What's new

Egypt Defense Industry

The SC

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Feb 13, 2012
Messages
32,229
Reaction score
21
Country
Canada
Location
Canada

Egypt is the most important manufacturer of weapons and military components among the Arab countries. State-owned enterprises, under control of the Armament Authority headed by a major general, were the main domestic producers of Egypt's defense systems. The Armament Authority was responsible for selecting, developing, and procuring military systems. Acting on behalf of the military's branches, the authority assigned production to domestic factories or contracted with external suppliers.


As early as 1949, Egypt unveiled plans to develop its own aircraft and armaments industry with the industrial base that emerged during World War II when British and American forces placed orders for equipment. Egypt entered into a number of joint venture projects to produce European-designed aircraft. The most successful of these led to the Jumhuriya basic flight trainer, of which about 200 were eventually made. In 1962 Egypt undertook a major program with the help of West German technicians to design and build a supersonic jet fighter, but the government terminated the project because of financial strains caused by the June 1967 War. In a separate program assisted by West German scientists and technicians, the air force built prototypes of three SSM designs. These designs, however, were never put into operational use.


During the 1970s and 1980s, Egypt expanded and diversified its production of arms to achieve partial self-sufficiency and to develop an export market in the Middle East and Africa. In addition to manufacturing small arms and ammunition, Egypt had begun producing or assembling more advanced weapons systems through licensing and joint venture agreements with companies based in the United States and Western Europe. Egyptian technicians and scientists developed several indigenous weapons systems.


The National Organization for Military Production within the Ministry of Military Production supervises a number of manufacturing plants, which were usually named after their location. These plants included the Abu Zaabal Company for Engineering Industries, which produced artillery pieces and barrels; the Abu Zaabal Tank Repair Factory, which overhauled and repaired tanks and would eventually become the producer of Egypt's main battle tank; the Al Maadi Company for Engineering Industries, which produced light weapons, including the Egyptian version of the Soviet AK-47 assault rifle; the Hulwan Company for Machine Tools, which produced mortars and rocket launchers; the Hulwan Company for Engineering Industries, which produced metal parts for ammunition, shells, bombs, and rockets; the Heliopolis Company for Chemical Industries, which produced artillery ordnance, bombs, and missile warheads; and the Banha Company for Electronic Industries, which produced communications devices.


As of 1990, Egypt did not manufacture its own aircraft, but it assembled Tucano primary trainers from Brazil, Chenyang fighters from China, and Alpha Jet trainers designed in France and West Germany. Egyptian technicians had also reverse engineered and modified two Soviet SAMs--the Ayn as Saqr (a version of the SA-7) and the Tayir as Sabah (a version of the SA-2). Egyptian shipyards had produced eight fast attack naval craft fitted with British armaments and electronics.


The only armored vehicle in production was the Fahd four-wheeled APC, although the United States and Egypt planned to coproduce 540 Abrams M1A1 main battle tanks over a ten-year period beginning in 1991. The project would be funded largely through United States military aid; the United States would also supply the engines and fire control systems. According to some reports, Egypt was reconsidering the project because of its high cost. But as of late 1989, Egypt appeared to be going forward with the plan.


In September 1989, Egypt dropped out of the Condor II project, cosponsored with Argentina and Iraq, to develop an intermediate-rage (800-kilometer) SSM. Earlier that year, officials in the United States had arrested several persons, including two military officers attached several persons, including two military officers attached to the Embassy of Egypt in Washington, in connection with the illegal export of missile technology and materials needed to produce rocket fuel and nose cones.


In March 1989, United States and Swiss officials claimed that Egypt had imported from Switzerland the main elements of a plant capable of manufacturing poison gas. Mubarak denied that Egypt had either the facilities or the plans for producing chemical weapons.


The main purchaser of Egyptian defense products had been Iraq. In the early 1980s, Iraq was desperate to replace Soviet military equipment lost during the early stages of the war with Iran. Iraq blunted Iranian attacks with the Saqr 18, the Egyptian version of the Soviet BM-21 122mm multiple rocket launcher.


