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RUS GÖNÜLLÜ SAVAŞÇILAR VE RUSYA’DA ÖZEL ASKERİ ŞİRKETLERİN ORTAYA ÇIKIŞI

Year 2022, Volume: 32 Issue: 2, 635 - 648, 24.05.2022
https://doi.org/10.18069/firatsbed.1038011

Abstract

Antik Çağ’da Mısırlılardan başlayarak, yakın döneme kadar hemen her imparatorluk yabancı askeri unsurları kendi adına savaştırma yoluna gitmiştir. Kâğıt üzerinde ticaret işletmesi olarak gözüken ama sıklıkla istihbarat ve gizli askeri operasyonlarda kullanılan bu şirketler özellikle 2003 yılında Irak’ın ABD tarafından işgali ve sonrasında sıklıkla gündeme geldikleri için daha fazla bilinir ve tanınır hale gelmiştir. Ordudan emekli edilen veya ettirilen profesyonellerden oluşturulan özel askeri şirket personeli düzenli ordu birliklerinin tabi olduğu kurallara bağlı kalmadan çalıştırılmıştır. Ulusal güvenlik ve çıkarlarını gerçekleştirmek için benzer askeri şirketleri Rusya’da kullanmaya çalışmıştır. Ancak bu noktada Rusya Federasyonu Anayasası ve kanunlarından kaynaklanan bazı kısıtlamalar ortaya çıkmıştır. Rus Anayasası ve Rus Ceza Kanunu paralı askerlik ve özel asker şirketlerin kurulmasına izin vermemiş ve bu türden yapılanmaları ve faaliyetleri kanundışı olarak nitelendirmiştir. Gerek bu nokta gerekse de uluslararası güvenlik şirketleri piyasasına gerek ekonomik sorunlar gerekse de silahlı kuvvetlerinden gelen muhalefet sebebiyle geç kalan Rusya Federasyonu şirketleri pazardan Batılı şirketler kadar pay alamamıştır. Bu çalışmada Rusya’nın olaylara doğrudan müdahil olamadığı durumlarda kullanıldığı gönüllü savaşçı uygulaması ve daha sonra Wagner Grup’la özdeşleşen özel askeri şirketler sistemi kurma girişimlerinin ilk dönemi, 1999-2013 yılları arasındaki dönem açıklayıcı ve kronolojik bir yöntemle açıklanmaktadır.

