About us | Advertising | Contact | Get Home Delivery | Archive
Feb 10, 2010 Homepage
News
National
Business
Interviews
Columnists
Op-Ed
Arts & Culture
Expat Zone
Features
Travel
Leisure
Life
Cartoons
Women
Health Briefs
Weird But True
Sports
Turkish Press Review
Today's think tanks

Turkey in Foreign Press

istanbul hotels


News National

Military establishes 24 radio stations for psychological warfare

A CD recently sent by an anonymous military officer to prosecutors conducting a probe into a criminal organization has revealed that the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) was responsible for establishing and operating 24 radio stations in various Turkish provinces and abroad to support its psychological warfare against civilian groups it deemed “dangerous.”

Related News
Newspapers fabricated reports in line with military plot
General Staff uses ultranationalist TV stations, newspapers to shape nation
Military plans against nation draw rebuke from various circles
Military establishes 24 radio stations for psychological warfare
Some papers turn blind eye to shady TSK plans outlined in third letter
Letter reveals imaginary reactionary scenarios
TSK planned nationalist strategy games for kids
Today's interactive toolbox
Bookmark and Share
Video Photo Audio
Send to print Send to my friend
Post your comments
Read comments

The CD contained a document titled “Psychological Warfare Institutions” which read that the radio stations should establish a “warm dialogue” with the public and grow popular in a short time through their broadcasts. “The broadcasts should feature interviews, chat shows, scientific debates, entertainment shows and music broadcasts,” read the document. The stations were to become popular, similar to the Security General Directorate’s radio stations, and convey “necessary” messages to the public.

Among these radio stations are TSK Disaster Briefing FM (Ankara); Güven FM (Şırnak, Siirt, Mardin, northern Iraq); Diyar FM (Diyarbakır); Sümbül FM (Hakkari); Dost FM (Tunceli); Türkiyem FM (Bingöl); Sancak FM (Bingöl); Lale FM (Muş); Göl FM (Bitlis); Süphan FM (Van); Ağrı Dağı FM (Ağrı-Iğdır); Kardelen FM (Van-Çaldıran); Nevruz FM (Van-Erciş); Fıstık FM (Siirt); Poyraz FM (Kocaeli); Leventler FM (İzmir Foça); Aksaz FM (Muğla); Yöre FM (Tokat, Amasya, Sivas, Ordu); Tunç FM (Tunceli); Sınır FM (Hakkari Yüksekova); Coast Guard FM (İzmir, Aydın, Manisa); Radyo Türkiyem (Afghanistan); and Mehmetçik FM (Kosovo).

 Twelve of the radio stations are part of the Land Forces Command, while five belong to the General Staff, three to the Naval Forces Command, three to the Gendarmerie General Command and one belongs to the Coast Guard Command.

18 November 2009, Wednesday

TODAY’S ZAMAN  İSTANBUL

   

The most read articles of this category

Turkey missed opportunity for new constitution, says Gül
Hrant Dink’s ‘deep family’ attends case hearing
NGOs call for calm amid prospect of violence in Southeast
Council of State once again stands by coefficient injustice
India-Turkey: Time to translate commonalities into closer bilateral ties
Police capture BDP attackers in Balıkesir
Ankara defies US pressure on normalization process with Armenia
Parliament post-brawl peace efforts face obstacles
Gül says MGSB not superior to Constitution, asks for revision
Report: Israel restricts tourism advertisements involving Turkish Cyprus


The most read articles

Turkey missed opportunity for new constitution, says Gül
Hrant Dink’s ‘deep family’ attends case hearing
NGOs call for calm amid prospect of violence in Southeast
Council of State once again stands by coefficient injustice
India-Turkey: Time to translate commonalities into closer bilateral ties
Police capture BDP attackers in Balıkesir
Ankara defies US pressure on normalization process with Armenia
Parliament post-brawl peace efforts face obstacles
Gül says MGSB not superior to Constitution, asks for revision
Report: Israel restricts tourism advertisements involving Turkish Cyprus

Death wells: Ergenekon's Aceldama