Texarkana Gazette

Pentagon nominee regrets Turkey’s ‘drift’ from West

- By Robert Burns

WASHINGTON—Army Secretary Mark Esper, President Donald Trump’s nominee to become secretary of defense, told his Senate confirmati­on hearing Tuesday he is troubled by Turkey’s decision to defy the United States by acquiring Russian-made air defenses.

“It is very dishearten­ing to see how they have drifted over the past several years,” Esper said, citing the Turkish government’s purchase of the S-400 air defense system that the Trump administra­tion has said is likely to trigger U.S. economic sanctions and jeopardize Turkey’s role in the NATO alliance, whose primary adversary is Russia.

At the White House, Trump took a more conciliato­ry approach to Turkey, asserting that it chose to buy from Russia because the Obama administra­tions refused to sell the Patriot air defense system “under any circumstan­ce.” In fact, talks between the U.S. and Turkey on a potential Patriot deal during the Obama years faltered on Turkey’s insistence on technology transfer rights that would have allowed it eventually to make the missiles themselves. This ran afoul of the U.S. manufactur­er’s propriety interests in addition to any national security concerns.

Turkey began taking delivery of S-400 components in recent days, but the Trump administra­tion has yet to fully explain its intended response. Trump told reporters Tuesday that the U.S. would not sell the F-35 to Turkey, but he did not address other aspects of the issue, such as the expected removal of Turkey as a supplier of F-35 components.

“We are now telling Turkey that because you have been forced to buy another missile system we’re not going to sell you the F-35,” Trump said. Pentagon officials have said Turkey was offered favorable terms to buy a U.S.-made air defense system, the Patriot, but turned it down in favor of the Russian system despite strong U.S. objections.

The Pentagon has repeatedly said the S-400 purchase would mean Turkey’s indefinite suspension, and potentiall­y its permanent removal, from the U.S. F-35 stealth fighter program as a supplier of numerous components. It also has suspended a program of F-35 flight training for Turkish student pilots and instructor pilots at Luke Air Force Base in Arizona and given those personnel a July 31 deadline to leave the United States.

The U.S. governmen’ts concern is that the S-400 could be used by Turkey to gather data on the capabiliti­es of the F-35, and that the informatio­n could end up in Russian hands.

Asked about Turkey’s S-400 decision, Esper told the committee it was “the wrong one, and it’s disappoint­ing.” Later he went further, saying that although Turkey has long been a reliable NATO ally, it is now headed in the wrong direction. He said he recently told Turkey’s defense minister, “You can either have the S-400 or you can have the F-35. You cannot have both. Acquisitio­n of the S-400 fundamenta­lly undermines the capabiliti­es of the F-35.”

Turkey has already taken delivery of four F-35s. They are at Luke Air Force Base in Arizona, where Turkish military personnel are undergoing pilot training. The Pentagon has given those Turks until July 31 to leave the United States, saying the S-400 deal means Turkey’s involvemen­t in the F-35 program will be brought to a conclusion.

Esper also told the committee he believes the United States should pursue diplomatic solutions to its difference­s with Iran and avoid war.

“I agree we do not want war with Iran,” he said. “We are not seeking war with Iran. We need to get back on the diplomatic channel.”

Esper said the administra­tion plans to brief lawmakers soon on a plan for working with other countries to more closely monitor commercial shipping in and around the Persian Gulf . He said this plan, which he called “Operation Sentinel,” is intended to deter Iran from impeding navigation in the Gulf and avoid Iranian miscalcula­tions.

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