Egypt sold a smaller volume of weapons to Kuwait and other Persian Gulf states. In 1988 Kuwait was reported to have ordered about 100 Fahd armored personnel carriers; Oman and Sudan ordered smaller quantities of these carriers. Because Egypt considered the value of its military exports confidential, it omitted this information from its published trade statistics. According to ACDA, Egypt exported US$340 million worth of military equipment in 1982, declining to an average of US$70 million annually in the years from 1985 to 1987. The ACDA data was considered conservative. Other estimates have placed Egyptian defense exports as high as US$1 billion in 1982 and US$500 million annually in 1983 and 1984, when deliveries to Iraq were at their peak.


U.S. military aid finances most of Egypt's big-ticket defense procurements--$1.3 billion annually for several years. Large projects underway include the M1A1 Abrams tank manufacturing facility, M88A2 coproduction program, IFF, the HAWK rebuild program, and Peace Vector V. Such projects can be expected to continue, although improvements to and maintenance of existing force capabilities are perhaps more likely targets of future spending than entirely new systems.


Military production plants are not scheduled for privatization and are unlikely to be sold. Twenty--six of these plants produce both military and civilian goods, and many managers of these plants are interested in licensing arrangements with foreign firms to enhance their production mix and improve quality.


Examples of civilian products currently manufactured at 26 of Egypt's military factories include: medical and diagnostic equipment; domestic appliances; fire extinguishers; ammunition; machine shop equipment such as lathes, drills, and grinders; generating and welding sets; electric motors; television receivers; computers; batteries; electric and water meters; agricultural machines; kitchen equipment; mobile water purifiers; circuit boards; calibration equipment; Chrysler Jeep-brand vehicles; laser alignment instruments; and microscopes.


Military goods produced in Egypt include: small caliber and heavy ammunition, mortars, mines, grenades and other explosives, antitank rockets, rocket motors, radars and electronic equipment, smoke and pyrotechnic devices, rifles, pistols (Beretta licensee) and machine guns, jet trainer aircraft (Alpha and Tucano), armored personnel carriers, Alpha jet engines, field and aircraft communications equipment, Gazelle helicopters and engines, gyroscopes, weapon sights, binoculars, periscopes, tanks, MLRs, and artillery pieces.


Agencies

https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/egypt/industry.htm

This is a somehow old article that gives an idea about the Egyptian Defense Industry, which must have advanced since then (the 90's)..

 
Last edited:
Self sufficiency is must if you want to withstands face to face with your enemy. I hope Arab world stands on its own in defense industry.
 
Self sufficiency is must if you want to withstands face to face with your enemy. I hope Arab world stands on its own in defense industry.
The Arab world is working on it..
 
Last edited:
Egypt is the most important manufacturer of weapons and military components among the Arab countries. State-owned enterprises, under control of the Armament Authority headed by a major general, were the main domestic producers of Egypt's defense systems. The Armament Authority was responsible for selecting, developing, and procuring military systems. Acting on behalf of the military's branches, the authority assigned production to domestic factories or contracted with external suppliers.

As early as 1949, Egypt unveiled plans to develop its own aircraft and armaments industry with the industrial base that emerged during World War II when British and American forces placed orders for equipment. Egypt entered into a number of joint venture projects to produce European-designed aircraft. The most successful of these led to the Jumhuriya basic flight trainer, of which about 200 were eventually made. In 1962 Egypt undertook a major program with the help of West German technicians to design and build a supersonic jet fighter, but the government terminated the project because of financial strains caused by the June 1967 War. In a separate program assisted by West German scientists and technicians, the air force built prototypes of three SSM designs. These designs, however, were never put into operational use.


During the 1970s and 1980s, Egypt expanded and diversified its production of arms to achieve partial self-sufficiency and to develop an export market in the Middle East and Africa. In addition to manufacturing small arms and ammunition, Egypt had begun producing or assembling more advanced weapons systems through licensing and joint venture agreements with companies based in the United States and Western Europe. Egyptian technicians and scientists developed several indigenous weapons systems.


The National Organization for Military Production within the Ministry of Military Production supervises a number of manufacturing plants, which were usually named after their location. These plants included the Abu Zaabal Company for Engineering Industries, which produced artillery pieces and barrels; the Abu Zaabal Tank Repair Factory, which overhauled and repaired tanks and would eventually become the producer of Egypt's main battle tank; the Al Maadi Company for Engineering Industries, which produced light weapons, including the Egyptian version of the Soviet AK-47 assault rifle; the Hulwan Company for Machine Tools, which produced mortars and rocket launchers; the Hulwan Company for Engineering Industries, which produced metal parts for ammunition, shells, bombs, and rockets; the Heliopolis Company for Chemical Industries, which produced artillery ordnance, bombs, and missile warheads; and the Banha Company for Electronic Industries, which produced communications devices.


