US approves $1 billion in Saudi defence contracts

Washington: The United States formally approved defence contracts totalling more than USD 1 billion with Saudi Arabia today, as the kingdom’s crown prince continued his American tour. The State Department confirmed it had green-lighted a USD 670 million deal for anti-tank missiles, a USD 106 million contract for helicopter maintenance and USD 300 million for ground vehicle parts.

An official said the deals had been in the pipeline since President Donald Trump has announced more than USD 100 billion in possible new contracts on a visit to Riyadh last year. “This proposed sale will support US foreign policy and national security objectives by improving the security of a friendly country,” the Defence Security Cooperation Agency said.

Western governments are under pressure from campaigners, including some US lawmakers, to halt or limit arms sales to Saudi Arabia as its forces fight in Yemen’s brutal civil war. But the United States, France and Britain continue to pursue lucrative deals to sell and maintain equipment in the kingdom’s vast, high-tech arsenal — and Riyadh is an avid client.

In theory, the US Congress could still block the latest deals announced Thursday, but on Tuesday the Senate voted down a bill to halt US support for the Saudi intervention in Yemen. These contracts are therefore now expected to be nodded through after the State Department and Pentagon gave the go-ahead and Trump publicly celebrated the prospect of the sales.

Saudi Arabia’s young crown prince and de facto ruler Mohammed Bin Salman is part-way through a three-week tour of America that has already taken him to friendly talks in Trump’s White House.
The largest of the three contracts is for 6,600 TOW 2B anti-tank missiles, made by US giant Raytheon. The next biggest covers spare parts and maintenance for the Saudi ground forces’ pool of US-built Abram tanks, Bradley fighting vehicles, LAV armoured vehicles, howitzers and Humvees. The last continues a support contract for the Saudi fleet of AH-64D and E Apache attack helicopters, UK-60L Black Hawk utility choppers and Schweizer and Bell scouts.

AFP