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Poland Eyes Expanded Missile Defense Amid Fear of Russia

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WARSAW, Poland — Poland’s ministry of defense has highlighted bolstering missile defense as one of the priorities of its ongoing military modernization in the years 2017 to 2022. The country has accelerated efforts to enhance its missile-defense capability following Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

Warsaw aims to spend some $10 billion to acquire mid-range air- and missile-defense systems, and over $5 billion on short-range air-defense systems, according to Polish Deputy Defense Minister Bartosz Kownacki.

Poland’s Defense Minister Antoni Macierewicz has said that the country will most likely sign a deal with the US government and Raytheon to acquire Patriot interceptors. The announcement came following the signing of a letter of intent between the manufacturer and Poland’s state-owned defense group PGZ.

Meanwhile, local observers point out that the Polish acquisition plans could be seen as a reaction to Russia’s upgrade of its missile capabilities in Kaliningrad, a Russian exclave that borders Poland and Lithuania, through the deployment of 9K720 Iskander short-range ballistic missiles.

According to various estimates, the Russian missile system could be enabled with a maximum range of 500 km, allowing to strike both Poland’s and Lithuania’s capitals.

"We also need to have an answer to it. Those Iskander missiles can hit Poland but also Germany," Macierewicz said May 17, as earlier reported by Defense News.

That said, Poland is unlikely to obtain the first Patriot systems any earlier than 2022, local analysts say.

Warsaw is also to host elements of the Aegis Ashore program, the land-based component of the Aegis ballistic missile defense (BMD) system. Aegis Ashore is to be deployed on Polish soil in 2018 as part of the Phased Adaptive Approach (PAA) Phase III. This technology will use Aegis BMD 5.1 and the SM-3 Block IB and IIA interceptors to cover northern Europe, according to the Missile Defense Agency (MDA).

http://www.defensenews.com/story/de...ed-missile-defense-amid-fear-russia/87533428/
 
Poland Intends To Finalize Patriot Sale Agreement By Year’s End

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WASHINGTON — The Polish government intends to finalize an agreement with the US government by the end of the year to buy the Raytheon-made Patriot air-and-missile defense system, the Polish defense minister said.

The initial agreement will cover the sale of two Patriot systems, Antoni Macierewicz told Defense News in a exclusive July 22 interview. And Poland will get over 50 percent of the work-share to build Patriot, something the country was adamant about when defining its terms.

Poland’s leading state-run defense group PGZ signed a letter of intent with Raytheon to cooperate on Wisla, paving the way for the country's acquisition of Patriot missiles, PGZ said in a statement earlier this month.

PGZ was set up in 2013 to consolidate Poland's fragmented state-owned defense industry. The Polish Ministry of Treasury remains the main shareholder of PGZ, but the group is subordinated to the country’s Ministry of Defense.




Over the past year, Poland has gone back and forth on its decision to procure a medium-range air-and-missile defense system that would provide 360-degree protection.

Poland announced in the spring of 2015 that it chose the Patriot system for its new missile defense program called Wisla. The plan was to buy two Patriot systems in the current configuration, followed by next-generation systems that include the AESA GaN radar and an open architecture that would allow a variety of interceptors to plug into the system. The two initial Patriot systems would then be retrofitted with next-generation capabilities.

Also in the Wisla competition were Lockheed Martin’s Medium Extended Air Defense System (MEADS), Israel’s David’s Sling and a French consortium’s offering. MEADS and David’s Sling were taken out of the running because they are still in development. However Germany plans to sign an agreement with Lockheed and MBDA Deutschland to finish MEADS development.

However, elections last November ushered in a new government, which decided to review all of the recent acquisition decisions of the previous government, including on Patriot. And the government has, all along, hinted that it would consider capabilities for its next-generation system outside of the two Patriot batteries it would initially procure.

Poland’s new conservative government called into question the previous liberal cabinet’s choice of Patriot — estimated to be €5 billion (US $5.5 billion) deal.

This gave hope to the other companies with offerings in the Wisla competition. Poland reopened discussions with Lockheed Martin, for instance.




Macierewicz said last November during a parliamentary defense commission meeting that the conditions of the potential contract to buy US missiles “have changed a lot since the public announcement.” He said he wasn’t happy with the price or the potential delivery timeline.

Through a translator, Macierewicz told Defense News a letter of intent with Raytheon was signed recently following conversations that were held during the last six months after his party came to power. The conversations “changed their shape, and if the negotiated commitments by Raytheon will be signed and applied then we are interested in such an agreement,” the translator said.

Macierewicz also indicated that while the agreement will cover the sale of two Patriots there is potential for Poland to order more batteries in the future.

“We do want to develop an anti-missile defense together with the US, US industry and US Army,” Macierewicz said through his translator. “We assume that Raytheon, what Raytheon proposes will then be the basis of equipment for the US Army and our financial capabilities will also be significant. We are perfectly aware of the fact modernization of the system carried out by Raytheon, will be, to a huge extent, be done by Polish money and it will serve the Polish Army and the US Army as well.”



Macierewicz said Poland’s plans to procure a new short-range air-and-missile defense system — the Narew program — through a competition is also separately underway.

Aaron Mehta in Washington contributed to this report.

Email: jjudson@defensenews.com

Twitter: @JenJudson

http://www.defensenews.com/story/de...ze-patriot-sale-agreement-years-end/87542244/
 

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