POLICY ANALYSIS BRIEF
TURKEY AT THE 36TH NATO SUMMIT ANKARA,
7–8 JULY 2026 Strategic Interests,
Alliance Leverage, and the New Southern Architecture
Executive Summary
Five strategic dynamics define Turkey's posture at Ankara 2026:
Southern Flank Re-centering: Turkey will leverage its host status to demand that the Ankara communiqué establish institutional parity between the eastern and southern flanks — matching the 2022–2025 eastern reinforcement surge with concrete southern air-defence and force-generation commitments.
Ukraine and the Black Sea: Turkey's indispensable role as Montreux Convention custodian and drone-warfare supplier will be mobilised to press for a standing Black Sea maritime security framework under Turkish operational leadership.
Defense Industry Validation: Ankara will deploy the summit stage to position its indigenous defense-industrial base — Bayraktar and Kızılelma platforms, SIPER air-defence, MILGEM corvettes — as an alliance-grade capability rather than a national export programme.
Counterterrorism Convergence: Turkey will seek formal communiqué language aligning NATO's counterterrorism definitions with Ankara's designation of the PKK/YPG nexus, pressing allies to end residual defence cooperation with Syrian Democratic Forces.
Strategic Autonomy Premium: The February 2026 Turkey-Egypt framework military cooperation, the pending Saudi-Pakistan-Turkey SMDA accession, and Ankara's Board of Peace membership collectively constitute bargaining leverage that Turkey will deploy to demand recognition as a regional peer, not a subordinate flank ally.
I. Strategic Context: Turkey's Position at the Summit
I.i. The Turkey Paradox — Militarily Valuable, Politically Contested
Turkey enters Ankara 2026 embodying what the Modern War Institute has termed the 'Turkey Paradox': an ally that is simultaneously indispensable to the alliance's operational capacity and institutionally uncomfortable for many of its members. The paradox has existed since Turkey joined NATO in 1952, but it sharpens acutely when geopolitical pressure rises. When threat perceptions are elevated — as they are today across the Black Sea, the Eastern Mediterranean, and the post-Iran Middle East — allies rediscover Turkey's strategic value. When threat perceptions moderate, concerns about Ankara's domestic politics, ties to Russia, and willingness to weaponise consensus procedures reassert themselves.
The summit convenes at the zenith of Turkey's strategic indispensability. Russia's war against Ukraine has made the Black Sea a central European security theatre. The Iran confrontation has underscored the volatility of NATO's southern flank. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has described the Ankara Summit as 'the most consequential gathering in NATO's history.' Turkish Defence Minister Yaşar Güler, briefing counterparts at a NATO Defence Ministers meeting in Brussels on 18 June 2026, described Turkey as 'not on the periphery of the security architecture, but at its centre.'
I.ii. The Macro-Alliance Fault Lines Entering Ankara
Three macro-level tensions frame the summit's political environment and directly shape Turkey's bargaining position:
US Disengagement Signalling
The Trump administration's 2026 National Defense Strategy explicitly signals a US Indo-Pacific reorientation, while a planned drawdown of US forces from Germany — confirmed by Defense Secretary Hegseth — has intensified European debates about autonomous defense capacity. Hegseth's characterisation of some European allies as 'freeloaders' and 'shameful' at a pre-summit defence ministers meeting, followed by his early departure from the session, left Secretary General Mark Rutte to manage the room. For Turkey, US disengagement from Europe paradoxically increases its leverage: an Alliance increasingly reliant on European and Turkish capabilities to compensate for reduced American forward presence cannot afford to marginalise its second-largest military.
European Burden-Shifting
The Hague Declaration of June 2025 committed all 32 NATO member states to investing 5 percent of GDP on core defence requirements and defence-related spending by 2035, with at least 3.5 percent allocated to core military requirements and up to 1.5 percent to cyber defence, critical infrastructure, and resilience. This was the most ambitious defence investment commitment in Alliance history — and for the first time, all 32 members met or exceeded the previous 2 percent target in 2025, with European allies and Canada achieving a 20 percent real increase in defence spending. Ankara 2026 will focus heavily on implementation: converting the Hague pledges into deployable forces, credible national roadmaps, and integrated supply chains.
