Saudi To Assemble Some of Its 72 Eurofighters
Saudi Arabia said on Aug. 21 an unspecified number of the 72 Eurofighter Typhoon warplanes it bought in a deal with the multinational Eurofighter consortium will be assembled in the kingdom.
The cabinet said in a statement after its weekly meeting the aircraft "were bought at the same price offered to the British air forces and part of them will be assembled and made in the kingdom".
Saudi Arabia said late on Aug. 17 it would take up to 72 of the combat war jets from the multinational Eurofighter consortium which includes British defense contractor BAE Systems, Airbus parent firm EADS and Alenia Aeronautica, part of Italyââ¬â¢s Finmeccanica.
The kingdom did not disclose the value of the deal which analysts estimate at about $11.4 billion but said it provided for defense technology transfer.
Britain and Saudi Arabia agreed that the Gulf state would purchase the planes after having signed an initial deal in December.
The cabinet statement, carried by state media, said the Typhoon deal comes under the kingdomââ¬â¢s policy to modernize its armed forces equipment, adding it provides for training Saudi nationals. It did not give further details.
BAE is expected to invest in local training for thousands of Saudi nationals.
The jets will replace British-made Tornado and other planes in a deal which marks a defeat for Franceââ¬â¢s Dassault Aviation, which was hoping for its first export customer for the Rafale combat jet.
Saudi Arabia has a long history of buying arms from Britain dating back to the 1960s, and usually pays in oil.
http://defensenews.com/story.php?F=2049100&C=mideast
Saudi Arabia said on Aug. 21 an unspecified number of the 72 Eurofighter Typhoon warplanes it bought in a deal with the multinational Eurofighter consortium will be assembled in the kingdom.
The cabinet said in a statement after its weekly meeting the aircraft "were bought at the same price offered to the British air forces and part of them will be assembled and made in the kingdom".
Saudi Arabia said late on Aug. 17 it would take up to 72 of the combat war jets from the multinational Eurofighter consortium which includes British defense contractor BAE Systems, Airbus parent firm EADS and Alenia Aeronautica, part of Italyââ¬â¢s Finmeccanica.
The kingdom did not disclose the value of the deal which analysts estimate at about $11.4 billion but said it provided for defense technology transfer.
Britain and Saudi Arabia agreed that the Gulf state would purchase the planes after having signed an initial deal in December.
The cabinet statement, carried by state media, said the Typhoon deal comes under the kingdomââ¬â¢s policy to modernize its armed forces equipment, adding it provides for training Saudi nationals. It did not give further details.
BAE is expected to invest in local training for thousands of Saudi nationals.
The jets will replace British-made Tornado and other planes in a deal which marks a defeat for Franceââ¬â¢s Dassault Aviation, which was hoping for its first export customer for the Rafale combat jet.
Saudi Arabia has a long history of buying arms from Britain dating back to the 1960s, and usually pays in oil.
http://defensenews.com/story.php?F=2049100&C=mideast