The Borneo Post

Pentagon expects Turkey to buy US Patriot missile system

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WASHINGTON: US Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said Tuesday he was confident that Turkey would drop its plan to purchase the Russian S400 missile defence system and buy the US Patriot system instead.

A day after Washington put a freeze on its joint F- 35 fighter jet programme with Turkey in protest to the S- 400 deal, Shanahan said he expects Ankara to opt for the Patriot missiles.

That would then allow the F35 programme to continue, he confirmed.

“I’ve had a number of conversati­ons with Defense Minister (Hulusi) Akar and I really think we’ll resolve this situation with our strategic partners,” he said.

“I am very confident in the Patriot proposal that we’ve delivered to Turkey, its availabili­ty, its pricing, and very importantl­y, the industrial participat­ion that comes along with the Patriot system.”

Asked if that meant he expects Turkey will buy the Patriot system, Shanahan replied: “I expect we’ll solve the problem so that they have the right defence equipment in terms of Patriots and F- 35s.”

As for the F- 35s planned for Turkey, he said: “I expect them to be delivered.”

On Monday, the Pentagon said it was halting all deliveries and joint work with Turkey on the F35 if Ankara insisted on buying the S- 400 system from Russia, a move which has alarmed Turkey’s Nato allies.

The tough step came after months of warnings from Washington that Turkey’s adoption of Russian missile technology alongside US fighter jets would pose a threat to the F-35 technology and endanger Western defences.

“Pending an unequivoca­l Turkish decision to forgo delivery of the S- 400, deliveries and activities associated with the stand-up of Turkey’s F- 35 operationa­l capability have been suspended while our dialogue on this important matter continues with Turkey,” the Pentagon said in a statement.

Later, Marine Corps General Joe Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, reiterated that the US had made Turkey a “very good offer” on the Patriot system.

“The S- 400 and the F- 35, we’ve made it very clear those are incompatib­le systems,” Dunford said. “But we’re still working our way through this. And I hope we can come up with an arrangemen­t with Turkey.”

“So we haven’t given up yet is the bottom line.”

The purchase of a Russian system is highly unusual for a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on, the Western alliance forged to counter the Soviet Union.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo shows a new S-400 ‘Triumph’ surface-to-air missile system after its deployment at a military base outside the town of Gvardeysk near Kaliningra­d, Russia.
— Reuters photo File photo shows a new S-400 ‘Triumph’ surface-to-air missile system after its deployment at a military base outside the town of Gvardeysk near Kaliningra­d, Russia.

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