Babur The Uzbek Tiger
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Relations with NATO and US are bad and will reach further lows. Turkey has signed for the S-400 and the US has already made a firm decision to punish Turkey for it. This is going to effect the entire military doctrine of Turkey and also strategic assets/inventory. Can we count on the F-35 as much as we had in the past despite being partners ? What does this say about the U.S. assets stationed in Turkey ? Is the S-400 just the beginning ? I believe the Turkish establishment is hinting that it does not trust NATO because defense of air space is extremely vital.
Turkey will need to procure further equipment from Russia and China because the American and European defense purchases are now subject to political strings and possible boycott. The smart thing to do here is realize where Turkey is and what has happened that has lead to this point. Regardless of the fact that Erdogan might not be liked by everyone, NATO and Europe always abused Turkey. It was possibly only Israel that ever helped Turkey while the U.S. and western Europe did their best to sabotage Turkey.
Things to procure immediately from Russia while Putin is still in office:
Aircraft (with transfer of technology) + missiles
1). Su-35 and Su-35UB (300)
2). Beriev A-100 Premier (6)
3). Su-34 (20)
4). Il-78 tanker (12)
Helicopters:
1). Mi-38 medium transport (200)
Nuclear Weapon Program
This is the most crucial. In the future I see the removal of U.S. nuclear stockpile from Incirlik. Even the American media agrees with me:
Turkey will need to procure further equipment from Russia and China because the American and European defense purchases are now subject to political strings and possible boycott. The smart thing to do here is realize where Turkey is and what has happened that has lead to this point. Regardless of the fact that Erdogan might not be liked by everyone, NATO and Europe always abused Turkey. It was possibly only Israel that ever helped Turkey while the U.S. and western Europe did their best to sabotage Turkey.
Things to procure immediately from Russia while Putin is still in office:
Aircraft (with transfer of technology) + missiles
1). Su-35 and Su-35UB (300)
2). Beriev A-100 Premier (6)
3). Su-34 (20)
4). Il-78 tanker (12)
Helicopters:
1). Mi-38 medium transport (200)
Nuclear Weapon Program
This is the most crucial. In the future I see the removal of U.S. nuclear stockpile from Incirlik. Even the American media agrees with me:
The United States keeps a stockpile of 50 Cold War-era B61 nuclear bombs at an air base in Incirlik. They are not considered strategically important. But they are a potential security risk, nuclear security experts say.
That became clear last July, during a failed military coup attempt against Erdogan's government. According to the government, those coup plotters were operating out of ... you guessed it: Incirlik.
Keeping a nuclear arsenal at the same air base where military coup plotters are launching their coup against their government is a scary situation. Add to that risk the proximity of the Syrian civil war, the ongoing conflict between Turkey and Kurdish separatists and a wave of terrorist attacks in recent years, and you've got to wonder why the US is taking the risk of housing 50 nuclear weapons in the country.
"There is no other country in Europe where the US stores nuclear weapons where a military coup just happened and you have something that looks almost like a civil war with violent explosions and killings, and in addition to that you are less than 100 miles from the border of a completely war-torn country, Syria," Hans Kristensen, the director of the Nuclear Information Project at the Federation of American Scientists said after the coup.
Since then, there's been reason to question whether Erdogan is the kind of partner you'd want babysitting your nuclear weapons. After the coup attempt, his government arrested or fired more than 100,000 people, including judges and civil servants; and cracked down on the free press; and arrested and imprisoned so many journalists that Turkey is now the world's leading jailer of them. His critics say he's become increasingly authoritarian and that a "yes" vote could effectively establish an Erdogan dictatorship.