Turkey will not step back on S-400 missile systems despite US sanctions

Turkey will not step back on S-400 missile systems despite US sanctions
Above, a Russian military cargo plane unloads S-400 missile defense systems at the Murted military airbase, northwest of Ankara on Aug. 27, 2019. (Turkish Defense Ministry/AFP)
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Updated 17 December 2020
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Turkey will not step back on S-400 missile systems despite US sanctions

Turkey will not step back on S-400 missile systems despite US sanctions
  • Turkey mulling steps it would take to reciprocate against the US sanctions

ANKARA: Turkey won’t step back from its decision to deploy Russian air defense systems despite US sanctions imposed on the country over the purchase, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Thursday.
In an interview with Turkey’s 24 TV television, Cavusoglu also said Turkey was mulling steps it would take to reciprocate against the US sanctions, but did not say what the steps could entail.
The US announced sanctions earlier this week over Turkey’s procurement of Russia’s advanced S-400 system, under a US law known as CAATSA, aimed at pushing back on Russian influence. The sanctions target Turkey’s Presidency of Defense Industries, the head of the presidency and three other senior officials.
The penalties block any assets the four officials may have in US jurisdictions and bar their entry into the US They also include a ban on most export licenses, loans and credits to the agency.
It is the first time that CAATSA has been used to penalize a US ally.
“If we were to step back we would have done so before now,” Cavusoglu said in response to a question on whether Turkey would cancel the S-400 deal with Russia.
Cavusoglu added: “Now we are assessing the impact of these sanctions in great detail ... and will take steps accordingly.”
The minister also described the sanctions as “wrong both legally and politically,” arguing that Turkey’s purchase of the Russian system in 2017 predated the CAATSA law.
Cavusoglu said that an improvement of relations between Turkey and the United States would be conditional on President-elect Joe Biden’s ability to address Ankara’s grievances.
Ties between the two have been plagued by numerous disputes, including the jailing of American citizens and local consular staff, US support for Syrian Kurdish fighters considered to be terrorists by Turkey and the continued US residence of a Muslim cleric accused of masterminding the 2016 coup attempt in Turkey.
The US had previously kicked Turkey out of its F-35 stealth jet program, saying their use alongside the Russian technology would jeopardize the safety of the fighter jets. Washington also says the Russian system would not be interoperable with NATO systems.