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Thanks

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References

  • Arnold, T. D. (2019). The Geoeconomic Dimensions of Russian Private Military and Security Companies. Military Review, 99(6), 6-18.
  • Aslantaş, S. (2009). Sırp İsyanı’nın Uluslararası Boyutu (1804-1813). Uluslararası İlişkiler, 6(21), 109-136.
  • Bebler, A. (Ed.). (2015). Frozen Conflicts in Europe. Berlin: Barbara Budrich.
  • Bellingcat. (2020). Putin Chef’s Kisses of Death: Russia’s Shadow Army’s State-Run Structure Exposed, Bellingcat, https://www.bellingcat.com/news/uk-and-europe/2020/08/14/pmc-structure-exposed/
  • Boiarskii, A. (2014). Chastniki Boevykh Deistvii-Kakie Zadachi Budut Reshat Rossiiskie Kommercheskie Voiska. Kommersant-Dengi.
  • Borovik, A. (1990). The Hidden War: A Russian Journalist’s Account of the Soviet War in Afghanistan. New York: Groove Press.
  • Borshchevskaya, A. (2019), Russian Private Military Companies: Continuity and Evolution of the Model. Philadelphia: Russia Foreign Policy Papers, Foreign Policy Research Institute.
  • Braithwaite, R. (2011). The Afgantsy: The Russians in Afghanistan 1979-1989, Londra: Oxford University Press.
  • Bryjka, F. (2019). Russian ‘Contractors’ in the Service of the Kremlin. Special Report, Varşova: Warsaw Institute.
  • Cabelka, O. (2021). Wagner Group: The Extended Hand of Russian Federation’s Hybrid Activities and The Clenched Fist of Russian Global Expansion, Security Outlines, https://www.securityoutlines.cz/wagner-group-the-extended-hand-of-the-russian-federations-hybrid-activities-and-the-clenched-fist-of-russian-global-expansion/#_ftn1
  • Canar, B. (2013). Soğuk Savaş Sonrasında Karadeniz. Ankara: Phoenix Yayınevi.
  • Dağı, Z. (2002). Rusya’nın Dönüşümü. İstanbul: Boyut Yayınları.
  • Dahlqvist, N. (2019). Russia’s (not so) Private Military Companies. RUFS Briefing No: 44. Stockholm: Swedish Defence Research Agency.
  • Donnelly, C. N. (1988). Red Banner: The Soviet Military System in Peace and War. Coulsdon, Surrey: Jane’s Information Group.
  • Ferro, M. (1998). Sovyet Rejiminin Milliyetler Politikası. Uluslar ve Milliyetçilikler (Haz. J. Leca), İstanbul: Metis Yayınları.
  • Gavrilov, Y. (2012). Lining up for the Beret: No End to Those Wishing to Serve in the VDV at the Enlistment Offices, Rossiskaya Gazeta, https://rg.ru/2012/04/26/shamanov.html
  • Giles, K. ve Akimenko, V. (2019). Use and Utility of Russia’s Private Military Companies. Journal of Future Conflict, (1), 1-29.
  • Glenny, M. (1996). The Fall of Yugoslavia (3. Baskı). Harmondsworth: Penguin.
  • Glitman, M. (1996-1997). US Policy in Bosnia: Rethinking a Flawed Approach. Survival, 38(4), 66-83.
  • Grau, L. W. ve Gress, M. A. (2002). The Soviet-Afghan War: How a Superpower Fought and Lost, Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas.
  • Grau, L. W. ve Bartles, C. K. (2016). The Russian Way of War, Force Structure, Tactics, and Modernization of the Russian Ground Forces. Fort Leavenworth: Foreign Military Studies Office.
  • Hasham, M. (2004). Public Wars, Private Profit. The World Today, 60(6), 7-9.
  • Jones, S. G., Doxsee, C., Katz, B., MCQueen, E. ve Moye, J. (2021). Russia’s Corporate Soldiers, The Global Expansion of Russia’s Private Military Companies. New York: Center for Strategic and International Studies, Rowman and Littlefield.
  • Kanbir, B. ve Sanmartin, R. (2020). Donmuş Çatışma Bölgeleri Nedir? Rusya Bu Bölgelerde Ne Kazandı, Ne Kaybetti? Euronews, https://tr.euronews.com/2020/10/19/donmus-cat-sma-bolgeleri-nedir-rusya-bu-bolgelerde-ne-kazand-ne-kaybetti
  • Karasev, A. V. (1981). 1875-1878 Bosna-Hersek Ayaklanması ve Doğu Sorunu. Moskova.
  • Konovalov, I. ve Valetski, O. (2013). Evolyutsiya Chastnykh Voyennykh Kompaniy, Tsentr Strategicheskoy Konyuktury. Pushkino.
  • Lachert, J. (2019). Post-Soviet Frozen Conflicts: A Challenge for European Security. Varşova: Warsaw Institute.
  • Leonov, V. N. (1993). Blood on the Shores: Soviet Naval Commandos in World War II. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press.
  • Lock, P. (1998). Military Downsizing and Growth in the Security Industry in Sub-Saharan Africa. Strategic Analysis, 22(9), 393-426.
