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Police can't combat PKK in the mountains, former military chief says
İlker Başbuğ, former chief of General Staff, retired last year.
The former head of the Turkish military has said only military troops can successfully combat terrorism in rural regions of southeastern Anatolia, casting doubt on the police's ability to operate against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in difficult terrain.
İlker Başbuğ, who retired as the chief of the General Staff last year, said the PKK was organized and trained primarily to operate in mountainous terrains. No one can conduct an anti-terrorism fight in rural and mountainous regions except military troops. This [thinking otherwise] would be ridiculous, Başbuğ said in an interview in Milliyet on Sunday, noting that the military is better placed to fight terrorism in rural areas because of its training, organizational structure and ability to maintain the chain of command and communication even when units are scattered in a vast region during an anti-terrorist operation.
The former military chief's comments came in response to the government's statements that it plans to extend the duties and authority of the police in the anti-PKK fight. Police special operations teams are reportedly to be given responsibility for seeking out PKK terrorists in rural parts of the southeastern Anatolia, the hub of PKK activities, when the planned changes in the anti-terrorism strategy go into effect.
Başbuğ opposed a police role in anti-PKK operations in rural areas, saying that replacing the troops with police teams in such territory was not a realistic approach.
We have prioritized area control as a matter of strategy since 1993. There are military posts and units deployed over vast areas to limit the movements of terrorist groups. If those areas are left unattended, this would give the terrorists a wide range in which to maneuver, Başbuğ said. And area control can only be done by the military.
The government's plans to expand the role of the police in the fight against the PKK come amid increasing criticism of the military's handling of the struggle. Last month, 13 soldiers were killed in a PKK attack in a rural area in the Silvan district of the southeastern province of Diyarbakır. Media reports claimed the commanders of the unit that was attacked in Silvan were responsible for security breaches, prompting the government and the military to launch separate investigations into the attack. The military admitted after its investigation that there were suspicious matters around the incident that need to be investigated by the judiciary. The government said its findings were almost identical to those of the military's investigation.
No such thing as a Kurdish issue'
Başbuğ, who recently published a book titled Terör Örgütlerinin Sonu (the End of Terror Organizations), also said there was no such thing as a Kurdish issue in Turkey, because Turkey's citizens of Kurdish origin face no restriction in any walk of life, ranging from education to business and job opportunities.
The prime minister [Recep Tayyip Erdoğan] also said prior to the [June 12] elections that there is no Kurdish issue in Turkey. We agree on this, he told Milliyet.
According to Başbuğ, the PKK is comprised of four wings: the armed wing, the Europe-based political wing, the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) and some like-minded civil society groups in Turkey and finally the PKK's jailed chief Abdullah Öcalan. He said success in the fight against the PKK will depend on Turkey's ability to deal with the PKK's armed wing based in the Kandil Mountains in northern Iraq.
"It is impossible for the PKK to lay down arms without approval from the armed wing. The armed wing may not even heed Öcalan's calls on this. Therefore, we need to threaten the group's presence in northern Iraq in order to force the terrorist organization to lay down arms," he said.
Police can't combat PKK in the mountains, former military chief says

İlker Başbuğ, former chief of General Staff, retired last year.
The former head of the Turkish military has said only military troops can successfully combat terrorism in rural regions of southeastern Anatolia, casting doubt on the police's ability to operate against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in difficult terrain.
İlker Başbuğ, who retired as the chief of the General Staff last year, said the PKK was organized and trained primarily to operate in mountainous terrains. No one can conduct an anti-terrorism fight in rural and mountainous regions except military troops. This [thinking otherwise] would be ridiculous, Başbuğ said in an interview in Milliyet on Sunday, noting that the military is better placed to fight terrorism in rural areas because of its training, organizational structure and ability to maintain the chain of command and communication even when units are scattered in a vast region during an anti-terrorist operation.
The former military chief's comments came in response to the government's statements that it plans to extend the duties and authority of the police in the anti-PKK fight. Police special operations teams are reportedly to be given responsibility for seeking out PKK terrorists in rural parts of the southeastern Anatolia, the hub of PKK activities, when the planned changes in the anti-terrorism strategy go into effect.
Başbuğ opposed a police role in anti-PKK operations in rural areas, saying that replacing the troops with police teams in such territory was not a realistic approach.
We have prioritized area control as a matter of strategy since 1993. There are military posts and units deployed over vast areas to limit the movements of terrorist groups. If those areas are left unattended, this would give the terrorists a wide range in which to maneuver, Başbuğ said. And area control can only be done by the military.
The government's plans to expand the role of the police in the fight against the PKK come amid increasing criticism of the military's handling of the struggle. Last month, 13 soldiers were killed in a PKK attack in a rural area in the Silvan district of the southeastern province of Diyarbakır. Media reports claimed the commanders of the unit that was attacked in Silvan were responsible for security breaches, prompting the government and the military to launch separate investigations into the attack. The military admitted after its investigation that there were suspicious matters around the incident that need to be investigated by the judiciary. The government said its findings were almost identical to those of the military's investigation.
No such thing as a Kurdish issue'
Başbuğ, who recently published a book titled Terör Örgütlerinin Sonu (the End of Terror Organizations), also said there was no such thing as a Kurdish issue in Turkey, because Turkey's citizens of Kurdish origin face no restriction in any walk of life, ranging from education to business and job opportunities.
The prime minister [Recep Tayyip Erdoğan] also said prior to the [June 12] elections that there is no Kurdish issue in Turkey. We agree on this, he told Milliyet.
According to Başbuğ, the PKK is comprised of four wings: the armed wing, the Europe-based political wing, the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) and some like-minded civil society groups in Turkey and finally the PKK's jailed chief Abdullah Öcalan. He said success in the fight against the PKK will depend on Turkey's ability to deal with the PKK's armed wing based in the Kandil Mountains in northern Iraq.
"It is impossible for the PKK to lay down arms without approval from the armed wing. The armed wing may not even heed Öcalan's calls on this. Therefore, we need to threaten the group's presence in northern Iraq in order to force the terrorist organization to lay down arms," he said.
Police can't combat PKK in the mountains, former military chief says