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Israeli-American commercial war in the defense industry
On August 2002 I wrote about the unfair measures the Americans are
enacting in order to get contracts for their military industry. I wrote about the American tactic of participating in the funding of military projects in order to choke them later. A quote of mine from the Aug 2002 discussion: "the Lavi was a classic case and I hope the arrow ABM wouldn't be another one." Link to this Aug 2002 thread: http://groups.google.com/groups?q=g:...le.com&rnum=10 Now it appears that indeed, the US vetoed the sale of the Israeli developed Arrow missiles to India in order to sale the American patriot missiles instead. Don't be surprised if the US will brutally act to block similar Arrow deals to Japan or other countries that are under a direct missile threat. http://www.menewsline.com/stories/20...y/01_22_2.html WASHINGTON [MENL] -- India appears to have abandoned plans to procure the Israeli-origin Arrow-2 missile defense system. U.S. officials said India was told by the Bush administration that the United States would not permit the sale of the Arrow-2, developed with Washington in a joint project over the last 15 years. The officials said the range of the Arrow-2 medium-tier system would affect the balance of power with neighboring Pakistan. Instead, the Defense Department has offered India the Patriot Advanced Capability, or PAC-3 system for New Dehli's missile defense requirements. Officials said India relayed a formal request for the PAC-3 in September as part of a proposal that New Dehli join a U.S.-led missile defense umbrella. Officials said the sale of the PAC-3 system to India is probable but not certain. They said the State Department and Congress want firm assurances that India will not transfer U.S. missile technology to any third country, particularly Iran. |
#2
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"Quant" wrote in message om... On August 2002 I wrote about the unfair measures the Americans are enacting in order to get contracts for their military industry. I wrote about the American tactic of participating in the funding of military projects in order to choke them later. A quote of mine from the Aug 2002 discussion: "the Lavi was a classic case and I hope the arrow ABM wouldn't be another one." Link to this Aug 2002 thread: http://groups.google.com/groups?q=g:...le.com&rnum=10 Now it appears that indeed, the US vetoed the sale of the Israeli developed Arrow missiles to India in order to sale the American patriot missiles instead. Don't be surprised if the US will brutally act to block similar Arrow deals to Japan or other countries that are under a direct missile threat. Gee, you would not be whining if you developed these kind of systems with your own money, would you? Break off your relaiance on US aid money and then you can chart your own course free of US involvment--until then, life is a bitch when the US decides that Arrow has too great a range for the sensitive Indo-Pakistani region at present (and consider yourself lucky that we did not sit on that recent sale of the Phalcon radar to India, where we had to sell the Pakistanis some radar aerostats to maintain some level of balance between the two sides). Maybe you can sell it to the PRC, like you did the Python AAM? Brooks snip |
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On Mon, 26 Jan 2004 13:08:34 -0500, "Kevin Brooks"
wrote: Gee, you would not be whining if you developed these kind of systems with your own money, would you? Break off your relaiance on US aid money and then you can chart your own course free of US involvment--until then, life is a bitch when the US decides that Arrow has too great a range for the sensitive Indo-Pakistani region at present (and consider yourself lucky that we did not sit on that recent sale of the Phalcon radar to India, where we had to sell the Pakistanis some radar aerostats to maintain some level of balance between the two sides). Maybe you can sell it to the PRC, like you did the Python AAM? There's a point there, but OTOH the original poster does have a fair point, too. America treats her allies really, really shabbily on things like this; I understand WHY (hell, I go to college thanks to US combat vehicle headsets, including FMS), but it still seems shabby. We can, and should, let the Israelis and our European allies have a fair shot in situations like this. Why? 1) It may well be better. (See Arrow, purpose-designed for ABM work. Personally, I would actually prefer it if the US adopted Arrow; it seems to be a plain better piece of equipment for the task.) 2) It makes the inevitable disagreements easier to bear; it's a lot easier to agree not to sell to, say, the PRC, if you know that you at least have a fair playing field in other sales competitions. 3) It lets our allies develop their defense industries. (It's forgotten that mostly, the reason Israel and similar countries depend on US aid money is because they can't dev their own local sources. Why can't they do that? Because they can't recoup their costs in the ever-more-important export market when they compete against the US, who then forces them NOT to compete.) So, Kevin...if you want the Israelis not to depend on US aid or not to sell to the PRC, you have to quit hamstringing them, and actually make it possible for them to win vs the US on the export markets. John |
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"Penta" wrote in message ... On Mon, 26 Jan 2004 13:08:34 -0500, "Kevin Brooks" wrote: Gee, you would not be whining if you developed these kind of systems with your own money, would you? Break off your relaiance on US aid money and then you can chart your own course free of US involvment--until then, life is a bitch when the US decides that Arrow has too great a range for the sensitive Indo-Pakistani region at present (and consider yourself lucky that we did not sit on that recent sale of the Phalcon radar to India, where we had to sell the Pakistanis some radar aerostats to maintain some level of balance between the two sides). Maybe you can sell it to the PRC, like you did the Python AAM? There's a point there, but OTOH the original poster does have a fair point, too. America treats her allies really, really shabbily on things like this; I understand WHY (hell, I go to college thanks to US combat vehicle headsets, including FMS), but it still seems shabby. We can, and should, let the