Turkey to keep Russian S-400 missiles, says it won’t bow to US sanctions threat
- Ankara plans to pursue a joint development deal with Moscow in order to be able to produce its own sophisticated missiles
- A Senate committee recently approved a bill that would enforce sanctions, which could freeze Turkish assets in the US

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