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U.S. Selling 84 US fighter jets, dozens of Blackhawk Helicopters to Saudi Arabia and scores of US latest war jets to Israel Printer friendly page Print This
By Jonathan Cook
The National
Saturday, Aug 14, 2010

Editor's Note: The author writes, "Washington fears that Iran is developing a nuclear weapon and wants its allies well armed to thwart possible aggression by Iran." It's not Iran's "nuclear weapon", Jonathan Cook, as surely you must know. It's the $30 billion from Saudi for the Boeing Company and the $11 billion plus "sale" to Israel for Lockheed Martin, with the U.S. taxpayer eventually picking up the tab for Israel, as always.

Stephen Zunes has it right:

“This is a pattern we’ve seen before. The US offers Arab states expensive modern armaments, and then turns around to Israel and tells it it needs to have even better weapons to stay ahead in the race. Then the pressure again mounts on the Arab states. It’s a racket that has been a bonanza for US arms manufacturers.”

- Les Blough, Editor


Saudi Arabia buys 84 US fighter jets

Two of the United States’ closest allies in the Middle East, Israel and Saudi Arabia, may be on the brink of signing large arms deals with the US.

The F-15 Strike Eagle. The U.S. is selling 84 of them to Saudi Arabia.

America has agreed to sell Saudi Arabia 84 of the latest model of the F-15 jet and dozens of Black Hawk helicopters. The deal also includes refurbishing many of the kingdom’s older F-15s, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.

Israel is believed to have opposed the US$30 billion (Dh109bn) deal. However, in a concession to Israel, the new F-15s, made by the Boeing Company, will not be equipped with the latest weapons and avionics systems available to the US military.

"Dozens" of Blackhawk Helicopters are part of the U.S. to Saudi package.

The last such major arms sale by the US to Saudi Arabia was in 1992, when the kingdom received 72 F-15s. On that occasion, Israel tried to block the $9bn deal by lobbying US Congress. The sale strained relations between Israel and the White House of George HW Bush.

Saudi Arabia has the third largest air force in the Middle East behind Iran and Israel. The Royal Saudi Air Force has 280 “combat capable” aircraft, according to data compiled by the Center for Strategic & International Studies. Israel has 424; Iran, 312; and the UAE, 184.

The Wall Street Journal did not specify the model of F-15 being bought by Riyadh, but experts widely assumed it to be the upgraded Strike Eagle. It will significantly boost the power and sophistication of the Saudi air force. The jet, designed for precision air-to-surface attacks, was the main one used by the US in destroying Iraq’s radar and missile systems during the 2003 invasion.

The supply of arms to the two countries is a key US initiative in the region. Washington fears that Iran is developing a nuclear weapon and wants its allies well armed to thwart possible aggression by Iran.

U.S. to sell as many as 75 of these F-35 Jets to Israel at $150 million a plane but Israel is balking at the price.
The US is preparing to provide Israel’s air force with the F-35, the latest jet fighter made by Lockheed Martin, the Israeli daily Haaretz reported last week.

The F-35’s stealth technology, which allows it to evade radar detection and anti-aircraft missiles, comes with a hefty price tag of up to $150 million a plane – a cost that Israel had been balking at.

But, according to the reports, the US has offered Israeli firms defence contracts worth $4bn to supply parts of the F-35 – a deal some Israelis believe is designed to buy Israel’s silence over the Saudi deal and ensure it gets through the US Congress. It is one of the largest such deals in Israel’s history and it would offset much of the cost to Israel of buying its first batch of F-35s.

The aircraft is not expected to enter service until 2014. If Israel signs up for a single squadron of 20 F-35s, as expected in the next few weeks, it would be the first country outside the US to secure the jet. Israel has been given an option to buy 55 more.

Last year Israel had threatened to abandon negotiations over the F-35 and opt instead to buy the advanced F-15. Saudi Arabia’s reported purchase of that jet appears to make such a scenario less likely.

If, as Iran reportedly claimed last week, it is in possession of Russian S-300 anti-aircraft missiles, the F-35 stealth technology would give Israel an important advantage in battle.

The Obama administration has faced heavy lobbying from Israel to prevent the Saudi deal. Israel is worried that the F-15s aimed at Iran today might be used against Israel later.

“Today these planes are against Iran, tomorrow they might turn against us,” Haaretz quoted an unnamed security official as saying last month.

Ehud Barak, Israel’s defence minister, told the Washington Post last month that the US administration was committed to making sure Israel was not left in an “inferior situation” and was “doing a lot to support Israel’s qualitative military edge”.

Some analysts questioned the wisdom of the US arms sales.

They are a “misguided policy” that is aimed at keeping Tehran “isolated and subdued”, said Trita Parsi, an analyst at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington.

“All that is achieved by heavily arming Arab states and Israel is to increase Iran’s sense of insecurity and therefore make the region less secure,” he said.

Stephen Zunes, a US-based Middle East policy analyst, said Washington is setting the stage for an “arms race” in the region.

“This is a pattern we’ve seen before. The US offers Arab states expensive modern armaments, and then turns around to Israel and tells it it needs to have even better weapons to stay ahead in the race. Then the pressure again mounts on the Arab states. It’s a racket that has been a bonanza for US arms manufacturers,” he said.

Israel receives $3bn annually in US military aid, more than any other country and covering about a quarter of Israel’s defence expenditure. Unlike other recipients, Israel is allowed to spend 26 per cent of the aid on the development and production of its own weapons systems.

However, Israeli officials are reported to fear that a combined squeeze on the defence budget and a massive outlay on buying a large number of F-35s would leave the military without money to replenish its stocks of ammunition and bombs.

Last month Washington agreed to an additional military subsidy of to help Israel develop its “missile shield” programmes, designed to intercept short-, mid- and long-range missiles.

jcook@thenational.ae

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