Qatar buys helicopters, missiles in $23-billion deals
Qatar announced contracts worth about $23-billion (U.S.) on Thursday
to buy attack helicopters, guided missiles, tankers and other weapons
from Boeing Co., Airbus SAS and other arms makers as the Gulf state
accelerates its military build-up.
The world’s top liquefied
natural gas (LNG) exporter announced deals with about 20 global
companies, including firms from the United States which were awarded
deals worth 27.5 billion riyals ($7.6-billion),
said a spokeswoman for a
Doha defense conference where the announcements were made
The weapons purchases include large deals with Lockheed Martin, Raytheon and others.
Qatar,
and other Gulf Arab and Middle Eastern countries are looking to acquire
new high-tech military equipment to protect themselves from
neighbouring Iran and internal threats after the Arab Spring uprising.
Boeing
confirmed that the announcement included a contract to buy 24 AH-64E
Apache attack helicopters and three Boeing 737 Airborne early warning
and control (AEW&C) aircraft.
The deal for the helicopters was valued at 8.9 billion riyals, said the spokeswoman for the conference.
In
Paris, France’s Defense Ministry said Qatar had agreed to buy 22 NH90
military helicopters from a unit of European aerospace group Airbus
worth €2-billion ($2.76-billion) and two Airbus-made refuelling tankers.
NHIndustries
is 62.5 per cent owned by Airbus’ Eurocopter helicopter unit, 32 per
cent owned by AgustaWestland, a unit of Italy Finmeccanica’s and 5.5 per
cent by Stork Fokker.
Qatar also committed to buy a Patriot
missile defence system built by Raytheon equipped with PAC-3 missiles
made by Lockheed; advanced daytime, high-definition sensors and radars
for Apache helicopters; and Javelin missiles built by a
Lockheed-Raytheon joint venture, according to sources familiar with the
matter.
Raytheon had told analysts in January that it expected to
finalize an order with Qatar in the first half of 2014 for more than
$2-billion in Patriot missile defence system equipment.
The
Pentagon approved the sale to Qatar of $9.9-billion worth of Patriot
fire units, radars, and various Raytheon and Lockheed missiles in
November 2012.
The Defense Security Co-operation Agency, the U.S.
body which oversees foreign arms sales, had notified lawmakers in July
2012 of a possible sale of Apache helicopters to Qatar.
A spokeswoman for the U.S. agency had no immediate comment.
Washington
has been keen to deepen its co-operation with Gulf nations, which have
been long-standing allies, on missile defence and increase pressure on
Iran over its nuclear program.
The Apache helicopters are built by
Boeing and used by the U.S. Army, Egypt, Greece, Israel, Japan, Kuwait,
Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, and
United Kingdom.
They will be fitted with Longbow radar equipment made by a joint venture of Lockheed and Northrop Grumman Corp.
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