  • Martin, K. (2019). Russia’s Use of Semi-State Security Forces: The Case of the Wagner Group. Post-Soviet Affairs, 35(3), 181-204.
  • Martin, K. (2020). The Wagner Group: Untangling the Purposes of a Russian Power Tool, Stanford: Stanford University, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies.
  • Maynes, C. (2018). Russia’s Shadow Armies: Soldiers, Mercenaries or Volunteers, The World, https://theworld.org/stories/2018-03-15/russia-s-shadow-armies-soldiers-mercenaries-or-volunteers
  • Mikail, E. H. (2007). Yeni Çarlar ve Rus Dış Politikası. İstanbul: IQ Yayıncılık.
  • Morgenshtern, A. (2015), Kratkii Spravochnik-chastnye Voennye I Okhrannye Kompanii på Dannym, ISOS.
  • Orttung, R. ve Walker, C. (2015). Putin’s Frozen Conflicts. Foreign Policy, http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/02/13/putins-frozen-conflicts
  • Neelov, V. (2013). Chastnye Voennye Kompanii v Rossii: Opyt i Perspektivy İspolzovania. Tsentr Strategicheskikh Otsenok I Prognozov.
  • Ostensen, A. G. ve Bukkvoll, T. (2018). Russian Use of Private military and Security Sompanies, the Implications for European and NorwegianSecurity. Kjeller: Norwegian Defense Research Establishment (FFI).
  • Özcan, S. A. (2005). Bir Sovyet Mirası: Rus Azınlıklar. İstanbul: Küre Yayınları.
  • Racz, A. (2020). Band of Brothers: The Wagner Group and Russian State, Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), https://www.csis.org/blogs/post-soviet-post/band-brothers-wagner-group-and-russian-state
  • Saçar, A. (2020). Ulus Devletin ve Modern Yurttaşlığın Oluşumunda ve Gelişiminde Düzenli Ulusal Orduların Rolü. (Yayımlanmamış doktora tezi). İstanbul Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü, İstanbul.
  • Silber, L. (1996). The Hero of Dayton: Slobodan Milosevic and the Politics of War and Peace. World Policy Journal, 13(1), 63-69.
  • Singer, P. W. (2008). Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
  • Stack, L. ve Zraick, K. (2015). Frozen Zones: How Russia Maintains Influence in the Post Cold War Era. The New York Times, https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/10/14/world/europe/russia-frozen-zonessyria.html
  • Sukhankin, S. (2019a). From ‘Volunteers’ to Quasi-PMCs: Retracing the Footprints of Russian Irregulars in the Yugoslav Wars and Post-Soviet Conflicts. War by Other Means, The Jamestown Foundation, 1-18.
  • Sukhankin, S. (2019b). Russian Special Operations Forces: Image Versus Substance. Eurasia Daily Monitor, The Jamestown Foundation, 16(43). https://jamestown.org/program/russian-specialoperations-forces-image-versus-substance/
  • Sukhankin, S. (2019c). Unleashing the PMCs and Irregulars in Ukraine: Crimea and Donbas, Continuing War by Other Means, The Jamestown Foundation, https://jamestown.org/program/unleashing-the-pmcs-and-irregulars-in-ukraine-crimea-and-donbas/
  • Sukhankin, S. (2019d). Russian PMC in the Syrian Civil War: From Slavonic Corps to Wagner Group and Beyond, Continuing War by Other Means, The Jamestown Foundation, https://jamestown.org/program/russian-pmcs-in-the-syrian-civil-war-from-slavonic-corps-to-wagner-group-and-beyond/#_edn12
  • Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs & International Committee of the Red Cross (2008). “The Montreux Document on Pertinent International Legal Obligations and Good Practices for States related to Operations of Private Military and Security Companies during Armed Conflict”. https://www.icrc.org/en/doc/assets/files/other/icrc_002_0996.pdf
  • Tamarov, V. (2001). Afghanistan: A Russian Soldier’s Story. Berkeley, California: Ten Speed Press.
  • Tüysüzoğlu, G. (2017). Rus Dış Politikasının Etkin Silahı: Donmuş Çatışma Bölgeleri. Güvenlik Stratejileri Dergisi, 17(26), 185-219.
  • Vejvoda, I. (1996). Serbian Perspective. International Perspectives on Yugoslav Conflict (Haz. A. Danchev ve T. Halverson), Londra: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Vysokiy, B. (2017). Glava 54. Rossiyskie ChVK, Pervye Shagi https://www.proza.ru/2017/02/14/2214
  • Yapıcı, M. İ. (2010). Rus Dış Politikasını Oluşturan İç Etkenler. Ankara: USAK Yayınları.

