Mideast Africa
Just
hours before Biden’s inauguration, the UAE and US come to a deal on F-35 sales
10
hours ago
A U.S. Air Force F-35A
assigned to the 4th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron prepares to taxi and take
off from Al Dhafra Air Base, United Arab Emirates, April 24, 2019. (Staff Sgt.
Chris Drzazgowski/U.S. Air Force)
This version
corrects the spelling of the secretary of state nominee’s first name to Antony.
WASHINGTON —The
United Arab Emirates on Jan. 20 signed off on a deal to purchase up to 50 F-35 joint strike
fighter aircraft and 18 MQ-9 Reaper drones from the United
States.
According to Reuters,
which broke the news, the agreement was one of the final acts of the Trump
administration, occurring just an hour before President Joe Biden was
inaugurated.
A source with
knowledge of the situation confirmed separately to Defense News that the U.S.
and UAE officials on Wednesday signed a letter of agreement, which
solidifies the terms of a foreign military sale between two nations.
The departments
of State and Defense did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The agreement
delineates the cost of the aircraft, technical specifications and the schedule
for F-35 deliveries to the UAE, people familiar with the deal told Reuters.
Those sources could not confirm when the first F-35 is due to be delivered to
Abu Dhabi, but stated that an initial proposal stipulated 2027 as one possible
date.
The UAE
deal was previously estimated at
a $23.37 billion value, including 50 F-35A fighters worth $10.4 billion, 18
MQ-9B drones worth $2.97 billion, and $10 billion worth of air-to-air and
air-to-ground munitions.
Those dollar
totals are expected to shift around during further negotiations with F-35 prime
contractor Lockheed Martin and MQ-9 maker General Atomics.
It’s unclear
whether the incoming administration will seek to undo the
deal. Biden’s pick for secretary of state, Antony Blinken, told reporters in
late October that the sale is “something we would look at very, very
carefully,” due to U.S. obligations to preserve Israel’s qualitative military
edge.
In December, the
Senate rejected an attempt to
block the sale, with Republicans largely voting to preserve the deal. The first
vote concerned the drones and munitions and failed 46-50, while the second
concerned the F-35s and fell 47-49.
Aaron Mehta
and Joe Gould in Washington contributed to this report.
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