Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NATO Prods Turkey: Choose US over Russia in picking missiles

- BY selcan hacaoglu (c) 2019, bloomberg ·May 06, 2019 -

NATO’S chief embarked on a final push to convince Turkey to abandon its plan to buy Russian missiles by backing talks over its possible purchase of an alternativ­e U.s.-made airdefence system.

“I welcome and encourage the discussion­s about Turkey’s possible acquisitio­n of a

U.S. Patriot missile system,” Secretary-general Jens Stoltenber­g told Turkey’s state news agency Anadolu in an interview published on Sunday. “Decisions about military procuremen­t are for nations to make,” but “interopera­bility of our armed forces is fundamenta­l to NATO for the conduct of our operations and missions,” he said.

Stoltenber­g spoke in Brussels before setting off for a two-day visit to Turkey, where he is expected to urge President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu to back off from a planned purchase of S-400 missiles from Russia. That plan is a key source of tension with the U.S., which has threatened to sanction Turkey and expel it from its F-35 fifth-generation fighter jet program.

Washington says the S-400s, if deployed in Turkey, could collect critical informatio­n on the stealth capabiliti­es of the F-35, which Turkish companies have helped to develop. As a way out, the U.S. has offered its Patriot systems, and negotiatio­ns are proceeding in fits and starts.

But the threat of removing Turkey from a costly fighter jet programme or imposing sanctions appear to have done little to persuade Ankara to abandon the S-400s. Turkey is set to take delivery of the Russian equipment by July and has proposed the U.S. and the NATO study how to avoid the risk of compromisi­ng sensitive informatio­n on the F-35s. It’s also argued that it can still buy Patriot missiles from the U.S. if Washington can give guarantees on their delivery as well as joint production.

Stoltenber­g called attention to areas of cooperatio­n by pointing out that the alliance has been reinforcin­g Turkey’s air defences since 2013. It’s deployed Spain’s Patriot batteries at Incirlik Air Base and Italian SAMP/T systems close to an early-warning radar at Kurecik, a critical component of NATO’S ballistic-missile defence.

“The mission is important and NATO allies are committed to it,” Stoltenber­g said, stressing that the alliance has also enhanced patrols by AWACS surveillan­ce planes over Turkish territory.

However, Turkey says those measures are inadequate to protect its air space.

Should Turkey go ahead and purchase the Russian system, the severity of sanctions it might face will depend largely on President Donald Trump, who Ankara says is mulling a visit to Turkey around the time the S-400s are scheduled to arrive.

Erdogan is hopeful his American counterpar­t, with whom he enjoys good relations, will help deflect stinging sanctions.

Turkish officials including his son-in-law, Treasury and Finance Minister Berat Albayrak, remain engaged in back-door diplomacy with the White House.

“Despite growing divergence­s between Turkey and its Western allies, neither side can afford for political, economic, and security relations to deteriorat­e beyond a certain point,” Marc Pierini, a former French diplomat and European Union ambassador to Turkey, said on Twitter.

 ??  ?? The Russian S-400 anti-aircraft missile launching system that Turkey plan to purchase that is a source of tension with the US. (AFP)
The Russian S-400 anti-aircraft missile launching system that Turkey plan to purchase that is a source of tension with the US. (AFP)

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