Ankara deals put Turkiye in NATO procurement architecture
Seven NATO signing tracks show how Turkish firms are moving into Alliance capability lines as members turn spending pledges into joint procurement channels.
Seven NATO signing tracks show how Turkish firms are moving into Alliance capability lines as members turn spending pledges into joint procurement channels.
ASELSAN, ROKETSAN, STM, and TÜBİTAK have joined NATO’s five new large-scale multi-national programmes during the 2026 NATO Summit being held in Ankara.
Türkiye -alongside Belgium, Croatia, France, Poland, Spain, and the UK- has signed a LOI to form a multi-national A400M transport fleet mirroring the MMF.
The 36th NATO Summit opened in Ankara with a defence industry forum focused on Allied production, investment and joint procurement across the Alliance.
NATO 3.0 is shifting deterrence from budget pledges to industrial capacity, placing Ankara and Turkiye’s defence ecosystem inside the Allied equation.
Mark Rutte used ASELSAN to illustrate NATO's changing approach to defence industry ahead of next month's summit in Ankara.
In written answers to TurDef, Yaşar Güler set out Türkiye’s NATO priorities, defence plans and views on European security before the NATO summit in Ankara.