NATO Leaders Leave Turkey Summit With Loaded Diplomatic Dilemma

by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Chief International Correspondent

ANKARA (Worthy News) – NATO leaders received more than they bargained for during last week’s summit of their military alliance in Turkey, leaving with an unusual diplomatic gift: a personalized Turkish-made revolver complete with live ammunition, courtesy of host President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

The gifts, presented to the leaders of NATO’s 32 member nations at the close of the summit, were intended to showcase Turkey’s expanding defense industry. Instead, they left several governments grappling with how to legally transport, register, deactivate, or preserve functioning firearms presented as official diplomatic gifts.

Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever was among the first leaders to publicly reveal the dilemma after discovering the revolver and six live rounds of ammunition in his luggage upon returning home.

He immediately handed the firearm over to Belgian police for secure storage while authorities determined how it should be handled under Belgian law.

UNUSUAL SUMMIT SOUVENIR

Photographs released by Lithuania’s presidential office showed the polished Turkish-made Gümüşay .357 Magnum revolver displayed in a wooden presentation case bearing the Turkish flag, the NATO emblem, and a plaque describing it as the first revolver manufactured in Turkey. Each firearm was engraved with the recipient’s name.

The presentation case also contained six live cartridges and documentation intended to facilitate export, underscoring Turkey’s efforts to promote its domestic defense industry, which President Erdoğan has frequently highlighted as a symbol of the country’s growing technological capabilities and strategic independence.

Germany’s Chancellor Friedrich Merz transferred his revolver to the German Embassy in Ankara so it could be imported legally before being added to Germany’s official collection of diplomatic gifts.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer opted to have his revolver permanently decommissioned before any transfer in line with Britain’s strict firearms regulations.

VON DER LEYEN’S DECISION

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen also thanked Erdoğan for the gift. Her spokesman said the firearm would be “securely transported and stored” before being permanently decommissioned and donated to a military museum.

Earlier, following the summit, von der Leyen thanked Erdoğan for his “warm welcome,” writing on social media: “In a more challenging world, our partnership matters more than ever.”

Polish President Karol Nawrocki’s office said the revolver was undergoing customs procedures before being placed in secure storage.

“Certainly no one will be shooting it,” an official from his office told Polish media.

LEGAL CHALLENGES

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney joked that his own diplomatic gift of maple syrup “undermatched” Erdoğan’s elaborate present and suggested the revolver also belonged in a museum.

The White House declined to say whether U.S. President Donald J. Trump accepted the firearm or what became of it afterward. During the summit, Trump initially criticized some NATO allies over defense spending before later telling reporters there was “a feeling of love in the air.”

The unusual gifts attracted international attention because they left leaders attending a NATO summit devoted to collective defense confronting an unexpected diplomatic and legal dilemma: what to do when receiving functioning firearms and live ammunition at a high-level international gathering.

Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.


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