‘Blinding’
Israel’s defense? Turkish media says Ankara could disable US radar
over F-35 deal threat
RT,
21
November, 2017
An
editorial in a Turkish conservative pro-government newspaper said
Ankara could leave Israel exposed to an Iranian missile attack by
disabling a US radar station, in retaliation for a possible
Washington ban on the purchase of F-35 fighter jets.
The editorial was
published on Sunday by the Yeni Safak newspaper in apparent response
to concerns voiced by a US Air Force official. Heidi Grant, the
deputy undersecretary of the USAF for international affairs, had
earlier said that Turkey’s deployment of the Russian-made S-400
long-range anti-aircraft missile system may expose vulnerabilities of
the US-made F-35 Lightning II fighter jets. Turkey plans to purchase
over 100 of the advanced warplanes from Lockheed Martin.
The
newspaper called the implication that the planned deal may be frozen
“blackmail” by Washington, and suggested that in retaliation
Ankara could dismantle the Kurecik radar station. The powerful
AN/TPY-2 X-band early-warning radar, which was
set up by
the US in the eastern province of Malatya in 2012, is part of NATO’s
system of airspace surveillance in the region.
The
newspaper says that unlike similar surveillance sites in Israel,
Jordan, Qatar and the UAE, the Kurecik radar station can detect
missile launches from the entire western part of Iran. With the site
disabled, that airspace would no longer be properly monitored by
NATO, the editorial said.
“In
case Turkey decides to dismantle the Kurecik radar in response to the
ongoing attempts by the US to use the F-35 jets to blackmail Turkey,
Israel will lose its ‘early warning system’ in case of a missile
launch from eastern or northern Iran,” the
newspaper said.
Turkey’s
hosting of NATO radar facilities is a matter of controversy in the
country. In 2014, the ruling AKP party of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, then
prime minister, had to defend itself from opposition accusations
which said the site only benefits Israeli security and fails to make
Turkey safer. The accusations were part of a heated presidential
race laden with
anti-Israeli sentiment.
The
deployment of NATO radar was also criticized by Russia since it has
contributed to the alliance’s anti-missile system in Eastern
Europe, which Moscow sees a threat to its national security.
Likewise,
Ankara’s decision to purchase the state-of-art Russian S-400 system
was criticized by NATO, which said the Russian SAM was incompatible
with the equipment used by the alliance.
Turkey
said it chose the Russian system because it was necessary to ensure
its security, which had been undermined by members of NATO, adding
that the bloc had failed to sell arms that Ankara wished to acquire.
The
US and NATO have experienced various barbs from Turkey and Erdogan
personally recently. Just days earlier, the Turkish president claimed
that his transatlantic ally “paid
a lot of dollars to [Islamic State].”
On
Monday, Erdogan’s chief adviser, Yalcin Topcu, questioned his
country’s membership in NATO, claiming the bloc’s approach
towards Ankara was “brutal
and dishonorable.”
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