Israelis and our European allies have a fair shot in situations like this. Why? In the case of the Europeans, no problem--they are paying their own way and will do as they so desire. But as long as we are footing the bill for programs like Arrow, then we get the right to decide who they can be sold to. There is no real comparison between how we deal with European armament sales and how we can, and should, deal with sales from Israel. If Israel wants to be its own independent little armory for whoever has the resources to buy on a cash-and-carry basis, fine--as long as Israel is the one paying the development bills. If the US taxpayer is subsidizing the Israeli efforts, then tough luck, our "interference" is the cost of taking our money. Imagine the possibility of Israel announcing they wanted to sell Arrow to the PRC--would it be right to allow them to do so after we bankrolled its development? Nope. 1) It may well be better. (See Arrow, purpose-designed for ABM work. Personally, I would actually prefer it if the US adopted Arrow; it seems to be a plain better piece of equipment for the task.) The article notes that the US is concerned over giving Arrow, with its greater range, to a nuclear nation that is involved in a current bout of "missile diplomacy" with another nuclear armed state. Personally I can understand our reluctance to contribute to, or even possibly contribute to, any imbalancing of the delicate status quo that currently exists between India and Pakistan. I'll bet that the US will in the end only sell Patriot to India if they also allow Pakistan to buy it--it is in our interest to maintain the staus quo, as we saw when we allowed pakistan to buy those airborne radars to offset the Indian purchase of Phalcon from Israel. 2) It makes the inevitable disagreements easier to bear; it's a lot easier to agree not to sell to, say, the PRC, if you know that you at least have a fair playing field in other sales competitions. So you are saying we should allow Israel to sell Arrow to any nuclear nation that is involved in a "brinkmanship"-like period of relations with another nuclear armed nation? I disagree. 3) It lets our allies develop their defense industries. (It's forgotten that mostly, the reason Israel and similar countries depend on US aid money is because they can't dev their own local sources. Why can't they do that? Because they can't recoup their costs in the ever-more-important export market when they compete against the US, who then forces them NOT to compete.) I'd hesitate to label a nation that has already sold advanced (compared to what they currently had) AAM's to, and tried to sell an advanced AWACS to, and currently is trying to sell an advanced fighter radar and helmet mounted sight system to, the PRC as an "ally". The same nation that has been identified by the US government as being one of the bigger espionage threats to the US, to boot. Just my opinion, though. So, Kevin...if you want the Israelis not to depend on US aid or not to sell to the PRC, you have to quit hamstringing them, and actually make it possible for them to win vs the US on the export markets. If they want to win versus the US in that international marketplace, they have to compete *on their own*, not with our subsidies. As long as we are paying the piper, we get to call the tune. Brooks John |
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On Mon, 26 Jan 2004 17:22:09 -0500, "Kevin Brooks"
wrote: The article notes that the US is concerned over giving Arrow, with its greater range, to a nuclear nation that is involved in a current bout of "missile diplomacy" with another nuclear armed state. Personally I can understand our reluctance to contribute to, or even possibly contribute to, any imbalancing of the delicate status quo that currently exists between India and Pakistan. I'll bet that the US will in the end only sell Patriot to India if they also allow Pakistan to buy it--it is in our interest to maintain the staus quo, as we saw when we allowed pakistan to buy those airborne radars to offset the Indian purchase of Phalcon from Israel. You misinterpreted what I said, perhaps understandably. I meant to say that, perhaps, the US should give a fair shot to foreign suppliers for our own forces. Also, I'm not talking about China. I'm talking about the side cases, like the Philippines, Singapore, etc. John |
#6
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"Penta" wrote in message news On Mon, 26 Jan 2004 17:22:09 -0500, "Kevin Brooks" wrote: The article notes that the US is concerned over giving Arrow, with its greater range, to a nuclear nation that is involved in a current bout of "missile diplomacy" with another nuclear armed state. Personally I can understand our reluctance to contribute to, or even possibly contribute to, any imbalancing of the delicate status quo that currently exists between India and Pakistan. I'll bet that the US will in the end only sell Patriot to India if they also allow Pakistan to buy it--it is in our interest to maintain the staus quo, as we saw when we allowed pakistan to buy those airborne radars to offset the Indian purchase of Phalcon from Israel. You misinterpreted what I said, perhaps understandably. I meant to say that, perhaps, the US should give a fair shot to foreign suppliers for our own forces. We do, to the point of even having a program that specifically targets foreign products for US evaluation and purchase (Foreign Competitive Testing Program); the most recent list of products just hit the street: http://www.defenselink.mil/releases/...0123-0928.html Note that list is only for the current year's batch--ongoing testing and in some cases purchases continue form the past years' lists. You'll note an Israeli product or two on that current list. We have bought tactical bridges from the UK, small arms form the Italians and Germans, etc. I believe even the AT-4 stems from a Swedish product, IIRC. And IIRC we purchased mineclearing apparatus from Israel. My only personal encounter with Israeli products was a batch of .45 cal pistol ammo from IMI we came across back in the late eighties--it did NOT receive a very complimentary review (it hrepeatedly jammed in my old Remington manufactured M1911A1 that had never before, or did later, exhibit that characteristic with other ammo). Brooks Also, I'm not talking about China. I'm talking about the side cases, like the Philippines, Singapore, etc. John |
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