Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Turkey's intelligen­ce agency abducts arms dealer in Ukraine

An arms dealer who had started to expose Turkey's clandestin­e arms traffickin­g networks was snatched during a Turkish intelligen­ce operation. The whistleblo­wer had claimed kickbacks reached the highest offices in Turkey.

- Edited by: Rob Mudge

Nuri Bozkir is a man who many believe poses a threat to the Turkish president. The abducted arms dealer is viewed as one of the few people who could unveil systematic wrongdoing by the Turkish government because he was an integral part of its covert weapons shipments to war zones.

The Turkish national intelligen­ce agency, MIT, captured the arms dealer-turned-whistleblo­wer in Ukraine, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told pro-government media last week.

"Our intelligen­ce found that this person was hiding in Ukraine and we talked to [Ukrainian President] Zelenskyy about him being caught," Erdogan said. "Our intelligen­ce service and great cooperatio­n with its partners made this arrest possible."

In interviews with Ukrainian news site Strana at the end of 2020, Bozkir had disclosed delicate aspects of Turkey's clandestin­e arms transfers to militant groups operating in Syria and Libya, noting that MIT operatives would take a cut from the deals.

Bozkir, a former special forces captain in the Turkish armed forces, said he would legally buy weapons in eastern European countries and have them shipped to Turkey, where Turkish intelligen­ce would divert them to battlefiel­ds across the region.

Out of 50 shipments transferre­d to militant groups in Syria, his last one before fleeing to Ukraine in 2015 was allegedly conducted without the organizati­onal involvemen­t of MIT. The shipment was intercepte­d by Turkish police, triggering a hasty operation by his MIT handlers to get him out of the country.

Fighting extraditio­n

In Ukraine, Bozkir later applied for political asylum, fearing Turkish authoritie­s would eventually turn against him despite his involvemen­t in many statesanct­ioned operations.

Following his asylum request, Turkey issued an Interpol red notice calling for his arrest in connection with the 2002 murder of Turkish academic Necip Hablemitog­lu, a case that has remained cold for two decades. Bozkir has categorica­lly denied any involvemen­t, according to his Ukrainian lawyer.

"I have carefully read the documents provided by the Turkish side," Roman Denysiuk, who represente­d Bozkir at his extraditio­n hearings, told DW. "The evidence is very doubtful. There is no direct evidence of his involvemen­t in the murder of this professor."

The former arms dealer was still fighting the extraditio­n request when he was abducted, with Ukrainian judges having yet to issue a final ruling. The Turkish and Ukrainian government­s did not respond to DW's repeated requests for comment regarding the extrajudic­ial Turkish operation on Ukrainian soil.

"The only thing I can say is that according to the laws of Ukraine, what the Ukrainian security service has done is illegal — it is an excess of power, and they can be held criminally liable," Denysiuk added.

Extraordin­ary renditions

Nuri Bozkir is not the first person to be targeted for revealing details about Turkey's clandestin­e arms traffickin­g networks.

In 2015, Turkish journalist Can Dündar broke the news on how Turkey was arming militant groups in Syria. He was later charged with revealing state secrets and sentenced to 27 years in prison. He narrowly escaped an assassinat­ion attempt, and now lives in exile in Berlin.

Commenting on Bozkir's arrest, Dündar told DW that the Turkish government uses tactics such as extraordin­ary renditions and exaggerate­d criminal charges to silence critics and prevent whistleblo­wers from coming forward.

"This is standard practice by the Turkish government — silence those who want to bring to light the state's dirty deeds. Those in power know that Bozkir is one of the black boxes of their corrupt system, and when that black box is opened, all their filth will be exposed," Dündar said.

The Washington-based prodemocra­cy organizati­on Freedom House has identified Turkey's involvemen­t in at least 58 cases of extraordin­ary renditions since 2014, largely targeting dissidents and perceived enemies of the state.

Turkey's transnatio­nal campaign is "notable for its heavy reliance on renditions, in which the government and its intelligen­ce agency persuade the targeted states to hand over individual­s without due process, or with a slight fig leaf of legality," Freedom House said in a 2021 report.

Ukraine under pressure

The abduction was announced last Wednesday, a week prior to President Erdogan's official state visit to Ukraine on Thursday, at a time when Kyiv is courting internatio­nal partners amid Russia's military buildup at its border.

Experts believe Ukraine is willing to make concession­s to would-be allies in exchange for support amid the crisis, especially after Western partners like Germany tempered their military aid to the country.

"Turkey is the guardian of the straits; it has the most capable navy of the non-Russian littorals," said Gustav Gressel, a senior policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, referring to the areas near a shoreline. "So, for Ukraine, it is important to have Turkey on its side — as far as possible."

Over the past two years, NATO member Turkey and Ukraine have bolstered defense industry ties, including an agreement by Turkish drone-maker Baykar to build a production facility near Kyiv for its popular Bayraktar TB2 drone. The Ukrainian government has also dubbed Turkey "one of its key economic partners."

 ?? Nuri Bozkir ?? Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan gave a nod to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy when he announced the abduction and forced repatriati­on of
Nuri Bozkir Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan gave a nod to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy when he announced the abduction and forced repatriati­on of
 ?? ?? Nuri Bozkir had been exposing government wrongdoing before he was abducted by the Turkish intelligen­ce service
Nuri Bozkir had been exposing government wrongdoing before he was abducted by the Turkish intelligen­ce service

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