Politics
US envoy rallies for F-35 for Türkiye to strengthen NATO
U.S. Ambassador to Türkiye Tom Barrack revived the country’s hopes for improved defense cooperation with his country.
Barrack described the prolonged dispute over Ankara’s participation in the F-35 fighter jet program as “insane,” urging a swift resolution, and stressing that it would help strengthen the NATO alliance, which both countries are longstanding members of.
In remarks to Fox News Digital following his statements at last weekend’s Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Türkiye, Barrack said the impasse underscores the need for a diplomatic breakthrough, reiterating that Türkiye remains a vital ally hosting key U.S. assets, contributing to NATO missions and countering shared threats.
Barrack, who also serves as the U.S. special envoy for Syria, said U.S. sanctions and Türkiye’s removal from the F-35 program, triggered by its purchase of the Russian S-400 air defense system, have unnecessarily strained ties while benefiting Russia.
“The S-400 issue can and should be resolved within months through surgical diplomacy,” Barrack said, pointing to efforts led by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and grounded in the relationship between U.S. President Donald Trump and President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Addressing concerns in Congress, including criticism from Senator Rick Scott over potential arms transfers, Barrack said any resolution would fully comply with Section 1245 of the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).
“That means verifiable cessation of possession and operability of the Russian S-400 system,” he said, adding that formal certifications from the U.S. Departments of Defense and State would confirm there is no risk to sensitive F-35 technology. “There will be no shortcuts on American security standards,” he stressed.
Barrack said a breakthrough is within reach, adding: “What I am signaling is that real breakthroughs are imminent: restoring Turkey’s role in the F-35 ecosystem, strengthening NATO interoperability, boosting US industry, and denying Russia leverage.”
Describing the approach as aligned with Trump’s foreign policy, he said: “This is classic Trump deal-making: enforce the law, protect our technology, and rebuild alliances that advance American strength.”
“In every one of these statements, I am speaking directly in support of this administration’s foreign policy. We believe in peace through strength, candid assessment of realities, and delivering results that protect U.S. interests without dragging America into endless conflicts,” said Barrack.
Politics
Türkiye calls on Israel to leave Syria, respect country’s sovereignty
Türkiye’s U.N. envoy Ahmet Yıldız voiced concerns about Israeli military activity in Syria and called on Tel Aviv to reverse course.
“It is essential that Israel refrains from escalatory actions in Syria and rolls back its encroachment,” Yıldız said, adding, “Stability in southern Syria must be ensured in full compliance with the 1974 Disengagement of Forces Agreement.”
“We reiterate our call for Israel’s withdrawal from the buffer zone and from the areas it has occupied since Dec. 8,” he said, stressing that “Respect for Syria’s sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity remains indispensable.”
Yıldız was speaking at a U.N. Security Council special session on Syria in New York on Wednesday.
The U.N. called out Israel over a renewed incursion into Syrian territory, warning that repeated military violations are threatening Syria’s “fragile” political transition and demanding an immediate halt to the provocations.
“Let me start by noting that Israeli military activity in southern Syria continues in breach of existing agreements and international law,” U.N. Deputy Special Envoy for Syria Claudio Cordone told the same event, pointing to Israeli forces conducting near-daily incursions, erecting checkpoints and detaining Syrian nationals.
He singled out an incident on Wednesday in which “dozens of Israelis crossed several hundred meters into the Area of Separation near the village of Hadar,” saying both the crossing and their behavior were “highly provocative.”
“I reiterate our strong call on Israel to cease violations, respect Syria’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, adhere to the 1974 Disengagement of Forces Agreement and prevent incidents such as the one today,” he said, also demanding Israel return all Syrian detainees taken in violation of international law.
Cordone expressed hope that “talks between Israel and Syria with U.S. facilitation can lead to sustainable security arrangements.”
He commended the Syrian government’s efforts to “shield Syria from the conflicts raging in the region, with Syrian security forces deployed defensively to control borders,” and that “March 2026 recorded the lowest levels of direct conflict-related violence in 15 years, although civilians continued to be killed by remnants of war.”
Warning that the economic picture remained concerning, he said: “Syria’s economic outlook remains fragile.”
“The regional conflict has raised import costs, disrupted supply chains and affected food production,” he added.
