Trump, Turkiye’s Erdogan discuss F-35s, Russian oil

US President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, September 25, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 25 September 2025
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Trump, Turkiye’s Erdogan discuss F-35s, Russian oil

  • Two leaders remain sharply at odds over US ally Israel’s attacks on Gaza, which Ankara calls a genocide
  • Trump called Erdogan a “very tough man” and said he would like to see Turkiye stop purchases of Russian oil

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump suggested the US could lift sanctions on Turkiye and allow it to buy US F-35 jets as he kicked off talks with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, but said he wanted Ankara to stop purchases of Russian oil.
Erdogan’s first visit to the White House in about six years comes at a time when Ankara is keen to take advantage of a US administration eager to make deals in return for big-ticket arms and trade agreements.
Seated side by side in the Oval Office, Trump called Erdogan a “very tough man” and said he would like to see Turkiye stop purchases of Russian oil.
Turkiye, Hungary and Slovakia are the main European purchasers of Russian oil and Trump is pressing for them to stop.
“I’d like to have him stop buying any oil from Russia while Russia continues this rampage against Ukraine,” Trump said of Erdogan.
Asked whether he was willing to make a deal to sell F-35s to Turkiye, Trump told reporters: “I think he’ll be successful in buying the things that he wants to buy.”

Trump also said he could lift sanctions against Turkiye “very soon,” and that “if we have a good meeting, almost immediately.”
He said they would discuss the issue in their Oval Office talks followed by lunch.
Former President Joe Biden had kept Turkiye at arm’s length partly over what it saw as the fellow NATO member’s close ties with Russia. Under Trump, who views Moscow more favorably and has closer personal ties with Erdogan, Ankara is hoping for a better relationship.
Trump and Erdogan — both seen as increasingly autocratic by their critics at home — had a checkered relationship during the Republican president’s first term. But since his return to the White House, their interests have aligned on Syria — source of the biggest bilateral strain in the past — where the US and Turkiye now both strongly back the central government.
They remain sharply at odds over US ally Israel’s attacks on Gaza, which Ankara calls a genocide — a potential wild card in what are otherwise expected to be friendly and transactional talks in the Oval Office.

US sanctions block F-35 sales
The mood shift has renewed Turkish hopes that Trump and Erdogan, who have exchanged mutual praise, can find a way around US sanctions imposed by Trump himself in 2020 over Turkiye’s acquisition of Russian S-400 missile defenses.
That, in turn, could pave the way for Ankara to buy Lockheed Martin’s advanced F-35 fighter jets, for which it was both a buyer and manufacturer until it was barred over the S-400s.
Erdogan has said the defense industry, including the topic of F-35s and ongoing negotiations over 40 F-16 jets Ankara also wants, would be a focus of the meeting, along with regional wars, energy and trade.
A US official said Washington had in recent days drafted a statement of intent — a document used to facilitate talks — for several sales to Turkiye, including the new F-16s that would bolster its existing fleet.
Turkiye asked for advanced equipment and modifications on the F-16s in their order, making the jets cost more than a standard F-35, the official said. But F-35s were omitted from the draft statement because the US cannot legally sell them while Turkiye has the S-400s, the person added.
Turkish government officials did not immediately comment on the F-16 costs.
Turkiye, NATO’s second-largest army, wants to ramp up air power to counter what it sees as growing threats in the Middle East, Eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea, where it neighbors Russia and Ukraine. 


Ukraine backs Pope’s call for Olympic truce in war with Russia

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Ukraine backs Pope’s call for Olympic truce in war with Russia

KYIV: Ukraine has backed a call for a ceasefire in the war with Russia during the Winter Olympics after ​Italy and Pope Leo urged world leaders to use the Milano Cortina games to further peace.
Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha told Reuters that Ukraine supported the proposal during the February 6–22 Winter Olympics and a corresponding United Nations resolution calling ‌for a global ‌truce. He said it ‌was ⁠up ​to ‌Russia to clarify its position.
“We support this appeal,” he said in an interview in Kyiv. “We are interested in a ceasefire and if Russia once again rejects, it will once again confirm who is the obstacle for ⁠peace and who wants to continue this war.”
Pope Leo ‌on Sunday invoked what ‍he said was the ‍ancient tradition of the Olympic truce ‍and called on people in positions of power to take real steps toward de-escalation and dialogue in the name of peace.
Ukraine is locked ​in brutal fighting with Russia nearly four years after Moscow’s troops poured over ⁠the border in a full-scale invasion in February 2022. Russian forces occupy nearly a fifth of Ukraine and have been bombarding the power grid.
The United States is trying to broker a settlement and has held rounds of talks between Ukraine and Russia in an effort to end the war.
“Let’s stop and it will definitely open a ‌path for broader peace negotiations,” Sybiha said.