Clockwise from top to left: Turkish prisoners of war after the Siege of Aintab, Armenian volunteers in the French army, Christian volunteers waiting for joining the French-Armenian legion, Turkish guerrillas in 1919, Sütçü İmam's shotting of French soldier, Turkish guerrillas in Urfa.
Date
7 December 1918[1] – 20 October 1921 (2 years, 10 months, 1 week and 6 days)
^Yücel Güçlü: The question of the Sanjak of Alexandretta: A study in Turkish-French-Syrian relations, Turkish Historical Society Printing House, 2001, ISBN9751614031, page 36.
^Western Society for French History. Meeting: Proceedings of the ... Annual Meeting of the Western Society for French History, New Mexico State University Press, 1996, page 206.
^Ahmet Hulki Saral, Türk İstiklal Harbi Güney Cephesi IV, Ankara, 1996, pg 47
^Military Training Publishing Corporation, 1921, National service (Volumes 9–10), page 287.
^Guclu, Yucel: Armenians and the Allies in Clicia 1914-1923 (2010). University of Utah Press. June 2009. Page 144, quoting Henry Franklin-Bouillon: "In Cilicia, France was expending 5 million francs a year and had buried some 5,000 of its sons..."
^Turgut Özakman: Vahidettin, M. Kemal ve milli mücadele: yalanlar, yanlışlar, yutturmacalar, Bilgi Yayınevi, 1997, ISBN9754946698, page 444.