[This post originally appeared at Asia Times Online on September 27, 2013, under the title Turkey Goes for Chinese take-away defense. It can be reposted if ATOl is credited and a link provided.]
On September 26, 2013, Turkey made the rather eyebrow-raising decision
to put its long range missile defense eggs in a Chinese basket,
announcing it had awarded a US$3 billion contract to the People's
Republic of China for its truck-mounted "shoot and scoot" FD-2000
system.
The Chinese FD-2000 is based on the Hong Qi missile, which has been
around since the 1990s. The FD-2000 is an export version of the HQ-9
that appeared in 2009 and is marketed as a next-generation improvement
on the Russian S-300 system, but whose fire control radar looks more
like the radar matching US-based Raytheon's Patriot missile system (with
the implication that the PRC filched the technology, maybe with some help from Israel). [1]
Defense correspondent Wendell Minick relayed the description of the FD-2000 that China provided at a 2010 Asian arms show:
It can target cruise missiles (7-24 km), air-to-ground
missiles (7-50 km), aircraft (7-125 km), precision-guided bombs and
tactical ballistic missiles (7-25 km). "FD-2000 is mainly provided for
air force and air defense force for asset air defense to protect core
political, military and economic targets," according to the brochure of
China Precision Machinery Import and Export Corporation (CPMIEC), the
manufacturer of the system. It can also coordinate with other air
defense systems to "form a multi-layer air defense system for regional
air defense." [2]
Turkey is procuring 12 of these systems (it had originally requested 20
Patriot systems when Syria heated up and got six for a year, since
renewed).
The FD-2000 looks great on paper. However, it appears to be untested in
combat - and even the Patriot system is apparently not effective
against cruise missiles, implying that the Chinese system isn't going to
do any better. Political issues aside - and there were a lot of
political issues - the deciding factor for Turkey was probably low
price, and China's willingness to do co-production and technology
transfer.
Maybe the Chinese government are eager to put the FD-2000 in some
foreign hot spot in the hopes of getting some real, battlefield data and
make some upgrades before the cruise missiles start flying toward
Beijing. [3]
Press reports from June already implied that Turkey was leaning toward
the Chinese system. However, Turkey's announcement in the midst of the
Syrian chemical weapons negotiations still looks like a slap at the
United States, which makes the Patriot missile system, and the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization, which is now manning six Patriot batteries
at present installed in Turkey. [4]
Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan certainly is feeling piqued at the
US-led detour into chemical weapon destruction in Syria, instead of
support for the quick regime collapse that he has been craving ever
since he made the precipitous and rather premature decision to call for
the fall of Bashar al-Assad in the summer of 2011.
Turkey's aggressive regime-change posture has always carried with it the
risk of Syrian chemical weapon retaliation, as a Xinhua piece pointed
out in early November:
Turkey's army build up on its Syrian border continued, with
some 400 chemical, biological and nuclear units arriving in the region
as a measure against a possible chemical threat.
While some analysts cited NATO anti-missile defense systems deployed in
Turkey, others doubted their effectiveness."The citizens in the southern
border have not been given adequate equipment to protect themselves,
especially from chemical attacks," said Turkish academic Soli Ozel.
"Let's say that one battery misses one missile ... The smart missile may
not be so smart." [5]
Suspicion of the Patriot's missile-busting awesomeness seems to be endemic in Turkey:
Sait Yilmaz, an expert, told Turkish daily Today's Zaman
that Patriots - the anti-ballistic missiles provided by NATO - would
not be effective against short-distance missiles. He said that if Syria
fired a large number of missiles on Turkish targets at such a short
distance, most would go uncountered. [6]
The general consensus seems to be that if Syria unleashed a barrage of
short-range missiles the Patriot missiles would not do a sensational
job; indeed, the suspicion is that the six batteries are in Turkey
merely as a symbolic show of NATO support for Turkey. Presumably, the
protection provided by the FD-2000 would also be less than 100%.
Syria, however, is something of a sideshow in Turkey's missile defense
game.
Turkey's decision to procure these missile defense assets goes back to
2011 and was part of Turkey's ambiguous dance with the United States,
NATO, and Iran and the threat of Iran's long range missiles.
In 2011, the Obama administration announced that Turkey's participation
in the US/NATO integrated ballistic missile defense system would be
limited to hosting a radar station at Malatya - without any NATO
provided missile defense. Unsurprisingly, Iran announced that a NATO
radar station in Turkey would have a bull's eye painted on it and Turkey
was left to its own devices to deal with the Iranian threat.
