Gendarmerie General Command

The Gendarmerie General Command (Jandarma Genel Komutanlığı) is the national gendarmerie force of the Republic of Turkey. It is a service branch of the Turkish Ministry of Interior responsible for the maintenance of the public order in areas that fall outside the jurisdiction of police forces (generally in rural areas), as well as assuring internal security along with carrying out other specific duties assigned to it by certain laws and regulations. In wartime, some of its elements can be subordinated to Turkish Land Forces by the President of Turkey.

The Commander of the Gendarmerie reports to the Minister of the Interior.

The Gendarmerie has its roots in the Ottoman Empire military law enforcement organization "Subaşı" (later known as the "Zaptiye"). A similar, earlier force called "Şurta" existed during the medieval Seljuq Empire.

Ottoman era
After the abolition of the Janissary corps of the Ottoman Empire in 1826, military organizations called Asâkir-i Muntazâma-i Mansûre, Asâkir-i Muntazâma-i Hâssa, and, in 1834, Asâkir-i Redîfe were established for security and public order in Anatolia and in some provinces of Rumelia.



As the first use of the term Gendarmerie was in the Assignment Decrees published in the years following the 1839 Edict of Gülhane, it is assumed that the Gendarmerie organization was founded after that year, but the exact date of foundation has not yet been determined. Therefore, the date on which the name Asâkir-i Zaptiye Nizâmnâmesi was adopted, June 14, 1839, is usually considered the foundation date of the Turkish Gendarmerie.

After the 1877–1878 Russo-Turkish War, Ottoman prime minister Mehmed Said Pasha decided to bring police officers from Britain and France to establish a modern law enforcement organization. The Gendarmerie was used to great effect after the 1908 Young Turk Revolution, particularly in Rumelia. In 1909, the Gendarmerie was affiliated with the Ministry of War, and its name was changed to the Gendarmerie General Command (Umûm Jandarma Kumandanlığı).

Gendarmerie units continued their internal security duties as well as taking part in the conflict at various fronts as a part of the Armed Forces during World War I and the Turkish War of Independence.

20th century


The Gendarmerie organization achieved its current legal status on June 10, 1930. In 1939, the Gendarmerie organization was restructured, having three groups: Fixed Gendarmerie Units, Mobile Gendarmerie Units, and Gendarmerie Training Units and Schools.

In 1956, the Gendarmerie General Command was assigned the duties of protecting borders, coasts and territorial waters, and fighting smuggling, which had been previously carried out by the Gümrük Umum Kumandanlığı, under the Ministry of Customs and Monopoly. In 1957, Gendarmerie Border Units were transformed into brigades, and Gendarmerie Training Brigades were established.

In 1961, Gendarmerie Regional Commands were established. In 1968, the first Gendarmerie Aviation Unit was established in Diyarbakır under the name of Light Helicopter Company Command.

In 1974, Gendarmerie Commando Units and Gendarmerie Aviation Units took part in the Turkish military operations in Cyprus.

In 1988, the duty of protecting the land borders and ensuring their security was assigned to the Land Forces Command, but Gendarmerie General Command still holds the responsibility for some parts of the Iranian and Syrian borders and the whole Iraqi border.

The Gendarmerie Criminal Department was founded in Ankara in 1993 and from 1994, Gendarmerie Regional Criminal Laboratory Superiorities were founded. Crime Scene Examination Teams, Explosive Material Disposal Units, Fingerprints and Palm Prints Branches and Crime Scene Examination Units were also established.

21st century
In 2016, the Gendarmerie General Command was affiliated to the Ministry of Interior.

In 2018, Gendarmerie Special Operations participated in Operation Olive Branch, part of the Turkish involvement in the Syrian Civil War. According to the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, Turkish Gendarmerie killed 500 Syrian civilians at the Turkish-Syrian border.

The Gendarmerie General Command currently has a total of 3,600 units, including 3,056 Internal Security Units, 218 Commando Units, 162 Prison Units, 160 Protection Units and four Aviation Units.

