NATO urges ‘positive solution’ after US sanctions Turkey over S-400s

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has urged allies to find a “positive solution” after the U.S. decided to impose sanctions on Turkey over its purchase of the Russian S-400 missile defense systems.

Photo courtesy of Sputnik.

Duvar English - Anadolu Agency

The NATO chief on Dec. 15 urged allies to find a “positive solution” after the U.S. decided to impose sanctions on Turkey over its purchase of the Russian S-400 missile defense systems.

“I urge all NATO allies and Turkey and other allies to look into whether there are ways to find a positive solution,” Jens Stoltenberg told a joint news conference with Prime Minister of Montenegro, Zdravko Krivokapic, in Brussels.

“I regret that we are in a situation where NATO allies have to impose sanctions on each other,” Stoltenberg said.

The U.S. Treasury Department on Dec. 14 imposed sanctions on Turkey over its purchase of the S-400s.

Turkey’s Foreign Ministry denounced the decision in a written statement saying: “We condemn and reject the decision to impose unilateral sanctions against Turkey.”

The sanctions, coming under the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA), target Turkey’s Defense Industries (SSB) Presidency, including its head İsmail Demir and three other officials.

Reiterating concerns over the consequences of Turkey’s decision to buy S-400s, Stoltenberg said: “This is a national decision but the S-400 system is not compatible with NATO systems. It cannot be integrated into the Air and Missile Defense of NATO.”

“We know that there have been talks before on the possibility of the delivery of NATO systems, like for instance, the Patriot system or SAMP-T, which are NATO systems that can augment Turkish air defense, but also do that in a way which is compatible and possible to integrate in NATO’s Air and Missile Defense,” he added.

In April 2017, Turkey signed a contract with Russia to acquire the S-400s. 

U.S. officials have voiced opposition to their deployment, saying they would be incompatible with NATO systems and would expose F-35 jets to possible Russian subterfuge.