The Iran Aftermath
The recently concluded US-Israel-Iran military confrontation has left NATO internally divided. European allies, not consulted on the campaign's launch, view it as a strategic distraction from Ukraine and a politically costly demand for solidarity. Turkey, by contrast, publicly welcomed the ceasefire agreement while positioning itself as the indispensable post-conflict stabiliser. Defence Minister Güler confirmed Turkey's readiness to support mine-clearing operations in the Strait of Hormuz and reaffirmed Turkey's unique regional mediation architecture spanning Moscow, Washington, and Persian Gulf capitals. This Iran aftermath dynamic directly accelerates Turkey's 'Regional Manager' ambitions — discussed in the annexed strategic assessment — and elevates the summit's southern flank agenda beyond what purely eastern-flank-oriented allies would prefer.
II. The Middle East and NATO's Southern Flank
II.i. Turkey as the Alliance's Southern Load-Bearer
The summit's physical location on the Alliance's southern flank is a strategic choice, not a logistical convenience. By hosting in Ankara rather than, say, Brussels or a Central European capital, Erdoğan signals that the southern flank's security agenda — long subordinated to the eastern reinforcement surge since 2022 — must be co-equal in the Ankara communiqué. Turkey will press this argument with considerable institutional force: as one of NATO's top five force contributors, with operational experience spanning Syria, Libya, the Black Sea, and now the Hormuz corridor, Ankara can credibly claim it bears disproportionate frontline burden for threats that the Alliance collectively faces but that geographically remote allies bear at lower cost.
The Atlantic Council's June 2026 analysis has already conceded the terrain: it calls for the Ankara Summit to reinforce the Southern Neighbourhood Security Dialogue at foreign ministers level, provide enhanced air-defence and counter-drone capabilities to southern flank allies, and extend Operation Sea Guardian in the Mediterranean. The complication is that the same analysis acknowledges the Trump administration's National Defense Strategy explicitly signals that European allies should take primary responsibility for their own neighbourhood — which means the southern flank operations that the Atlantic Council recommends are ones that the United States is simultaneously signalling it will not lead.
II.ii. Integrated Air and Missile Defence on the Southern Flank
Turkey will press forcefully for stronger alliance commitments regarding integrated air and missile defence along its borders with Syria, Iraq, and Iran. This agenda predates Ankara 2026 but carries fresh urgency in the wake of the Iran confrontation. The recent regional volatility — Iranian proxy missile and drone activity, Israeli strikes in Syria creating Turkish-Israeli deconfliction challenges, and the residual Hormuz threat environment — provides Ankara with primary evidence that NATO's southern exposure is not adequately resourced compared to the eastern flank investments since Russia's 2022 invasion.
The argument has real analytical force. Since 2022, NATO has substantially reinforced its eastern flank: battle groups expanded into brigade-level formations, air defence systems strengthened, maritime presence increased in the Baltic and North Sea. The southern flank has received comparatively marginal institutional attention. Turkey's bid for parity — framed not as special pleading but as coherent alliance risk management — is structurally difficult for allies to resist, particularly as European defence industries scale up and new southern air defence architecture becomes financially feasible.
The unresolved F-35/S-400 dispute intersects directly with this air defence agenda. US Ambassador Tom Barrack's February 2026 statement that F-35 access 'could be resolved within four to six months' established a negotiation window that now coincides precisely with the pre-summit period. Turkey's preferred resolution — mothballing the S-400 in monitored storage, receiving F-35As with modified avionics, with Israel receiving compensatory capability packages — remains on the table. Ankara's parallel Eurofighter acquisition from the United Kingdom (£8 billion for approximately 20 aircraft) provides strategic insurance and creates implicit urgency for Washington: a failure to resolve the F-35 dispute by Ankara cedes the bilateral defense relationship initiative to London.
