of four due to the fact he will reach the retirement age of 67
    once he becomes the new chief of general staff.

    Current Chief of General Staff Gen. YaÅ?ar
    BüyükanÄ&#x B1;t is also about to reach retirement age
    after serving two years in office.

    "Because one stayed and the other is going to stay for two years, both
    Büyükanıt and BaÅ?buÄ? have preferred
    to be more compromising with the government. If they knew that they
    were going to stay for four years, I am sure their attitude would have
    been different to the government practices in general and to the
    latest detentions in particular. They could have stopped their
    detentions," said a retired general, speaking to Today's Zaman.

    According to this general, the government has deliberately chosen this
    two-year system to ensure a compromise with the top commanders.

    Since the prime minister and the president have the authority to
    extend the term of the duty of the chiefs of general staff in line
    with the Constitution, they could have used this power by extending
    their term of duty for another two years, he stated.

    Despite uneasiness within the TSK over the detention of former senior
    generals, there has been ongoing speculation over their alleged
    activities to topple the government.

    Retired Gen. Eruygur's ADD helped in calling millions of Turks to the
    streets to protest the election of former Foreign Minister Abdullah
    Gül as president last year.

    He was also implicated in an incident involving the alleged diaries of
    the former Naval Forces commander, retired Adm. Ã-zden Ã-rnek,
    published in late March last year by the now-closed weekly Nokta
    magazine, as the mastermind of a coup attempt codenamed
    "AyıÅ?ı& #xC4;?ı."

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an said on July 1 that the
    detentions were linked to the investigation into Ergenekon -- a
    hard-line secularist group suspected of planning bombings and
    assassinations to trigger a military takeover against the ruling
    Justice and Development Party (AKP), which is facing a Constitutional
    Court case over charges of anti-secular activities. Predominantly
    Muslim Turkey is a secular nation according to its Constitution.

    This is the first time in the history of the Turkish Republic that
    such high-level former military leaders have been detained on charges
    of planning a coup, Turkish military analysts have noted.

    No purges during YAÅ?, claim officers

    Unlike the latest speculation in the press that there could be a
    clean-up operation within the TSK against those who might have been
    involved in alleged coup attempts said to be engineered by the
    detained ex-generals, some TSK members were confident that no such
    thing would happen.

    On the contrary, around 20 to 30 officers alleged to have been
    involved in Islamic activities may be purged, claimed a retired
    colonel.

    TSK's ongoing autonomous and monolithic structure has made it harder
    to understand and analyze the exact position of its members.

    But the views of some members of the TSK that Today's Zaman
    interviewed appear to come close to the reality that even hawkish
    Gen. Büyükanit does not seem to have been satisfying
    them if the military fails to continue meddling openly in political
    life.

    On the other hand, the TSK does not seem to have liked the idea of
    looking bad in the eyes of the public and thus allowed the legal
    authorities to detain its former senior generals, said a retired
    officer.

    By preventing their detention, the TSK would have portrayed an image
    that it is opposed to the law. If an indictment fails to prove the
    alleged links of ex-generals with a coup attempt, then the TSK will be
    able to tell the public that it adhered to the law, embarrassing the
    government. If the indictment contains strong proof about their
    involvement with unlawful acts, then again the TSK will be able to
    tell the public that it has observed the law by allowing the detention
    of their former members," said the same source.

    However, the TSK has a record of incidents in which it has not allowed
    its members to be tried or interrogated over different charges as well
    as making public comments over civilian court decisions.

    For example, back in 2002, seven top former generals, including former
    Chief of General Staff Gen. DoÄ?an GüreÅ?, who was
    at the time a deputy, publicly criticized the jail sentence of Korkut
    Eken, a former TSK officer, over charges of forming a gang to commit
    crimes in the infamous Susurluk case.

    Turkish bar associations accused the former generals of attempting to
    influence the judiciary and called for those generals to be tried in
    order to shed light on the Susurluk case. But this has never happened.

    A fatal car accident in which a truck collided with a Mercedes in
    Turkey's town of Susurluk took place on Nov. 3, 1996, revealing
    state-mafia ties for the first time in Turkish history.

    In another incident, for example, a colonel declined to appear before
    a parliamentary commission investigating the assassination of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink early last year.

    But because the Ergenekon investigation has become highly
    sensationalized with the alleged links to some members of the TSK, top
    commanders of the Turkish military may have allowed the prosecutors to
    do their job this time -- instead of preventing them -- out of fear of
    a strong negative public reaction, stated a Western military official.

    As a matter of fact, in the midst of the first wave of detentions
    early this year as part of the Ergenekon investigation,
    Gen. Büyükanıt said the TSK was not an
    organization that commits crimes.

    "In every institution there are those involved in crimes, and they
    would be tried and punished if they committed the crime," he said on
    Jan. 29 of this year.

    This statement of Gen. Büyükanıt might explain
    the permission given by the TSK for the recent detention of its former
    senior-level generals as an attempt to avoid a possible negative
    public reaction to the military.


    05 July 2008, Saturday


    LALE SARIÄ°BRAHÄ°MOÄ?LU ANKARA
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