Pentagon
Approves 'Bunker Buster' Smart Bombs Sale To Turkey For Fight Against
Kurds
31
January, 2016
The
Pentagon approved a deal Tuesday to sell nearly $700 million worth of
smart bombs to Turkey through its Foreign Military Sales scheme. The
sale comes at a pivotal time for Ankara’s military, which continues
to be heavily involved in attacking the military arm of the Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (PKK) in northern Iraq.
“The
deal came timely, as we are deeply engaged in asymmetrical warfare
and need smart bombs,” a Turkish military official told Defense
News.
Turkey
intensified its efforts against the Kurdish militants after
they canceled a
two-year-long ceasefire in July. Turkey will also be keen to ensure
it is adequately armed, given its continued standoff with Russia
over military action in Syria. Turkey in November shot
down a Russian jet that allegedly strayed across the
border into its territory from Syria.
The
award of the unknown amount of munitions was given to the Ellwood
National Forge and General Dynamics Ordnance and Tactical Systems,
which both build BLU-109 "bunker buster" bombs.
Their sale is the first to Turkey, and the contract will expire in
2020.
The
highly explosive bombs, each carrying 550 pounds of tritonal, which
is a mix of TNT and aluminum powder, have been in the U.S. inventory
since 1985 and were used in raids against enemy combatants in both
Iraq wars and Afghanistan. The bomb can delay its explosion until
it passes through the ground, allowing it to fully destroy the
cave or bunker it is aimed at.
The
Foreign Military Sales system was criticized Tuesday
by a prominent Air Force general and last week by Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz., who both said the slow process to buy weapons was pushing
potential overseas customers to buy from Russia instead. Not only
does that mean less revenue for U.S. defense companies, it can mean
that U.S. forces have to work with their allies using different
weapons and communications systems on the battlefield.
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