clear

Creating new perspectives since 2009

Turkey repeats working group offer to US to solve row over Russian defense purchase

April 14, 2020 at 9:16 pm

Russian S-400 missile defense system arrive at Murted Airbase in Ankara, Turkey on 15 September 2019 [TURKISH NATIONAL DEFENSE MINISTRY / HANDOUT/Anadolu Agency]

Turkey on Tuesday repeated an offer to the United States to establish a technical working group including NATO to help solve a dispute over Ankara’s purchase of Russian missile defenses that angered Washington.

Ties between the NATO allies were badly strained last year when Turkey bought Russian S-400 defense systems, prompting Washington to threaten sanctions and to suspend Turkish involvement in its F-35 jet program.

The United States says the S-400s are not compatible with NATO systems and threaten the stealth capabilities of its Lockheed Martin F-35 jets. Turkey rejects this and says the S-400s will not be integrated into the alliance’s defenses.

Before the outbreak of the coronavirus shifted focused away from the issue, Ankara’s bilateral ties with Moscow took a heavy blow over Russia’s support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s military offensive on the northwestern Syrian town of Idlib.

OPINION: Turkey’s battle in Idlib exposes US hypocrisy

In early March as fighting between Syrian government forces and the Turkish military and allied Syrian rebels intensified, Ankara sought help from the United States to give it ammunition as well as humanitarian assistance for hundreds of thousands of civilians fleeing the battle.

Since then, both Turkey and the United States have largely kept silent on the S-400 issue. Turkey had previously said it would make the Russian missile defense systems operational in April but so far there has been no sign of such a move.

Speaking at a virtual Atlantic Council event, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Turkey’s stance on how to solve the issue had not changed.

We offer the US to establish a technical working group with NATO’s inclusion and NATO can lead this technical working group actually. And this offer is still on the table,

he said.

He also added that Turkey was still willing to purchase Patriot batteries if it had a good offer. Washington has repeatedly said it was unwilling to provide Patriots to Turkey unless it returned the S-400s.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan visited Washington last November and met with US President Donald Trump and agreed with him about setting up a working group but the effort made little progress.

OPINION: Behind Trump-Erdogan ‘bromance,’ a White House meeting to repair US-Turkey ties