As of 1990, Egypt did not manufacture its own aircraft, but it assembled Tucano primary trainers from Brazil, Chenyang fighters from China, and Alpha Jet trainers designed in France and West Germany. Egyptian technicians had also reverse engineered and modified two Soviet SAMs--the Ayn as Saqr (a version of the SA-7) and the Tayir as Sabah (a version of the SA-2). Egyptian shipyards had produced eight fast attack naval craft fitted with British armaments and electronics.


The only armored vehicle in production was the Fahd four-wheeled APC, although the United States and Egypt planned to coproduce 540 Abrams M1A1 main battle tanks over a ten-year period beginning in 1991. The project would be funded largely through United States military aid; the United States would also supply the engines and fire control systems. According to some reports, Egypt was reconsidering the project because of its high cost. But as of late 1989, Egypt appeared to be going forward with the plan.


In September 1989, Egypt dropped out of the Condor II project, cosponsored with Argentina and Iraq, to develop an intermediate-rage (800-kilometer) SSM. Earlier that year, officials in the United States had arrested several persons, including two military officers attached several persons, including two military officers attached to the Embassy of Egypt in Washington, in connection with the illegal export of missile technology and materials needed to produce rocket fuel and nose cones.


In March 1989, United States and Swiss officials claimed that Egypt had imported from Switzerland the main elements of a plant capable of manufacturing poison gas. Mubarak denied that Egypt had either the facilities or the plans for producing chemical weapons.


The main purchaser of Egyptian defense products had been Iraq. In the early 1980s, Iraq was desperate to replace Soviet military equipment lost during the early stages of the war with Iran. Iraq blunted Iranian attacks with the Saqr 18, the Egyptian version of the Soviet BM-21 122mm multiple rocket launcher.


Egypt sold a smaller volume of weapons to Kuwait and other Persian Gulf states. In 1988 Kuwait was reported to have ordered about 100 Fahd armored personnel carriers; Oman and Sudan ordered smaller quantities of these carriers. Because Egypt considered the value of its military exports confidential, it omitted this information from its published trade statistics. According to ACDA, Egypt exported US$340 million worth of military equipment in 1982, declining to an average of US$70 million annually in the years from 1985 to 1987. The ACDA data was considered conservative. Other estimates have placed Egyptian defense exports as high as US$1 billion in 1982 and US$500 million annually in 1983 and 1984, when deliveries to Iraq were at their peak.


U.S. military aid finances most of Egypt's big-ticket defense procurements--$1.3 billion annually for several years. Large projects underway include the M1A1 Abrams tank manufacturing facility, M88A2 coproduction program, IFF, the HAWK rebuild program, and Peace Vector V. Such projects can be expected to continue, although improvements to and maintenance of existing force capabilities are perhaps more likely targets of future spending than entirely new systems.


Military production plants are not scheduled for privatization and are unlikely to be sold. Twenty--six of these plants produce both military and civilian goods, and many managers of these plants are interested in licensing arrangements with foreign firms to enhance their production mix and improve quality.


Examples of civilian products currently manufactured at 26 of Egypt's military factories include: medical and diagnostic equipment; domestic appliances; fire extinguishers; ammunition; machine shop equipment such as lathes, drills, and grinders; generating and welding sets; electric motors; television receivers; computers; batteries; electric and water meters; agricultural machines; kitchen equipment; mobile water purifiers; circuit boards; calibration equipment; Chrysler Jeep-brand vehicles; laser alignment instruments; and microscopes.


Military goods produced in Egypt include: small caliber and heavy ammunition, mortars, mines, grenades and other explosives, antitank rockets, rocket motors, radars and electronic equipment, smoke and pyrotechnic devices, rifles, pistols (Beretta licensee) and machine guns, jet trainer aircraft (Alpha and Tucano), armored personnel carriers, Alpha jet engines, field and aircraft communications equipment, Gazelle helicopters and engines, gyroscopes, weapon sights, binoculars, periscopes, tanks, MLRs, and artillery pieces.


