The Jerusalem Post

Turkey loses F-35s, pressured on Med drilling

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

Turkey, whose government attempts to create regional crises every month to stoke tensions from Libya to Armenia, is now running into increased pressure to stop its escalation of activities in the Mediterran­ean. It comes as the US Air Force agreed to acquire the F-35s that were meant for Turkey but which Ankara lost because it prefers Russia and Russian S-400s to working with NATO members.

Ankara is increasing­ly dominated by a militarist, nationalis­t and extremist government that has recently sent thousands of Syrian mercenarie­s to Libya, has been bombing minorities in Iraq and has also threatened to involve itself in the Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict. Turkey has also been involved in northern Syria, stoking extremists and spreading instabilit­y in areas from Afrin to Tel Abyad. But it is in the Mediterran­ean that the next clash may come.

Let’s start with the F-35 fiasco. Turkey was a partner in the F-35 program, and it was supposed to have had its soldiers training on the planes and was going to receive them. However, Ankara decided in 2017 to buy Russia’s S-400 air defense system. The US urged and begged Turkey not to, with one senator even proposing that America buy the Russian system from Turkey to help Turkey save face. Now it is official: The US will buy eight F-35A warplanes that were meant for Turkey, according to Defense News. This also includes “six F-35As built for the air force and modificati­ons that will bring the Turkish jets in line with the US configurat­ion.”

Meanwhile, Turkey has been criticized by the US for Mediterran­ean activity that has raised tensions with Greece. The State Department, which is usually very pro-Ankara, criticized Turkey’s plans for operations around the Greek island of Kastellori­zo and any work in disputed waters off the island. Kastellori­zo is just 2 km. from the Turkish coast and around 120 km. from the larger Greek island of Rhodes. The island is the easternmos­t edge of Greece and is considered one of the prettiest and smallest of the Dodecanese islands. It has a population of several hundred, and Turkey likely views it as low hanging fruit to test Greece, because Greek fighter pilots have to fly furthest to get to it.

Turkey says it is merely doing a seismic survey. But Ankara has been increasing­ly claiming a huge swath of the Mediterran­ean – and claiming it is a “blue motherland” for Turkey. Ankara has sent drilling vessels and naval drills to test Athens and signed a deal with the embattled government in Libya to lay claim to a huge area of water between Cyprus and Greece.

Germany has also warned Turkey about straining EU-Turkey ties over the continued attempts to pressure Greece. Turkey has exploited the COVID-19 crisis to try to get more areas from Libya to Iraq, thinking the EU is weak and won’t respond. Turkey in February and March tried to pressure the EU by threatenin­g to force Syrian refugees to cross the border into Greece.

Ankara creates a new crisis every month to distract from what it is doing. For instance, it is building a TurkStream pipeline to Eastern Europe and is trying to sabotage an Israeli deal with Greece and Cyprus for a similar pipeline. Israel has approved that pipeline deal; Greece warned Turkey about it this week. Greece, the UAE, Egypt and France have all condemned Turkey’s maritime role in the past.

With the EastMed deal moving forward six months after the trilateral signing, Chevron is also buying Noble Energy, which will mean new progress for offshore energy fields along Israel’s coasts. This may all be linked, but Ankara’s role in destabiliz­ing the Mediterran­ean is therefore more important.

Ankara’s role has to be seen as an arc of potential conflicts. That means tensions with

Greece, which is tied to its S-400s and Russia and Syria, as well as its role in Libya. Turkey is only in Libya because of its energy deals; it sought to get Libya and the waters off the coast in one deal.

Now Egypt says it may intervene in Libya to stop Turkey.

Ankara is backing Tripoli, but Cairo backs the Libyan National Army in eastern Libya. Ankara sought to exploit Tripoli’s weakness, and a supply of poor Syrian rebels who needed a new place to fight, to secure its water claims. Berlin, Rome and Paris have all threatened sanctions on countries interferin­g in Libya. Meanwhile, Turkey has held meetings with Malta and Italy about its views.

It’s not clear if Turkey’s recent actions around the Greek islands, as well as demands to drill and do underwater surveys, are just to test Greece and the EU, or if it will proceed. There has been increased air activity, including Turkish drones allegedly flying off the coast of Greek islands, and more Turkish ships are apparently moving to the Aksaz naval base.

Greece is on alert for violations of its airspace and waters. Social media user @ItaMilRada­r wrote on Tuesday that these tensions included Turkish F-165s being intercepte­d by Greek pilots near Kastellori­zo. If only Turkey had acquired the F-35 rather than the S-400s, it might have been Turkish F-35s overflying the waters off the island.

 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ??
(Wikimedia Commons)

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