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I am not sure many Western countries are interested in buying Turkish UAVs, though. Even oil-rich Middle East countries would prefer American drones if the US congress allows. I can see a limited number of North African and some Middle East countries may find Turkish Drones interesting, but I don't expect there is going to be a huge demand over there as well.
Perhaps the most challenging part for potential customers is that they have to buy all Turkish ammunition separately. With American drones, the West could just use existing bombs and missiles. For instance, with MQ-9 Reaper can carry Hellfire, JDAM, Stinger and maybe Brimstone.
Perhaps, the most worrying aspect of Akinci to potential operators is Ukrainian turboprop engines. Ivchenko has a bad reputation in the industry. This is the part where Turkey has to prove them wrong with in the next couple of years.
Of course, rich Middle Eastern countries or developed western nations wouldn’t choose Turkish UAVs. They wouldn’t even be able to choose Turkish UAVs even if they wanted to. Because they have gone too deep into the US-manufactured systems. Most of their systems wouldn’t be able to communicate with Turkish UAVs or they just wouldn’t be able to operate them since Turks operate and manufacture under a different doctrine. Therefore, Turkish defence industry companies will aim to persuade countries outside US influence. I don’t want to list any particular countries because each day, we see very different and unexpected countries looking to buy Turkish systems. (For example: Phillipines’ interest in Atak helicopters)
Also, for smaller countries, we can easily say that Turkish UAVs have a couple of advantages compared to western systems. First of all, Turkish UAVs are all battle-tested in active warzones. No country or even terrorist would dare try to shoot down an American or British or French UAV. Meanwhile, everybody’s trying to target Turkish UAVs. This allows engineers to get very valuable data that can only be obtained through active attack and defence situations. Secondly, Turkish UAVs are trained against asymmetrical targets. Since Turkey mostly fights against terrorist organizations with limited or unorthodox defence systems, it can easily adapt its systems against such targets. Their success against the Pantsir-S1 in Libya and Syria can be an example. Of course, you cannot use these UAVs to attack a conventional nation with multi-layered air defence systems. However, you can learn how to pick single targets and perhaps master that ability. Since conventional all-out wars are no longer feeble around the world, we will probably continue to see proxy wars in Middle East or other places. Therefore, these battle-proven systems will surely have their advantages compared to western systems that are designed with conventional wars in mind. Lastly, Turkish UAVs are cheap. For most nations, these UAVs are considered as cannon fodder. They don’t want to lose their precious fighter jets or highly trained pilots for an event with a limited outcome. Jets are expensive and pilots are hard to train. Once you lose them, you lose them. These smaller nations also won’t need any expensive systems. Global Hawks have a unit cost of over 130 million $. Meanwhile, Israeli Heron has double the unit cost of a Bayraktar TB2. You don’t need a Global Hawk or any such hugely expensive drone to control your borders. You need a reliable and cheap drone that can operate for over 24 hours and if you lose one, no big deal because it was dirt cheap anyway. If you lose a Global Hawk, you’re screwed. It is like losing a fighter jet but worse. You’re left with a useless command center .