II.iii. Counterterrorism Definitions and the PKK/YPG Nexus
A persistent and deepening source of transatlantic friction is the divergence between Turkey and the United States over counterterrorism designations in Syria. Washington has maintained operational reliance on the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) — predominantly led by the Kurdish YPG — for counterterrorism operations against Islamic State remnants. Turkey designates the YPG as an operational extension of the PKK and regards continued US-SDF cooperation as direct support for a terrorist organisation targeting Turkish territory and population.
Turkey will use the Ankara summit to press for formal communiqué language that aligns NATO's collective counterterrorism framework with Ankara's designations, and to demand that allies — particularly the United States — provide a credible timeline for ending military cooperation with the SDF. The fall of the Assad regime in December 2024 has made this demand more acute: Syrian territorial reconfiguration has altered the operational map of Kurdish political autonomy, creating new points of potential Turkish-US friction in the Syrian transitional environment.
This agenda will encounter firm resistance from Washington and from European allies that view Kurdish forces as reliable counterterrorism partners with a legitimate security grievance. The likely summit outcome is calibrated communiqué language acknowledging Turkey's security concerns without adopting Ankara's full terminological framework — a formulation both sides can claim as a partial victory.
II.iv. Turkey-Israel Strategic Competition in the Post-Iran Middle East
The Eastern Mediterranean and broader Middle East are increasingly characterised by a Turkey-Israel strategic competition that complicates NATO's southern security architecture. Turkey's sustained support for Palestinian political causes, its sharp deterioration in bilateral relations with Israel since 2008, and its backing of post-Assad Syrian transitional forces that conflict with Israeli buffer-zone operations in southern Syria — all create a structural tension that is unlikely to be resolved at the summit level.
The National Interest's analysis, published immediately before the summit, warns that Turkey's 'Blue Homeland' maritime doctrine — now being codified in domestic legislation — seeks to extend Turkish EEZ claims in ways that directly challenge Greece, Cyprus, and Israel simultaneously. NATO leadership will manage this issue defensively, seeking to prevent any public confrontation that undermines summit cohesion, while leaving the substantive disputes to bilateral diplomatic channels.
The Israeli dimension carries a specific summit implication. Israel's QME-based legislative opposition to Turkish F-35 acquisition is the single most operationally significant bilateral complication in the F-35 resolution pathway. US-mediated Israeli acquiescence — likely requiring compensatory capability packages — is a precondition for any Ankara-timed F-35 breakthrough.
III. The Black Sea and Ukraine Strategy
III.i. The Montreux Convention as Strategic Leverage
Turkey's control of the Bosphorus and Dardanelles under the 1936 Montreux Convention is the single most legally codified and operationally consequential asymmetric power held by any NATO ally. Turkey's consistent and legally rigorous application of Montreux throughout the Russia-Ukraine conflict — restricting warship passage by both belligerents — has functioned as a stabilising mechanism that prevents direct NATO naval escalation in the Black Sea while simultaneously degrading Russia's capacity to reinforce its Black Sea Fleet.
Defence Minister Güler reiterated at the June 2026 Brussels ministerial that Turkey 'continues to implement the Montreux Convention while supporting regional ownership and cooperation among Black Sea littoral states' and described Black Sea stability as 'an inseparable part of Euro-Atlantic security.' This framing — Montreux as a contribution to alliance security rather than a constraint on it — is Turkey's standard position, and it is analytically correct. Russia's Black Sea Fleet has been so severely degraded by Ukrainian naval drone operations that Ankara's Montreux authority now applies primarily to preventing the re-entry of Russian reinforcements that no longer exist at scale, while maintaining the legal architecture that prevents NATO from deploying a full carrier battle group into the theatre.
The proposal circulating in advance of the summit — a standing Turkish-led Black Sea maritime security fleet, designed to provide safe passage guarantees without violating Montreux — would formalise Turkey's de facto dominant naval role in the theatre. This is the 'fix being floated,' as Türkiye Today has characterised it: an acknowledgement that Turkey is already, by simple attrition, the strongest navy in the Black Sea, given Russian fleet losses and the treaty-bound absence of non-littoral powers. Turkish acceptance of this role as a formally recognised alliance function would represent a significant summit outcome.
