Türkiye said on Thursday that talks were continuing with Qatar and Oman on procuring Eurofighter Typhoon fighters, after a deal it inked with Britain on Monday to buy 20 of the jets.
The deal between NATO allies Türkiye and Britain aimed at deepening their ties and bolstering Turkish air defenses. Ankara has said it was also seeking 24 more jets, albeit lightly used, from Qatar and Oman, Reuters reported.
Some analysts called the deal, which British Prime Minister Keir Starmer put at 8 billion pounds ($10.7 billion), expensive.
At a briefing in Ankara, Türkiye's Defense Ministry said the value of the deal, which included the jets, equipment for the aircraft and various ammunition, was 5.4 billion pounds.
A person familiar with the matter told Reuters on Wednesday that the deal included a weapons package that includes the MBDA Meteor air-to-air missiles and Brimstone ground attack missiles.
"Work on the Eurofighter Typhoon fighter jets that will be procurement from Qatar and Oman to meet our Air Force's mission needs are continuing," the ministry said.