Russian Volunteer Warriors and Emergence of Private Military Companies in Russia

Year 2022, Volume: 32 Issue: 2, 635 - 648, 24.05.2022
https://doi.org/10.18069/firatsbed.1038011

Abstract

Starting with the Egyptians in the Ancient Age, almost every empire has tried to make foreign military elements fight on its own behalf. These companies, which appear to be commercial enterprises in theory, but are frequently used in intelligence and secret military operations, have become more known and recognized, especially after the invasion of Iraq by the USA in 2003. Private military company personnel composed of military professionals retired or dismissed from the armed forces. Russia has also tried to use private military companies in order to realize her national security and interests. However, some restrictions originating from the constitution and criminal code of the Russian Federation made that solution difficult. The Russian Constitution and the Russian Penal Code does not allow the establishment of mercenary and private military companies and describe such organizations and activities as illegal. Additionally, the Russian military companies, were late for the international security market because of economic problems and the opposition from the armed forces. In this study, the first period of the establishment of the private military company system, the period between 1999 and 2013, is explained in the chronological method.

Project Number

-

References

  • Arnold, T. D. (2019). The Geoeconomic Dimensions of Russian Private Military and Security Companies. Military Review, 99(6), 6-18.
  • Aslantaş, S. (2009). Sırp İsyanı’nın Uluslararası Boyutu (1804-1813). Uluslararası İlişkiler, 6(21), 109-136.
  • Bebler, A. (Ed.). (2015). Frozen Conflicts in Europe. Berlin: Barbara Budrich.
  • Bellingcat. (2020). Putin Chef’s Kisses of Death: Russia’s Shadow Army’s State-Run Structure Exposed, Bellingcat, https://www.bellingcat.com/news/uk-and-europe/2020/08/14/pmc-structure-exposed/
  • Boiarskii, A. (2014). Chastniki Boevykh Deistvii-Kakie Zadachi Budut Reshat Rossiiskie Kommercheskie Voiska. Kommersant-Dengi.
  • Borovik, A. (1990). The Hidden War: A Russian Journalist’s Account of the Soviet War in Afghanistan. New York: Groove Press.
  • Borshchevskaya, A. (2019), Russian Private Military Companies: Continuity and Evolution of the Model. Philadelphia: Russia Foreign Policy Papers, Foreign Policy Research Institute.
  • Braithwaite, R. (2011). The Afgantsy: The Russians in Afghanistan 1979-1989, Londra: Oxford University Press.
  • Bryjka, F. (2019). Russian ‘Contractors’ in the Service of the Kremlin. Special Report, Varşova: Warsaw Institute.
  • Cabelka, O. (2021). Wagner Group: The Extended Hand of Russian Federation’s Hybrid Activities and The Clenched Fist of Russian Global Expansion, Security Outlines, https://www.securityoutlines.cz/wagner-group-the-extended-hand-of-the-russian-federations-hybrid-activities-and-the-clenched-fist-of-russian-global-expansion/#_ftn1
  • Canar, B. (2013). Soğuk Savaş Sonrasında Karadeniz. Ankara: Phoenix Yayınevi.
  • Dağı, Z. (2002). Rusya’nın Dönüşümü. İstanbul: Boyut Yayınları.
  • Dahlqvist, N. (2019). Russia’s (not so) Private Military Companies. RUFS Briefing No: 44. Stockholm: Swedish Defence Research Agency.
  • Donnelly, C. N. (1988). Red Banner: The Soviet Military System in Peace and War. Coulsdon, Surrey: Jane’s Information Group.
