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Can the UAE emerge as a leading global defense supplier?

Does this mean you will accuse me on this thread, and abuse me and get personal... all day long !!

Ask Imran Khan to explain release of ABhinadan and this ...


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Your allegiance clearly lies with UAE and Nawazoo. You are not a patriot.

For me a thousand Imran Khan's can come and go. I wouldn't care. I am critical of certain policies of Imran Khan and it is there for everyone to read. In the past I have criticised Iran too. I don't have any favorites except Pakistan.

You have only two favorites. One is UAE/KSA and the other is PML-N. Pakistan probably comes in third place. Good for you.
 
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Your allegiance clearly lies with UAE and Nawazoo. You are not a patriot.

For me a thousand Imran Khan's can come and go. I wouldn't care. I am critical of certain policies of Imran Khan and it is there for everyone to read. In the past I have criticised Iran too. I don't have any favorites except Pakistan.

You have only two favorites. One is UAE/KSA and the other is PML-N. Pakistan probably comes in third place. Good for you.

did i ask you to criticize Imran Khan and why are your bringing this up in between discussion on UAE defense technology development?

Only those are un patriots who are smuggling Iranian oil into Pakistan and that is ruling mafia.

Now what is with KSA... what is your argument for hating them?

On the other hand they have all the right curb terrorism against them selves, and most if it is linked with black sheep in bureaucracy and cabinet.
 
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I heard that a lot on this forum and on Pakistan's social media lead by ruling clergy, but please educate me with details. simply accusations is not enough... but open a separate thread, inserting off topic remarks here would be difficult to follow.

Respected Bro!!!!! All I know is that when I wrote a blog condemning the UAE-Israel relationship. After that, the land of Dubai became hell for me. I pointed out the hotels that sheltered the Baloch terrorist insurgents. I have video footage, I endured the brutal violence of their agents. Unluckily since I came back to Pakistan, I have been a gypsy here , I could not even go to my own home because of the mafias from whom I went to Dubai to save my life. God willing, I will publish the book I am writing on the day I find a safe haven. Even those who consider these Israeli slave Arabs human will shed tears of blood.

No one knows the value of love for Pakistan better than me. My crime is that I am the son of those who sacrificed their lives for the freedom of Pakistan. And I live in that homeland where insensitive , double face and cruel people wait for someone's dead body to fall for a breaking news.....

You will be able to bear my truth. ۔ ۔ ۔ ۔


معجزہ عشق کا دنیا کو دکھانا ہے مجھے
مر کے دوبارہ اسی دشت میں آنا ہے مجھے

تم مرے قتل پہ بس سوگ منا سکتے ہو
اپنے قاتل سے حساب آپ چکانا ہے مجھے
(فاروق رشید بٹ)
 
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Respected Bro!!!!! All I know is that when I wrote a blog condemning the UAE-Israel relationship. After that, the land of Dubai became hell for me. I pointed out the hotels that sheltered the Baloch terrorist insurgents. I have video footage, I endured the brutal violence of their agents. Unluckily since I came back to Pakistan, I have been a gypsy here , I could not even go to my own home because of the mafias from whom I went to Dubai to save my life. God willing, I will publish the book I am writing on the day I find a safe haven. Even those who consider these Israeli slave Arabs human will shed tears of blood.

No one knows the value of love for Pakistan better than me. My crime is that I am the son of those who sacrificed their lives for the freedom of Pakistan. And I live in that homeland where insensitive , double face and cruel people wait for someone's dead body to fall for a breaking news.....

You will be able to bear my truth. ۔ ۔ ۔ ۔


معجزہ عشق کا دنیا کو دکھانا ہے مجھے
مر کے دوبارہ اسی دشت میں آنا ہے مجھے

تم مرے قتل پہ بس سوگ منا سکتے ہو
اپنے قاتل سے حساب آپ چکانا ہے مجھے
(فاروق رشید بٹ)

You can invent any thing on this forum against Saudi Arabia, you are safe here, carry on.
 
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only after India become a global supplier of toilets
 
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they have inve
The White Europeans rely on NO-ONE except themselves for inventing, pioneering and manufacturing advanced sciences and technologies.

Can you name a few advanced technologies and sciences that the educated emirati youth have invented as you claim?



Can you post a link that confirms the above because I can't find any evidence of the emiratis having developed any advanced sciences and technologies themselves.
stop your inferiority complex for white people
accept that UAE Arabs are the best . they have invented many things. they have great scientists, thinkers, designers and Engineers.
see proof below. Emarati scientist testing teleportation device.
testing the Cyborg
Solving the mystery
giving lecture of Gravitational forces and discovering New element.

