Bubblegum Crisis
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Flashback…
Continue… See all old links :
Saudi National Guard upgraded to Ministry | Page 2
Saudi National Guard upgraded to Ministry | Page 3
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
More Saudi Arabians pursue studies in US
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 3
Saudi Arabian National Guard
Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
Mutaib bin Abdullah
Canadian ‘LAV III’ in Afghanistan - 25MM Cannon
Flashback…
King Abdullah's son to lead new Saudi ministry
Reuters
May 28, 2013
RIYADH // Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah named his son to head a new national guard ministry yesterday, strengthening the force's role in the kingdom.
The elevation of Prince Miteb bin Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, which came in a royal decree, has few strategic or military implications but bolsters his credentials within the ruling family.
"With this ministry, Miteb will have a stronger role to play. It gives the national guard more authority, better structure and a larger institutional budget," said Abdulaziz Al Sager, the director of the Gulf Research Centre in Jeddah.
The new ministry will be formed from the existing presidency of the Saudi Arabian national guard, based in Riyadh. Beside its military duties, the guard runs large social welfare and health programmes for families of guardsmen.
Saudi Arabia has appointed leading younger members of the ruling family to senior posts over the past 18 months, including the interior ministry and governorships of Riyadh and Eastern Province, two of the most important districts.
King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud turns 90 this year, Crown Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud will be 77. The next generation of Saudi leaders, including Prince Miteb, are mostly in their 50s and 60s.
In a country where top posts are often held for decades, the moves represent a changing of the guard for the inner circles of a family where major decisions are based on a consensus of views among senior princes.
Prince Miteb's promotion also augments the special status of the national guard, commanded by King Abdullah from 1962 to 2010, as separate from the kingdom's conventional armed forces, run by the defence minister, Crown Prince Salman.
Originally based on the tribal fighters who helped King Abdulaziz Ibn Saud create the modern Saudi state in the early 20th century, the national guard later helped guard against possible coups by the regular army.
Although such coups are no longer seen as a risk, the force has retained an important role in the Saudi military and as a link to the country's main tribes.
According to a 2011 IHS Jane's Sentinel Country Risk Assessments estimate, the national guard has 100,000 personnel, compared with 75,000 for the regular army, 34,000 for the air force and 15,500 for the navy.
TheNational.ae
Continue… See all old links :
Saudi National Guard upgraded to Ministry | Page 2
Saudi National Guard upgraded to Ministry | Page 3
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
More Saudi Arabians pursue studies in US
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 2
KAEC to have 2m people, projects worth $100bn on completion: CEO | Page 3
Saudi Arabian National Guard
Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
Mutaib bin Abdullah
General Dynamics Canada to sell LAVs 8x8 armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia.
Saturday, February 15, 2014 10:36 AM
General Dynamics of Canada has received a new contract to sell armoured vehicles LAV to Saudi Arabia. The sale was secured with the help of the Canadian federal government for a total amount of $10 billion. The deal was announced Friday, February 14, 2014, by International Trade Minister Ed Fast at the London, Ont., plant of General Dynamics Land Systems.
The Company is a subsidiary of General Dynamics United States with offices based in Canada. Delivery of the first vehicles is expected in 2016.
The total number of LAV vehicles sold to Saudi Arabia was not being revealed, but documents filed in the U.S. by General Dynamics Land System Canada put the contract at between $10 billion and $13 billion.
The contract with the Saudis follows an agreement last year that saw the General Dynamics operations in London, Ont., win a US$65.3-million contract with the Colombian government.
The Colombian Ministry of National Defence signed a deal to buy 24 light armoured vehicles from General Dynamics.
The General Dynamics Land Systems - Canada Light Armoured Vehicle (LAV) is the standard wheeled armoured vehicle in service since many years with the Canadian Army.
In January 1997, the Diesel Division, General Motors of Canada (today General Dynamics Land Systems - Canada), was awarded a contract worth C$552 million for the supply of 240 new LAV-III 8 × 8 armoured personnel carriers for the Canadian Forces.
The General Dynamics Canada LAV III is an 8x8 armoured vehicle personnel carrier equipped with a two-man turret. The turret is armed with a US ATK Gun Systems Company 25 mm M242 Chain Gun with a 7.62 mm C6 coaxial machine gun and a 5.56 mm C9 machine gun on the turret roof for air and local defence.
The LAV-III will be used for the troop transport role with a total of eight troops being carried in the rear troop compartment.
Army Recognition
Canadian ‘LAV III’ in Afghanistan - 25MM Cannon
Saudis Sign $10B Vehicle Deal With GDLS-Canada
Feb. 14, 2014 - 06:43PM
By PAUL McLEARY
WASHINGTON — Saudi Arabia has entered into a 14-year, $10 billion agreement with General Dynamics’ Canadian subsidiary for an undisclosed number of military and civilian armored vehicles, Canada’s Trade Minister Ed Fast announced Friday.
The vehicles will be produced by General Dynamics Land Systems-Canada (GDLS) in London, Ontario, and the deal could be worth up to $13 billion if all options are exercised by the Saudi government.
Ken Yamashita, a spokesman for GDLS said that while the company is contractually unable to divulge the number or make of the vehicles that are part of the deal, “these will be new vehicles” and the company is “starting to do design and development work immediately,” with the first vehicles rolling off the production line in 2016.
He wouldn’t say whether the vehicles were wholly new or a variant on an existing platform.
The international competition to win the Saudi work began about five years ago.
The facility in London employs about 2,400 people, and is the producer of the Canadian Army’s Light Armoured Vehicle (LAV), an eight-wheeled infantry carrier that serves as the basis for the US Army’s Stryker infantry carrier. Some Stryker chassis are also made at the facility.
In addition, the facility makes the Ocelot, a four-wheeled tactical vehicle used by British forces.
The deal includes a full maintenance and training package. Yamashita said the training of Saudi crews would likely take place in Canada and in Saudi Arabia, though because of clauses in the contract, he couldn’t confirm that the customer was Saudi Arabia.
Other parts of General Dynamics will also feel the effects of the deal, as work will be done by the US-based GD Land Systems facility in Sterling Heights, Mich., European Land Systems in Madrid, GD’s Ordnance and Tactical office in Saint Petersburg, Fla., and GD C4 Systems in Scottsdale, Ari.
One of the big concerns for the Saudis is its long, desolate land borders with neighbors like Iraq and Yemen, both of which have sizeable al-Qaida-inspired violent Islamist groups operating within their borders.
As a result, it’s long been known that the Kingdom was looking for fast, light, maneuverable ground vehicles that can traverse distances and operate in austere, unpaved environments. Other US and international military vehicle manufacturers were bidding for the work, including Oshkosh, which was at one point late last year in talks with the Saudis about their M-ATV, but whatever it is that General Dynamics showed them apparently won the day.
Defense News
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