Latest Thread
F-35 is being upgraded to carry 6 amraams or 6 future aim-260That big fighter can only carry 4 amraams? Are you sure?
After Kaan, the government should launch a new fighter program, this time it should be a strike fighter, specialized for air to ground missions. Those F35s are not coming, so Turkish Air Force better have a contingency plan.
That big fighter can only carry 4 amraams? Are you sure?
F-35 is being upgraded to carry 6 amraams or 6 future aim-260
F22 can carry 8 amraam.
Are you sure?we are gonna get out matched by greek airforce in the near future.
Luckily, warfare is more than just 20 planes they might get by 2030s. I swear I'll never understand people that are getting worried about Greece. They are not a threat to us by themselves, cannot ever hope to be. We spend 4 or 5 times more than them, and not just this year, almost every single year. We have far larger military and more importantly, we have far more experienced. And we have our own military production, so we can arm ourselves unlike Greece who buys some stuff and accepts whatever their puppetmasters donate to them from their old stocks.We could have F35 by now but we are gonna get out matched by greek airforce in the near future.
What is it with this fascination of Greece being a real threat?Buying S-400 was the worst decision this country has ever made. We could have F35 by now but we are gonna get out matched by Greek airforce in the near future.
We should give S-400 to ukraine and return to f35 program.
“Also high on Barrack’s agenda is resolving the long-stalled sale of 40 F-16 fighter jets to Turkey, a deal that has been approved by Congress but remains unimplemented.
Since the agreement was finalized in January 2024, Ankara has deliberately stalled its execution, citing concerns that the associated upgrade of its existing fleet of 79 F-16s is not economically advantageous. This posture has caused growing frustration among senior officials at the Pentagon and the State Department, who have made it clear – both publicly and privately – that such behavior is unacceptable for two main reasons.
First, because it constitutes a breach of an agreement that only came together after months of high-stakes diplomacy over Sweden’s NATO accession, a process that demanded the expenditure of significant US political capital on the global stage. Second, and more critically, because the implementation of the F-16 deal is seen as a prerequisite for any future progress toward the F-35s sale, should the legal obstacles currently in place be removed.
On that front, sources in Washington tell Kathimerini that lawmakers aligned with Ankara will soon introduce an amendment to this year’s National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). The goal is to repeal or modify Section 1245 of the 2020 NDAA, which explicitly prohibits the transfer of F-35s to Turkey for as long as the possession status of the Russian-made S-400 air defense system remains unchanged.
A similar attempt was made – under strict confidentiality – last summer, when Senator Jeanne Shaheen sought to insert a similar amendment, reportedly at the urging of the Turkish lobby. That effort ultimately failed.
Any new legislative initiative would require approval from the House and Senate Armed Services and Appropriations Committees. Still, the adoption of such an amendment would be politically controversial even under this Republican-controlled Congress and would be widely interpreted as a major concession to Ankara. It could provoke strong pushback, even if the president himself were to support it.
In the hypothetical – yet entirely plausible – scenario where Turkey becomes eligible once again to acquire the F-35, one key question would remain: Would it be reinstated as a co-production partner in the program, or would it simply be treated as a standard FMS (foreign military sales) customer, like Greece?
Sources in Washington suggest that President Trump might consider reinstating Turkey’s co-production status not merely as a goodwill gesture, but for a more strategic reason: Because doing so would exempt future Turkish F-35 purchases from the formal Congressional review process required for FMS deals.
![]()
Plans afoot for an Erdogan trip to the White House | eKathimerini.com
Behind-the-scenes efforts have been intensifying rapidly in recent days towards a potential visit by Turkish President Erdogan to the White House.www.ekathimerini.com
WtfRe Turkish purchase of Eurofighters:
"There are still some hurdles to be jumped over" for Turkey. One of them is "quite sensitive". Make of that what you will"
It's all guesswork. Word sensitive could mean those things, but it could also mean one of the three owners of the program saying "no".Wtf
I think it stems from our excessive demands. We are asking for too many things, such as joint production and access to software.
GermanyIt's all guesswork. Word sensitive could mean those things, but it could also mean one of the three owners of the program saying "no".
software =Wtf
I think it stems from our excessive demands. We are asking for too many things, such as joint production and access to software.