Video shows missile fired where Turkey cleared way for S-400 test,
prompting U.S. warning
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[October 17, 2020]
ISTANBUL/
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A
missile was fired into the sky on Friday on Turkey's Black Sea coast
where the military was expected to test its Russian-made S-400 defence
systems, according to local video obtained by Reuters, drawing a strong
warning from the United States.
The video, taken in the coastal city of Sinop, showed a narrow column of
smoke headed high into the blue sky. In recent days Turkey had issued
notices restricting air space and waters off the coastal area to allow
firing tests.
A U.S. official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said Turkey had
tested the S-400 system on Friday but did not provide details.
Tests of the S-400s, if verified, could stoke tensions between Turkey
and the United States, which sharply opposed Ankara's purchase of the
weapons from Moscow on grounds they compromise shared NATO defence
systems.
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State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said the United States has
expressed to the most senior levels of the Turkish government that the
acquisition of Russian military systems such as the S-400 is
unacceptable, adding that Washington has been clear on its expectation
that the system should not be operationalised.
"If confirmed, we would condemn in the strongest terms the S-400 test
missile launch as incompatible with Turkey’s responsibilities as a NATO
Ally and strategic partner of the United States," Ortagus added.
The Pentagon, separately, said that the S-400 should not be activated.
"Turkey has already been suspended from the F-35 program and the S-400
continues to be a barrier to progress elsewhere in the bilateral
relationship," a Pentagon spokesman said.
Turkey's defence ministry said it would neither deny nor confirm missile
tests.
Washington reacted last year by suspending Turkey from its F-35 jet
programme and has threatened sanctions.
Defence analyst Turan Oguz said a preliminary assessment of the colour,
intensity, angle and route of the smoke in the video coincided with
S-400 missiles. The angle of the column suggested the target "must not
be too high," he added.
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A missile was fired into the sky on Friday on Turkey’s Black Sea
coast where the military was expected to test its Russian-made S-400
defence systems, according to local video obtained by Reuters,
drawing a strong warning from the United States.
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Last year the military conducted radar tests of the surface-to-air
defences, which is among the world's most advanced and can spot and
track incoming aircraft at medium and long ranges.
Turkey signed the S-400 deal with Russia in 2017. Deliveries of the
first four missile batteries, worth $2.5 billion, began in July last
year.
U.S. Senator Jim Risch, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, called the test "unacceptable behaviour" from a NATO
ally.
In a statement, Risch said the move damages the alliance and posed a
direct threat to the F-35 and other U.S. and NATO allies’ systems.
“U.S. law requires sanctions against countries that continue to
deepen their defence relationship with Russia, and the
administration should send a strong signal that Turkey must divest
its S-400s," he said.
U.S. Senator Bob Menendez, the ranking Democrat on the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, said President Donald Trump's affinity
for Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan posed a serious threat to the
United States' national security.
"Turkey must be sanctioned immediately for its purchase and use of
this system," Menendez said in a statement.
(Additional reporting by Daphne Psaledakis, Idrees Ali and David
Brunnstrom in Washington; Editing by Jonathan Spicer, Jon Boyle,
David Gregorio and Tom Brown)
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