Therefore, the Turkish government embarked on its procurement odyssey
seeking a defense against long range (ie Iranian) missiles, which ended
with the announcement of the purchase of the FD-2000.
It can be assumed that Turkey, eager to maintain its regional clout as
an independent security actor, made the conscious decision to stick a
finger in Iran's eye by siding with the US and NATO on the radar (while
stipulating that Iran must never be formally identified as the radar's
target), and to try to manage Iran's extreme displeasure by deploying a
more Turkish, non-NATO, presumably less confrontationally managed
missile defense system. [7]
Performance questions aside, the Syrian trauma has reinforced Turkey's
desire for a non-NATO missile defense system. As an analysis on the
Carnegie Europe website pointed out, Turkey's feelings of being slighted
by the US and NATO on Syria are no accident and translate rather
directly into an independent defense policy:
In a little-known episode of NATO history, the only Article 5
[collective self defense] crisis-management exercise ever conducted by
the organization ended in disagreement. Coincidentally, the scenario for
the exercise, held in 2002, was designed to simulate an Article 5
response to a chemical weapons attack by Amberland, a hypothetical
southern neighbor of Turkey.
Amberland was known to have several Scud missiles, tipped with
biological and chemical warheads, aimed at Turkey. During the seven-day
exercise, the United States and Turkey reportedly took a more hardline
stance in support of preemptive strikes, while Germany, France, and
Spain preferred to defuse the crisis through more political means.
The exercise apparently ended with NATO members disagreeing about the
prospective NATO response before any attack was carried out or Article 5
was officially invoked. [8]
As Turkey sees it, in other words, maybe the danger on Iran is that NATO
will go too far and embroil Turkey in a regional confrontation it does
not desire; on Syria, the reality is that NATO doesn't go far enough,
and is leaving Turkey vulnerable to Syrian retaliation for Erdogan's
perilous overreach on Syrian regime change.
Even though the FD-2000 is not well-suited to coping with a Syrian short
range missile threat, the missile defense batteries could also assist
in enforcing a no-fly zone at the Syrian-Turkish border, something that
NATO has specifically ruled out for its Patriot batteries in Turkey
(which are for the most part safely out of range of the Syrian border
and whose main purpose seems to be protecting NATO and US military
installations) without an enabling UN resolution or suitable coalition.
Turkey would probably be happy to have this independent capability in
its security/Syria destabilization portfolio though, at a cost of
hundreds of thousands of dollars per pop, it will probably think twice
about a shooting spree of FD-2000 missiles at Syrian planes. Erdogan is
also unhappy with Russia's frontline support of the Syrian regime
militarily as well as diplomatically, especially compared with Chinese
discretion, and that's probably why he didn't choose the S-300 option.
Iran, which has experienced the headaches of politicized supply (or, to
be more accurate, non-supply) of its S-300 missile defense system by
Russia, is also reportedly considering the FD-2000 (its manufacturer,
CPMIEC, was sanctioned by the United States for unspecified Iran-related
transgressions presumably relating to Chinese willingness to transfer
missile technology) ... but maybe Iran is thinking long and hard about
the rumor that the fire control radar technology passed through Israel's
hands on its way to China.
Apparently a Western marketing point steering Turkey away from Russian
or Chinese systems was the argument that inoperability with NATO
equipment would be a problem and the missile defense batteries would be
sitting there without vital linkages to NATO theater-scale radar and
missile-killing capabilities (though Greece, with an inventory of
Russian S-300s, somehow managed to make do).
Well, maybe that's the point. Erdogan is implying he doesn't want to
rely on the United States or NATO - which might demand Turkey's
diplomatic and security subservience and NATO control over Turkish
missile defense assets - to keep his missile defense system working,
while exposing both missile sites and the radar facility to Iranian
NATO-related wrath.
Perhaps Erdogan has abandoned his dreams of full partnership with NATO
and the European Union, and doesn't see Turkey as Europe's front line
state in the Middle East. He wants his own, independent missile defense
capability to protect distinctly Turkish targets and manage his
relationships with Iran and Syria on a more bilateral basis.
And as far as the People's Republic of China is concerned, it can
mollify Iran with the observation that China, by stepping up and
providing the system in place of Raytheon or a French/Italian
consortium, was preventing the full integration of Turkey into the NATO
missile defense bloc.
In which case, Turkey's name on the NATO membership rolls should include
an asterisk denoting its special status. Or maybe it should be a red
star.
"Turkey Chooses Chinese Long Range Missile Defense"
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