Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Turkey’s -2.5 wars- dogma. Turkey downgraded Greece’s position in its list of possible external threats.

Photo: balkaneu.com
By Manolis Kostidis – Ankara

Turkey has made changes to its Red Book as the neighboring country alters its strategy in order to be able to deal with 2.5 wars, including one with Greece.

The Red Book is a guide for the Turkish government and the Armed Forces and was last updated before 2010.

Three years ago the Erdogan administration had removed potential enemies such as Syria from the list of threats and cooperation agreements were signed with Damascus. However, according to newspaper Vatan, Ankara has had to change its strategy following the downing of a Turkish fighter plane by Syrian air defense and heavy fighting breaking out in Syria.



Syria ranked first on a list of potential enemy threats. Greece is considered enemy number two and the PKK is thought of as a half enemy. The Turkish newspaper reports Turkey applies the 2,5 wars dogma, meaning it is prepared to tackle 2.5 wars simultaneously at any given time.

Turkey downgraded Greece’s position in its list of possible external threats.

In 2010, the National Security Council had approved changes to the Red Book, a Security Policy Document many call the “secret constitution” where Turkey’s external and internal threats are mentioned.

As far as Greece is concerned, it is still perceived as a threat but it is now a lower risk compared to previous accounts of external threats. There has been no change, however, to the “casus belli” threat regarding the unilateral extension of the breadth of territorial sea to 12 miles in the Aegean.

Until recently, PKK action was considered a serious problem for Turkey and was the number one domestic threat. However, the effort to solve the Kurdish issue seems to have brought Syria to the top of the external threats list.
- See more at: http://www.balkaneu.com

2/7/13
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2 comments:

  1. Turkey redefines duties of armed forces...

    In a symbolic move, legislators specify that military’s role is to defend the nation against external threats alone.

    ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Turkey’s parliament has amended an armed forces regulation which once-powerful military leaders have held up in the past as justification for intervening in politics.

    In a vote late Friday, legislators amended the regulation which defined the military’s duty as watching over and protecting the Turkish republic, changing it to “defending the Turkish nation against external threats.”

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Islamic-rooted government has already significantly curtailed the military’s clout through reforms asserting civilian control and the amendment was seen as being largely symbolic......http://www.timesofisrael.com/turkey-redefines-duties-of-armed-forces/
    13/7/13

    ReplyDelete
  2. Turkish Parliament OKs change on coup pretext article ....

    Turkey’s Parliament has moved to amend Article 35 of the army’s Internal Service Code in an effort to eliminate the historical legal justifications for military coups. The former wording was seen as open enough to grant the army opportunities to stage coups in 1960, 1971, 1980 and 1997...

    Parliament has amended an article believed to have provided historical legal justification for military coups d’état in the country, which saw four governments overthrown between 1960 and 1997.

    The current government, too, narrowly escaped from the Turkish Armed Forces’ (TSK) intervention in 2007 when military forces issued a warning against the candidacy of then-Foreign Minister and current President Abdullah Gül, mainly because his spouse wears a headscarf, which is seen as an alarming symbol of fundamentalism by hyper-secularists in society.

    The amendment was adopted by Parliament on July 13, on the last day of the past legislative year.

    Despite having taken important strides in normalizing civilian-military relations particularly through EU-inspired reforms since coming to power in the 2002, the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) had so far shied away from taking any concrete step to amend the articles, number 35 of the Internal Service Code of the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK).

    “The duty of the Armed Forces is to protect and safeguard the Turkish homeland and the Turkish Republic as stipulated by the Constitution,” the former Article 35 stated.

    With the amendment, the phrasing now states that “the duty of the Armed Forces is to protect the Turkish homeland against threats and dangers to come from abroad, to ensure the preservation and strengthening of military power in a manner that will provide deterrence, to fulfill the duties abroad with the decision of the Parliament and help maintain international peace,” thus putting greater emphasis on threats from outside......http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-parliament-oks-change-on-coup-pretext-article.aspx?pageID=238&nID=50706&NewsCatID=338
    14/7/13

    ReplyDelete

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