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Turkey

Last Updated: 21 August 2012

Cluster Munition Ban Policy

The Republic of Turkey has not acceded to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

Turkey did not make any statements on the Convention on Cluster Munitions in 2011 or first half of 2012. In 2010, government officials informed the Monitor that Turkey’s position on joining the ban convention had not changed from the position previously articulated in 2009.[1] In March 2009, Turkey said it shared the “humanitarian concerns behind the efforts limiting the indiscriminate use of cluster munitions” but “for the time being, [it was] not considering to sign the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions” as its primary aim was to fulfill its obligations under the Mine Ban Treaty.[2] Turkey is a State Party to the Mine Ban Treaty. On 21 June 2011, Turkey completed the destruction of its remaining stockpile of antipersonnel landmines, after missing the initial deadline in 2008.

Turkey attended several of the diplomatic conferences of the Oslo Process that produced the Convention on Cluster Munitions, but participated as an observer only in both the formal negotiations in Dublin in May 2008 and in Oslo Signing Conference in December 2008 and did not sign the convention.[3]

Turkey has continued to show interest in the Convention on Cluster Munitions since 2008. It attended an international conference on the convention in Santiago, Chile, in June 2010. Turkey attended the convention’s First Meeting of States Parties in Vientiane, Lao PDR in November 2010 as an observer. A representative from Turkey’s embassy in Lebanon participated in the Second Meeting of States Parties in Beirut in September 2011, but did not make any statements. Turkey did not attend intersessional meetings of the convention in June 2011 or April 2012.

The Initiative for a Mine-Free Turkey, a CMC member, has continued its work to garner domestic support for the Convention on Cluster Munitions.[4]

Convention on Conventional Weapons

Turkey is party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), where it supported the conclusion of a CCW protocol on cluster munitions on the basis that it would include the major users and producers of the weapon.

At the outset of the CCW’s Fourth Review Conference in November 2011, Turkey expressed its support for the draft CCW protocol on cluster munitions being negotiated, stating that it “will further strengthen the overall UN disarmament machinery” and “would significantly contribute to reducing humanitarian concerns arising from cluster munitions” by having a “tangible positive impact on the ground.”[5]

The Review Conference ended without reaching agreement on the draft protocol, thus concluding the CCW’s work on cluster munitions.

Use, production, transfer, and stockpiling

In June 2010, a government official informed the Monitor that “Turkey does not use, transfer, produce or import cluster munitions.”[6] In August 2011, a different official told the Monitor, “Turkey no longer produces, transfers, exports or imports cluster munitions; has not produced cluster munitions since 2005; and has never used cluster munitions in the past.”[7]

A US Department of State cable from February 2008 made public by Wikileaks in May 2011 states that “there exists a de facto moratorium on the use of cluster munitions by the Turkish armed forces [but] Turkey’s military doctrine continues to call for the use of cluster munitions in the event of an ‘all out war.’”[8]

In March 2009, Turkey stated that it “is not making use of cluster munitions.”[9] It is not known if Turkey used cluster munitions in the past.[10]

In the past, Turkey has produced, exported, and imported cluster munitions; and it currently has a stockpile.

According to its website, the Turkish company Makina ve Kimya Endustrisi Kurumu (MKEK) produces an extended range M396 155mm artillery projectile which contains self-destructing M85 dual purpose improved conventional munition (DPICM) submunitions.[11] MKEK has also produced, under license from the US, M483A1 155mm artillery projectiles with DPICM submunitions.[12] It is unclear if this latter projectile is still in production.

The firm Roketsan has produced the TRK-122 122mm rocket, which contains 56 M85 DPICM submunitions.[13] Turkey sold 3,020 of the TRK-122 122mm rockets to the United Arab Emirates in 2006–2007.[14]

The US supplied Turkey with 3,304 Rockeye cluster bombs, each with 247 submunitions, at some point between 1970 and 1995.[15] In 1995, the US announced that it would provide Turkey with 120 ATACMS missiles with submunitions for its Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS) launchers.[16] Turkey also possesses US-supplied M26 rockets, each with 644 submunitions, for its MLRS. In October 2004, the US announced its intent to transfer to Turkey two CBU-103 Combined Effects Munitions cluster bombs, each with 202 submunitions, and two AGM-154 Joint Stand-Off Weapons, each with 145 submunitions.[17] In September 2005, it announced the proposed sale of another 50 CBU-103 and 50 JSOW.[18]

Slovakia reported the export of 380 AGAT 122mm rockets, each containing 56 submunitions, to Turkey in 2007.[19]

In 2012, Chile’s Ministry of Defense provided the Monitor with a document detailing the export of four CB-250 cluster bombs to Turkey in 1996.[20]

 



[1] Email from İsmail Çobanoğlu, Counsellor, Permanent Mission of Turkey to the UN in New York, 24 June 2010; and interview with Serhan Yiğit, Head, Disarmament Unit, and Ramazan Ercan, Consultant, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ankara, 25 March 2010.

