In shift, Erdogan links Sweden’s NATO accession to Turkey’s F-16 acquisition
ANKARA — In a reversal of his position during the last two months, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday openly linked Sweden’s accession to NATO, which is pending ratification by the Turkish parliament, to Ankara’s request to buy new F-16 fighter jets from the US.
“If you have a Congress, we have a Congress too, that’s our parliament. There is nothing to say until our parliament’s final decision. As the president, I submitted [Sweden’s accession protocol] to the parliament, and you thanked me. I fulfilled my duty, but I also expect something from you: You pass [F-16 deal] in your Congress so that we can take these steps simultaneously,” Erdogan urged Washington in a reference to the Turkish bid to buy 40 new F-16 fighter jets and roughly 50 modernization kits from the US.
His comments came on his return from Qatar, before his formal visit to Greece on Thursday, the first since 2017.
The remarks are the first public acknowledgement of Turkey’s linking the F-16 jets to Sweden’s NATO accession. Commentators and analysts have long noted this connection, but the link has been denied by Ankara until Erdogan’s remarks.