With eye on U.S., Turkey in no rush to back Sweden's NATO bid -sources
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[October 16, 2023]
By Jonathan Spicer, Huseyin Hayatsever and Tuvan Gumrukcu
ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey is willing to hold off ratifying Sweden's bid
to join NATO this month as it awaits signs of U.S. support for its own
request to buy F-16 jets, sources said, potentially disappointing bloc
allies hoping to end 17 months of delay.
President Tayyip Erdogan elated a NATO summit in July by promising to
send the bid to Turkey's parliament for ratification when it reopened in
October, appearing to green-light Sweden after having raised objections
over its alleged harboring of terrorists.
However since parliament opened on Oct. 1, its foreign affairs
commission, which would debate the NATO bid, has received almost 60
international agreements to review - excluding Sweden's, official data
shows.
Two people familiar with the situation said Ankara wanted to move in
tandem with Washington, where the State Department is expected at some
time to seek congressional approval for a $20-billion sale of F-16
fighters to Turkey and dozens of modernization kits.
"Given the lack of trust over the issue of F-16s and Sweden, Turkey is
not rushing to ratify the NATO bid and looking for a sign that the
United States is taking steps at the same time," said an official from
Erdogan's ruling AK Party.
A second person familiar with U.S.-Turkish talks said a rough proposal -
in which each side would take steps toward ratifying the NATO bid on the
one side, and the F-16s purchase on the other - had been delayed.
Erdogan's office did not immediately comment on a time frame for
Sweden's ratification or on any U.S. talks.
The U.S. State Department looked forward to Sweden joining NATO "in the
near future", a spokesperson said, and that President Joe Biden backed
the F-16s sale in the interest of the alliance, the United States and
its relationship with Turkey."
"(W)e should do both of these things," the spokesperson said.
IN NO RUSH
Turkey, NATO's second-biggest military, is still expected to ultimately
endorse Sweden's bid and could rapidly move on it.
But Turkish officials and foreign diplomats say Erdogan is in no rush,
especially after a bomb attack in Ankara on the day parliament opened
and, days later, the downing of an unmanned Turkish drone by the United
States in northern Syria.
Addressing the drone incident, which occurred near U.S. troops on Oct.
5, Erdogan said last week: "Isn't Turkey a NATO ally of the U.S.? ...How
can we explain this? Only when it suits them, they call themselves
partners".
Sweden and Finland applied to join NATO last year after Russia invaded
Ukraine. Finnish membership was sealed in April, marking an historic
expansion of the Western defense bloc, but Sweden's bid remains held up
by Turkey and Hungary.
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Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and Swedish Prime Minister Ulf
Kristersson shake hands next to NATO Secretary-General Jens
Stoltenberg prior to their meeting, on the eve of a NATO summit, in
Vilnius, Lithuania July 10, 2023. REUTERS/Yves Herman/Pool
Turkey says Sweden must take more steps at home to clamp down on the
militant Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which the European Union and
United States also deem a terrorist group.
After meeting NATO counterparts in Brussels on Friday, Turkish
Defense Minister Yasar Guler told reporters Sweden was expected to
implement new counter-terrorism measures, adding parliament "would
have the final say" on ratification.
Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said on Friday he was
convinced the process to join NATO will be resolved "reasonably
soon," given Stockholm has fulfilled all commitments in a deal
signed last year with Ankara and Helsinki.
LEVERAGE
But Erdogan appears willing to leverage the situation for other
gains. Last month, he openly floated exchanging Sweden's
ratification for the U.S. go-ahead to upgrade Turkey's F-16 fleet.
With Washington keen to expand NATO, senior U.S. and Turkish
officials had sketched out a plan in which Erdogan would send the
NATO proposal to parliament and the State Department would ask
leaders of the U.S. Senate and House foreign affairs committees to
review the F-16 deal, the second source said.
But hopes for a swift approval took a blow on Oct. 1 when the PKK
claimed responsibility for the bomb attack near Ankara government
buildings.
In response, Turkey redoubled strikes on militant targets in Iraq
and Syria, where the United States is allied with some Kurdish
fighters, leading to the drone incident.
After that, the second source said, discussions quieted down on the
U.S.-Turkish proposal to move roughly in parallel.
While the White House endorses the sale of the Lockheed Martin Corp
F-16s, there are objections in Congress over Turkey delaying NATO
enlargement and its human rights record.
Another potential strain in U.S.-Turkish ties emerged last week in
Israel's war against Palestinian militant group Hamas.
Erdogan - long supportive of Palestinians and a two-state solution -
said that a U.S. aircraft carrier that arrived in the eastern
Mediterranean was meant to commit "serious massacres" in the Gaza
Strip.
(Additional reporting by Humeyra Pamuk in Riyadh and Simon Johnson
in Stockholm; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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