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ANKARA: Turkey, US Sign Agreement On NATO Radar Deployment

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  • ANKARA: Turkey, US Sign Agreement On NATO Radar Deployment

    TURKEY, US SIGN AGREEMENT ON NATO RADAR DEPLOYMENT

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 14 2011
    Turkey

    Ambassador Francis Ricciardone signed the agreement on behalf of the
    US. (Photo: AA)

    Turkey and US officials have signed a memorandum on the deployment
    of US radar as part of a NATO-backed missile defense system designed
    to protect European members of the alliance from missile threats.

    According to the memorandum, the X-band radar system will be deployed
    at a military base in the eastern province of Malatya, private NTV
    television reported on Wednesday. It also said the agreement was signed
    by Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun SinirlioÄ~_lu and
    US Ambassador to Turkey Francis Ricciardone at the Turkish Foreign
    Ministry on Wednesday morning.

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry confirmed that the radar system would
    be deployed in Kürecik, Malatya. â~@~\The site surveys and relevant
    legal arrangements have been finalized, and accordingly a military
    installation in Kürecik has been designated as the radar site,â~@~]
    a statement from the Foreign Ministry said.

    NATO members agreed to an anti-missile system over Europe to protect
    against Iranian ballistic missiles at a summit in Lisbon last year. A
    compromise was reached with Turkey, which has cultivated close ties
    with its neighbor Iran and had threatened to block the deal if Iran
    was explicitly named as a threat.

    At the NATO summit of heads of state and government in Lisbon last
    year, Turkey formally backed NATO plans to build a missile defense
    system, saying it will also contribute to national defense against
    the growing threat of ballistic missile proliferation.

    The summit came after months of discussions between Turkey and the US,
    in particular over some aspects of the proposed shield, most notably
    whether countries such as Turkey's neighbors Iran and Syria should be
    named as potential threats. Ankara insisted that the proposed system
    should provide protection for all territories of member states and
    that reference to any country would undermine the defensive nature of
    the shield by antagonizing countries singled out as a threat. Turkish
    insistence paid off in the end as the NATO summit endorsed the missile
    defense system plans without naming any country as a potential threat.

    Ankara on Sept. 2 announced its decision to host the early-warning
    radar system as a contribution to NATO's missile defense system.
    Turkey's decision annoyed Iran, which said Tehran would not tolerate
    any aggression against its national interests. â~@~\The West claims
    the radar system [in Turkey] is to confront Iranian missiles, but they
    should be aware that we will not tolerate any aggression against our
    national interests,â~@~] Iranian Defense Minister Ahmad Vahidi was
    quoted as saying by Iranian state TV.

    The Turkish and US governments say the radar system will help spot
    missile threats coming from outside Europe, including potentially
    from Iran. The system, provided by the United States, is to become
    operational later this year.

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