Duties
The duties of the gendarmerie according to the Law No. 2803 on the Organization, Duties and Powers of the Gendarmerie; It is categorized under four main titles as judicial, military, civil and other duties.

Judicial duties

 * Finding crimes and criminals,
 * Capturing suspects,
 * Transferring evidence judicial authorities,
 * Conduct preparatory investigations when instructed to by the public prosecutor,
 * Transporting prisoners between jails and courthouses.

Civil duties

 * To ensure that the services for general safety and security are carried out in accordance with the relevant legislation,
 * To carry out the services of informing the public about how to protect the society from public order crime, directing children and young people to crime and taking precautionary measures,
 * To evaluate the information and statistics about public order crimes, to conduct or have an analysis of the crime and to determine the methods of combating crime to prevent public order crimes by evaluating them,
 * Carrying out activities to prevent crime,
 * Preventing, pursuing and investigating smuggling,
 * External protection of penal institutions and detention centers.

Military duties

 * To perform military services provided by law

Other duties

 * These are duties other than judicial, military and civil duties, such as facility and personal protection and transport security, which must be carried out in accordance with laws and regulations, orders and decisions.

Commands
Gendarmerie General Command Headquarters (Ankara)


 * Gendarmerie Security Corps Command (Van)
 * 23. Gendarmerie Border Division (Şırnak)
 * 21. Gendarmerie Border Brigade (Yüksekova)
 * 1. Gendarmerie Commando Brigade (Çakırsöğüt, Şırnak)
 * 2. Gendarmerie Commando Brigade (Bornova, İzmir)
 * Gendarmerie Training Command (Ankara, İncek, Gölbaşı)
 * 1. Gendarmerie Training Battalion Command (Aydın)
 * 2. Gendarmerie Training Battalion Command (Bilecik)
 * 3. Gendarmerie Training Battalion Command (Ezine, Çanakkale)
 * 5. Gendarmerie Training Regiment Command (Gölköy, Kastamonu)
 * 6. Gendarmerie Commando Training Regiment Command (Kırkağaç, Manisa)
 * 7. Gendarmerie Commando Training Regiment Command (Yenifoça, İzmir)
 * Gendarmerie Combat Training Battalion Command (Seferihisar, İzmir)
 * Gendarmerie Transport Battalion Command (Söğüt, Bilecik)
 * 10. Gendarmerie Training Regiment Command (Bornova, İzmir)
 * 116. Gendarmerie Private Training Regiment Command (Çanakkale)
 * 121. Gendarmerie Training Regiment Command (Serinyol, Antakya)
 * 125. Gendarmerie Training Regiment Command (Safranbolu, Karabük)
 * Işıklar Gendarmerie NCO High School (Bursa) ( was established in 1845 as "Mekteb-i Fünun-u İdadi"')
 * Gendarmerie Horse and Dog Training Center Command (Nevşehir) (JAKEM)
 * Gendarmerie Logistics Command (Güvercinlik, Ankara)
 * Gendarmerie Aviation Command (Güvercinlik, Ankara)
 * Gendarmerie UAV Command (Elazığ)
 * Gendarmerie Special Public Security Command (JÖAK)
 * Gendarmerie Special Operations (JÖH)
 * Gendarmerie Search and Rescue Battalion Command (JAK)
 * Gendarmerie Underwater Search and Rescue Teams (SAK)
 * Gendarmerie Public Security Boat Commands (Security and public order services at inland waters are carried out by the Gendarmerie Public Order Boat Commands.)
 * Village guards
 * Prison Gendarmerie Division Commands (There are garrison stations appointed in every prison)
 * The Gendarmerie Band Command

Criminal units

 * Provincial Gendarmerie Commands in 81 provinces & in 388 districts.
 * The Crime Scene Investigation Teams (CSIT) (Working under the Provincial and District Gendarmerie Commands systematically examine the crime scene by means of technical and scientific methods; properly gather physical evidences; pack and send them to forensic laboratories.)
 * Explosive Ordnance Disposal Teams ( which have been established in tourism regions, regions with a concentration of terror incidents and big cities, dispose of explosive ordnances.)
 * Crime scene investigation units
 * Anti-Smuggling and Organized Crime Department (ASOCD)
 * Gendarmerie Intelligence Organization

