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Belgium Joins MQ-9B Operators Club
Tony Osborne April 11, 2023
Belgium has become the first international participant in the General Atomics MQ-9B SkyGuardian operators club established by the UK Royal Air Force (RAF).
The
MQ-9B International Cooperation Program (MICP) was formed by the RAF last year
for operators and potential future customers of the SkyGuardian family of
platforms, in a bid to foster cooperation between users.
Belgium’s
MQ-9B SkyGuardian medium-altitude, long-endurance uncrewed aircraft systems
will be virtually identical to the MQ-9B Protectors being acquired by the RAF
to replace MQ-9A Reapers currently in service.
These
similarities allow the MICP member nations to collaborate on certification and
airworthiness, training, sustainment, and future capability enhancements, RAF
officials state.
The
RAF established the MICP because the U.S.-developed UAS has not yet been
procured by one of the U.S. armed forces, so there is currently no MQ-9B
program of record, no program office, and no forum for enhancing cooperation.
The
arrangement has its roots in a letter of intent signed by the RAF’s chief of
the air staff, Air Chief Marshal Mike Wigston, and Belgian counterpart Maj.
Gen. Frederik Vansina in August 2020 looking at how the two air forces might
work together on training, maintenance, logistics support, interoperability and
capability enhancement.
“Thanks
to this collaboration, we can develop synergies that optimize the
interoperability and support of the SkyGuardian, creating economies of scale
for all participants. This is happening in various areas such as staff
training, certification and the development of future capabilities,” said Maj.
Gen. Ivan De Tender, head of the Public Procurement Division of Belgium’s
defense forces.
Belgium’s
accession to the MICP through a memorandum of understanding makes it a lead
nation in the arrangement, along with the UK. Six other nations are observers
to the MICP: Canada, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Lithuania and Norway.
Belgium
is buying four MQ-9B airframes and two ground control stations, with the
aircraft due to be based at Florennes airbase. The platform will replace
Belgium’s B-Hunter, a derivative of the Israel Aerospace Industries Hunter
tactical uncrewed aircraft system, which performs regular flights in Belgian
airspace, albeit segregated from other users. Once the MQ-9B is fully
certified, the Belgian air force hopes it can be operated in non-segregated
airspace.
Work
on the infrastructure to support the MQ-9Bs already is underway at the air
base, including areas for administration, operations and maintenance
facilities.
The
first deliveries to Belgium are expected in 2024.
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