  • Ferro, M. (1998). Sovyet Rejiminin Milliyetler Politikası. Uluslar ve Milliyetçilikler (Haz. J. Leca), İstanbul: Metis Yayınları.
  • Gavrilov, Y. (2012). Lining up for the Beret: No End to Those Wishing to Serve in the VDV at the Enlistment Offices, Rossiskaya Gazeta, https://rg.ru/2012/04/26/shamanov.html
  • Giles, K. ve Akimenko, V. (2019). Use and Utility of Russia’s Private Military Companies. Journal of Future Conflict, (1), 1-29.
  • Glenny, M. (1996). The Fall of Yugoslavia (3. Baskı). Harmondsworth: Penguin.
  • Glitman, M. (1996-1997). US Policy in Bosnia: Rethinking a Flawed Approach. Survival, 38(4), 66-83.
  • Grau, L. W. ve Gress, M. A. (2002). The Soviet-Afghan War: How a Superpower Fought and Lost, Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas.
  • Grau, L. W. ve Bartles, C. K. (2016). The Russian Way of War, Force Structure, Tactics, and Modernization of the Russian Ground Forces. Fort Leavenworth: Foreign Military Studies Office.
  • Hasham, M. (2004). Public Wars, Private Profit. The World Today, 60(6), 7-9.
  • Jones, S. G., Doxsee, C., Katz, B., MCQueen, E. ve Moye, J. (2021). Russia’s Corporate Soldiers, The Global Expansion of Russia’s Private Military Companies. New York: Center for Strategic and International Studies, Rowman and Littlefield.
  • Kanbir, B. ve Sanmartin, R. (2020). Donmuş Çatışma Bölgeleri Nedir? Rusya Bu Bölgelerde Ne Kazandı, Ne Kaybetti? Euronews, https://tr.euronews.com/2020/10/19/donmus-cat-sma-bolgeleri-nedir-rusya-bu-bolgelerde-ne-kazand-ne-kaybetti
  • Karasev, A. V. (1981). 1875-1878 Bosna-Hersek Ayaklanması ve Doğu Sorunu. Moskova.
  • Konovalov, I. ve Valetski, O. (2013). Evolyutsiya Chastnykh Voyennykh Kompaniy, Tsentr Strategicheskoy Konyuktury. Pushkino.
  • Lachert, J. (2019). Post-Soviet Frozen Conflicts: A Challenge for European Security. Varşova: Warsaw Institute.
  • Leonov, V. N. (1993). Blood on the Shores: Soviet Naval Commandos in World War II. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press.
  • Lock, P. (1998). Military Downsizing and Growth in the Security Industry in Sub-Saharan Africa. Strategic Analysis, 22(9), 393-426.
  • Martin, K. (2019). Russia’s Use of Semi-State Security Forces: The Case of the Wagner Group. Post-Soviet Affairs, 35(3), 181-204.
  • Martin, K. (2020). The Wagner Group: Untangling the Purposes of a Russian Power Tool, Stanford: Stanford University, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies.
  • Maynes, C. (2018). Russia’s Shadow Armies: Soldiers, Mercenaries or Volunteers, The World, https://theworld.org/stories/2018-03-15/russia-s-shadow-armies-soldiers-mercenaries-or-volunteers
  • Mikail, E. H. (2007). Yeni Çarlar ve Rus Dış Politikası. İstanbul: IQ Yayıncılık.
  • Morgenshtern, A. (2015), Kratkii Spravochnik-chastnye Voennye I Okhrannye Kompanii på Dannym, ISOS.
  • Orttung, R. ve Walker, C. (2015). Putin’s Frozen Conflicts. Foreign Policy, http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/02/13/putins-frozen-conflicts
  • Neelov, V. (2013). Chastnye Voennye Kompanii v Rossii: Opyt i Perspektivy İspolzovania. Tsentr Strategicheskikh Otsenok I Prognozov.
  • Ostensen, A. G. ve Bukkvoll, T. (2018). Russian Use of Private military and Security Sompanies, the Implications for European and NorwegianSecurity. Kjeller: Norwegian Defense Research Establishment (FFI).
