Canada unfreezes talks with Turkey on export controls after NATO move

Canada unfreezes talks with Turkey on export controls after NATO move
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Updated 14 July 2023
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Canada unfreezes talks with Turkey on export controls after NATO move

Canada unfreezes talks with Turkey on export controls after NATO move
  • Canada's move seen as one of concessions won in exchange for Turkiye's blessing for Sweden's NATO membership
  • US earlier said it would move ahead with a transfer of F-16 fighter jets in consultation with Congress

ANKARA: Canada has unfrozen talks with Turkiye on lifting export controls on drone parts after Ankara gave its nod for Sweden to join NATO, a person familiar with the talks said, a move seen as one of several concessions won in exchange for the Turkish blessing.

President Tayyip Erdogan’s greenlight, which ended more than a year of opposition to Sweden’s membership bid, came as a surprise even to allies at home who had supported him in demanding Stockholm first take steps against groups deemed terrorists by Ankara.
Erdogan’s decision, announced ahead of a North Atlantic Treaty Organization summit in Vilnius, was followed quickly by a statement from Washington that the United States would move ahead with a transfer of F-16 fighter jets in consultation with Congress.
In a potentially significant move for Turkiye’s defense industry, NATO member Canada agreed to re-open talks on lifting export controls on drone parts including optical equipment, the person familiar with the talks said, declining to be identified because they were not authorized to discuss details with media.
Canada suspended the export of some drone technology to Turkiye in 2020 after concluding the equipment had been used by Azerbaijan’s forces fighting Armenia in the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.
Ahead of the NATO summit, Turkiye, already seeking assurances over the F-16s in talks with Washington, asked that Canada’s export controls also be rolled in to the final discussion, the person familiar with the talks said.
Turkiye sought “a package deal,” the person said.




Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan meets with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau ahead of a NATO leaders summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, on July 11, 2023. (Turkish Presidential Press Office/Handout via REUTERS)

Canada agreed to reopen talks on the matter that had been frozen since Turkiye initially objected to NATO membership bids by both Sweden and Finland last year as long as Turkiye pledged to ratify Sweden’s bid at Vilnius, the person said.
At Vilnius, Canada outlined its position to Turkiye on rules regarding uses of any exported technologies, and was awaiting a response. This means the talks on export controls are no longer frozen, a move that helped play a role sealing Erdogan’s pledge over Sweden, the person said.
In response, a spokesperson for Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly, said Canada and Turkiye “continue to engage in frank exchanges on our bilateral, economic and commercial relations” but noted export controls for Turkiye remained in place.
Asked whether Turkiye was in talks with Canada to lift export curbs, a Turkish defense ministry official said it was unacceptable for NATO allies to impose export restrictions on each other and “a certain progress has been made at the Vilnius Summit on that issue.”
“But we will follow the results of the negotiations and decision taken at the Vilnius summit,” the official said.

Erdogan’s ‘levers’
In an interview with Turkish media published on Thursday, Erdogan said his country expects all NATO allies to lift sanctions and restrictions on its defense industry.
On Wednesday, Erdogan said he was “more hopeful than ever” about the sale of the F-16 fighter jets, after meeting with US President Joe Biden a day earlier. Turkiye had requested in October 2021 to buy $20 billion of F-16 fighters and nearly 80 modernization kits for its existing warplanes.
Ankara’s objections have been a major obstacle in the path of Sweden and Finland joining NATO after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Turkiye’s demands included a tougher line against the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which took up arms against the Turkish state in 1984. The PKK is designated a terrorist group by Turkiye, the United States and the European Union.
Turkiye’s parliament ratified Finland’s membership in March, after Erdogan said Helsinki had taken concrete steps to crack down on groups seen as terrorists, and to free up defense exports.
Erdogan said on Wednesday he would forward Sweden’s ratification to parliament when it reopens in October, adding Stockholm would provide a roadmap to Turkiye regarding the steps it would take before the approval.
The leader the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), upon which Erdogan’s AK Party depends for its parliamentary majority, said on Tuesday that Sweden had failed to distance itself from terrorism, but added that Erdogan would make the final call about Sweden’s membership bid.
Erdogan met with MHP leader Devlet Bahceli on Thursday.
Erdogan has also said he expects steps from the EU, including on updating a customs union and visa-free travel, before Turkiye begins “work on implementing the promises (it) has made.”
A European diplomat said Erdogan “may have maximized how much he could get from holding Sweden up.”
“We’ve seen in the past he likes to use his levers.”