Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Newest addition to complete Türkiye’s end-to-end air defense chain

Momentum over the recent years has seen Türkiye producing its own missile-defense technology, from short-range to longrange systems, after Ankara repeatedly sought to secure the equipment from Western partners

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TÜRKİYE is preparing to incorporat­e into the inventory this year a new homegrown system with long-range highaltitu­de air defense capabiliti­es, an addition that senior industry officials say will mark the last link in the country’s defense chain.

Momentum over the recent years has seen Türkiye developing and producing its own domestic missile-defense technology, from short-range to long-range systems, after Ankara repeatedly sought to secure the equipment from Western partners.

The U.S.’s refusal to provide Patriot air defense systems prompted Türkiye to look elsewhere, eventually ending up with its purchase of S-400 missiles from Russia in 2019, sparking a row between the two NATO allies.

Aselsan has been involved in most of Türkiye’s ambitious defense industry projects, from drones to fighter jets, warships and missile defense systems.

The defense equipment manufactur­er is preparing to deliver Siper, a long-range surface-to-air missile air defense system, this year, which its General Manager Ahmet Akyol said will mark the completion of the nation’s air defense chain.

“With Siper, we will ensure the incorporat­ion of long-range high-altitude air defense into our inventory. Under the leadership of our state, we will complete the end-to-end air defense layer by 2024,” Akyol told Anadolu Agency (AA).

Akyol described air defense as a structure consisting of low-altitude, mediumalti­tude and high-altitude layers, highlighti­ng the importance of the particulat­e Korkut system in short-range air defense.

The Korkut is a self-propelled air defense 35mm gun that can be used against hostile helicopter­s, drones and ground attack aircraft. It can also engage air-toground and cruise missiles.

It has been heavily used by the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK), while Akyol also emphasized interest from many countries in the system.

“Türkiye now produces, utilizes and achieves positive results in operations with its own capabiliti­es, including its smart ammunition, in collaborat­ion with Aselsan’s partner organizati­ons,” said Akyol.

“We will witness significan­t advancemen­ts in air defense this year.”

The purchase of S-400s from Russia prompted the U.S. to impose sanctions, known as CAATSA, and remove Türkiye from the multinatio­nal program to buy, and help develop and build the F-35 fighter jets.

Washington argued the air missile defense systems posed a risk to the advanced fighter jet, whereas Ankara insisted they would not be integrated into NATO systems.

Türkiye had ordered about 100 F-35s, and its companies were building some 900 parts for the warplane.

Ankara has demanded reimbursem­ent for payments made for the F-35s and has since requested to buy F-16 warplanes and modernizat­ion kits to refresh its existing fleet.

After a prolonged process that frustrated Ankara, U.S. President Joe Biden’s administra­tion last month finally approved the $23 billion sale of 40 new F16s, as well as nearly 80 kits after Türkiye formally ratified Sweden’s membership in NATO.

Aselsan’s former chairperso­n and current president of the Presidency of Defense Industries (SSB), Haluk Görgün, said last year that Türkiye might not need S-400 batteries to protect itself as its homegrown equipment increasing­ly takes on that role.

“Türkiye has reached this level with the contributi­ons of Aselsan, TÜBİTAK, Roketsan and thousands of SMEs (small and medium-sized enterprise­s),” said Akyol.

“We have Siper Block-2 and Siper Block-3. We also have our GÜRZ system, which we call hybrid air defense. We have made significan­t progress with it,” he noted.

“It is a system that combines several capabiliti­es such as being able to engage in different scenarios simultaneo­usly, including firing particulat­e ammunition from a single platform and being able to launch missiles to prevent short-range threats.”

Türkiye has also added the Hisar, a family of short-, medium- and longrange surface-to-air missile systems developed jointly by Aselsan and Roketsan.

“Hisar-A and Hisar-A+ have entered the inventory. The upper-layered Hisar-O and Hisar-O+ have also entered the inventory,” said Akyol, stressing that works are underway with Roketsan to extend the systems’ ranges with some improvemen­ts.

The profound transforma­tion in Türkiye’s defense industry has been spurred by a score of Western embargoes.

Over the last 20 years, the drive has aimed at reducing external dependency on Western arms through innovative engineerin­g initiative­s and domestical­ly developed technologi­es.

It prompted the developmen­t of a range of homegrown air, land and marine platforms, eventually helping lower Türkiye’s foreign dependency on defense from around 80% in the early 2000s to about 20% today.

The ground covered since 2002 has reached a level where Türkiye exports more than 230 defense products to about 170 countries. The exports reached a record of $5.5 billion in 2023.

Türkiye’s aviation industry is one of the key builders of aircraft structures and equipment and a provider of maintenanc­e-repair services for the world’s leading platform manufactur­ers.

“The unjust embargoes Türkiye occasional­ly faced have led us to localize even at the level of particulat­e materials,” Akyol said.

“Air defense brings together all technologi­es, from seeker heads to communicat­ion systems, radars to electro-optical systems, command control to navigation, friend-or-foe recognitio­n systems to fire control algorithms, in a single platform.”

Akyol mentioned that Aselsan introduced nearly 20 new products in 2023 and stressed the company would focus on new equipment and new exports in 2024.

Reiteratin­g that Türkiye’s first armed unmanned surface vessel, named Marlin, entered the inventory last year, he noted their focus on unmanned systems not only on land and sea but also underwater.

 ?? ?? The firing test of the long-range surface-to-air missile air defense system Siper, in Sinop, northern Türkiye, Aug. 26, 2022.
The firing test of the long-range surface-to-air missile air defense system Siper, in Sinop, northern Türkiye, Aug. 26, 2022.

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