III.ii. Ukraine: Drone Supplier, Mediator, and Sanctions Ambiguity
Turkey occupies a structurally unique position in the Ukraine conflict: it has supplied Bayraktar TB2 drones that have materially altered the operational trajectory of Ukrainian defence, endorsed Ukraine's territorial integrity, facilitated the 2022 Black Sea Grain Initiative under Secretary General Guterres, and hosted the only direct Russian-Ukrainian bilateral negotiations since the war's escalation. Simultaneously, Turkey purchases Russian natural gas at scale — Russia remains Turkey's largest pipeline gas supplier — and has not joined Western sanctions regimes against Moscow.
This balancing act will face behind-closed-doors pressure at Ankara from Washington and key European capitals. Allies will urge tighter Turkish enforcement of Western sanctions — particularly regarding dual-use goods that continue to reach Russia via Turkish intermediaries — while acknowledging the domestic political and energy-security constraints that make full Turkish sanctions compliance unrealistic without compensatory arrangements.
The likely summit posture is continuity: Turkey will reaffirm its support for Ukraine's territorial integrity and announce enhanced military support commitments (potentially including TB3 drone deliveries or MILGEM naval platform transfers), while deflecting sanctions-alignment demands with reference to its mediator role and Montreux responsibilities. Erdoğan's pre-summit proposal to host a Trump-Putin meeting in Ankara — on the grounds that Turkey is 'trustworthy on both sides' — is partly a domestic political performance, but it also signals Ankara's preference to be indispensable to any negotiated settlement pathway, regardless of which power ultimately brokers it.
III.iii. Black Sea De-Mining and Maritime Security Cooperation
Practical Black Sea security cooperation — joint de-mining operations, commercial shipping lane protection, and maritime surveillance coordination — represents the area where Turkey-NATO operational integration is most straightforward and politically uncontested. The existing tripartite de-mining initiative between Turkey, Romania, and Bulgaria provides an institutional foundation that the Ankara Summit may seek to expand into a more comprehensive maritime security framework.
The summit's Defence Industry Forum — confirmed as a full-day dedicated session — is likely to feature Turkish maritime platforms prominently, including the MILGEM-class corvette programme and unmanned surface vessel development. Turkey's positioning of its naval industrial base as an alliance-grade capability, rather than a national export programme, directly supports its bid for a formalised Black Sea maritime security role.
IV. Defence Procurement and Industrial Integration
IV.i. The Hague Commitments and the Ankara Implementation Imperative
The 2025 Hague Summit's 5 percent GDP defence spending commitment was the headline political achievement of the Rutte era — but as the European Policy Centre's pre-summit assessment notes, translating the commitment into operational capacity is 'the central challenge' for Ankara. The 1.5 percent cyber and resilience tier has no agreed measurement framework; national roadmaps submitted ahead of the summit vary enormously in credibility; and the defence industrial expansion necessary to absorb higher spending faces supply chains operating at or near capacity.
Turkey will use the Ankara platform to argue that the spending gap cannot be closed without deep allied defence-industrial integration — and specifically, that restricting defence trade among allies, whether through formal embargo or informal procurement politics, directly undermines the collective deterrence that the 5 percent commitment is designed to build. This argument targets the residual export restrictions that certain European NATO members have maintained against Turkey following the 2019 Syria operation: Germany, France, the Netherlands, and Denmark all imposed temporary or partial arms embargoes that, even where subsequently lifted, have left commercial and political residues in defence-industrial relationships.
IV.ii. Turkey's Indigenous Defense Industrial Base as Alliance Capability
Turkey has rapidly built one of NATO's most dynamic indigenous defence industrial ecosystems. The Bayraktar TB2 drone demonstrated in Ukraine the lethal effectiveness of affordable, networked unmanned systems at scale. The more advanced TB3 and Kızılelma platforms extend this capability to carrier-based and high-speed strike configurations. SIPER provides sovereign long-range air defence. The MILGEM programme delivers corvettes and frigates that have become export-competitive across multiple market segments.
