This is very critical. If Turkish companies, which can offer fast, efficient and quantity solutions to meet Europe's defense and security needs, are included in EU defense programs, this could pave the way for Turkiye to become a production hub and provide a very important plus factor for Europe in military capacity building and transformation.
This possible strategic cooperation will also be mutually beneficial for the EU to take concrete and swift action to strengthen its overall defense preparedness, reduce its strategic dependencies, and address critical capability gaps, as set out at the last summit. It is win-win. But at the same time, it is a situation that countries that compete(or dont want new player) with the Turkish industry instead of cooperating with it would never want. I think this issue is also a litmus test for the EU. The agenda of those who are strongly opposed to EU-TR defense cooperation is certainly not related to EU interests.