Agencies

https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/egypt/industry.htm

This is a somehow old article that gives an idea about the Egyptian Defense Industry Which must have advanced since then (the 90's)..
No it didn't advance that much... as for the arab world even UAE have a better domestic def industry than Egypt. Even Sudan ( percentage wise!) def industry is more domestic than Egypt himself.
As for if it's true or not... u can just check the def /import/export and their representation in Defence exposition where Egypt is non existent.
As for manufacturing... it's just subsidaries of foreign industries... and not Egyptian " created" but only assembly under "few licencing" meaning it's not indegenious... if tomorow any of them don't find it good enough, then they will be out of the country...

AS for why a country with such big military forces and culture are not into Def industries by pushing an hardcore indegenious line... well that's what you get with fishy governement adn reliying on foreign aid. Thing will ( I hope) change,( like those few transfer of Tech from French naval industry etc...) But Egypt has a long run to it... per exemple they could have asked somthing when signing for the MIg/kamov/ (maybe T-90) contracts... but they didn't
 
Last edited:
so get some help from usa
 
Self sufficiency is must if you want to withstands face to face with your enemy. I hope Arab world stands on its own in defense industry.
North africa, like Algeria and Egypt haven't really been doing much of anything, Libya well...

Iraq had a good one back in the day but we know what happened there, syria had potential as well.
Jordan never did much, and the gulf countries really aren't doing much here either.

Saudi is the only one I would look at.
 
North africa, like Algeria and Egypt haven't really been doing much of anything, Libya well...

Iraq had a good one back in the day but we know what happened there, syria had potential as well.
Jordan never did much, and the gulf countries really aren't doing much here either.

Saudi is the only one I would look at.
not rly for KSA... if I have to look for someone in Def industry for the arab world... it will be UAE and that's it... as for KSA... still fifty-fifty on his ability to make a proper Def industry...
 
Egyt doesnt produce but assemble abrams.. saw on Nat geo.

US sending abrams parts.. ready for assembly.
 
yes now we dont need
are you sure... then should we speak about the 36Billion$ package of aid toward Defence? maybe... F-35? mhh what else? ah yes those shiny incoming submarines from Germany wonderland and those frigates too :) Shall we continue?

Israel is as dependent on the US tech than any country in the region... maybe a little less some may say... but in the End the result is the same... no US...Israel will be as dependent as any arab country...Even Turkey will be light ahead...
 
are you sure... then should we speak about the 36Billion$ package of aid toward Defence? maybe... F-35? mhh what else? ah yes those shiny incoming submarines from Germany wonderland and those frigates too :) Shall we continue?

Israel is as dependent on the US tech than any country in the region... maybe a little less some may say... but in the End the result is the same... no US...Israel will be as dependent as any arab country...Even Turkey will be light ahead...
israel dont need usa tech yes we need some weapons we cant manufacture like f 35 but we have good industry if you consider us to arab world
im sure we can give up the aid we have almost 40 k gdp per capita
 
israel dont need usa tech yes we need some weapons we cant manufacture like f 35 but we have good industry if you consider us to arab world
im sure we can give up the aid we have almost 40 k gdp per capita

lol... well Bibi knows it and liberman too..; that's why they gave the US the red carpet... YOU need that aid... whatever you want to admit it or not, I don't rly care...but you gov do and make everything to have it and even more...

YOu industry is not bad, in comparison to the arab world it's light away from them, that's a fact. but if you put Turkey in it... you are not anymore.
AND NO, israel can't manufacture equipment as advanced as F-35 or any other big equipment ( like frigate/subs etc...) Israel is good in small/light equipment and tech..; that's it.
 
Egyt doesnt produce but assemble abrams.. saw on Nat geo.

US sending abrams parts.. ready for assembly.
Egypt makes more than 70% of the Abrams tank locally..some parts are still shipped from the US and assembled..So Egypt has almost 80% TOT for the Tank.. And is the largest user of Abrams in the world after the US with around 1200 Abrams tanks..
 
Last edited:
Egypt makes more than 70% of the Abrams tank locally..some parts are still shipped from the US and assembled..So Egypt has almost 80% TOT for the Tank..
They don't... it's only assembly pack...no component is made in EGypt, even the screws are not... check the past contract from congress...yuou will have a full list of those "shipped" items...
Same goes for the future t-90 assembly line...no Tot, just assembly with preshipped kits...
 
Back
Top Bottom