Try Turkish Army Veterans for Human Rights Violations
Only When the Stigma of Killing Kurds or Occupying Cyprus Becomes Too Great to Bear Will Ankara Change Its Polemics
19.11.2025
By Michael Rubin*
Source:https://www.meforum.org/mef-
A decade ago, the Turkish army imposed a curfew on Cizre, Mardin, and other Kurdish
towns and cities. It cut water and electricity in an illegal act of collective punishment.
Diabetics died for lack of insulin, and when indiscriminate Turkish shelling wounded
civilians, because Turkish forces would not allow them to take them to the hospital.
Satellite images show wanton destruction. Reports suggest Turkish soldiers killed
several suspected Kurdish activists execution-
The annual State Department human rights report on Turkey is blistering, citing Turkey
for “arbitrary or unlawful killings; torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment
or punishment; arbitrary arrest or detention; transnational repression against individuals
in another country; witting cooperation with other countries to facilitate acts of
transnational repression; unlawful recruitment or use of children in armed conflict
by government-
The Turkish Army has occupied northern Cyprus for more than a half century. They are complicit in ethnic cleansing and theft of resources.
Turkish Air Force bombings of predominantly Kurdish and Yezidi villages continue. What Turkish reports cite as Kurdish terrorists are often farmers and schoolchildren, many of whom do not own a gun. Even United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees personnel must avoid driving after dusk or taking roads close to the Turkish border in Iraq, lest Turkish troops fire upon them. Nor are the Kurds the only people whom the Turkish Air Force harasses. Turkish jets regularly overfly Greek islands. The Turkish Navy, meanwhile, alternately harasses and cynically facilitates illegal refugee flotillas to weaponize migration.
Turkey has launched court proceedings against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and senior Israel Defense Forces commanders for alleged war crimes in Gaza. In practice, the Turkish complaint is meaningless. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s motivation is distraction, not justice. If he can inflame Turks toward Israelis and Jews, they might not ask about inflation and the Turkish lira’s collapse against pretty much every currency except the Congolese Franc, Nigerian Naira, and Venezuelan Bolivar. Few take Turkey seriously. It hosts Hamas, and Turkey’s intelligence service often fabricates evidence. Accusations generated by dictatorships hold little credibility on the world stage. Turkey can deny transit rights to Israeli aircraft, but its case has little other impact.
The idea of holding militaries to account for violating the rule of law and human
rights, however, is not new. Following World War II, the International Military Tribunal
for the Far East tried eighteen Japanese flag officers; seven received the death
penalty. Individual countries tried another 5,700 lower-
If Western and moderate Arab countries Turkey harasses or occupies militarily are
serious, they should investigate and, if merited, charge Turkish soldiers with war
crimes and human rights violations. No Turkish soldier who served in southeastern
Turkey during the massacres in Cizre, Mardin, and Diyarbakir should be able to travel
in the European Union, fly on a European carrier, or even traverse European airspace
without first submitting to an interrogation about their record. The European Union
and United States should ban any Turkish soldier who has served as part of the occupation
force in Cyprus; Iraq might treat Turkish soldiers who served in Bashiqa the same
way. The West should also ban all Turkish F-
Erdoğan talks about trying Netanyahu, whom he labels a new Hitler, to bolster his popularity among rejectionist and Islamist states. Western countries and moderate Arab states could try Turkish officers and soldiers to bring peace. Only when the stigma of killing Kurds or occupying Cyprus becomes too great to bear will Ankara change its polemics. If it takes a few Turks in European, Arab, Israeli, or American prisons after flying outside of Turkish jurisdictions, so be it.
*Michael Rubin is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where he specializes in Middle Eastern countries, particularly Iran and Turkey. His career includes time as a Pentagon official, with field experiences in Iran, Yemen, and Iraq, as well as engagements with the Taliban prior to 9/11. Mr. Rubin has also contributed to military education, teaching U.S. Navy and Marine units about regional conflicts and terrorism. His scholarly work includes several key publications, such as “Dancing with the Devil” and “Eternal Iran.” Rubin earned his Ph.D. and M.A. in history and a B.S. in biology from Yale University.