  • Özcan, S. A. (2005). Bir Sovyet Mirası: Rus Azınlıklar. İstanbul: Küre Yayınları.
  • Racz, A. (2020). Band of Brothers: The Wagner Group and Russian State, Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), https://www.csis.org/blogs/post-soviet-post/band-brothers-wagner-group-and-russian-state
  • Saçar, A. (2020). Ulus Devletin ve Modern Yurttaşlığın Oluşumunda ve Gelişiminde Düzenli Ulusal Orduların Rolü. (Yayımlanmamış doktora tezi). İstanbul Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü, İstanbul.
  • Silber, L. (1996). The Hero of Dayton: Slobodan Milosevic and the Politics of War and Peace. World Policy Journal, 13(1), 63-69.
  • Singer, P. W. (2008). Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
  • Stack, L. ve Zraick, K. (2015). Frozen Zones: How Russia Maintains Influence in the Post Cold War Era. The New York Times, https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/10/14/world/europe/russia-frozen-zonessyria.html
  • Sukhankin, S. (2019a). From ‘Volunteers’ to Quasi-PMCs: Retracing the Footprints of Russian Irregulars in the Yugoslav Wars and Post-Soviet Conflicts. War by Other Means, The Jamestown Foundation, 1-18.
  • Sukhankin, S. (2019b). Russian Special Operations Forces: Image Versus Substance. Eurasia Daily Monitor, The Jamestown Foundation, 16(43). https://jamestown.org/program/russian-specialoperations-forces-image-versus-substance/
  • Sukhankin, S. (2019c). Unleashing the PMCs and Irregulars in Ukraine: Crimea and Donbas, Continuing War by Other Means, The Jamestown Foundation, https://jamestown.org/program/unleashing-the-pmcs-and-irregulars-in-ukraine-crimea-and-donbas/
  • Sukhankin, S. (2019d). Russian PMC in the Syrian Civil War: From Slavonic Corps to Wagner Group and Beyond, Continuing War by Other Means, The Jamestown Foundation, https://jamestown.org/program/russian-pmcs-in-the-syrian-civil-war-from-slavonic-corps-to-wagner-group-and-beyond/#_edn12
  • Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs & International Committee of the Red Cross (2008). “The Montreux Document on Pertinent International Legal Obligations and Good Practices for States related to Operations of Private Military and Security Companies during Armed Conflict”. https://www.icrc.org/en/doc/assets/files/other/icrc_002_0996.pdf
  • Tamarov, V. (2001). Afghanistan: A Russian Soldier’s Story. Berkeley, California: Ten Speed Press.
  • Tüysüzoğlu, G. (2017). Rus Dış Politikasının Etkin Silahı: Donmuş Çatışma Bölgeleri. Güvenlik Stratejileri Dergisi, 17(26), 185-219.
  • Vejvoda, I. (1996). Serbian Perspective. International Perspectives on Yugoslav Conflict (Haz. A. Danchev ve T. Halverson), Londra: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Vysokiy, B. (2017). Glava 54. Rossiyskie ChVK, Pervye Shagi https://www.proza.ru/2017/02/14/2214
  • Yapıcı, M. İ. (2010). Rus Dış Politikasını Oluşturan İç Etkenler. Ankara: USAK Yayınları.
There are 53 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language Turkish
Journal Section Issue
Authors

Mehmet Erkan Kıllıoğlu 0000-0002-3146-2609

Project Number -
Publication Date May 24, 2022
Submission Date December 17, 2021
Published in Issue Year 2022 Volume: 32 Issue: 2

Cite

APA Kıllıoğlu, M. E. (2022). RUS GÖNÜLLÜ SAVAŞÇILAR VE RUSYA’DA ÖZEL ASKERİ ŞİRKETLERİN ORTAYA ÇIKIŞI. Fırat Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi, 32(2), 635-648. https://doi.org/10.18069/firatsbed.1038011