Morocco, Israel Conclude $500 Million Deal for Missile Defense System
Rabat - Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) will provide
Morocco with the Barak MX air and missile defense system. The deal is worth
over $500 million, Israeli daily Globes reported.
A source told Morocco World News that the Israeli aircraft
manufacturing company IAI has reached an agreement with Morocco to supply it
with the Barak MX missile defense system.
The Barak MX missile defense system is flexible and modular
and can protect against a range of missile threats and unmanned drones, Globes’
report explained.
The negotiations reportedly began with the visit of Israel’s
Defense Minister Benny Gantz to Morocco on November 23, 2021.
During Gantz’s visit, Morocco and Israel signed military
agreements to strengthen security cooperation.
The purchased system enables the management of three types
of IAI's Barak interceptors: Barak-MRAD, a single-pulse rocket engine, which
intercepts missiles up to a distance of 35 kilometers; Barak-LRAD, a dual-pulse
rocket engine that intercepts missiles up to 70 kilometers; and the Barak-ER
dual-pulse rocket engine as well as an additional booster for a range of 150
kilometers.
Barak-MX is additionally supported by radar and various
launchers for the best coverage of combat aircraft, helicopters, drones, cruise
missiles, surface-to-air missiles, and surface-to-surface missiles.
Morocco also purchased the Skylock Dome anti-drone system
from Israel last year. The system detects, verifies, and neutralizes drones.
The North African country has been reinforcing its military
equipment and boosting its defense system amid rising tensions in the region.
Most recently, the country bought from Spain MAD 321 million
($34 million) worth of ammunition, military devices, torpedo bombs, rockets,
missiles, aircraft, lighter-than-air vehicles, and unmanned vehicles (UAV).
The United States remains the main arms supplier for
Morocco, covering 90% of the country’s demand, ahead of France (9.2%), and the
UK (0.3%), according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
(SIPRI).
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