Donald Trump urges Turkish President Erdogan to cut Russian oil, floats F-35 deal

The president said he would discuss Erdogan's desire to rejoin the F-35 fighter program, but did not commit to letting Ankara back in. Trump said, however, that if he had a good meeting with his Turkish counterpart, sanctions on officials there co...

Agencies
US President says he will discuss potential sale of Patriot missile system with Türkiye counterpart
President Donald Trump pressed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to stop buying oil from Russia and left the door open to Ankara obtaining F-35 fighter jets, as the leaders looked to resolve a number of longstanding issues that have strained ties between the NATO allies.

"I'd like to have him stop buying any oil from Russia while Russia continues this rampage against Ukraine," Trump said Thursday alongside his Turkish counterpart in the Oval Office.

Trump's comments mark the latest example of him pressuring US partners to slash Russian energy purchases, in an effort to squeeze financing for the Kremlin's war effort in Ukraine. The president this week said he believed Kyiv could achieve victory against Moscow, another effort to apply pressure on Russian leader Vladimir Putin.


Erdogan's visit to the White House - his first time in six years - presented an opportunity for the US and Turkiye to reset relations as the two NATO allies navigate a web of defense deals, regional conflicts and competition with Russia and China.

The president said he would discuss Erdogan's desire to rejoin the F-35 fighter program, but did not commit to letting Ankara back in. Trump said, however, that if he had a good meeting with his Turkish counterpart, sanctions on officials there could be lifted "almost immediately." The US president said that a conclusion could be reached by the end of the day.

"I think he'll be successful with buying the things he'd like to buy," Trump said. "He needs certain things and we need certain things."
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The two countries have been locked in a long-running dispute over Lockheed Martin Corp.'s F-35 stealth jet program. Turkey was an original partner in developing Lockheed's most advanced warplane but was kicked out of the program after buying Russia's S-400 air defense system. That purchase resulted in congressional sanctions that targeted Turkiye's defense industry and still remain in place.

Trump recently indicated there was a chance to resolve that dispute. Ankara has refused to abandon the S-400s, as Washington demands, but hopes a compromise over their deployment could reopen the door to purchasing F-35s. The US president said Thursday he would discuss with Erdogan purchases of the Patriot missile-defense system, an American alternative to the S-400s.

'Big Influence'
Turkiye depends on US military and diplomatic backing, and its commitment to the NATO alliance is widely viewed as a barometer for the outlook of a major Middle Eastern economy. Repairing some of the longstanding rifts between the countries could also be crucial to strengthening NATO as the alliance faces new challenges from a newly emboldened Russia and with Trump looking to ease Middle East tensions stoked by Israel's war on Hamas.
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