Other units

 * Gendarmerie Traffic Teams
 * The Gendarmerie Motorcycled Public Order Teams (Round-the-clock at the highways established by the protocols in the responsibility areas of the Gendarmerie General Command.)
 * Gendarmerie Dog Teams
 * Gendarmerie Environmental Protection Teams (Environmental Protection Teams have been established in order to protect environment, ecological balance and natural life, to protect living species and areas protected by national legislation and international conventions and to prevent environmental pollution.)
 * The Gendarmerie Mounted Units (Used in performing patrolling services at resort areas, forestlands, recreation spots and museums (Topkapı Palace), and in performing preventive law enforcement services.)

The Gendarmerie Museum
The Gendarmerie Museum is established in order to reflect the developments in periodical order beginning with the foundation of the Gendarmerie organization; to exhibit its activities, heroic deeds, services in the history; to protect all kinds of military cultural assets related to the Gendarmerie by collecting them and to transfer them to the future generations. The Gendarmerie Museum in the Beytepe Lieutenant General İsmail SELEN Quarters in Ankara and is open to public.

Handguns

 * Yavuz 16
 * Glock 19
 * SAR 9
 * TP9
 * K2000 Mega
 * M1911
 * Zigana T and F
 * Beretta 92FS
 * Browning Hi-Power
 * Girsan Regard Compact
 * Girsan Regard MC

Shotguns

 * SPAS-12
 * Sarsılmaz Cobra & Baba
 * Armsan Armtac RS A2/A3

Submachine guns

 * HK MP5
 * P90
 * SAR-109T
 * Uzi

Assault and battle rifles

 * AKM
 * HK G3
 * HK G41
 * HK33A4
 * M16A1
 * M4A1
 * MKEK MPT-76
 * MKEK MPT-55
 * Kale KCR-556 New primary rifle of Gendarmerie 43.500 Rifles delivered late 2019
 * Galil MAR used by Turkish Gendarmarie commando's
 * SAR 223P
 * SAR 308 used by Village guards.

Machine guns

 * HK23E
 * RPK
 * M249 SAW
 * M2
 * MG3
 * PKM
 * MAG 58
 * SAR 762 MT
 * Canik M2 QCB
 * Type 80
 * KMG556

Sniper rifles

 * Arctic Warfare
 * SVD
 * Tac-50
 * SR-25
 * SR-15 Match
 * HK G28
 * Armalite M-15T
 * IMI Galatz
 * Accuracy International AWM
 * LMT MWS 308
 * MKEK JNG-90
 * Robar RC-50
 * MacMillan M87R
 * PSL (rifle)
 * KNT-76

Rocket and grenade launchers

 * HK 69
 * HK 79
 * HK GLM
 * M203
 * Milkor MGL
 * Mk 19
 * RPG-7 7B
 * AK-40GL
 * Kale KGL40
 * MKEK 40mm
 * MKEK T40

Mortars

 * M19
 * M29
 * Mortier 120mm Rayé Tracté Modèle F1
 * Aselsan Alkar

Directed energy weapon

 * JARMOL -Laser weapon

Anti-drone system

 * ASELSAN IHTAR KARTAL-2

Unmanned ground vehicles

 * COŞKUN - EOD robot
 * ASLAN - Medium class UGV with integrated AVAZ long-range sonic weapon

Vehicles and Aerial vehicles
Additional info : Gendarmerie also acquired 130 basic and 5 professional Micro UAV systems. It is also planned acquisition of new liaison and utility aircraft.

Retired/Reserve


Vehicles : Otokar Akrep - 250+, BTR-60 - 180, BTR-80 - 295 , Condor - 25



Aircraft : Cessna O-1E Bird Dog, Dornier Do-28D - 2

Helicopters : Bell 212 - 1, Bell 206 - 8