Turkey, US agree to set up joint working group on S-400 issue: FM Çavuşoğlu

Test7

Experienced member
Staff member
Administrator
Messages
4,784
Reactions
18 19,918
Nation of residence
United States of America
Nation of origin
Turkey
5fec3f9167b0a92214e2bf46.jpg


Ankara and Washington have started talks to form a joint working group regarding Turkey's purchase of Russian S-400 missile defense systems and the U.S. sanctions stemming from it, Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said on Dec. 30.

Speaking at a news conference, Çavuşoğlu said the working group had not been formed yet but talks among experts had begun.

Çavuşoğlu said that Turkey had itself had earlier proposed a joint working group on the sanctions, which target Turkey’s Defense Industries Presidency (SSB), including SSB head Ismail Demir and three other officials.

“Now the proposal came from the US. As we naturally always favor dialogue, we said yes, and negotiations began at the level of experts,” he said during a meeting reviewing foreign policy developments in 2020.

Underscoring that opinions differ as to whether the sanctions are heavy or not, he said imposing sanctions is a misstep both politically and legally.

“It is an attack on our sovereign rights,” he stressed.

On Dec. 14, through its Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA), the US imposed sanctions on Turkey over its acquisition of the Russian S-400 missile defense system.

In April 2017, when its protracted efforts to buy an air defense system from the U.S. proved futile, Turkey signed a contract with Russia to acquire the state-of-art missile shield.

U.S. officials have voiced opposition to their deployment, claiming they would be incompatible with NATO systems and would expose F-35 jets to possible Russian subterfuge.

Turkey, however, stressed that the S-400s would not be integrated into NATO systems, and poses no threat to the alliance or its armaments.

Turkish officials have repeatedly proposed a working group to examine the technical compatibility issue.

 
A

adenl

Guest
Most probably it'll end up with Turkey being allowed back in the F-35 program while military observers are stationed in Turkey to make sure the F-35's not not operate in the vicinity of the S-400. Kinda like the arrangement the US has with the Pakistani air-force regarding the F-16's.
 

Combat-Master

Baklava Consumer
Moderator
Messages
3,667
Reactions
15 25,473
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Turkey
if tensions with russia gets intense then i expect when turkey has it's own air defence will sell its s400 to nato to know its secrets :cool:

Why would Turkey do such a selfless act for NATO... Turkey will hold S400 close to it's chest, especially in the highly volatile state US has left the region in.
 
A

adenl

Guest
if tensions with russia gets intense then i expect when turkey has it's own air defence will sell its s400 to nato to know its secrets :cool:

Why would Turkey do such a selfless act for NATO... Turkey will hold S400 close to it's chest, especially in the highly volatile state US has left the region in.
Unless the US is willing to share the latest and greatest tech with Turkey, alongside a recovery of bilateral relations to heights never seen before, perhaps only then. But until that happens, the S-400 are like an insurance against F-16's trying to bomb Turkish places of authority
 

mulj

Experienced member
Messages
1,989
Reactions
3,243
Nation of residence
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Nation of origin
Bosnia & Herzegovina
firm stance backed with real thing behind is always meaningfull , huge retraction of state department.
one point goes to RTE.
 

Test7

Experienced member
Staff member
Administrator
Messages
4,784
Reactions
18 19,918
Nation of residence
United States of America
Nation of origin
Turkey

Agha Sher

Experienced member
DefenceHub Diplomat
Messages
2,685
Reactions
10 9,114
Nation of residence
Denmark
Nation of origin
Afghanistan
Great development. Sort things out with the US, get the F-35 and start hammering Assad, UAE interests and Haftar.
 

Snake

New member
Messages
3
Reactions
10
I know how this is gonna end. First we give you Patriot/F-35 if you bla bla bla. then further we give you F-35 if you ditch your TF-X program and so it goes with nothing won at the end.
 

mulj

Experienced member
Messages
1,989
Reactions
3,243
Nation of residence
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Nation of origin
Bosnia & Herzegovina
We don't want the F35.
regardless, do you want it or not, it is reasonable to get your hands on couple of squadrons of those birds and it perfectly suits your dance on the wire foreign policy.
 

mulj

Experienced member
Messages
1,989
Reactions
3,243
Nation of residence
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Nation of origin
Bosnia & Herzegovina
i see the s400
was an unsuccessful move from the turey
on the contrary, you show some backbone and gained respect, that is always success, what would be unsuccessfull is that usa continued to tighten the grip, we are witnessing opposite.
 

ANGMAR

Committed member
Moderator
Egypt Moderator
Messages
236
Reactions
526
Nation of residence
Egypt
Nation of origin
Egypt
on the contrary, you show some backbone and gained respect, that is always success, what would be unsuccessfull is that usa continued to tighten the grip, we are witnessing opposite.
hope everything go right especially we will face a new US administration
 

the

Well-known member
Messages
321
Reactions
756
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Turkey
I know how this is gonna end. First we give you Patriot/F-35 if you bla bla bla. then further we give you F-35 if you ditch your TF-X program and so it goes with nothing won at the end.

That's not a genuine issue; Japan, SK, UK all have their own independent 5th/6th generation fighter projects yet they are all holders of both F35A and F35B. You are buying American G&S, in the form of maintence for the planes.
 

Follow us on social media

Top Bottom