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Turkey defies US sanctions threat, says will keep Russian defense system: report

Russian S-400 anti-aircraft missile launching system is displayed at the exposition field in Kubinka Patriot Park outside Moscow on August 22, 2017 during the first day of the International Military-Technical Forum Army-2017. / AFP PHOTO / Alexander NEMENOV

Turkey has dug into its refusal to abandon its new Russian missile defense system, saying it will not bow to the threat of crippling US sanctions or trade the S-400s for an American system, Bloomberg reported.

“They said they would not sell Patriots unless we get rid of the S-400s. It is out of the question for us to accept such a precondition,” Ibrahim Kalin, a spokesman for President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, said late Tuesday after a cabinet meeting.

Turkey, which has NATO’s second-largest military, denies it is walking away from the alliance, but its row with the US over its purchase of the Russian S-400s is escalating. The US Congress is pushing for sanctions against Ankara over the objection of President Donald Trump, who says such a move could drive Turkey closer to Moscow.

“An irrational anti-Turkish sentiment has prevailed in the congress, and it is not good for Turkish-American relations,” Kalin said. “They should know that such language of threat would push Turkey exactly toward places that they don’t want it turn to.”

Turkey plans to acquire a second S-400 battery and pursue a joint-development agreement with Moscow in order to be able to produce its own sophisticated ballistic missiles.

Trump has so far refrained from using a piece of legislation that allows the US president to slap sanctions on any country that makes a sizable arms purchase from Russia. But a Senate committee recently approved a bill that would enforce the legislation, which could freeze Turkish assets in the US, restrict visas and limit access to credit.

The last time the US sanctioned Turkey, to pressure it to release a detained US pastor last year, the lira crashed and sent the Turkish economy into a recession from which it is still recovering.

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