Turkey to 'retaliate' if US enacts law banning weapons sales
Turkey says it will retaliate if the United States enacts a proposed law halting weapons sales to the country.
Lawmakers in the US House of Representatives on Friday released details of a $717 billion annual defence policy bill, including a measure to temporarily halt weapons sales to Turkey.
In an interview with broadcaster CNN Turk, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said the measures in the bill were wrong, illogical and not fitting between the NATO allies.
"If the United States imposes sanctions on us or takes such a step, Turkey will absolutely retaliate," Cavusoglu said. "What needs to be done is the US needs to let go of this."
The proposed US National Defence Authorization Act would ask the Defence Department to provide Congress with a report on the relationship between the United States and Turkey, and would block the sale of major defence equipment until the report was complete.
The act is several steps from becoming law.
Lawmakers in the US House of Representatives on Friday released details of a $717 billion annual defence policy bill, including a measure to temporarily halt weapons sales to Turkey |
Turkey plans to buy more than 100 of Lockheed Martin's F-35 Joint Strike Fighter jets, and is also in talks with Washington over the purchase of Patriot missiles.
Turkey signed an agreement with Russia in December to buy S-400 surface-to-air missile batteries as part of Ankara's plans to boost its defence capabilities amid threats from Kurdish and Islamist militants at home and conflicts across its borders in Syria and Iraq.
The move to buy S-400s, which are incompatible with the NATO systems, has unnerved NATO member countries, which are already wary of Moscow's military presence in the Middle East, prompting NATO officials to warn Turkey of unspecified consequences.
Cavusoglu dismissed the warnings, saying Turkey's relations and agreements with Russia were not an alternative to its ties with the West and accused the United States of trying to control Turkey’s actions.
"Turkey is not a country under your orders, it is an independent country... Speaking to such a country from above, dictating what it can and cannot buy, is not a correct approach and does not fit our alliance," he said.
Relations between Ankara and Washington have been strained over a host of issues in recent months, including US policy in Syria and a number of legal cases against Turkish and US nationals being held in the two countries.
In April, a bipartisan group of US senators have moved to block the transfer of F-35 warplanes to Turkey over President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's "reckless governance".