INONU, ISMET


Meaning of INONU, ISMET in English

born Sept. 24, 1884, Smyrna, Ottoman Empire died Dec. 25, 1973, Ankara Turkish army officer, statesman, and collaborator with and successor to Mustafa Kemal Atatrk as president of the Turkish Republic. Identified with one-party rule between 1939 and 1946, he later emerged as a champion of democracy. Ismet served on the general staff of the 3rd Army at Edirne and as chief of staff of the army in Yemen. During World War I, he commanded the 4th Army in Syria (1916), and, at the time of the Ottoman surrender (Oct. 30, 1918), he was the undersecretary of war in Constantinople. Later he joined Mustafa Kemal's movement to resist the Allied occupation of Anatolia. In 1920 he was elected to the last Ottoman Parliament as deputy for Edirne. After the Greek occupation of western Anatolia, he was appointed chief of the general staff of the nationalist army and repelled the invaders in the two battles of Inn (near Ankara) in January and April 1921. From those engagements he later took his surname. Appointed foreign minister in the government of the Grand National Assembly in Ankara in 1922, Ismet succeeded, with the support of Mustafa Kemal, in gaining most of the Turkish demands in the Treaty of Lausanne (Switz.; July 24, 1923). When the republic was proclaimed on Oct. 29, 1923, Ismet became the prime minister. He remained in power until 1937. On Atatrk's death on Nov. 10, 1938, Inn was elected president and became the permanent chairman of the Republican People's Party (RPP). During World War II, Turkey, under his adroit leadership, remained neutral. In the postwar period, however, in response to internal strains and to the Western pressures for a democratic regime, he encouraged the formation of the Democrat Party (DP) in 1946, which defeated the RPP in the elections of 1950. Inn was replaced as president by Cell Bayar and led the opposition (195060), assuming the role of defender of democracy. Following the 1960 military coup d'etat, which overthrew the DP government, Inn formed three coalition governments between 1961 and 1965, but in the general elections of 1965 and 1969 his party suffered overwhelming defeats. During this period Inn was criticized by the Kemalist and Socialist factions within RPP for the compromises he made with the coalition partners and with the conservatives. Under these pressures he declared his ideological stance as left of centre, alienating the centrists in his party, who formed the Reliance Party (Gven Partisi) in 1967. Inn himself, however, was replaced in 1972 as RPP leader by Blent Ecevit, the head of the leftist faction.

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