טערקיי טעסט א נייע ראקעט
Turkey conducted a new test of its TAYFUN ballistic missile this week, showcasing a system designed for regional deterrence but still falling well short of the range needed to threaten Israel. The launch, carried out on December 12, 2025, from the coastal city of Rize, was captured on video showing vehicle preparations and the missile’s flight path over the Black Sea.
Developed by ROKETSAN, the TAYFUN is classified as a short-range ballistic missile with an estimated reach of 550 to 700 kilometers. While this positions it as a viable tactical asset within Turkey’s immediate neighborhood, it is far from capable of striking central Israel, which lies roughly 800 to 1,000 kilometers from mainland Turkish territory. Analysts note that even from Turkey’s closest southern points, the missile would still fall short by several hundred kilometers.
This technical limitation directly contrasts with Ankara’s recent rhetoric and regional signaling. Despite Turkey’s expanding missile development programs, the TAYFUN test highlights the gap between political messaging and actual long-range capability. In practical terms, the missile poses no direct strategic threat to Israel.
Regional observers also point out that Turkey’s choice to conduct the test over the Black Sea reflects careful calibration. By avoiding more sensitive testing directions, Ankara appears focused on advancing domestic capabilities without escalating tensions with NATO or Israel.
For Israel and its allies, the launch serves as a reminder that while Turkey is working to modernize its missile infrastructure, its current platforms remain confined to short-range operational use. The TAYFUN may strengthen Turkey’s posture in local theaters, but it does not alter the broader regional balance where Israel maintains overwhelming technological and strategic superiority.
The test marks another step in Ankara’s pursuit of indigenous missile systems, yet its limitations reinforce the reality that Turkey remains years—and multiple technological breakthroughs—away from fielding a system capable of reaching Israeli territory.