1613957100447.png
 
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No, in a few years UAE will cease to exist as a country. Despite their billions, the children and grandchildren of the current rulers will slowly disappear in a haze of drugs and decadence in the West.
 
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No, in a few years UAE will cease to exist as a country. Despite their billions, the children and grandchildren of the current rulers will slowly disappear in a haze of drugs and decadence in the West.
What this has to do with the OP article?
 
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For a country that is 49 years old, it is doing great things. It has surely come a long way. In 2020, my department hired 7 new Emirati civil engineers and Architects and these 20 something guys are amazing ! Confidence to take on any project or task, lead teams and come up with better ideas ! i really am starting to see what is meant by (fresh blood). I have to admit working in the field for 15 years makes you focused on production and rarely on enhancements. These guys are great ! already helping us out and i see great things in the pipe line.

like others have said here. We are barely a million people. Majority of them are in college or much younger. Taking this into consideration, we are doing great ! mashallah

this "oh its impossible" business is reserved for the defeatist. The ones suffering from inferiority complexes. I wish them all the luck and inshallah they rid themselves of such traits and become better


P.S , Much respect to my brothers on this site that speak out when others name call and accuse others wrongfully. Yes there are sick racists in every nation, including the GCC. However, to brush the whole society of being racist and hateful and condescending to Pakistanis or south-east Asian is absolutely rubbish. What a load of camel sh!t ;)
 
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God this forum is toxic.

UAE can advance quite quickly importing experts like the US did with German scientists after WW2, I have checked many linkedins and seen a lot of South Africans engineers migrating to the UAE with prior experience at Denel and other South African companies.

Fore example a anti ship cruise missile I have never seen from another country is being developed. I would bet it uses a good amount of foreign tech but baby steps work.

1614040630217.png
 
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they have inve
stop your inferiority complex for white people
accept that UAE Arabs are the best . they have invented many things. they have great scientists, thinkers, designers and Engineers.
see proof below. Emarati scientist testing teleportation device.
testing the Cyborg
Solving the mystery
giving lecture of Gravitational forces and discovering New element.

View attachment 718528


 
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WRDOHE4MUFBT3ACCABXD72HF24.jpg

Military aircraft fly in formation as part of a show at the 2017 IDEX in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Jon Gambrell/AP)

Proceeding with the IDEX and NAVDEX 2021 defense trade exhibitions despite the coronavirus pandemic underlines the defense-industrial intent of the United Arab Emirates. The CEO of Abu Dhabi-based technology and defense group Edge, Faisal Al Bannai, suggested these shows will be used to portray the Emirates’ “consolidated sovereign capability” with an expectation to exhibit newly developed equipment including several UAVs. The government of the UAE for its part is set to continue to push its plan to diversify its source of arms imports and build up its defense-industrial base.

A reliance on the United States to sell defense equipment has been tempered by recent uncertainty over that relationship and whether it will change in the future. This has spurred the UAE to expand its defense partnerships to France, Russia, Italy and Turkey.

According to data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies’ 2021 Military Balance report, scheduled for release in February 2021 as of this writing, Middle Eastern and North African defense spending reached $162 billion (including U.S. military aid) in 2020, accounting for about 8.9 percent of the global total, with countries in the region allocating 5.5 percent of their respective gross domestic product to defense on average. Regional spending has exceeded $150 billion every year since 2014 but has been on a downward trend since 2018, as the oil price remained subdued.

The six Gulf Cooperation Council countries consistently account for between 55-60 percent of regional defense spending, and recent reductions have been primarily due to cuts implemented by Saudi Arabia, which has the region’s largest budget.

The UAE is estimated to have spent $19.8 billion on defense in 2020 — 5.6 percent of GDP — making it the region’s second-largest spender. Between 2010 and 2019, it is estimated that between 15 percent and 16 percent of the UAE’s annual defense budget was spent on procurement with foreign contractors, but the country has reduced this reliance in recent years. Studying how the UAE has strengthened its position as a leading regional defense supplier provides insight for other countries about how to develop local industry.

Preparing for the post-oil era, the UAE has laid foundations for longer-term defense-industrial base planning through promoting domestic investment, international joint ventures and technology transfers for almost 30 years. In November 2019, the UAE consolidated 25 indigenous, state-owned defense companies into the Edge conglomerate, with a claimed $5 billion in combined revenue. Much of this had been grouped together in the Emirates Defence Industries Company, or EDIC, established in December 2014.