[2] Letter to Human Rights Watch from Amb. Tomur Bayer, Director-General, International Security Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 2 March 2009.

[3] For details on Turkey’s cluster munition policy and practice through early 2009, see Human Rights Watch and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), pp. 246–249.

[4] For example, it held a race with the “ban cluster bombs” logo on all the runners’ shirts, and engaged a disabled sportsman to advocate on the issue. CMC 1 August 2011 website – Turkey, http://bit.ly/MnLP0R.

[5] Statement by Turkey, CCW Fourth Review Conference, Geneva, 14 November 2011, http://bit.ly/Ntoehi.

[6] Email from Çobanoğlu, Permanent Mission of Turkey to the UN in New York, 24 June 2010.

[7] Email from Ercan, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 8 August 2011.

[8] “Turkey Shares USG Concerns About Oslo Process,” US Department of State cable dated 12 February 2008, released by Wikileaks on 20 May 2011, www.cablegatesearch.net

[9] Letter from Amb. Bayer, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 2 March 2009.

[10] In January 1994, the Turkish air force carried out an attack on the Zaleh camp of the Kurdistan Worker’s Party (Partiya Karkerên Kurdistan, PKK) in northern Iraq near the Iranian border. The PKK is listed as a terrorist organization by the European Union, NATO, Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom (UK), and the United States (US). Turkish television reported that US-supplied cluster bombs were used. See, Human Rights Watch (HRW), “U.S. Cluster Bombs for Turkey?” Vol. 6, No. 19, December 1994, www.hrw.org, citing Foreign Broadcast Information Network, Western Europe, FBIS-WEU-94-0919, 28 January 1994, p. 26, from Ankara TRT Television Network in Turkish, 11:00 GMT, 18 January 1994.

[11] MKEK, “155 mm M396 ERDP Ammunition,” undated, www.mkek.gov.tr.

[12] Leland S. Ness and Anthony G. Williams, eds., Jane’s Ammunition Handbook 2007–2008 (Surrey, UK: Jane’s Information Group Limited, 2007), pp. 635636.

[13] Ibid., p. 702; and Roketsan, “122 mm Artillery Weapons Systems, Extended Range Rockets and 122 mm MBRL System,” undated, www.roketsan.com.tr.

[14] Submission of the Republic of Turkey, UN Register of Conventional Arms, Report for Calendar Year 2006, 22 March 2007, and Report for Calendar Year 2007, 7 July 2008.

[15] US Defense Security Cooperation Agency, “Cluster Bomb Exports under FMS, FY1970–FY1995,” obtained by HRW in a Freedom of Information Act request, 28 November 1995.

[16] Congressional Record, “Proposed Sale of Army Tactical Missile System to Turkey,” 11 December 1995, p. E2333, www.fas.org. Each ATACMS missile contains 300 or 950 submunitions.

[17] US Defense Security Cooperation Agency, “Notifications to Congress of Pending US Arms Transfers,” No. 05-12, 7 October 2004.

[18] US Defense Security Cooperation Agency, “Turkey—Munitions and Aircraft Components for F-16 Aircraft,” Press release, Transmittal No. 05-29, 8 September 2005, www.dsca.mil; and US Defense Security Cooperation Agency, “Turkey—AGM-154A/C Joint Standoff Weapons,” Press release, Transmittal No. 05-33, 6 September 2005, www.dsca.mil.

[19] Submission of the Slovak Republic, UN Register of Conventional Arms, Report for Calendar Year 2007, 12 June 2008.

[20] “Exports of Cluster Bombs Authorized in the Years 1991-2001,” official document by General Directorate of National Mobilization (Dirección General de Movilización Nacional), Chilean Ministry of Defense document provided together with Letter from the Brigadier General Roberto Ziegele Kerber, Director-General of National Mobilizaton, Chilean Ministry of Defense, 18 May 2012.