Aegean Army
The Aegean Army or Fourth Army is one of the four main formations of the Turkish Army. It covers the entire west coast of the Anatolia peninsula and has its headquarters in İzmir. It was organised in the 1970s in response to political tensions with Greece - the ongoing Aegean dispute.
Aegean Army | |
---|---|
Active | July 1975[1]–present |
Country | Turkey |
Size | Field Army |
Part of | Turkish Army |
Garrison/HQ | İzmir |
Commanders | |
Current commander | General Abdullah Recep |
Its stated mission is to protect Turkey's territory on its western coast. This is directed against the perceived threat posed by Greece's armament of the Aegean Sea islands. Greece, on the other hand, perceives the presence of the Aegean Army as a threat to its islands, citing strong offensive capabilities ascribed to the Aegean Army as well as the exposed and isolated geographical position of the islands, the 5 most populous of which are several hundred kilometres distant from the Greek mainland, yet sit only 2-3km from Turkey's, as reasons of concern. Greek sources particularly point to the strong amphibian forces maintained by the Aegean Army as an indicator of its offensive nature.[2] Turkey has countered such concerns by stating that besides being of a fundamentally defensive nature it is "basically a training army".[3]
The Army has been reported to consist of the following units and organizations:
- Cyprus Turkish Peace Force
- Headquarters
- 28th Mechanized Infantry Division (Paşaköy Kyrenia)
- 39th Mechanized Infantry Division (Çamlıbel, Morphou)
- 14th Armoured Brigade (Degirmenlik, Nicosia)
- 49th Special Force Regiment
- 41st Commando Regiment
- 109th Field Artillery Regiment
- 190th Marines Battalion
- Communications Battalion
- Central Command Military Police Battalion
- Logistics Support Group (Kyrenia)
- Headquarters
- 57th Artillery Training Brigade (Izmir)
- 19th Infantry Brigade (Edremit)[4]
- 11th Motorised Infantry Brigade (Denizli)
- 3rd Infantry Training Brigade (Antalya)
- 1st Infantry Training Brigade (Manisa).[5]
References
- Olaylarla Türk Dış Politikası, Ankara Üniversitesi Siyasal Bilgiler Fakültesi, 1987, p. 586.
- Macedonian Press Agency
- Turkish embassy declaration Archived April 15, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- "19. Motorlu Piyade Tugay Komutanı Altun Tuğgeneralliğe Terfi Etti - Haber". 30 June 2020. Archived from the original on 6 July 2020.
- Forum discussion of current structure, drawn from S&H Magazine
External links
- Turkey and Greece: Time to Settle the Aegean Dispute
- https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1975IZMIR00162_b.html - 1975 United States State Department report of creation of army