Turkey aims to have entirely AI-controlled unmanned warplane: Erdoğan
Turkey has a plan to join the list of countries to have an entirely artificial intelligence (AI)-controlled unmanned warplane, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan stressed in his address to AK Party deputies in the capital Ankara on Wednesday.
- Türkiye
- Agencies and A News
- Published Date: 03:38 | 26 May 2021
- Modified Date: 03:44 | 26 May 2021
The success of Turkish unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) in the field has produced results that "require war strategies to be rewritten," the president said.
The president added that currently a total of 180 Bayraktar TB2 unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs) are operated in four countries, including Turkey.
Previously, Turkish drone magnate Baykar's Chief Technology Officer Selçuk Bayraktar said the maiden flight of the prototype of the country's domestically-made unmanned fighter jet is scheduled for 2023.
Bayraktar's announcement came following Turkey's official expulsion from the F-35 fighter jet program.
The Baykar CTO said that while the country being expelled from the stealthy fighter jet program may seem like a disadvantage, in the long run, it will yield positive outcomes for the domestic defense industry.
Turkey has been driven to domestically develop UAVs and other defense systems because of sanctions and unofficial embargoes in the past.
The country now not only uses its combat drones in the field, but it is also well on its way to becoming a major exporter of the systems, with Baykar's Bayraktar TB2 UCAVs taking the lead.
Instead of producing an F35-like aircraft in 15 to 20 years, Bayraktar said, they are concentrating on areas the world is already heading toward – lower-cost, artificial intelligence-equipped unmanned warplanes.
This can make Turkey one of the leading countries in the field as it has succeeded with its "game-changing" UAVs and UCAVs, he said.
Another major Turkish combat drone manufacturer, Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI), which produces the Anka medium-altitude, long-endurance (MALE) UCAVs, also rolled up its sleeves.
TAI is working on new unmanned aircraft technology alongside the TF-X National Combat Aircraft (MMU), in which artificial intelligence (AI) serves as a co-pilot, the company's general manager Temel Kotil said in previous statements.
The TAI top official explained that there is only one pilot in the fifth-generation aircraft and the AI acts as the co-pilot, underlining that the MMU is a "more intelligent aircraft" with this feature.