Persian Gulf & Middle East Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Qatar will sign for 24 Dassault Rafale combat aircraft to fulfil its fighter procurement requirement on 4 May.

The upcoming contract, which was announced by Dassault on 30 April, will be signed in Doha during a visit by French President François Hollande. The deal follows French media reports that the Qatar Emiri Air Force (QEAF) was looking to acquire an initial batch of 36 aircraft to replace the 12 Dassault Mirage 2000-5 fighters it already operates.

The La Tribune newspaper said in 2013 that requests for proposals had been sent to Dassault for its Rafale fighter, to Eurofighter for Typhoon, and to Lockheed Martin for the F-35 Lightning II, although there was no official confirmation of this. Previously, it had been reported that Qatar was in the market for between 24 and 36 new fighters, with the Boeing's F/A-18E/F Super Hornet and F-15 Eagle also reported to be contenders.

It is not clear if the pending contract for 24 Rafales represents the total buy, since the potential for a follow-on batch of aircraft was also previously reported by La Tribune , for a total procurement of 72 fighters. It was reported that this second batch might be satisfied by an aircraft other than the Rafale, with the F-35 being named as a likely candidate.

The notice of the impending contract signature did not disclose a value, delivery timelines, aircraft configurations, or weapons packages.

The purchase of the Rafales comes some three years after the QEAF ordered 24 PC-21 turboprop aircraft to replace the Dassault-Dornier Alpha Jet to satisfy its training requirements.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


Qatar is a faithful ally of France for a long time and had before Mirage F-1 and get also AMX-30B2, AMX-10P etc... many French armament.
 
Last edited:

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Completely sure now deal signed today for 24 Rafale presumably F3R variant
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Then :
180 ordered for France 132 B/C for AF and 48 M for Navy yet delivered 99 ( but 2 for Egypt ) and 42. Remains 33 B/C and 6 M.
Rafale M different and normaly the 4 planned for this year delivered i believe, 7 B/C no.
5 lost definitely replaced.

24 Qatar AF +12 option
24 Egypt AF

Right now Dassault have to produce 39 + 24 +24 : 87 fighters which 15 French max for 2019 ( 26 2014/19, 11 in 2014 ) after the rest.

Rest to see for India normaly 36 ordered this month, eventualy again up to 126.
 
Last edited:

Miragedriver

Brigadier
I understand that after inspecting the Mig-21/23's stored in Serbia, that Iraqi AF decided they were in very poor state, not worth trying to salvage - anyone have any more info on this? It's a shame, no doubt those aircraft if they had been serviceable, would have been very useful.
oF9blpM.jpg



Back to bottling my Grenache
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!



USN-Escort.jpg

CNN said:
Washington (CNN)U.S. Navy warships will begin accompanying British-flagged commercial cargo vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, something they've already been doing with US-flagged vessels, Pentagon spokesman Col. Steve Warren announced Monday.

The accompanying of U.S. and British ships follows the seizure of a Marshall Islands-flagged vessel by Iranian Revolutionary Guard ships last week.

U.S. Navy warships have already begun escorting American vessels, accompanying four U.S.-flagged ships through the Strait of Hormuz Thursday. The new military operation offers armed protection from potential harassment by Iran's navy, a U.S. defense official told CNN.

All four unarmed U.S.-flagged vessels were military supply and survey ships either operated by the U.S. Military Sealift Command or under contract to the command. They traveled without incident.

The official said the Pentagon will not be providing daily details on transits or the warships in the area because the U.S. "does not want to establish a pattern of life" for observers in the area.

Col. Edward Thomas, special assistant for public affairs, said that "this is nothing more than benign but prudent accompanying of already scheduled ships."

He added that it was "not designed to send a signal" but is "merely a hedge against some unpredictable Iranian behavior the last few days."

CNN first reported Thursday that U.S. Navy warships would accompany U.S.-flagged commercial vessels that pass through the Strait of Hormuz due to concerns that ships from Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps navy could try to seize a U.S. cargo ship.

Pentagon officials provided clarification Thursday afternoon that not every ship will necessarily be accompanied by the Navy. But this is still a significant change in the U.S. military posture in the Strait.

The classified plan was approved by the Pentagon earlier Thursday, according to a senior defense official.

While the Navy maintains a routine ship presence in the Persian Gulf and the North Arabian Sea, this new effort specifically requires an armed warship to be in the narrow channel between Iran and Oman when a U.S. commercial vessel passes through.