At Ankara, Turkey will deploy this capability showcase strategically. The summit's Defence Industry Forum provides the ideal stage. Ankara's argument is consistent with a position gaining traction in Atlantic Council and CSIS analyses: NATO's defence-industrial mobilisation cannot rely exclusively on traditional tier-one suppliers (US, UK, France, Germany) when supply chain constraints, political conditionality, and capacity limits constrain their output. Turkey's ability to deliver proven, combat-tested systems at competitive price points, with minimal political conditionality, is an alliance-grade resource that formal NATO procurement architecture has under-utilised.
US Senators Shaheen and Tillis, speaking at the Atlantic Council ahead of the summit, proposed integrated NATO supply chains in which countries compete for specific links rather than insisting on full domestic manufacturing. This framework, if adopted in the Ankara communiqué, directly benefits Turkey's positioning as a manufacturing and assembly hub for alliance-grade platforms.
IV.iii. The S-400/F-35 Impasse: Final Negotiation Window
The S-400/F-35 impasse remains the most structurally significant bilateral US-Turkey defence procurement dispute in Alliance history. Turkey paid $1.4 billion for 100 F-35 aircraft before its 2017 S-400 acquisition triggered removal from the programme under CAATSA sanctions. Ambassador Barrack's February 2026 statement that the issue 'could be resolved within four to six months' — noting the S-400 is inactive and the key issue is continued possession and legal status — defines the negotiation window that now coincides with the summit itself.
Turkey's triangular negotiation posture involves three simultaneous tracks. With Washington, Ankara seeks F-35 reinstatement in exchange for S-400 mothballing — monitored inactive storage rather than physical return to Russia. With Moscow, Turkey has raised the possibility of an S-400 return or refund against gas import credits, but Russia has declined, citing Ukraine precedent concerns. With Israel, Ankara requires a US-brokered Israeli acquiescence that neutralises QME-based objections in exchange for compensatory capability packages.
The most likely summit outcome is not full F-35 resolution — the Israeli dimension alone makes that timeline unlikely before July 8 — but a formal commitment by both parties to resolve the dispute within a defined post-summit window, potentially including an agreed S-400 monitoring framework as an immediate confidence-building measure. The parallel Eurofighter acquisition provides Turkey with strategic insurance and creates implicit urgency for Washington: continued delay cedes defence-industrial relationship initiative to the United Kingdom.
V. The Eastern Mediterranean: Fault Lines and Alliance Cohesion
V.i. The Post-Egypt Strategic Landscape
The February 2026 Turkey-Egypt framework military cooperation agreement — documented in the annexed strategic assessment — fundamentally altered the Eastern Mediterranean strategic geometry. Greece had long anchored its EEZ claims on an anti-Turkey coalition: the EastMed Gas Forum (Greece-Cyprus-Israel-Egypt) provided multilateral legitimacy for maximalist Greek maritime positions and a counterbalance to Turkish 'Blue Homeland' doctrine. Egypt's strategic reorientation toward Turkey — formalised through 18 bilateral agreements including a Mediterranean defence industrial complex for joint drone and warship production — has dissolved this coalition architecture.
The implications for Greece are severe. Athens can no longer rely on Cairo as a diplomatic counterweight. The Egyptian-Turkish joint naval exercises (resumed September 2025 after a 13-year hiatus) signal a new operational reality in the Eastern Mediterranean. The 'pincer effect' — Turkish-Egyptian coordinated patrols complicating Greek naval operations, Turkey using Egypt as a manufacturing and export gateway to compete with Greek economic positioning — is a structural shift, not a temporary diplomatic alignment.
Greece, facing this new strategic reality with uncertain US support under the Trump administration's transactional approach, accelerated its own naval modernisation and counter-drone programme. But Athens's options are constrained: without Egyptian partnership, without reliable French naval presence (France faces its own Trump-era pressure), and without a clear Article 5 guarantee for intra-alliance disputes — which the convention was never designed to address — Greek strategic options in the Eastern Mediterranean have narrowed considerably.
V.ii. Greece-Turkey Tensions: Summit Management and Medium-Term Scenarios
NATO leadership will work intensively in the final weeks before July 7 to ensure that bilateral Greece-Turkey tensions remain formally subdued during the summit itself. The objective is to project absolute cohesion and to prevent any public disruption over Aegean airspace, Cyprus, or EEZ claims from undermining the summit's broader agenda. Secretary General Rutte's intervention on the Greenland crisis in January 2026 — credited as a key factor in defusing immediate tensions — provides a template for active secretariat management of bilateral alliance disputes.
