As Turkey expands its geopolitical and economic presence in the Middle East and East Africa, Turkish parliament has approved deployment of its forces in the Gulf of Aden, Somalia, and the Arabian Sea.
Parliament on Wednesday (Feb 7) ratified a motion extending authorization of the deployment through Feb. 10, 2019, the Turkish Anadolu News Agency reported.
Since it was first approved by parliament in 2008, the government motion for the deployment has been extended 10 times.
The renewal comes off the back of last month’s Turkish defense plan to deploy 60,000 troops in bases abroad, as a projection of Turkish military power.
The Turkish Armed Forces collectively rank as the second largest standing military force in Nato, after the US Armed Forces, with an estimated strength of 639,551 military, civilian and paramilitary personnel
The Gulf of Aden — near Yemen and close to the world’s fourth-biggest chokepoint for oil transit, the Bab el-Mandab strait — is a strategic energy route for Middle Eastern crude oil.
Yemen is currently enduring a civil war which erupted in September 2014, when the Houthi militia overran much of the country, including capital Sanaa.
In March 2015, launched military operation to dislodge Houthi and other rebel forces and restore President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi’s government.
Turkey already has 3,000 troops deployed near the Red Sea, in Somalia and a military base in Sudan’s Suakin Island, which is capable of holding some 20,000 military personnel for five years. 200 Turkish soldiers have been deployed in Somalia since October last year, training Somalia’s military.
In addition to some hundred soldiers currently based in Qatar’s Al-Udeid military base since shortly after the blockade on Qatar, Turkey plans to deploy more to fulfill its 2022 plan. The number has not publically been disclosed.