U.N. relief chief Tom Fletcher shared “a more positive trajectory,” but immediately cautioned that “the progress is fragile” following years of conflict and neglect, pointing to millions of people returning home, growing markets and more electricity coming back on as encouraging signs.
Pointing to three major risks threatening to reverse those gains, he said, “As of April 19, nearly 300,000 people had crossed into Syria from Lebanon, overwhelmingly Syrian nationals, adding to the estimated 1.6 million Syrian refugees who have returned to Syria from across the region since the end of 2024.”
He warned that ongoing disruptions to critical supply routes risked “setting back return and recovery efforts by years.”
Internally, the needs remained staggering, over 13 million people in need of food, 12 million without access to clean water, and mines continuing to kill and maim.
Fletcher made three requests of the council: sustain diplomatic energy, support vital humanitarian operations, and invest in Syria’s future. “The world needs a success story,” he said. “Syria could be one.”
The U.N.’s special representative for children and armed conflict, Vanessa Frazier, said children remained the most vulnerable amid the continued hostilities across the Middle East.
“Sadly, the situation has been taken over by the events in the Middle East immediately upon my return, and once again, children are caught in a spiral of deadly violence and destruction,” she said, expressing hope that international support could still deliver “positive and long-lasting change for children” in Syria.
Politics
Erdoğan warns wars are weakening Europe, urges shift to diplomacy
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan warned that ongoing wars in the region are beginning to weaken Europe, cautioning that failure to adopt a peace-focused approach could lead to far greater damage, during a phone call with German President Frank Walter Steinmeier.
According to a statement from the Communications Directorate, Erdoğan stressed that without timely diplomatic intervention, the consequences of the conflicts would deepen, affecting not only the region but Europe as well.
The two leaders also discussed Türkiye-Germany relations and broader regional and global developments, with Erdoğan noting that bilateral ties have gained momentum through recent high-level contacts.
He reiterated that Türkiye continues efforts to end conflicts through negotiations, including initiatives related to tensions involving Iran and the Russia-Ukraine war.
Politics
Ex-EU council chief backs Türkiye after von der Leyen remarks
Former European Council President Charles Michel on Wednesday expressed support for Türkiye and appeared to question recent remarks by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen that grouped the NATO member alongside Russia and China as influential actors.
In a post on X, Michel highlighted Türkiye’s strategic importance and called for continued engagement.
“Türkiye is a core NATO ally, a key migration partner, an energy corridor, a major defense actor on Europe’s flank, and a serious regional power,” Michel wrote in his post tagging von der Leyen. “Europe doesn’t get stronger by applying double standards or simplifying reality.”
Michel’s remarks followed the European Commission president’s remarks at an event marking the 80th anniversary of the newspaper Die Zeit in Hamburg on Monday. Von der Leyen mentioned her support for EU enlargement and said: “We must succeed in completing the European continent so that it is not influenced by Russia, Türkiye, or China.”
Von der Leyen drew criticism from Turkish officials who said the characterization did not reflect the country’s status as a key partner and NATO ally.
Ömer Çelik, the spokesperson for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party), said
von der Leyen’s approach reflected a lack of vision and risked increasing tensions in the Balkans.
“Von der Leyen’s statement is something that should be seen as a manifestation of a lack of vision,” Çelik said, adding that framing the issue in such terms could “trigger more fault lines and produce stress in the Balkans.”
He also criticized the characterization of Türkiye as a rival, saying it revealed a deeper contradiction in the EU’s approach. “Seeing Türkiye, a candidate country, as a competitor of the European Union is a grave mental and political contradiction,” he said, adding that Türkiye has long promoted a peace-based and integrative vision for the Balkans.
EU officials later sought to ease the tensions, stressing Ankara’s strategic role and significance for Europe, underscoring ongoing cooperation.
“Türkiye is unquestionably an important partner in the region both economically and politically, including in strategic areas such as the Connectivity Agenda, with the Trans-Caspian Middle Corridor where Türkiye is a key anchor in the region, and on migration management where Türkiye is a long-standing partner,” said a Commission spokesperson Tuesday.
The spokesperson added: “Türkiye is also an important NATO ally and EU candidate country, and as such, a key interlocutor.”
