Kuwait Times

Turkey signs deal to buy Russian S-400 missile systems

MISSILE SYSTEMS PURCHASE TO RAISE CONCERNS IN WEST

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ISTANBUL: Turkey has signed a deal with Russia to buy S-400 missile defense systems, its first major weapons purchase from Moscow, in an accord that could trouble Ankara’s NATO allies. The purchase of the surface-to-air missile defense batteries, Ankara’s most significan­t deal with a non-NATO supplier, comes with Turkey in the throes of a crisis in relations with several Western states.

“Signatures have been made for the purchase of S-400s from Russia. A deposit has also been paid as far as I know,” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in comments published in several newspapers yesterday. “Mr Putin (President Vladimir Putin) and myself are determined on this issue,” he told Turkish journalist­s aboard his presidenti­al jet returning from a trip to Kazakhstan. Moscow also confirmed the accord, with Vladimir Kozhin, Putin’s adviser for military and technical cooperatio­n, saying: “The contract has been signed and is being prepared for implementa­tion.”

Take our own decisions

The purchase of the missile systems from a non-NATO supplier is likely to raise concerns in the West over their technical compatibil­ity with the alliance’s equipment. The Pentagon has already sounded the alarm, saying bluntly that “generally it’s a good idea” for NATO allies to buy interopera­ble equipment. But Erdogan said Turkey-which has the second largest standing army in NATO after the United Stateswas free to make military acquisitio­ns based on its defense needs.

“Nobody has the right to discuss the Turkish republic’s independen­ce principles or independen­t decisions about its defense industry,” he said. “We make the decisions about our own independen­ce ourselves, we are obliged to take safety and security measures in order to defend our country.” He said Moscow would extend a credit to Turkey for the purchase of the weapons. Quoted by Russian state-owned TASS news agency, Kozhin said the deal was fully in line with Moscow’s strategic interests.

“For this reason we fully understand the reactions of several Western countries which are trying to put pressure on Turkey”. However signing the deal does not mean that delivery is imminent, with Russia facing a high demand for the S-400s from its own armed forces and key clients like China and India. Some analysts have suggested the message sent to the West by the military cooperatio­n between Moscow and Ankara is as important as the delivery itself. In 2015, Turkey scrapped a $3.4 billion deal with China to build its first anti-missile system.

Another blow

Russia’s relations with NATO have been in crisis over its annexation of Crimea from Ukraine and for backing pro-Moscow separatist­s in eastern Ukraine. Turkey, a NATO member since 1952, has currently troubled ties with the United States over a number of issues including Washington’s support for the People’s Protection Units (YPG) Syrian Kurd militia which Ankara considers a terror group. The Turkish-Russian contract is a new sign of better relations between Ankara and Moscow since a reconcilia­tion deal was signed last year following the 2015 shooting down by the Turkish military of a Russian plane over the Syrian border.

Ankara was also heartened by Moscow’s response to the 2016 failed coup in Turkey and the two sides have been working together in search of a solution to the Syria conflict. But the two nations whose rivalry in the Black Sea and Caucasus regions dates back centuries-are still at odds on a host of political issues. Turkey, which vehemently opposed the 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula by Moscow, condemned Tuesday the jailing of a Tatar leader for eight years by Russia over a rally against Moscow’s seizure of the region. —AFP

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 ??  ?? ANKARA: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech during a meeting of ruling Justice and Developmen­t (AK) Party provincial heads at the AK Party Headquarte­rs in Ankara. — AFP
ANKARA: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech during a meeting of ruling Justice and Developmen­t (AK) Party provincial heads at the AK Party Headquarte­rs in Ankara. — AFP

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