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New Pentagon chief confronts Turkey on NATO debut

Ankara, Washington have relations based on ‘strategic partnership’

By AFP - Jun 26,2019 - Last updated at Jun 26,2019

Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar (left) talks with Supreme Allied Commander of Europe Tod Wolters during a defence ministers meeting at the NATO headquarters in Brussels on Wednesday (AFP photo)

BRUSSELS — President Donald Trump's pick for Pentagon chief plunged straight into business as he made his NATO debut on Wednesday, confronting Turkey over its purchase of Russian air defence missiles.

Mark Esper, nominated as defence secretary last Friday, reiterated Washington's warning that buying the Russian S-400 missile system would mean it would be booted out of the US F-35 jet fighter programme.

Making his first appearance at a meeting of NATO defence ministers, Esper had what a Pentagon spokesman described as a "frank and transparent" meeting with his Turkish counterpart Hulusi Akar.

The US and NATO are alarmed that Turkey may acquire the missiles, which are designed to shoot down planes like the F-35, America's new generation multirole stealth fighter that Turkey also wants to buy.

But Turkey has so far rebuffed all efforts to persuade it to drop the deal, and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan insisted that the delivery process had already begun.

"Do not forget that Turkey is a NATO country. America is a NATO country. I am not aware if NATO countries place sanctions on one another," Erdogan told reporters at an Ankara airport, before leaving for Japan where he will attend ta G-20 summit.

 

 ‘Done deal’ 

 

"The two leaders had a frank and transparent discussion where Secretary Esper reiterated that Turkey's purchase of the Russian S-400 air and missile defence system is incompatible with the F-35 programme and that Turkey will not be permitted to have both systems," Pentagon spokesman Jonathan Hoffman said.

Erdogan has said he will use his good relations with Trump to defuse tensions when they meet on the sidelines of the G-20 summit in Osaka this week.

He said Turkey's relations with Washington was based upon "strategic partnership" and added he did "not get such an impression from Mr Trump" that sanctions would be placed unless Ankara dropped the Russia deal.

The Turkish leader also insisted that the agreement with Moscow was a "done deal" and that the system was "in the process of delivery".

But the US has set a July 31 deadline for Ankara to drop the purchase or face sanctions and expulsion from the F-35 programme.

This would mean an end to Turkey's current plans to buy 100 F-35s and the loss of lucrative contracts to build parts of the jet.

Esper, who is yet to be confirmed in post by the Senate, is the third man to lead the Pentagon in six months after Jim Mattis and Patrick Shanahan.

The departure of defence secretary Mattis — who quit in December admitting he had had differences with Trump — concerned some European allies who saw him as a cool, experienced head in Washington.

In Esper they face another former military man, but one who is close to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and National Security Adviser John Bolton — both outspoken hawks in the Trump team.

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