Behind the diplomatic surface, the medium-term scenario probabilities — detailed in the annexed assessment — have shifted materially since the Egypt partnership. Turkey's growing confidence from regional alignment, combined with the new Mediterranean defence industrial complex, increases the risk of sub-sea escalation in disputed waters even as both sides maintain formal summit-period composure.
V.iii. Cyprus: The Structural Paralytic
The unresolved division of Cyprus — and overlapping claims over energy exploration rights in the Eastern Mediterranean — remains the most legally intractable element of the Greece-Turkey-NATO triangulation. Turkey continues to maintain military forces in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, which it alone recognises, and exercises guarantor-power prerogatives. Defence Minister Güler's Brussels statement that Turkey 'will continue fulfilling its guarantor responsibilities regarding the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus' signals no departure from established policy.
Cyprus's EU membership creates a specific NATO-EU coherence problem: Cyprus is an EU member but not a NATO member, which means the Eastern Mediterranean energy governance dispute straddles both institutions without cleanly falling within either's dispute-resolution architecture. The summit will not resolve Cyprus. The most realistic summit-period outcome is continued diplomatic management and a commitment to bilateral dialogue mechanisms — neither of which materially changes the structural incentives for either side.
VI. Turkey's Broader Strategic Architecture: The Multi-Vector Hedge
VI.i. The February 2026 Inflection: Turkey as Regional Pole
The strategic assessment appended to this brief documents in detail the February 2026 diplomatic offensive in Riyadh and Cairo that formalised Turkey's emergence as an autonomous regional pole. Eighteen bilateral agreements with Egypt — including framework military cooperation, a Mediterranean defence industrial complex for joint drone and warship production, a $15 billion bilateral trade target, and an annual presidential-level strategic council — represent structural realignment, not tactical opportunism. Combined with Saudi energy cooperation discussions, the pending Saudi-Pakistan-Turkey Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement (SMDA) accession, and Erdoğan's Board of Peace founding membership alongside Egypt, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, Turkey has constructed an alternative security architecture that partially overlaps with NATO but is not subordinate to it.
This architecture has direct implications for the Ankara Summit. Traditional G7 assumptions — that Turkey requires NATO more than NATO requires Turkey, that economic leverage can compel Turkish compliance, that Greece anchors a viable anti-Turkey Eastern Mediterranean coalition — no longer hold. Washington, Brussels, and London must engage Turkey at the summit on terms that acknowledge this structural shift, or accept accelerating marginalisation from the Eastern Mediterranean and Horn of Africa security theatre.
VI.ii. Horn of Africa and Red Sea Presence
Turkey's operational expansion in Somalia — including the Hobyo Port 80-year concession, offshore hydrocarbon drilling programmes, an 80-year Hobyo operational period, and most significantly the construction since January 2026 of an equatorial spaceport in the Jamaame dunes region near Kismaayo (designed for satellite launches and long-range ballistic missile testing) — constitutes a strategic presence that extends well beyond NATO's traditional area of operations. Combined with the Port Sudan twinning agreement and Bayraktar drone deliveries to Sudanese Armed Forces, Turkey has established a Red Sea-Indian Ocean logistics and military footprint that no other NATO ally approaches.
The ICDS analysis of the Ankara Summit agenda notes that 'it would make sense for leaders to discuss reopening the Strait of Hormuz and to host a meeting of the coalition of the willing' at the summit. Turkey's willingness to support Hormuz mine-clearing operations — confirmed by Defence Minister Güler — intersects directly with this agenda. The four Persian Gulf NATO partners (Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, UAE) and potentially Oman and Saudi Arabia will be invited to Ankara, where Turkey's existing bilateral frameworks with all these states position it as the natural alliance interlocutor for Persian Gulf security architecture.
