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Turkey says it hopes to achieve result on lifting U.S. sanctions soon

By Thomson Reuters Jul 10, 2026 | 10:18 AM

ANKARA, July 10 (Reuters) – Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said on Friday that Turkey hopes to achieve a result on lifting U.S. sanctions and its desire to purchase F-35 fighter jets soon, ​adding there should be no defence industry restrictions between allies.

U.S. ‌President Donald Trump, who visited Ankara this week for a NATO Summit, announced on Tuesday that he would lift U.S. sanctions imposed on Turkey over its purchase of Russian S-400 defence missile systems.

Speaking to state broadcaster TRT Haber, Fidan said there was ‌political ​will from both Ankara and Washington on removing ⁠the sanctions, and that ⁠the relevant ministers were working to resolve the issue.

In 2020, Washington imposed sanctions on Turkey under the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) over its acquisition of the S-400s. It also removed Ankara from ​the F-35 stealth fighter jet programme. The U.S. Congress passed legislation requiring Turkey to end possession of the S-400s in order to rejoin ⁠the F-35 programme.

Fidan said that there were ⁠two matters to be resolved in Turkey-U.S. relations that ​are subject to U.S. legislation.

“CAATSA is one of them. The issue of the ​F-35 jets is another… God willing, we will reach a ‌conclusion soon; in other words, I do not think there will be any problems in this regard,” Fidan said in his remarks broadcast on TRT.

Two sources told Reuters this week that Trump was expected to throw ⁠his support behind the potential sale of F-35s during the visit to Ankara. Trump said he “has not totally made up his mind” on the issue.

Turkish daily ⁠newspaper Hurriyet reported ‌on Friday that Turkey could announce it would resell ⁠the S-400s to one of the Gulf nations as ​soon ‌as Friday in order to persuade the U.S. to ​sell F-35 ⁠jets to Ankara.

Asked on Friday about the media report and whether Turkey had sought Russia’s permission for such a deal, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Moscow had been in contact with Ankara over what he described as an “extremely sensitive issue”.

(Reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu and Huseyin Hayatsever; Editing by Daren Butler ​and Peter Graff)