Ankara, angered by a resolution passed by Germany’s parliament in June that terms the 1915 massacre of Armenians
by Ottoman forces as genocide, has denied German MPs access to the Incirclik base.
“The German army answers to parliament,” Social Democrat leader and Deputy Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel told
the regional newspaper “Mitteldeutsche Zeitung.”
“And if parliament cannot visit its army, then the army cannot stay there.
Gabriel said, adding that all 250 soldiers at the base – part of NATO operations against “Islamic State” (IS)
militants in Iraq – could be pulled out.
Crucial partners in efforts to stem mass migration to Europe,
Germany and Turkey have fallen out in recent months, with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan angry
over various satirical broadcasts targeting him on German television,
most notably an insulting “poem” by comedian Jan Böhmerrmann.
The Armenian resolution, which prompted Ankara to recall its ambassador to Germany, has deepened the rift.
Germany has said it will recall troops at its Incirlik airbase in Turkey if Ankara continues to block German MPs from visiting them.
It’s perhaps the clearest sign yet of escalating tensions between the two NATO members.
This is absolutely clear,”