President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has voiced optimism that Turkey will be readmitted to the US F-35 project and obtain the stealth fighter fighters in accordance with “an agreement” with US President Donald Trump.
Washington removed Turkey out of the F-35 program in 2019 and placed penalties on Ankara a year later for purchasing a Russian S-400 surface-to-air missile defence system, but with Trump’s return to power, the two Nato allies look eager to resolve the conflict.
“I believe that Mr. Trump will remain loyal to the agreement we made. I think the F-35s will be delivered to Turkey step-by-step during his term,” Erdogan said while returning from Azerbaijan, the Anadolu state news agency reported Saturday.
He gave no further details about the agreement but said the move was “part of a geo-economic revolution.”
“The F-35 issue is not only a military technology issue for us, but also a strong partnership issue in international platforms such as Nato,” he added.
The sanctions on Turkey’s defence sector have soured ties between the two allies but last weekend, Washington’s envoy to Ankara Tom Barrack said they were likely to be over “by the year’s end”.
Trump and Erdogan would instruct their top diplomats to “figure out the way and end it and Congress will support an intelligent solution”, he told Anadolu on Sunday.
Impact Shorts
More ShortsIn March, Erdogan spoke to Trump about the need to finalise a deal to let Turkey buy US F-16 fighter planes and be readmitted to the development programme for F-35 warplanes.
And last month, he said he saw an end in sight to the sanctions, saying Turkey had seen them eased under Trump.


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