VI.iii. The SMDA and the Limits of NATO Exclusivity
Turkey's finalisation of accession to the Saudi-Pakistan Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement — assessed at 71 percent probability by Q3 2026 — represents the most structurally significant external security commitment since its 1952 NATO accession. The SMDA's mutual defence clause (attack on one equals attack on all), combined with Pakistan's nuclear deterrence architecture, Saudi financial underwriting, and Turkish drone-warfare capabilities, creates a complementary security framework that reduces Turkey's dependence on Article 5 as its sole deterrence guarantee.
This is not Turkey leaving NATO. It is Turkey building strategic insurance that increases its leverage within NATO. Defence Minister Güler's pre-summit briefings consistently frame Turkey's multi-vector architecture as a contribution to alliance security — not a departure from it. The analytical challenge for G7 principals is distinguishing between the rhetorical framing and the operational reality: Turkey can now credibly threaten to withhold forces or opt out of alliance commitments in a way that it could not in the Cold War, because alternative security guarantees exist.
VII. Risk Register for Summit and Post-Summit Period
The following risk register summarises near-term probability assessments for the principal disruption scenarios relevant to the Ankara Summit and the post-summit period through Q2 2027. All probabilities are Bayesian posteriors incorporating intelligence through June 2026.
VIII. Summit Outcome Scenarios: Bayesian Game-Theoretic Assessment
The Ankara Summit presents NATO with a Bayesian game-theoretic challenge that can be modelled as a multi-player coordination game with incomplete information. Each principal party — Turkey, the United States, European allies, and Greece — enters with private type-space parameters (domestic political constraints, security threat perceptions, alliance valuation functions) that are not perfectly observable by other players. The summit communiqué is the coordination mechanism: a public signal that shapes posterior beliefs about alliance cohesion and commitment.
Three outcome scenarios bracket the probability space:
IX. Policy Recommendations for G7 Principals
Recommendation 1: Recognise Southern Flank Parity in Communiqué Language
Turkey's demand for institutional parity between the eastern and southern flanks should be accommodated in the summit communiqué. This means concrete operational commitments — enhanced air-defence architecture, counter-drone capability investment, maritime security coordination in the Eastern Mediterranean and Red Sea — that match the 2022–2025 eastern reinforcement programme in specificity and financial commitment.
Practical action: Establish a Southern Flank Defence Investment Sub-Programme within the broader 5 percent GDP implementation framework, with dedicated reporting requirements and annual ministerial review. This converts Turkey's rhetorical demand into an institutional mechanism that also benefits Greece, Cyprus, and other southern allies.
Recommendation 2: Facilitate F-35 Resolution Within the Summit Window
The pre-summit negotiation window created by Ambassador Barrack's four-to-six-month commitment should be converted into a formal post-summit resolution timeline. The three-part compromise structure — S-400 monitored mothballing, limited F-35A deliveries with modified avionics, Israeli QME compensation package — remains the most analytically viable pathway. Failure to announce progress at Ankara cedes defence-industrial initiative to London (Eurofighter) and signals to Ankara that NATO is incapable of resolving bilateral disputes that serve collective alliance interests.
Recommendation 3: Proactive Greece-Turkey Maritime Mediation
NATO leadership should announce at the summit a formal mediation process — Secretary General-led, with a defined timeline and an explicit moratorium commitment on unilateral maritime actions — to address the structural Greece-Turkey EEZ dispute before Egyptian-Turkish maritime coordination creates irreversible facts on the water. The Scenario Beta probability (42 percent) of an Ankara-Cairo maritime alignment against Greek EEZ claims represents the most likely medium-term Eastern Mediterranean trajectory. Proactive mediation is the only realistic mechanism for altering this trajectory before it becomes structurally locked in.
Recommendation 4: Engage Turkey's Board of Peace and SMDA Architecture as Complementary Security Frameworks
Rather than treating Turkey's multi-vector security affiliations as threats to NATO coherence, G7 principals should engage with Board of Peace member states (Egypt, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Indonesia, Jordan) and with the SMDA framework as indirect influence channels for advancing shared interests in regional stabilisation, counterterrorism, and maritime security. Turkey's unique bilateral relationship architecture — connecting Moscow, Tehran, Persian Gulf, and Kyiv simultaneously — is a resource that no other NATO ally can replicate. It should be operationally leveraged, not institutionally penalised.
