Turkey remembers its fallen soldiers in Korean War

Turkey remembers its fallen soldiers in Korean War

ANKARA - Anadolu Agency

Turkey’s dispatch of soldiers to the Korean War in 1950 has brought the countries closer together, developing both diplomatic and economic ties.

Sixty-eight years after the end of the war and with 61 years of formal relations, the people of the two countries continue to refer to each other as “blood siblings.”

Turkey was the first country after the U.S. to answer the United Nations’ call for military aid to South Korea after the North attacked in 1950.

The first Turkish brigade left Mersin Port in southern Turkey under the command of Brigadier General Tahsin Yazıcı on Sept. 17, arriving 26 days later at Busan, Korea.

Turkey was the country sending the fourth most troops to Korea, with four brigades of a total 21,212 soldiers.

Turkey was third among the 16 participating countries in terms of casualties with over 900 total dead, veterans and missing in action. The U.N. Memorial Cemetery in Busan bears 462 Turkish soldiers.

Ankara and Seoul have enjoyed amicable relations since the 1950s, with each country’s leaders maintaining bilateral ties as well as dialogue within international organizations such as the U.N., G20 and MIKTA (Mexico, Indonesia, South Korea, Turkey, Australia).

On the 60th anniversary of relations in 2017, 120,622 Korean tourists visited Turkey, while 27,272 Turkish tourists visited South Korea.

Turkish soldiers are the only armed forces to have built a school for the orphaned children of the war.

Turkey’s participation in the war also improved its geopolitical position in the context of the Cold War.

According to Merthan Dündar, chair of the Asia-Pacific Studies Research and Application Center at Ankara University, Turkish-Korean relations must be understood within the “circumstances of the time.”

“The government of the Turkish Republic sent soldiers to Korea in order to ensure that Turkey was able to join NATO against the Russian communist threat,” Dündar told state-run Anadolu Agency in an exclusive interview.

Dündar also said the increased U.S. economic aid to Turkey following the Korean War was another “benefit.”