The National - News

Turkey uses US jets to test Russian S-400 missile system

- JOYCE KARAM

Turkey moved a step closer to activating the S-400 Russian missile defence system on Monday, using American-made F-16 jets to test its radars.

Turkish media showed F-16 jets flying over Ankara to assess the S-400 system that Turkey acquired over the summer from Russia, despite US and Nato opposition to the deal.

Since then, the US has taken several measures to punish Turkey, including cancelling its F-35 warplane sales and expelling it from the fighter jet consortium it joined in 2002.

Privately, Trump administra­tion officials were hoping that Turkey would keep the S-400 system boxed and deactivate­d to avoid further escalation.

But with Monday’s military exercise, experts agree that

Turkey is one step closer to activating the system and is risking more US sanctions.

Aaron Stein, the director of the Middle East programme at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, said Turkey’s behaviour had been emboldened by US President Donald Trump.

“Turkey is hiding behind the whims of one man who is not following the law a majority-Republican senate passed,” Mr Stein told The National.

A US sanctions Act designed to deter any significan­t transactio­ns with Russia was passed in 2017 with an overwhelmi­ng bipartisan majority.

Mr Trump has been delaying the imposition of sanctions on Turkey, a fellow Nato member.

Mr Stein said the US president “is just directing the executive branch to loosely interpret ‘significan­t transactio­n’ [with Russia], and hanging his hopes on the rather absurd idea that Ankara won’t use something they paid $2.5 billion [Dh9.18bn] to purchase”.

“It is another step towards activation, which Ankara says will be in April 2020,” he said.

Nicholas Danforth, a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund, said Turkey was “more committed than ever to using the air-defence system it purchased”.

“Turkey’s solution to this crisis has always been, ‘we activate the S-400s and Washington does nothing’,” Mr Danforth told The National.

Ankara is now “interpreti­ng Washington’s refusal to follow through on sanctions as an endorsemen­t of this plan”, he said.

“What happens when Turkey finally burns through Washington’s remarkable reserves of optimism?”

Congress is growing impatient with Turkey and the White House.

Politician­s clashed with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan during his visit to Washington this month, over his incursion into Syria and closer ties with Russia.

Mr Trump called him a “great president” but the two were not able to reach a compromise on the S-400 purchase.

With Turkey testing the system, the US president could opt for lighter sanctions available through the Act, and Congress could move on other bills to punish Ankara.

The Republican senator Lindsey Graham told Axios on Sunday that he blocked a resolution recognisin­g Armenian genocide by the Ottoman Empire at the request of the White House.

“After the meeting, we kind of huddled up and talked about what happened,” Mr Graham said. “The only reason I did it is because he [Erdogan] was still in town.”

Mr Graham he said he would not object to the recognitio­n next time.

The testing of the S-400 in Ankara comes on the eve of a Nato summit planned for next Tuesday in London.

US State Department and Defence officials contacted by The

National were not available for comment.

 ??  ?? Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Donald Trump were unable this month to reach a compromise on the Russian S-400 deal AFP
Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Donald Trump were unable this month to reach a compromise on the Russian S-400 deal AFP

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