Ankara stopped buying Iran oil out of ‘respect’ for US sanctions

Ankara stopped importing oil from Iran at the beginning of
May out of “respect” for American sanctions despite disagreeing with them, a
Turkish official said on Wednesday.
“As a strategic ally” of the United States, “we respect” the
sanctions, said the official, who asked to remain anonymous, during Turkish
Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Yavuz Selim Kiran’s visit to Washington.
Since pulling out of the landmark Iran nuclear deal a year
ago, President Donald Trump’s administration has hit Iran with severe sanctions
prohibiting the export of Iranian oil, as well as targeting countries that
continue to purchase it.
Turkey was among eight countries, also including China,
India, and Japan, that were initially exempt from the sanctions and allowed to
continue importing Iranian crude, but the exemption ended May 2 and has not
been renewed. Ankara initially appeared unwilling to comply, but according to
the anonymous official, Turkey did stop importing Iranian oil after May 2.
While meeting with Trump, the Turkish delegation in
Washington discussed the various points of tension between the two NATO allies,
including Ankara’s recent controversial purchase of the S-400 missile defense
system from Moscow.
Washington says the deal with Moscow is a threat to Western
defense and in April suspended Ankara from the F-35 fighter jet program in a
bid to halt the purchase. “It’s a done deal,” the Turkish deputy minister told
journalists in Washington, reaffirming the country’s stance on maintaining the
contract with Moscow.
The Turkish government proposed a joint technical working
group with the Trump administration to help dispel any fears on the part of the
US, which worries that the S-400s will be used to collect technological data on
NATO military aircraft, which Russia will be able to access.
“We’re still waiting for their answer” on the technical
group, added the Turkish official. US-Turkish relations have grown tense over
multiple issues, including US support for Syrian Kurdish forces labeled
terrorists by Ankara, and Washington’s refusal to extradite Pennsylvania-based
Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen, who is accused of being behind a failed coup
in Turkey in 2016.