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Size of the Turkish Armed Forces

Hakan

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Size of the Turkish Armed Forces

Seal_of_the_Turkish_Armed_Forces.png


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dmms.jpg


Total Personnel: 675,961


Genelkurmay Başkanlığı Resmi Kurumsal İnternet Sitesidir - Anasayfa - Turkish
General Staff Official Web Site - Main Page
 
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@Kaan , maybe it would be better to make a screenie of the page you viewed and post it here.
Don't forget the link either.

Edit: awsome mate.
 
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213k proffessionals is good actually.

I suppose this Sözleşmeli issue is largely failed right ?
 
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I heard there wasn't enough applicants and conditions were bad ?
 
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@Informant in short there is 213k professional personel, which includes officers, petty officers, specialist privates/corporals/sergenas and contracted soldiers.

There is 410k reserve officers and constripted soldiers.

Total military personal is 623.351
 
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Yes it includes Jandarma Paramilitaries.

The Jandarma has 189,786 Personnel.

Considering that Turkiye has a system of conscription in place, isn't the overall size of the Turkish Armed Forces a bit lower than expected ? :unsure:
 
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Considering that Turkiye has a system of conscription in place, isn't the overall size of the Turkish Armed Forces a bit lower than expected ? :unsure:
They are switching over to a more professional force.


This article was from 2013 but it has some interesting analysis.


Ankara will impose a measure Jan. 1, 2014, that will reduce the overall size of the Turkish armed forcesby shortening its conscription requirements. At 750,000 troops, Turkey has the second-largest military of any NATO member, but the conscription reform will lower the number by roughly 70,000. Political and economic considerations may have informed Ankara's decision, but ultimately the move was made to reflect the changing geopolitical conditions under which Turkey now finds itself. Historically, Turkey's location and geography has necessitated a robust military. Located at the crossroads between Asia and Europe, the country was critical terrain during the Cold War. In 1952, Turkey became a member of NATO, serving as the southwestern bulwark against the Warsaw Pact. It mustered a large standing military by establishing compulsory service for all Turkish men. Currently, a healthy Turkish man with no college education serves for 15 months. Prior to 2003, the minimum requirement was 18 months. The upcoming change will reduce this term to 12 months.

With such a short service time, many conscripts fail to gain experience after their basic training. As a result, the Turkish military has a small professional core that is augmented by lightly trained forces. This model made sense during the Cold War, when Turkey was facing similarly structured Soviet and Soviet-backed militaries. But it now must contend with domestic terrorism, Kurdish insurgents and, more recently, border issues with neighboring Syria, still in the throes of civil war.Smaller, more agile professional forces, along with Turkey's paramilitary forces, are better suited to address these security concerns. There are also political elements to the force reduction. For the past decade, the ruling Justice and Development Party has gradually undermined the political influence of the Turkish military, and the conscription reform can be seen as an extension of that trend. Moreover, the reform may earn the ruling party a lot of political capital with voters ahead of the 2014 presidential election and the 2015 president elections.


Source: Stratfor | Geopolitical intelligence, economic, political, and military strategic forecasting (You have to have a subscription to read the article but I got this one free.)
 
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