If you follow Drill & Defense, you already know: the F-35 debate is not only about hardware. It is about law, alliance politics, sanctions, industrial participation, and trust. Whether Turkey will receive F-35s is therefore less a binary “yes/no” than a moving equation with several interlocking variables. Below, I’ll walk you through those variables with a calm, neutral lens, speaking directly to you as a reader who wants clarity rather than noise.
Where We Are Today
The baseline is simple: Turkey was removed from the F-35 program in 2019 after taking delivery of the Russian S-400 air defense system. Since then, the U.S. position has been anchored in law. Congressional language originating in FY2020 defense legislation limits any transfer of F-35 aircraft, technology, or training to Turkey so long as the S-400 issue remains unresolved. That statutory reality matters more than any single leader’s comments or diplomatic mood. It is why periodic waves of optimistic headlines haven’t converted into deliveries.
You’ll also see reports that political discussions have reopened. Those are meaningful, but they don’t erase the legal preconditions. Even when leaders say the door could open if the S-400 is “rendered inoperable” or otherwise addressed, the step from dialogue to delivery is a long one, and it runs through Congress, not just the White House.

The Legal Hinge: S-400 First, Then Everything Else
Let’s be pragmatic. U.S. concerns were about protecting F-35 secrets from potential exposure to a Russian-origin system operating in the same environment. That is the core rationale behind Turkey’s removal and the legal guardrails that followed. Any future path will therefore start with a “technical-political” fix on the S-400, something concrete enough to convince skeptics in Congress and credible enough to be verifiable over time. Concepts occasionally floated in Washington such as mothballing, partial dismantlement, or relocating the system under U.S. control live in this space. None has been implemented to date.
If you are evaluating seriousness, look for tangible steps that demonstrate irreversible change in the S-400 posture. Anything short of that will keep the legal lock in place. This is not an anti-Turkey point, it’s an institutional one about how U.S. law interacts with alliance management.

Politics vs. Programs: What Leaders Say vs. What Programs Require
High-level meetings matter because they reset atmospherics and can instruct bureaucracies to explore options. Recently, top-level engagements produced comments about revisiting the F-35 issue, “technical talks,” and hopeful signals. Important? Yes. Determinative? Not by themselves. The program reality is that the F-35 enterprise is large, multi-year, and tightly governed by agreements and security rules. Partners and buyers plan decades ahead. The re-entry of any former participant would require adjustments in training, sustainment, software releases, and secure data environments that take time and political cover.
Industrial Footprint: Turkey’s Past Role and Today’s Gap
Before removal, Turkish industry produced over a thousand F-35 parts and expected significant long-term workshare. That industrial bridge was rebuilt elsewhere at considerable cost and effort. Reversing or re-allocating production is not impossible, but it is not trivial either. Supply chains prize predictability, and the F-35 office moved to stabilize production after 2019. If you’re scanning signals, a serious discussion about any future Turkish role would surface in industrial notices and program updates well before jets change hands. Watch that space, not just podium statements.
Capability Fit: Why the F-35 Still Matters to Ankara
From an operational standpoint, the F-35 would expand Turkey’s options in several mission sets: suppression of enemy air defenses, deep strike with networked targeting, ISR fusion, and maritime strike. It would also provide future interoperability dividends as more NATO air forces field the type. That said, capability is not the only currency. Access, sustainment costs, sovereign upgrade levers, and technology protection rules all shape the net value proposition. GAO reporting shows the sustainment bill for the global fleet is high and under constant reform. Any buyer, new or returning must weigh lifetime costs and performance targets against alternatives such as the F-16V, Eurofighter Typhoon, or indigenous pathways and their political friction.
NATO Optics: The Alliance Layer
Within NATO, the F-35 is moving toward becoming the common fifth-generation baseline. More European members are joining the user community, which increases shared training, spare pools, and mission standardization. For alliance planners, a Turkey that flies F-35s and is fully plugged into allied data networks would be a net operational gain in several theaters, from the Black Sea to the Eastern Mediterranean. But alliance harmony also depends on minimizing intra-system risks. That returns us to the S-400: integrating a fifth-gen fleet while a Russian-origin battery remains in national service would keep raising red flags. This friction is structural rather than emotional.
The Negotiating Set: What Would a Deal Look Like?
If you’re asking what’s the shape of a possible deal, picture a layered package rather than a single handshake. Elements could include:
A verifiable S-400 disposition plan. Not just paperwork, physical, inspectable steps.
Sequenced legal relief. Congress would likely condition any transfer on verified compliance over time.
Industrial and training timelines. Real lead times for simulators, security accreditation, ALIS/ODIN access, weapons integration, and squadron stand-up.
Parallel tracks. Expect other aviation pieces such as F-16 sustainment and upgrades to act as political stabilizers while the F-35 question is tested.
None of this is speculative wish-casting, it is how complex defense transactions typically move from politics to programs when statutory barriers exist.
Signals to Watch
You will see many “we talked about F-35s” stories. Filter them with these practical indicators:
- Legislative movement. Any amendment, waiver path, or formal report language that modifies the current prohibition.
- Program office notices. Shifts in partner lists, training slots, or long-lead procurement signals.
- Industrial contracts. Re-opening Turkish workshare or tooling modifications would be a loud early bell.
- Verification mechanisms. Third-party or U.S.-managed oversight arrangements for the S-400, if any, will be a tell.
If none of those move, the conversation remains political theater rather than a programmatic change.
A Realistic Read for 2025
So, will Turkey get F-35s? Here is the most defensible, even-handed read for now:
Policy space exists for renewed talks, and leaders on both sides periodically test that space.
Law still dominates the outcome. Without a concrete S-400 solution that convinces Congress, actual transfers remain blocked.
Time horizons are long. Even a positive decision would entail years of technical, legal, and industrial steps before Turkish squadrons fly operational F-35s.
Alternatives continue in parallel. Upgrades to existing fleets and other procurement conversations will roll on, partly as hedges.
If you’re a reader who wants a binary answer, that can be unsatisfying. But accuracy beats simplicity: the center of gravity is statutory, not rhetorical. The moment you see verifiable S-400 steps paired with legislative action, the probability shifts materially. Until then, treat any “green light” talk as provisional.
Sources
- U.S. Department of Defense press briefing on removing Turkey from the F-35 program (July 17, 2019).
- White House (archived) statement on Turkey and the S-400/F-35 incompatibility (July 17, 2019).
- U.S. Congress, FY2020 National Defense Authorization Act texts detailing limitations on F-35 transfer to Turkey.
- Congressional Research Service brief noting that U.S. law prohibits F-35 transfer while Turkey retains the S-400, discussion of possible “rendered inoperable” scenarios (Aug.–Sep. 2025).