Elbit to supply airborne defense systems to the UAE Air Force's tanker aircraft
Israeli defense company Elbit Systems announced that its
subsidiary in the United Arab Emirates was awarded a contract to supply
airborne defense systems for the UAE Air Force tanker aircraft.
The contract, worth approximately $53 million, will see the
subsidy Elbit Systems Emirates to supply Direct Infrared Countermeasures
(“DIRCM”) and airborne Electronic Warfare (“EW”) systems for the Airbus A330
Multi-Role Tanker Transport aircraft of the UAE Air Force.
“Elbit Systems views the UAE as an important market and
believes that this contract award further highlights the technological
advantage and maturity of the solutions offered by the company in this field,”
read a statement released by Elbit.
As part of the contract, Elbit will deliver a multi-turret
configuration of the J-MUSIC™
Self-Protection System together with the Infra-Red-based Passive Airborne
Warning System (PAWS IR), that according to the company will “provide high
levels of protection and redundancy.”
The J-MUSIC DIRCM and the integrated PAWS IR, is designed
with open architecture and integrates the latest laser technology along with a
high frame-rate thermal camera and a small, dynamic high-speed sealed-mirror
turret making it possible to defend against infra-red missile threats.
The contract will be performed over a five-year period.
Elbit’s DIRCM systems have accumulated more than 350,000
operational flight hours and are installed onboard more than 25 types of
aircraft including Lockheed Martin’s C130J, NATO’s Multinational Multi-Role
Tanker Transport fleet, and many more.
Elbit “is witnessing a growing demand for this type of
self-protection capabilities in light of the rising threat that aircraft face from
shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles,” the company said.
The Israeli defense giant established a venture in the UAE
in mid-November in order to “foster a long-term cooperation with the UAE Armed
Forces” and other operational needs.
Ran Kril, Executive Vice President for International
Marketing & Business Development of Elbit Systems, said that the Abraham
Accords provided a “sound basis for business collaborations” with the UAE and
other countries in the region.
Both Israel and the UAE have worked together covertly for
years against Iran’s hegemony, and according to foreign reports have behind
closed doors improved their intelligence-sharing and military relations in
order to be prepared for Iranian threats.
Following the normalization agreement signed as part of the
Abraham Accords, the UAE’s Minister of State for Defence Affairs Mohammed
al-Bawardi and Israel’s Defence Minister Benny Gantz agreed to establish
security ties between the two countries.
They also discussed possible channels of cooperation between
the two defense establishments and their intention to establish “close,
continuous and fruitful working relations,” read a statement released by
Israel’s Defense Ministry at the time.
In October the Commander of the Kingdom’s Air Force
Maj.-Gen. Ibrahim Nasser Mohammed al-Alawi landed in Israel for the first time
as the guest of Israel Air Force Commander Amikam Norkin.
The following month Norkin traveled to the United Arab
Emirates to participate in the Dubai International Air Chiefs' Conference as
part of the Dubai Airshow.
The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said that the visit “indicated the continued development and strengthening of the relationship between the IDF and foreign militaries, at the national and strategic level, as well as an example of the growi
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