World
Nato boosts air defences in Turkiye with new Patriot battery after Iran missile incidents
Patriot missile systems of the 37th Air Defense Missile Squadron are pictured during a ceremony at the 3rd Warsaw Air Defense Missile Brigade’s base in Sochaczew, Poland on December 18, 2025. Nato is deploying a new Patriot missile battery at Incirlik air base in Turkiye, just days after a third ballistic missile from Iran was shot down. — Reuters pic

INCIRLIK AIR BASE (Turkiye), March 18 — Turkiye’s defence ministry said today Nato was deploying a new Patriot missile battery at Incirlik air base, just days after a third ballistic missile from Iran was shot down.

“Another Patriot system... is being deployed... in addition to the existing Spanish Patriot system stationed there,” a ministry official told reporters at the Turkish air base, just outside the southern city of Adana.

The ministry did not say which country’s troops would be operating the new PAC-3 system.

Last Friday, Turkiye confirmed a third ballistic missile from Iran was shot down in Turkish airspace by Nato forces, the third such incident since the Middle East war started.

After the second interception, Nato deployed Patriot defences in the central Malatya region, where the Kurecik air base is located, which houses a Nato early-warning radar system manned by US troops that can detect Iranian missile launches.

The Patriot is a mobile air-defence system designed to intercept tactical ballistic missiles, low-flying cruise missiles and aircraft.

The PAC-2 version has an interception range of up to 70 kilometres against aircraft and cruise missiles, while the PAC-3 has a range of 20 to 35 kilometres against ballistic missiles, according to US army data. — AFP

 

Related Articles

 

You May Also Like