REUTERS and U.S. Air Force photo by Master Sgt. Donald R. Allen (modified by INSS)
The Engine and F-35 Aircraft Deal for Turkey: Implications for the Regional and Global Balance of Power
The current U.S. administration is advancing a major deal, valued at over $700 million, to sell F110 engines to Turkey for its KAAN aircraft project. Despite the administration’s attempts to bypass congressional barriers, this move is not an isolated event; rather, it is a strategic accelerator intended to pave the way for Ankara’s full return to the F-35 program. While Washington’s rationale seeks to preserve Turkey as an anchor within NATO, in practice, it creates a serious dilemma and presents a weighty, threefold strategic risk: Undermining NATO from within: Empowering an actor that is engaged in aggressive competition against Western allies (such as Greece) and is entrenching a defiant military presence in Cyprus.
Fueling Regional Friction: Granting legitimacy to a competitive power that provides a safe haven for Hamas and supports the al-Sharaa regime in Syria.
Creating a Systemic Risk to the Global F-35 Network: Deploying 5th-generation capabilities in proximity to Russian S-400 systems risks compromising and cracking the information security of the platform as a whole. This threat is not limited to the erosion of Israel’s qualitative edge or the exposure of its defense industries; it constitutes a direct threat to every country in the world equipped with the F-35, alongside concerns over the possible proliferation of KAAN aircraft to additional militaries across the Sunni sphere.
15/07/26 Anadolu via Reuters Connect
The Race for $216 Billion: Syria’s Economy and Reconstruction Efforts in the al-Sharaa Era
A year and a half after Assad's fall: What is the state of the Syrian economy, and what can it teach us about the future of the new Syria?
14/07/26
A Conceptual Failure: Following the State Comptroller's Report on Countering Foreign Interference in Elections
The State Comptroller’s latest report not only exposes deficiencies regarding foreign interference in Israeli elections, but also a deeper failure—a conceptual failure—that Israel must rectify ahead of the upcoming elections
13/07/26