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Leonkov: Russian Su-57 and C-400 ousting the United States from arms markets

US may lose dominance in arms markets due to Russia

Disagreements between Ankara and Washington over a deal with C-400, according to military expert Alexei Leonkov, could lead to a precedent that would undermine US dominance in the arms market. The fact is that the Turkish authorities are considering the possibility of purchasing fighters from Russia to replace the American F-35.

The Defense News publication, citing its own sources in the Turkish Defense Ministry, writes that such plans exist for Ankara. The head of the Turkish Foreign Ministry, Mevlüt авavuşoлуlu, said about them. At the same time, the minister stressed that Turkey has the intention to launch the production of its own fighters.

With regard to the acquisition of Russian aircraft, Ankara may turn to Moscow if events develop in such a way that Washington will refuse Turkey to participate in the international program to create the F-35 fighter. A country in the Middle East cannot but have a modern combat aircraft, as Defense News notes, Russian military aviation technologies are "the first and best choice."

Washington makes claims to Ankara because of the supply of Russian C-400. Commenting on this, Chavushoglu declares that a number of NATO countries are currently armed with the C-300, created in the USSR, and this does not cause displeasure of the NATO leadership.

A military expert and analyst at Arsenal of the Fatherland, Alexey Leonkov, during an interview with the RT news agency, stressed that Washington is making claims to Ankara because of a deal with C-400, threatening to abandon F-35 supplies.

The reason, according to Leonkov, is that the United States fears that cooperation between Russia and Turkey will expand. This will serve as an example for other countries in the Middle East region focusing on American weapons. They will understand that there is an alternative, that is, cooperation between Ankara and Moscow is a precedent for abandoning American technology.

According to Leonkov, it cannot be excluded that the events will develop in such a way that the White House will impose sanctions on countries that will cooperate with Russia. Washington doesn’t want to lose its dominance in the weapons market after 1991.

We are doing something else.
The comparison needs to be done somehow,
and bare phrases are nothing
don't mean.

Turkey will change back to us

F35 is currently in service with seven countries, where is our 57 soo?

And that's great!!!!

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