ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -- Turkish
authorities say they have freed 49 hostages from one of the world's most
ruthless militant groups without firing a shot, paying a ransom or offering a
quid pro quo.
But as the well-dressed men
and women captured by the Islamic State group more than three months ago
clasped their families Saturday on the tarmac of the Turkish capital's airport,
experts had doubts about the government's story.
The official explanation
"sounds a bit too good to be true," said Sinan Ulgen, a former
Turkish diplomat who chairs the Istanbul-based Centre for Economics and Foreign
Policy Studies. "There are some very legitimate and unanswered questions
about how this happened."
The hostages - whose number
included two small children - were seized from the Turkish Consulate in the
northern Iraqi city of Mosul after the Islamic State group overran the city on
June 11. How they traveled from Mosul to Turkey and why the Islamic State would
relinquish such a useful bargaining chip remained unclear.
"I think it's fair to say
that we haven't been told the full story," said Aaron Stein, an associate
fellow at the London-based Royal United Services Institute who has studied
Turkey's security policy.
Turkish leaders gave only the
broadest outlines of their rescue Saturday. Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said
the hostages' release was the work of the country's intelligence agency rather
than a special forces operation.
"After intense efforts
that lasted days and weeks, in the early hours our citizens were handed over to
us and we brought them back," Davutoglu said.
One former hostage, Alptekin
Esirgun, told the state-run Anadolou Agency that militants held a gun to Consul
General Ozturk Yilmaz's head and tried to force him to make a statement.
Yilmaz told NTV television
late Saturday that the hostages were forced to watch videos of the beheadings
of other hostages. Two U.S. journalists and a British aid worker were recently
beheaded by the Islamic State group.
"They liked to demoralize
hostages," Yilmaz said, adding that although his group was not subjected
to any physical violence, it was threatened with violence.
Yilmaz said he had a telephone
that he dismantled and kept hidden from his captors, but he did not elaborate
on how that may have helped the rescue.
Another former hostage,
Alparslan Yel, said the Islamic militants "treated us a little better
because we are Muslims. But we weren't that comfortable. There was a war going
on."
Davutoglu was the star of the
homecoming ceremony Saturday, flying the hostages back to Ankara and delivering
an impassioned address to the crowd. Families rushed to the aircraft to greet
their returning loved ones. The ex-hostages emerged wearing clean dresses and
suits and showed little sign of having been held captive by fanatical militants
for more than three months.
The joyous reunion at the
airport came as an enormous relief after the earlier beheadings, which briefly
reignited a debate over whether the U.S. or British government should pay
ransoms.
Anadolu reported that Turkey
had paid no ransom and "no conditions were accepted in return for their
release," although it didn't cite any source for its reporting.
The news agency said the
hostages had been held at eight separate addresses in Mosul and their
whereabouts were monitored by drones and other means.
The Iraqi government said it
had no information about the rescue.
Turkey had been reluctant to
join a coalition to defeat the militant group, citing the safety of its 49
kidnapped citizens, but it was not unclear that the release of the hostages
would change Turkey's policy toward the militants.
Stein said he doubted that
Turkey would suddenly adopt a much more muscular attitude toward the militants.
"There will some changes,
but not as much as people hope," he said.
In Washington, one U.S.
official said Saturday that while the Obama administration was pleased with
Turkey's contributions so far, it hoped that the change in circumstances of the
hostages would allow Turkey to take on a more robust role. The official was not
authorized to speak publicly about diplomatic matters.
The successful operation was
likely to prove a boon to Turkey's government. Davutoglu, flanked by Yilmaz and
others, made sure to highlight Turkey's success and blast the political
opposition as he thanked the "nameless heroes" involved in the
release.
Devlet Bahceli, leader of
Turkey's opposition nationalist party, warned that any promises made by the
Turkish government to the militants would eventually come out.
"Praise God, the 101-day
circle of oppression and torment has ended," he said. "However, what
kind of bargaining was made with ISIL, what was promised in return for our
citizens' freedom remains a mystery. What went on behind the scenes during the
negotiations certainly won't remain a secret."
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