Earlier this week, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan expressed dissatisfaction over Washington's unwillingness to implement Ankara's two basic conditions for acquiring Patriot interceptors related to providing a loan and joint production.
Speaking to the Turkish broadcaster NTV, Ismail Demir, chairman of Turkey's Defence Industry Directorate, said that it is impossible for Ankara to accept Washington's offer to sell its NATO partner US Patriot missile systems as it currently stands.
“We submitted a request to the US on buying the Patriot air defence systems, and we received an answer a year and a half later. Some details of this proposal don't suit us at all”, Demir noted.
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He added that the “negotiations [on the Patriot deal] continue because there are issues that have yet to be clarified”.
The statement comes after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Sunday that “although they [the United States] are positive for early delivery [of the Patriot systems], they can't promise to provide [the systems-related] loan and joint production”.
Last week, US Permanent Ambassador to NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison urged Turkey not to continue the implementation of its agreement to buy Russian S-400 missile systems, something that she said would not allow Washington “to deliver the [Patriot] air defences to Turkey which we could install…