The decision to go ahead with this plan comes as Iran Revolutionary Guard ships harassed a U.S.-flagged vessel, the Maersk Kensington, on Friday and then later seized another cargo ship, the Maersk Tigris, flagged in the Marshall Islands.

The worry is that with the uncertainty around Iran's intentions, any seizure of a U.S.-flagged vessel could provoke an international incident with Iran.

"This is a way to reduce the risk of confrontation," the official told CNN.

The official emphasized the Navy is not trying to "play up" the current situation, but said the orders were approved "based on tensions in the region."

A second U.S. official said if it becomes necessary, U.S. warships are prepared to escort U.S. commercial vessels throughout the entire Gulf.

There are a number of U.S. ships and aircraft in the immediate vicinity, including four ships and several aircraft monitoring the status of the Marshall Island vessel, which remains in Iranian custody allegedly over a 2005 financial dispute. U.S. Navy ships will be moved in and out of the area depending on the transit schedule of U.S. cargo vessels.

The US is now it is extending escort to UK and probably any other friendly nation who ask.
 

Scratch

Captain
Israel is procuring kits to assemble more Namer heavy APCs through US military assistance.

Those Namer troop carriers are based on the Merkava Mk4 hulls, and the new ones are now supposed to be outfitted with Trophy APS. That probably makes them the best protected APCs in the world.

rva4ie.jpg


Israel Signs Heavy APC Deal With GDLS
By Barbara Opall-Rome 3:15 p.m. EDT May 5, 2015
$310M, Six-Year Contract To Come From US Military Aid

TEL AVIV — Israel's Defense Ministry announced Tuesday that it signed a US $310 million contract with General Dynamics Land Systems (GDLS) to produce kits for its Namer (Leopard), a heavy troop carrier based on the indigenous Merkava Mk4 main battle tank.

Funded through annual US military assistance, the six-year contract calls for US-based production kits, with final assembly and installation of subsystems to be performed at MoD's Masha facility in Tel Hashomer, south of Tel Aviv.

In the announcement, MoD noted that the contract with GDLS joins a $250 million previously concluded contract, also funded through US military aid, for US-built Namer engines.

"The Namer is considered to be the most heavily armored carrier in the world, and has proven its capabilities in Operation Protective Edge against myriad threats," MoD stated in reference to last summer's war in Gaza.

[...]

The contract announced Tuesday follows a 2011 deal between MoD and GDLS for production tooling and an initial 111 kits, with options for another 276 vehicles based on a full production rate of some 60 per year.

Prior to last summer's war, due to budget cuts, MoD had planned to slash Namer production orders by more than half. But lessons from that war and outrage sparked when seven infantrymen were killed in an RPG attack on their 50-year-old M113 restored top procurement priority for the heavy APC.

Since its initial fielding in 2009, less than a handful of infantry brigades have been equipped with Namer. And unlike the Merkava Mk4 tanks, the heavy APCs have not yet been equipped with active protection against RPGs and anti-tank missiles.

According to today's statement by MoD, all new Namers will be equipped with the Trophy, an active protection system (APS) built by state-owned Rafael. ...
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
Israel is procuring kits to assemble more Namer heavy APCs through US military assistance.

Those Namer troop carriers are based on the Merkava Mk4 hulls, and the new ones are now supposed to be outfitted with Trophy APS. That probably makes them the best protected APCs in the world.

rva4ie.jpg

Just curious...does the Namer troop carrier has the same engine as the Merkava Mk4? I like it...looks to be designed specifically for desert terrain heavily armored troop carrier or APC.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Corvette Godwind 2500 for Egypt, 4 in order
The Egyptian Navy is really modernizing.

They will have :

1 x FREMM FFG as their flagship
4 x Godwinfd 2500k FFGs, very modern and capable
4 x Perry FFGs, still very capable, particularly for ASW
2 x 053HE FFGs
2 x Knox FFGs

...and lets not forget their four new (soon to be six) US built Ezzat Class (Ambassador III corvettes).

These are very heavily armed, good sea state vessels, with eight harpoon missiles (in launchers amidships between the bridge and the Phalanx), a 20mm Phalanx CIWS, a full RAM launcher with 21 missiles, and a 76mm main gun.

Ezzat-01.jpg

Ezzat-03.jpg

Ezzat-04.jpg
 
Top