Russia Offers Sukhoi Su-35 to Turkey after US Removes from F-35 Programme
Russia Offers Sukhoi Su-35 to Turkey after US Removes from F-35 Programme
The first parts of the S-400 air defence system were flown to a military air base northwest of Ankara, sealing NATO ally Turkey's deal with Russia, which Washington had struggled for months to prevent.

The United States on Wednesday removed Turkey from the F-35 fighter jet programme, a move long threatened and expected after Ankara began accepting delivery of an advanced Russian missile defence system last week. The first parts of the S-400 air defence system were flown to the Murted military air base northwest of Ankara, sealing NATO ally Turkey's deal with Russia, which Washington had struggled for months to prevent.

Russia has now offered Turkey to buy Sukhoi Su-35 fighter jets. CEO of the Russian State Corporation Rostec, Sergey Chemezov, said, "If our Turkish colleagues express a desire, we are ready to work out the deliveries of Su-35 fighter jets".

Turkey's foreign ministry said the move was unfair and could affect relations between the two countries. Turkey makes more than 900 parts of the F-35. The F-35 stealth fighter jet, the most advanced aircraft in the US arsenal, is used by NATO and other US allies. Washington is concerned that deploying the S-400 with the F-35 would allow Russia to gain too much inside information about the aircraft's stealth system.

"The F-35 cannot coexist with a Russian intelligence collection platform that will be used to learn about its advanced capabilities," the White House said in a statement earlier on Wednesday. Washington had long said the acquisition of the S-400 might lead to Turkey's expulsion from the F-35 programme.

Frayed Ties

After the Pentagon announcement, Turkey's foreign ministry said in a statement: "We invite the United States to return from this mistake which would open irreparable wounds in strategic relations."

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, speaking at the Aspen Institute's annual security forum in Aspen, Colorado, said he was concerned at Turkey's expulsion from the F-35 programme. But while the S-400 could not become part of NATO's shared air and missile defences, he said, Turkey has aircraft and radars that would remain part of the system.

"The S-400, the Russian air defence system, it’s not possible to integrate into the integrated NATO air defence and missile system, which is about sharing, you know, radar picture, about joint air policing, which is about shared capabilities. And Turkey has not asked for that," Stoltenberg said.

The S-400 acquisition is one of several issues that have frayed ties between the two allies, including a dispute over strategy in Syria east of the Euphrates River, where the United States is allied with Kurdish forces that Turkey views as foes.

The Pentagon had already laid out a plan to remove Turkey from the programme, which included halting training for Turkish pilots on the aircraft. Lord said all the Turkish F-35 pilots and personnel had "firm plans" to leave the United States and were scheduled to leave by July 31.

Turkey will no longer be able to buy the 100 F-35s it had agreed to purchase. "These would likely have been delivered at an annual rate of 8-12 aircraft/year through the 2020s," Byron Callan, an analyst at Capital Alpha Partners, said in a research note on Wednesday.

The jet's prime contractor, Lockheed Martin Corp and the jet's programme office at the Pentagon "should be able to re-market those delivery positions," Callan said.

Lockheed Martin spokeswoman Carolyn Nelson said: "Over the last several months we've been working to establish alternative sources of supply in the United States to quickly" adjust for the loss of Turkey's contribution to the programme.

The United States is considering expanding sales of the jets to five other nations, including Romania, Greece and Poland, as European allies bulk up their defences in the face of a strengthening Russia.

David Trachtenberg, the deputy undersecretary of defence for policy, told reporters at the briefing that the United States still valued its relationship with Turkey. "Our strategic partnership continues, but as I said, this is a specific response to a specific action," Trachtenberg said.

With Inputs from Reuters

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