Praetorian army in action: a critical assessment of civil–military relations in Turkey

Date
2021-01
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Source Title
Armed Forces and Society
Print ISSN
0095-327X
Electronic ISSN
1556-0848
Publisher
Sage Publications
Volume
47
Issue
1
Pages
201 - 222
Language
English
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Abstract

With four successful and three failed coups in less than 60 years, the Turkish military is one of the most interventionist armed forces in the global south. Despite this record, few scholars have analyzed systematically how the military’s political role changed over time. To address this gap, this article examines the evolution of civil– military relations (CMR) in Turkey throughout the 1960s and 1970s. Based on a historical analysis, this article offers a revisionist account for the extant Turkish scholarship and also contributes to the broader literature on CMR. It argues that the military’s guardian status was not clearly defined and that the officer corps differed strongly on major political issues throughout the Cold War. This article also demonstrates that the officer corps was divided into opposite ideological factions and political agendas and enjoyed varying levels of political influence due to frequent purges and conjectural changes.

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