Greece could receive six F-35 stealth jets originally built for Turkey before its ouster from the program, days after the latter conducted tests of the S-400 missile systems it bought from Russia.
The United States and Greece agreed upon the sale of 20 F-35s during U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s visit to Athens earlier this month. Of this, six will be purchased in 2022, Greek newspaper Estia reported on October 19.
On October 16, Turkey conducted first test of S-400 air defense system (ADS) from its missile test facility in Sinop province on the Black Sea, where it was delivered earlier this month with British-made Banshee drones for use as targets.
The U.S.-Turkey tensions skyrocketed after the latter bought the S-400 systems from Russia for $2.5 billion in 2017. Washington’s attempts to persuade Ankara to ditch the systems went in vain. Soon after Russia began shipping the S-400s to Turkey in July 2019, the U.S. struck off Turkey’s name from the list of F-35 program partners and refused to sell the jets, 100 of which Ankara had planned to buy.
Additionally, the U.S. is mulling over relocating Incirlik Air Base in Turkey to Greece’s Crete island, reports said. NATO allies rely on the base as a staging point for access to the Middle East.