ANKARA, March 24 (Xinhua) -- Turkish Chief of General Staff Yasar Buyukanit
said Monday that sending Turkish troops to Afghanistan was not the policy of
Turkish Armed Forces, but a state policy, the semi-official Anatolia news agency
reported.
Buyukanit made the remarks at a reception held on the occasion of
Pakistan's National Day in Ankara, capital of Turkey.
Upon a question on the dispatch of Turkish troops to Afghanistan, Buyukanit
was quoted as saying that "this is not the policy of Turkish Armed Forces, this
is a state policy. I will only say that".
Turkish government and military are at odds over sending more combat troops
to Afghanistan, local newspaper Turkish Daily News reported last Thursday.
Meanwhile, Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said the government might
consider sending more combat troops to Afghanistan." Turkey has its own
terrorism problem but on the other hand it has responsibilities of being a NATO
member when fighting against terrorism," Babacan said during a joint press
conference with the visiting Afghan FM Rengin Spanta Wednesday.
"The general tendency is to support Afghanistan in all ways, including
military ones," he added.
Spanta, for his part, told reporters that he had asked for Turkey's support
in fighting against Afghanistan's terrorism problem. "Their response was
positive."
However, Buyukanit had said earlier that the military would not dispatch
even a single troop to the southern region of Afghanistan to fight against the
Taliban.
"Our troops in Kabul are under the ISAF (International Security Assistance
Force), which has no mission to fight against terrorism. Our troops are not
there for this purpose," said Buyukanit.
NATO and the United States are pressuring allies to do more for the
42,000-strong mission in Afghanistan. NATO will discuss the Afghanistan mission
in the upcoming NATO summit that will take place in April in Bucharest,
Romania.