Turkish PM dismisses Syria arms video as election ploy
KAYSERİ - Agence France-Presse
Turkish Prime Minister and leader of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) Ahmet Davutoğlu addresses supporters on May 29, 2015 during an election rally in Kayseri, central Turkey, ahead of June 7 legislative elections. AFP PHOTO / BULENT KILIC
Turkey has said the release of images allegedly showing Turkish spy agency trucks carrying weapons into Syria early last year was an election ploy, with the prime minister denouncing what he called an "illegal action" against Turkey’s interests.An opposition Turkish daily on May 29 published video footage of mortar shells, grenade launchers and tens of thousands of rounds of ammunition stashed under boxes containing antibiotics and marked "fragile".
Local security forces in January 2014 searched trucks in southern Turkey near the Syrian border on suspicion that they were smuggling arms into Syria and found personnel of the Turkish National Intelligence Organisation (MİT) on board.
Turkey said at the time that the vehicles were on a humanitarian mission to the Turkmen community in Syria.
The new images prompted the opposition to question whether Ankara had provided military support to jihadists of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group fighting in Syria.
In an interview with Agence France-Presse, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu said he could not comment fully because of "state secrecy", but said Turkey provided the Syrian people and the Free Syrian Army with assistance, without specifying whether the aid was of a military nature.
"I said at the time it was made up of logistical aid directed for the Turkmen community in desperate need of help ... The aid was for the Free Syrian Army and the Syrian people," he said during a visit to the central Anatolian city of Kayseri.
"The raid on MİT trucks was an illegal action against Turkey’s interests and national security.... And the release of (the video footage) right now is an effort aimed at affecting the elections," he added.
"But Turkey always does and will continue to do whatever its national security requires, and whatever responsibility it needs to shoulder for humanitarian purposes in the international arena. This is our right. We will not let it be a subject of discussion."
Turkey ‘did not send aid unilaterally to Syria’
Tensions are mounting in Turkey ahead of the critical June 7 legislative elections as the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) is seeking to maintain the dominance it has enjoyed since coming to power in 2002.
Turkey has emerged as a key opponent of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a onetime ally, calling for his removal from power.
Ankara has vehemently denied arming and supporting the Islamists who are fighting the regime in Damascus as well as a myriad rebel groups.
It allowed Iraqi peshmerga forces to cross the Turkish border to help defend the Syrian town of Kobane against ISIL insurgents in October.
Davutoğlu told AFP that Turkey did not send aid unilaterally to Syria.
"All the assistance is activities carried out together with the international community in the Friends of Syria group... and not Turkey’s unilateral aid," he said.
Anti-terror, espionage probe launched
Shortly after the Cumhuriyet’s report, a Turkish prosecutor launched a criminal investigation into whether the daily breached terrorism laws by publishing the footage.
Charges include "obtaining information on state security," "political and military espionage" and "propaganda for a terrorist organisation".
The main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) said the images were "very disturbing for Turkey’s prestige."
"Those who illegally sent arms to (Syria) have blood on their hands," CHP leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu told AFP on May 28. "Who were those weapons bound for? Were they sent to ISIL?" he asked.
The arrests of dozens of soldiers, police and prosecutors over the inspections of the MİT vehicles has sparked widespread controversy, notably after leaked documents circulated on the Internet claimed that the seized trucks were delivering weapons to Syrian rebels.
The government has imposed a full-blown media blackout, including on social networks.
Ankara has claimed that the search of the MIT trucks was carried out on the orders of US-based preacher Fethullah Gülen, whom President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan accuses of running a parallel state through supporters in the judiciary and police with the aim of usurping his power.