Seems to me people don't really get the situation TurAF is in. TurAF is NATO's second largest air force and the third largest air force in the region. Some of its capabilities can only be matched by countries like France and Israel. But, unlike 10 or 20 years ago Turkey now ensures this numerical superiority with relatively outdated aircraft in the form of some 230 legacy F-16s, an important part of which are not used for combat duties. As far as i can remember, TurAF currently have 8(7 if you discount 113) combat squadrons made up of F-16s. That's it. It has one squadron specializing in SEAD duties, and two squadrons specializing in strike roles with more than usual LANTIRN share. This is our fighter aircraft inventory. TurAF was the first non-US NATO country to field a LANTIRN squadron in 90s that allowed to strike at night with precision in Yugoslavia. It was one of the first users of the Sniper pod, and the DB-110.
This technological edge TurAF had over its neighbours and adversaries is now lost in 2024. Now almost every neighbour that's worth talking about field more technologically advanced aircraft than TurAF, and in greater numbers than in the past. There is also the issue of training pilots and keeping up with the doctrinal and operational changes of the neighbouring air forces. While Kızılelma and Anka-3 are hopefully set to be great additions as part of OKU, they are not fighter jets, they can't replace the roles we give to our fighter jets. While it is good that we have hundreds of drones that can strike a moving vehicle outside of our borders, whenever a real target shows up, it's not the TB2 or Anka that is sent but an F-16 with 4 big PGMs under its wings. Israeli strikes in Lebanon and Yemen in the last 10 days I believe have showed everyone again that a fighter bomber is irreplaceable and gives the most capability for money spent.
Neither Özgür-II nor Kaan is coming soon enough and both require American acceptance to develop, produce and field and Kaan will not be delivered in meaningful numbers soon. There's issues to be talked about stopgap solutions, mainly about political back and forths and delivery times, but TurAF needs a new generation aircraft that is ready to be fielded without development as the world plunges to chaos. This is not a new topic, I wrote about a "B plan for the air force in case of issues and delays" in 2019. 5 years has passed, with no solution reached. Only thing that stands is that our aircraft are old and the replacements we are working on are still in early stages of development project scale wise.
There's no F-15 offer. Per my understanding reading the article, Ekşi mentions F-15 as another alternative instead of F-35s and the official interviewed basically says "sure, that can be discussed."