Recommendation 5: Coordinate a G7 Economic Stabilisation Package as Alternative to IMF Conditionality
Turkey's domestic economic vulnerability — inflation at approximately 65 percent in January 2026, persistent lira volatility, and an external debt burden exceeding $450 billion — represents the highest-probability risk to all other strategic scenarios. Turkish economic collapse drives mass migration to Europe, regional instability, authoritarian consolidation, and anti-Western pivot acceleration. A G7-coordinated stabilisation package — bilateral credit lines, currency swap arrangements, EU customs union modernisation, LNG supply agreements at preferential rates — preserves Turkish sovereignty perceptions while achieving G7 macroeconomic objectives. This is prevention, and prevention is cheaper than crisis management.
Recommendation 6: Preserve NATO Institutional Relationships Despite Strategic Divergence
The most consequential error G7 principals could make at Ankara is forcing Turkey to choose between NATO membership and its emerging regional partnerships. Turkey's SMDA accession, Board of Peace membership, and Egypt-Saudi alignment do not preclude continued NATO engagement — they parallel it. Multi-alignment is a structural feature of the emerging multipolar order, not a temporary deviation from alliance discipline. G7 should preserve: Turkish participation in NATO exercises, intelligence sharing on Russia and Iran, defence-industrial cooperation on non-sensitive systems, and consultation mechanisms. G7 should manage: the S-400/F-35 dispute through negotiation rather than ultimatums, Greece-Turkey tensions through institutional mechanisms rather than public confrontation, and Turkish regional deployments through coordination rather than unilateral opposition. G7 should avoid: public threats of expulsion (which strengthen Erdoğan domestically), sanctions escalation (which accelerates strategic decoupling), and forcing Turkey to choose between alliance frameworks.
X. Conclusions
The 2026 NATO Summit in Ankara is the most consequential gathering of the Alliance in the post-Cold War era for Turkey specifically. No previous summit has placed Turkey simultaneously in the roles of summit host, regional security architect, active conflict supplier, Montreux Convention custodian, and emerging bloc leader. The strategic density of Turkey's concurrent roles creates both extraordinary opportunity and extraordinary risk.
For NATO, the central analytical challenge is that the Turkey of July 2026 is structurally different from the Turkey of any previous NATO Summit. The February 2026 Egypt partnership, the pending SMDA accession, the Horn of Africa operational footprint, and the domestic defence-industrial base capable of supplying alliance-grade systems independently of Western export licences — all of these represent irreversible strategic facts that cannot be altered by summit pressure, sanctions, or rhetorical discipline.
The choice before G7 principals is not between Turkish compliance and Turkish independence. That choice has already been foreclosed. The remaining choice is between managed accommodation — preserving influence channels, reciprocal burden-sharing, and institutional integration — and chaotic decoupling, which accelerates Russian and Chinese influence in the Eastern Mediterranean and Horn of Africa while generating the very outcomes (mass migration, regional instability, NATO southern fracture) that the 5 percent GDP defence investment is designed to prevent.
The window for constructive G7 engagement narrows with each summit quarter that passes without resolution. G7 principals should choose adaptive engagement.
ANNEX: Bayesian Probability Methodology
All probability assessments employ Bayesian updating: P(H|E) = [P(E|H) × P(H)] / P(E), where P(H) is the prior probability based on historical base rates and structural factors, P(E|H) is the likelihood of observing the specific evidence given the hypothesis, and P(H|E) is the posterior probability. Point estimates carry uncertainty ranges of ±5 percentage points (high confidence), ±10 (medium), and ±15 (low). Assessments should be updated as new evidence emerges — particularly following the summit communiqué, Turkey's SMDA accession decision, and the Greek-Turkish maritime situation through Q3 2026.
All factual references draw on open-source reporting from NATO official communications, Atlantic Council, CSIS, Modern War Institute (West Point), European Policy Centre, International Centre for Defence and Security, Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Anadolu Agency, Daily Sabah, Hürriyet Daily News, and TRT World, among other cited primary and secondary sources.