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U.S. Role As Top Turkish Arms Supplier Jeopardized By Diplomatic, Te

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  • U.S. Role As Top Turkish Arms Supplier Jeopardized By Diplomatic, Te

    U.S. ROLE AS TOP TURKISH ARMS SUPPLIER JEOPARDIZED BY DIPLOMATIC, TECHNICAL ISSUES
    Selcan Hacaoglu

    AP Worldstream
    Jun 21, 2006

    For the first time ever, there are no U.S. bidders for a major Turkish
    arms contract, signaling serious snags in one of the world's closest
    military-commercial partnerships.

    For more than 50 years, the United States and U.S. firms have been
    the main arms suppliers to Turkey, a lynchpin of NATO's southern
    flank during the Cold War. Turkey, in a rough neighborhood that
    includes Iran, Iraq, Syria as well as traditional rival Greece,
    has also been eager to snatch up weapons to supply its large army,
    which is also dealing with a domestic Kurdish insurgency.

    At the heart of the problems today are both diplomatic and technical
    issues rooted in Turkey's ambition to gain control over its military
    technology.

    Turkey is going through a low point in defense relations with
    Washington following its refusal to host U.S. troops for the invasion
    of Iraq in 2003. It has actively sought out other potential arms
    suppliers, making Turkey's business less attractive for U.S. companies.

    If they last, the frictions threaten to make U.S arms companies
    reluctant to support Turkish lobbying efforts in Washington, analysts
    and defense sources say.

    Next week, firms from South Africa, Russia, France and Italy are
    competing for a US$2 billion (A1.6 billion) tender to deliver attack
    helicopters to Turkey. U.S. makers Bell Helicopter Textron, Boeing
    Co. and Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. did not even offer proposals after
    evaluating tough tender conditions.

    The new bidding rules included full access to the aircraft's specific
    software codes _ which the United States considers a security risk _
    and a written guarantee from the provider's government that there
    will be no political obstacles to the export of the arms. However,
    the U.S. government can only seek the consent of Congress for a deal
    after the sale is finalized.

    It was not clear whether Turks would be satisfied with an initial
    letter from the government assuring them there would be no political
    problems.

    "As far as Boeing is concerned, some of the conditions in the tender
    are such that we simply could not agree to (them), and that we felt
    would make the program from a Boeing perspective very difficult,"
    Greg Pepin, Vice President of Boeing Turkey said in an interview.

    Pepin explained that sharing the software was problematic because it
    was partly owned by other U.S. suppliers as well as the U.S. government
    _ and the other owners would likely balk at sharing the technology
    even if Boeing were willing.

    "We can't guarantee that the U.S. government will transfer that
    technology, we can talk about the technology that we own but we can't
    agree to and sign up to assuring that these other owners of technology
    would do the same," Pepin said. "That was an issue we had, we simply
    cannot guarantee that."

    Turkey imposed new bidding rules last year, after it canceled a
    previous tender in 2004 when a deal with Bell Helicopter Textron's
    "King Cobra," a Turkish version of the AH-1Z Super Cobra used by U.S.

    Marines, collapsed over price, technology transfer and licensing
    problems.

    The new rules empower Turkey to substitute alternative, probably
    locally manufactured components such as weapon systems, the mission
    computer, avionics and electronic warfare suites, and require the
    supplier to integrate other systems or equipment built by Turkish
    companies.

    "The collapse of one deal is not itself a major crisis, but if Turkey
    persists in seeking carte blanche from American suppliers to substitute
    its own technology for theirs and asks for impossible terms, U.S. arms
    suppliers will not, indeed cannot, bid for Turkey's business, and they
    will likely cease their lobbying efforts on Turkey's behalf with both
    the White House and Congress," said Ian M.

    Cuthbertson, an arms sales expert at World Policy Institute. "U.S.

    industry will lose business and Turkey would lose powerful allies
    in Washington."

    U.S. arms companies have been lobbying for Turkey against Armenians _
    who are pressing for recognition of killings of Armenians in the early
    20th century as a genocide _ and Kurds _ who complain about Turkey's
    alleged human rights violations.

    Turkey's concerns over technological control of its weaponry increased
    after it faced arms blockades from several countries because of
    human rights problems in its fight against autonomy-seeking Kurdish
    guerrillas, while Washington demanded Turkish progress on human rights
    as a condition for arms sales.

    Many Turkish defense authorities also bitterly remember a U.S. arms
    embargo following Turkey's invasion of Cyprus in 1974, when Libya
    provided Turkey with bombs and spare parts to operate its U.S.-made
    jets.

    Today, Turkey is keen on having a sovereign helicopter to freely use,
    mainly against Kurdish guerrillas in the rugged southeast, without
    taking on the risk of outside interference in the aircraft's mission
    computer or of political obstacles from Washington to its use.

    Turkey's Defense Executive Committee might opt in its next meeting on
    June 27 to choose one of the current bidders from France, Italy, Russia
    and South Africa _ which lifted an arms embargo against Turkey in
    2005 _ to end a decade-long search for Turkey's next attack helicopter.

    The options are Tiger of the Franco-German company, Eurocopter,
    Mangusta of Italy's Agusta Aerospace, Kamov of Russia and South
    African company Denel's Rooivalk.

    "If Turkey wants to have a sovereign helicopter, this is the
    opportunity," said an official of Likom Defense, the representative
    of Denel in Turkey, speaking on condition of anonymity because he
    was not authorized to speak to the media.
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