Politics
Turkish FM, Pakistan’s Dar discuss US-Iran talks
Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan held a phone call with Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Muhammad Ishaq Dar on Wednesday, diplomatic sources said. The two ministers discussed negotiations between the U.S. and Iran mediated by Islamabad, sources added. Dar was in Türkiye last week to attend the Antalya Diplomacy Forum.
A second round of talks between the U.S. and Iran had been expected this week in Pakistan, but Tehran said it would not attend the meeting until Washington ends its “illegal blockade of Iranian ports.” The U.S. had said its delegation would be led by Vice President JD Vance.
On Tuesday, U.S. President Donald Trump extended a two-week cease-fire with Iran to allow time for Tehran to prepare a “unified proposal,” following a request by Pakistani officials.
Washington has called for the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, which has remained largely closed since the U.S. and Israel launched attacks on Iran on Feb. 28.
Tehran declared the strait open Friday but closed it again a day later after Trump announced that the blockade of Iranian ports would continue. On Sunday, U.S. forces detained an Iranian cargo ship after opening fire and boarding it.
Pakistan brokered a two-week cease-fire between the U.S. and Iran on April 8, followed by critical talks in Islamabad on April 11 and 12 attended by senior delegations from both countries. However, the sides did not reach an agreement to end the Middle East war.
The cease-fire had been set to expire Wednesday, but Trump extended it without announcing a new timeframe.
Politics
Turkish main opposition mired in internal disputes, election debate
The main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) is embattled with uncertainty about its future.
Trailing behind the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) in opinion polls, the CHP has failed to win a presidential election in the past two decades. Nowadays, it focuses on a new strategy to push for an early or by-election, but a fateful trial and a reported dissent in the party linked to that trial may prove a challenge for Türkiye’s oldest party.
Ahead of a hearing in May in a trial over alleged wrongdoings in an intraparty election in 2023, the party charts its future, which is now apparently stuck between a reported feud between two men. One is the chairperson, Özgür Özel, and the other is the prematurely announced future presidential candidate, Ekrem Imamoğlu. Former Istanbul Mayor Imamoğlu remains jailed and faces multiple corruption charges. Özel himself is at the heart of a trial over allegations of vote-buying in the 2023 election that brought him to power in the CHP.
May’s hearing in Ankara may lead to a verdict on the absolute nullification of the 2023 election. This means Özel will lose his seat. On the other hand, Imamoğlu, even if he is acquitted of corruption charges before the 2028 general election, remains ineligible to run for the presidency as a separate court verdict annulled his university diploma, a prerequisite for presidential candidates.
In the face of these developments, both men mull a future with room for their political ambitions. Dissidents in the party who spoke to the Sabah newspaper on Tuesday said May’s hearing will be decisive for the party, and they anticipated the removal of the Özel administration. They say Özel’s predecessor, Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, will likely return to his post and “unite the party against those entangled in corruption,” referring to mayors and senior figures detained or arrested in the corruption investigations in the past two years.
The Sabah report says some 100 CHP lawmakers were already ready to support Kılıçdaroğlu if he were to be appointed as a trustee to the party, in the case of suspension of the Özel administration by the court verdict.
Özel and Imamoğlu, in the meantime, brace for multiple scenarios. The Sabah report says Imamoğlu favors establishing a new party if Özel is ejected from his seat and has considerable support. Yet, Özel is reportedly inclined to stay in the CHP, unless the party is “fully shut down.” Özel also plans to “resist” the nullification of his administration, like the party did when its Istanbul branch was suspended and appointed a trustee last year. Back then, CHP supporters tried to storm the party’s offices in Istanbul to prevent the trustee from taking over and confronted riot police deployed to the building. The party administration is expected to take the same stance again if Özel is suspended from office.
Encouraged by rare success in the municipal elections in 2024, the CHP also renewed its faith in winning a general election after a disastrous defeat to incumbent President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in the 2023 elections. Özel has been pushing for an early election and consented to a by-election to fill the vacant seats in Parliament when the government shot down his hopes for a snap vote.
Özel on Tuesday challenged the government again to organize a by-election for Parliament. “Let’s hold elections in constituencies you won in the past,” he said, calling on the AK Party to take action. In remarks at the CHP’s parliamentary group meeting, hours after government ally Devlet Bahçeli ruled out an election of any kind before the normal schedule, Özel said that the government should not “dodge the ballot box.”
