In what future journalism textbooks may charitably describe as "an ambitious geography own-goal," Turkey's Sözcü newspaper has managed the impressive feat of being furious at the correct topic, aimed at entirely the wrong institution, and somehow still confident about the whole thing. Here is what actually happened, for anyone keeping score at home. On 8 July, the European Parliament — Brussels, EU, the actual legislature Turkey has spent decades not joining — passed a resolution on the effects of Turkey's 1974 intervention on Cypriot women and girls, drafted under rapporteur Eleonora Meleti of the FEMM Committee. Ankara's Foreign Ministry, never one to let an insult go unrebutted, declared the resolution "null and void" the following day and accused it of harbouring baseless slander against the Turkish Armed Forces. A perfectly ordinary diplomatic spat, by regional standards. And then Sözcü arrived, notebook in hand, apparently having left its atlas...
Russia has indicated it views a potential sale of S-400 air defence systems currently operated by Turkey to the United Arab Emirates in a favorable light, according to multiple sources cited by Middle East Eye (MEE), though the outlet reported that negotiations have not yet been finalized. The S-400 systems, which Turkey purchased from Russia in 2019, led to Turkey's expulsion from the F-35 fighter jet programme and prompted a series of US sanctions targeting Turkey's defence industry. Six F-35 jets remain in US storage after their transfer to Turkey was blocked by American legislation in 2020. According to MEE, the S-400 issue and Turkey's potential return to the F-35 programme have become central topics of discussion as Washington and Ankara have worked to repair relations since Donald Trump returned to office in 2025. Under the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act, the US government must confirm that Turkey no longer possesses the S-400 systems before Turkey can r...