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Turkey extends naval mission off Somalia, granting Erdogan broad authority over scope and timing

January 23, 2026
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Turkey extends naval mission off Somalia, granting Erdogan broad authority over scope and timing
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Levent Kenez/Stockholm

The Turkish Parliament on Tuesday approved a one-year extension of the country’s naval deployment in the Gulf of Aden, Somali waters and the Arabian Sea, renewing a mandate that gives President Recep Tayyip Erdogan broad discretion to determine when, where and how Turkish forces operate in one of the world’s most strategic maritime corridors.

The authorization allows the government to deploy Turkish naval units for another year starting on February 10, 2026, with the scope, duration and operational details to be set directly by the president. The wording of the mandate leaves those decisions to Erdogan’s judgment without requiring additional parliamentary approval once the extension takes effect.

The vote prolongs Turkey’s longest-running overseas naval mission, launched in 2009 at the height of Somali piracy. Since then, successive governments have renewed the mandate almost every year, citing persistent threats to international shipping, armed robbery at sea and maritime terrorism in and around the Horn of Africa.

Under the renewed authorization, Turkish warships will continue to operate in the Gulf of Aden, off the coast of Somalia, in the Arabian Sea and in adjacent international waters. The mission includes escorting Turkish-flagged and Turkey-linked commercial vessels, supporting multinational maritime security operations and providing logistical backing for humanitarian shipments moving through the region.

Government officials told lawmakers that the deployment remains necessary despite a decline in large-scale piracy attacks compared with the late 2000s. They argued that instability in Somalia, militant activity and the strategic importance of the Red Sea route require a continued naval presence to protect trade and contribute to international security efforts.

During parliamentary debates, opposition lawmakers criticized the mandate’s open-ended language, saying it effectively hands the president unchecked authority over a military deployment far from Turkey’s borders. They argued that parliament was being asked to approve a framework that allows the executive to decide the mission’s scale, geographic reach and operational tempo without further legislative oversight.

Opposition speakers questioned whether parliament retained any meaningful role once such mandates are approved, warning that extensions have become routine votes rather than substantive debates over foreign policy and military engagement. They said lawmakers were given limited information about costs, risks or exit strategies, even as overseas missions become more permanent.

Some critics also raised concerns about Turkey’s expanding military footprint abroad, saying repeated renewals normalize the idea of continuous deployments and blur the line between defensive maritime security and broader power projection. They urged the government to rely more on diplomacy and international burden-sharing rather than maintaining long-term unilateral authority over foreign missions.

Supporters of the extension countered that maritime insecurity in the region has not disappeared and that Turkey’s commercial and strategic interests remain directly exposed. They said the naval mission operates within international law, focuses on deterrence rather than combat and contributes to collective security in a region vital to global trade.

The Somalia mandate approved by the Turkish Parliament:

The authorization was adopted with broad support in parliament, although a group of pro-Kurdish opposition lawmakers voted against it.

The renewed mandate comes as Turkey continues to deepen its political, economic and military engagement with Somalia, where it has emerged as one of the country’s most influential external partners over the past decade. Turkish involvement ranges from humanitarian aid and infrastructure development to military training and commercial operations, tying maritime security off Somalia’s coast to Ankara’s broader regional strategy.

Turkey’s engagement with Somalia accelerated after Erdogan’s visit to Mogadishu in August 2011, a turning point that marked Ankara’s entry into the country as a major international actor. Since then, Turkey has financed hospitals, roads and public buildings and has taken on management roles at Mogadishu’s port and international airport through Turkish companies.

Turkey’s growing role in Somalia also includes plans for energy exploration. Turkey will begin oil and natural gas exploration off Somalia’s coast in 2026, according to statements by the Turkish energy minister, who said seismic surveys are already under way and will be followed by simultaneous hydrocarbon drilling both onshore and offshore. The planned exploration is tied to a hydrocarbons agreement signed by Ankara and Mogadishu that grants Turkey extensive rights to conduct surveys and drilling in Somali territory and maritime zones, further linking Turkey’s security presence in the region to long-term energy and commercial interests.

Mogadishu hosts Turkey’s largest embassy in the world.

In December 2025 Turkey’s military pension fund signed a deal with Somalia’s government granting a newly created joint company authority over fishing licenses and regulation across Somali waters, effectively centralizing control of a major natural resource.

Security cooperation has been central to the relationship. Turkey operates Camp TURKSOM in Mogadishu, its largest overseas military training base, where more than 15,000 Somali soldiers have been trained. Turkish officials describe the program as essential to building a national force capable of countering militant groups such as al-Shabab, which continues to stage attacks despite years of international intervention.

A recent assessment by Turkey’s National Intelligence Academy described Somalia as entering a period of heightened fragility, citing persistent militant threats, political disputes between the federal government and regional administrations, weak state institutions and economic vulnerability. The report warned that Somali forces remain unable to secure the country without external support and that security gains are easily reversed.

The assessment also highlighted Somalia’s strategic position along the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, warning that regional rivalries and geopolitical competition add pressure to already fragile institutions. Disruptions along these maritime routes, it said, could affect global shipping lanes linking Europe, the Middle East and Asia.

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Levent Kenez

Levent Kenez

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