“If they don’t want an early election, they should accept a by-election. The Constitution allows it. If you won’t resort to tricks, we are ready to have at least 50 lawmakers resign,” he said, referring to a threshold where Parliament is required to hold a by-election to fill the seats vacated for various reasons between two legislative elections.
Politics
NATO chief visits Türkiye with high praise, defense pledge
A few months before a critical NATO summit, the alliance’s secretary-general, Mark Rutte, arrived in Ankara on Tuesday.
Rutte began his visit with a meeting with Defense Minister Yaşar Güler, before proceeding with a visit to Aselsan, the country’s leading defense company, on Thursday. He later held talks with Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan and was received by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Rutte had nothing but pleasant words for Türkiye in terms of defense. He said the bloc’s members “can learn a lot” from Türkiye’s defense industry revolution in remarks to journalists while visiting Aselsan.
The NATO chief had no scheduled news conference, but media outlets reported that he was set to discuss several pressing issues with the Turkish officials. Among them were the invitation of the Gulf countries to July’s NATO summit in Ankara and bolstering regional cooperation, to enhance the bloc’s clout. The invitation to the Gulf comes after several countries in the region suffered from attacks by Iran in response to U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran. Another issue on the table was attendance at the summit by U.S. President Donald Trump, whose remarks on the alliance marked a major fallout between his country and the alliance it led. Rutte’s meeting will also focus on Türkiye’s acquisition of F-35 fighter jets from the U.S., long stalled under the previous U.S. administration. Additionally, Rutte’s talks will concentrate on the establishment of a multinational structure led by France and the United Kingdom for the security of the Strait of Hormuz and Türkiye’s likely participation in the structure.
Rutte will also discuss the dispute between Türkiye and Greece, especially on maritime jurisdiction, the Cyprus question and improving the role of Turkish defense companies in Europe’s security architecture, media outlets reported on Tuesday.
Speaking at the headquarters of Aselsan, Rutte said there is “a lot” the sector can learn from what the country has achieved, pointing to its rapid advances in recent years. He stressed that accelerating defense industrial production alongside innovation is a “top priority” for NATO, adding that both issues will be central at the alliance’s summit in July.
He said NATO allies must “do better” and “do more,” underlining that increased defense spending alone would not ensure security without boosting output of key capabilities such as air defense systems, drones, ammunition, radars and space technologies. “Of course, we will celebrate that we are able collectively to increase the defense spending, but defense industrial production will be extremely important, because we have to do better, we have to do more, and we can learn a lot from what Türkiye is doing here,” he said.
Describing the global security environment as increasingly volatile, he pointed to a wide range of threats “from the Arctic to the Mediterranean, from outer space to the seabed,” including missile and drone attacks as well as sophisticated cyber threats.
He cited Russia’s ongoing war against Ukraine, China’s military modernization and nuclear expansion, and Iran’s activities in the region “as key sources of instability,” noting that Türkiye is directly affected by some of these risks.
Rutte also said NATO had recently intercepted ballistic missiles heading toward Türkiye from Iran on four separate occasions, underscoring the alliance’s readiness to defend all its members.
Reiterating his earlier remarks, he said Türkiye has gone through a “defense industrial revolution,” adding that Aselsan is “at the forefront” of these developments. He urged the defense firm to “produce and innovate even more and faster.”
He emphasized the role of the defense industry in ensuring collective security, saying that protecting “1 billion people across Europe and North America” cannot be achieved by militaries alone. It also requires strong industrial capacity, he said. Rutte highlighted growing defense cooperation across the alliance, noting that Turkish firms are expanding their footprint abroad, including exports and operations in several European countries, and called for continued collaboration “from Alaska to Ankara.”
“Just recently, as you know, Aselsan sold advanced electronic warfare systems to Poland. You have started operations in Albania and Romania, and you have equipped a vessel for the Croatian Navy,” Rutte said. He also drew attention to the role of young engineers, noting that the average age at Aselsan is around 33 – and possibly even lower. “So I’m glad to address you, the young engineers who make all of this possible,” he added.
Aselsan, headquartered in the Turkish capital Ankara, was founded in 1975 and has grown to be one of the country’s largest defense firms, ranking among the top 50 in its field worldwide. The defense giant became the first Turkish company to reach a $30 billion market value in January 2026.
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