What's new

U.S. to sell Predator XP to UAE

Major Shaitan Singh

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Dec 7, 2010
Messages
3,550
Reaction score
43
Country
India
Location
India
upload_2015-1-28_13-50-34.jpeg


images


U.S. lawmakers have given the green light for General Atomics to export its unarmed Predator XP unmanned aircraft to United Arab Emirates.

UAE had signed the contract for the UAVs two years ago. U.A.E. Ambassador to the U.S. Yousef Al Otaiba told Bloomberg that his government will now have to go and find funds to pay for the program.

Alert 5 » U.S. expected to sell Predator XP to UAE - Military Aviation News
 
.
January 28, 2015


UAE a step closer to buying US Predator drones

&MaxW=640&imageVersion=default&AR-150128898.jpg

The Predator drone was displayed at the International Defence Exhibition and Conference (Idex) at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre in 2013.


The sale of Predator surveillance drones to the UAE has been tentatively approved by senior US lawmakers, in what would be the first sale of the aircraft outside of Nato.

After nearly two years of deliberations, the US state department began talks with the senate and house foreign affairs committees in December, both of which approved the sale by defence contractor General Atomics to the UAE last week, US officials told Bloomberg News yesterday.

Congress is expected to be officially notified this week, with legislators then having 30 days to block the sale.

A source familiar with the discussions on Capitol Hill said that members of both the foreign affairs committees do not foresee any problems.

After the 30-day deadline expires, the state department will be free to clear the sale – which is worth around US$200 million (Dh734.6m), according to a Congressional Research Service report.

The sale of the unarmed export version of the military drone was announced at the Idex defence trade show in Abu Dhabi in February 2013. Sources familiar with the deal say it includes up to 10 Predator XP drones equipped with surveillance and targeting equipment but no weapons capabilities.

“The sale reflects the increasing closeness between the US and the UAE,” said Bilal Saab, a senior fellow for Middle East security at the Atlantic Council think tank in Washington, “the latter being perceived by the former as its most competent and trusted partner in the Arab world.”

If Congress allows the sale to proceed, General Atomics and the UAE would then complete the deal. The UAE ambassador to Washington, Yousef Al Otaiba, told Bloomberg Government earlier this month: “We then have to go back in and find funds, because this contract was signed two years ago” but that “It should be approved within the next several months.”

With the agreement signalling the first ever sale of the sophisticated technology to a nation outside of Nato, the US defence, state and commerce departments had to coordinate on formulating new policy to enable the deal.

A major stumbling block was Washington’s legal obligation to maintain Israel’s “qualitative military edge” over all other countries in the region. Similar concerns had to be addressed before the sale of advanced F-16 fighter jets to the UAE.

Many US allies in the Gulf and elsewhere have expressed interest in buying the Predator technology, which is now seen as a strategic asset. China, Turkey, Pakistan and other countries are developing similar technology, and concerns have been raised that they may have less qualms than the United States in exporting armed drones.

The UAE is one of the closest US allies in the Middle East. Between 2007 and 2010, the UAE signed defence contracts with US firms worth more than $10 billion, and contracts for military systems and training worth at least another $10bn have been agreed to since then. Many of these purchases have been made with a focus on defending against Iranian missile capabilities.

UAE a step closer to buying US Predator drones | The National
 
.
A major stumbling block was Washington’s legal obligation to maintain Israel’s “qualitative military edge” over all other countries in the region. Similar concerns had to be addressed before the sale of advanced F-16 fighter jets to the UAE.

Israel's qualitative edge yeah right lol, why are Israelis so cowards? why do they want to have a qualitative edge? why not be equal with the other countries in the region ? oh right, because Israelis are cowards :-) they gotta hide their cowardliness behind technological edge :sarcastic: they are so cowards to the point that they didn't think the qualitative edge is enough so they had to develop nuclear weapons :sarcastic:deep down they know they will never win if they face a military in the region that has the same technology they have :rolleyes1:
 
.
What is the difference between the unarmed RQ-1 and something like scaneagle. Better FLIR sight is the only difference ?
 
. . .
January 28, 2015


UAE a step closer to buying US Predator drones

&MaxW=640&imageVersion=default&AR-150128898.jpg

The Predator drone was displayed at the International Defence Exhibition and Conference (Idex) at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre in 2013.


The sale of Predator surveillance drones to the UAE has been tentatively approved by senior US lawmakers, in what would be the first sale of the aircraft outside of Nato.

After nearly two years of deliberations, the US state department began talks with the senate and house foreign affairs committees in December, both of which approved the sale by defence contractor General Atomics to the UAE last week, US officials told Bloomberg News yesterday.

Congress is expected to be officially notified this week, with legislators then having 30 days to block the sale.

A source familiar with the discussions on Capitol Hill said that members of both the foreign affairs committees do not foresee any problems.

After the 30-day deadline expires, the state department will be free to clear the sale – which is worth around US$200 million (Dh734.6m), according to a Congressional Research Service report.

The sale of the unarmed export version of the military drone was announced at the Idex defence trade show in Abu Dhabi in February 2013. Sources familiar with the deal say it includes up to 10 Predator XP drones equipped with surveillance and targeting equipment but no weapons capabilities.

“The sale reflects the increasing closeness between the US and the UAE,” said Bilal Saab, a senior fellow for Middle East security at the Atlantic Council think tank in Washington, “the latter being perceived by the former as its most competent and trusted partner in the Arab world.”

If Congress allows the sale to proceed, General Atomics and the UAE would then complete the deal. The UAE ambassador to Washington, Yousef Al Otaiba, told Bloomberg Government earlier this month: “We then have to go back in and find funds, because this contract was signed two years ago” but that “It should be approved within the next several months.”

With the agreement signalling the first ever sale of the sophisticated technology to a nation outside of Nato, the US defence, state and commerce departments had to coordinate on formulating new policy to enable the deal.

A major stumbling block was Washington’s legal obligation to maintain Israel’s “qualitative military edge” over all other countries in the region. Similar concerns had to be addressed before the sale of advanced F-16 fighter jets to the UAE.

Many US allies in the Gulf and elsewhere have expressed interest in buying the Predator technology, which is now seen as a strategic asset. China, Turkey, Pakistan and other countries are developing similar technology, and concerns have been raised that they may have less qualms than the United States in exporting armed drones.

The UAE is one of the closest US allies in the Middle East. Between 2007 and 2010, the UAE signed defence contracts with US firms worth more than $10 billion, and contracts for military systems and training worth at least another $10bn have been agreed to since then. Many of these purchases have been made with a focus on defending against Iranian missile capabilities.

UAE a step closer to buying US Predator drones | The National
Good for UAE but @Al Bhatti Can you tell current and future weapons of UAE Navy
 
.
i still don't understand that why UAE wants to advance the Army and Air force so much
i mean from whom are they scared ?
 
.

Latest posts

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom