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News ID: 95334
Publish Date : 11 October 2021 - 21:30
Amid Arms Sales Race With EU,

U.S. Encouraged Turkey to Buy F-16s

ANKARA (Middle East Eye) -- The U.S. government encouraged Turkey to request the purchase of a slew of new Lockheed Martin-made Viper class F-16 fighter jets, as well as modernization kits for its existing warplanes, two sources familiar with the issue told Middle East Eye.
Turkey sent a letter of request on 40 F-16s and 80 modernization kits last month after getting kicked out of the F-35 program more than two years ago due to its Russian missile defense system S-400s.
The Turkish public learned of the letter through an obscure Greek defense website rather than the Turkish officials or sources.
The move surprised many since there is a significant amount of ongoing animosity in the U.S. Congress towards Ankara for its regional policies, and Turkey is currently subject to U.S. CAATSA sanctions following its S-400 purchase.
In any case, Congressional authorization is a must due to the size of the request, which is believed to be around $6bn.
The Turkish military had expected to acquire fifth-generation F-35 fighter jets from the U.S. Once Ankara was excluded from that program, it had to move to update its rapidly ageing F-16 fleet.
It has also launched several of its own projects, like the TF-X currently being developed by Turkish Aerospace Industries and the British arms company BAE Systems, but it will take some time for these to get to a place where they can be serially produced.
One Turkish official told MEE that Turkey’s ageing F-16s fleet, if not restored, could put not only the security of Ankara’s but also NATO’s southern flank at risk.
“The U.S. officials never told us that the modernization of F-16 was something out of reach,” the official said. “We believe Washington would be mindful of the Turkish and Greek balance as well,” referring to the Greek purchase of French warplanes.
France and Greece signed this month a multibillion-euro deal for Athens to buy three French warships. The deal sent a clear signal from Paris after its stinging loss of a multibillion-euro contract for submarines with Australia, which announced it would instead buy nuclear-powered subs from the U.S.
A second Turkish official said the whole process was progressing really fast and that the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden had no issues with the request to update the F-16s. “However, the U.S. Congress is another matter,” the official said.

One of the fundamental arguments that the Biden administration may use to convince U.S. lawmakers is the possibility of Turkey acquiring more Russian weapons, including aircraft.
“Maybe the United States won’t maintain the F-16 program,” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told CBS News in September. “I don’t have such a guarantee that the Americans will continue with the F-16 provision. If that will be interrupted, then we will be forced to take other measures.”
After meeting his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Sochi last month, Erdogan said that both countries were likely to work on the joint production of jets or jet engines.
However, there are military concerns as well. In a memo on the potential implications for the U.S. of the S-400 deal between Russia and Turkey, the Pentagon counted F-16s among the systems that could be impacted by Russian espionage. Some believe the Pentagon will need to understand whether the sensors used with F-16s could be jeopardized with S-400s, since F-35s also use them.
Officials said Turkey asked to purchase 40 new F-16s because the oldest version of the jets the Turkish military already uses are too old to be modernized.
Some Washington-based lobbyist NGOs, including Armenian, Greek, Christian, and right-wing foreign policy groups, have already begun a campaign dubbed “No Jets to Turkey” to pressure the administration and Congress to stop the process.
Turkish officials say that if the U.S. Congress blocks the sale, Turkey will be left vulnerable and relations between Washington and Ankara will be further destabilized.