Adhering to three industry development guidelines, the UAE is now investing more in technology innovation through research and development efforts, including expanding its scope into space in both the defense and commercial sectors with the introduction of the Mohammed Bin Rashid Centre for Government Innovation, or MBRCGI, formed in 2014, the same year that EDIC was established. The UAE’s federal budget has consistently allocated $544.59 million each year since 2016 for MBRCGI’s Mohammed Bin Rashid Innovation Fund, which will look to foster cross-sector collaboration and more sustainable innovation development, with more possibilities to come.

Over the last decade, the UAE has managed to build up a network of customers in neighboring countries. The question is whether the UAE can emerge as a leading international defense supplier, applying its prospective technology advancement as a stepping stone.

The UAE’s equipment exports to date have been relatively low-tech, and the country still relies on technology transfers to remain prominent among competitors. With current customers stretching from Kuwait to Libya and Cameroon, Emirati companies have begun to establish themselves as a reliable source of defense equipment. Their current exports largely consist of different types of armored four-wheel vehicles such as Panthera and Ajban. As Emirati exports become technically more complex, as indicated by the reported export of armed Yabhon UAVs to Algeria in 2018, the customer base will likely expand. Sales to India, Russia and Turkmenistan are likely a sign of things to come with aspiration to supply advanced markets against competitors like the U.S. and China.

The UAE’s large neighbor, Saudi Arabia, spends more than double on defense ($48.5 billion, or 7.13 percent of GDP in 2020) but seems to have taken inspiration from the UAE’s EDIC by forming the Saudi Arabian Military Industries, or SAMI, in May 2017 as part of its Vision 2030 initiative to enhance its localization rate in defense manufacturing by up to 50 percent.

However, differences exist. SAMI’s development leans more toward the production of land and air systems, whereas Edge covers all three domains, with expansion into space. Saudi Arabia has also subsequently created the General Authority for Military Industries, or GAMI, in August 2017. However, GAMI focuses on local employment, industry localization and procurement management, which appears to be a step behind the UAE.

Despite the establishment of two state-owned entities for defense industry development, Saudi Arabia remains the world’s largest importer of defense equipment over the last decade, spending an estimated $116 billion to purchase foreign equipment between 2010 and 2019. This was 24.27 percent of Saudi Arabia’s defense expenditure within the same period.

While the adaptability and pace of the UAE’s defense-industrial development stands out in the region, the country still needs to overcome a number of hurdles to help expedite growth. UAE-based companies do not yet supply much equipment to the local customer despite the UAE military having notable capability gaps. For example, several attacks on commercial oil tankers off the coast of the UAE in mid-2019 put its oil production at risk and revealed concerns with maritime security. The UAE must still import its most advanced equipment due to a lack of adequate infrastructure or technological capacity, which is illustrated through the contract the UAE reportedly awarded France for two Gowind 2500 frigates in March 2019. The Gowind 2500 frigate is known to be 102 meters long and 16 meters wide with a draft reaching 5.4 meters high and a displacement of 2,600 tons.

Since 2016, the UAE has had the infrastructural capacity to build such vessels based on the conventional regulations of the contractor’s dry dock capacity requiring a minimum of 125 percent of the weight of the vessel. Even with the country’s acquisition of its largest dock in August 2016 at Zayed port in Abu Dhabi — with a 6,000-ton capacity at 180 meters long and 30 meters wide with a maximum vessel draft of 6 meters — Emirati naval forces still need to rely on foreign contractors. The contract between the UAE and France is believed to include the transfer of relevant technologies, and the extent of the involvement of local subcontractors is unknown to the public. Agreements signed at the very end of the Trump administration for 50 F-35A fighter jets and 18 MQ-9B UAVs are another example.

Despite the ongoing dependencies on defense imports, the UAE’s focused investment on R&D is expected to accelerate the country’s transformation as a formidable defense supplier. Furthermore, continued partnership and technology transfers will support the UAE in its attempts to broaden its range of customers.


https://www.defensenews.com/digital...ng-global-defense-supplier/?utm_source=clavis


This Korean lady is trying to earn some brownie points to be considered for earning a permanent residence under the new program.
Don't take her serious folk.

There are many things UAE is good at and can accomplish in time, but defence tech and exports? WTF ???
 
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This Korean lady is trying to earn some brownie points to be considered for earning a permanent residence under the new program.
Don't take her serious folk.

There are many things UAE is good at and can accomplish in time, but defence tech and exports? WTF ???
Get your facts right bro..Check this IDEX and NAVEX 2021..
 
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thanks for confirming

Iran gives us shia covid

UAE gives to poor and needy beggars
 
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