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Netherlands
doubles order of MQ-9 Reaper drones, plans to arm them
Aug 29, 01:53 PM
A U.S. Air Force MQ-9 Reaper comes in
for a landing at Creech Air Force Base, Nevada, on March 16, 2023. The drone
has found customers in Europe, with the Netherlands recently topping up a
previous order. (Airman 1st Class Ariel O’Shea/Air Force)
MILAN
— The Netherlands is set to receive four additional MQ-9 Reaper drones that
will carry guided bombs and missiles.
More
than a decade after launching the process to buy MQ-9A Reapers from General
Atomics Aeronautical Systems, the Dutch government announced it will not only
double its order but also arm them for the first time.
“When
the [Ministry of Defence] started the project in 2011, there was no need to arm
the aircraft yet. However, the threat picture has changed considerably since
then. The aircraft must now be able to protect the safety of its own troops,”
Defence Secretary Christophe van der Maat wrote in a
letter to parliament in May.
The
Netherlands first signed a deal to purchase four unarmed MQ-9A Reaper Block 5
drones from the General Atomics division in 2018 that were solely intended for
intelligence-gathering and surveillance missions. The U.S. company delivered
the initial batch and associated ground control stations last year.
The
MoD now plans to upgrade these systems to carry GBU-12 laser-guided bombs and
AGM-114 Hellfire II air-to-surface missiles. The latter currently equip the
AH-64 helicopters operated by the Royal Netherlands Air Force.
The
Netherlands will buy the weapons from the U.S. government through the Foreign
Military Sales program, and the package will cost between $108 million and $270
million, van der Maat said in his statement.
The
aim is to have the first ammunition ready for initial deployment by 2025 so it
can fully deploy in 2028.
On
Aug. 21, General Atomics Aeronautical Systems confirmed in a news release that
the Air Force was doubling the number of MQ-9As on order, taking the total
quantity from four to eight unmanned aircraft. According to the manufacturer,
with this new set of capabilities, the Netherlands will have the most capable
set of Block 5 drones in the world.
“The
expansion to eight aircraft will enable the Dutch MoD to support international
missions on more than one axis, giving it the capability to operate the
aircraft from one main operating base and two forward operating bases
simultaneously,” Tom van Hout, a spokesperson for the ministry, told Defense News.
“The sensor capacity of the platforms will also be improved with maritime
surveillance radar and electronic support measures pods.”
The
drones will be based and flown from the main operating location of Leeuwarden
Air Base, and operated by the 306 Squadron. Van Hout noted that subject matter
experts and liaison officers of the Royal Netherlands Navy will also support
this squadron in specific naval operations.
The
Dutch Reapers are not certified to fly in civil airspace alongside routine air
traffic, but van Hout said the manufacturer “and partners” are working on this
capability.
Appetite for change
European
countries have wrestled with the question of buying armed drones for years. As
a result, most countries’ forces were only allowed to deploy unarmed drones for
reconnaissance.
But
evolving threats as well as Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February
2022 triggered a wider appetite for arms and a change in defense policies.
In
April 2022, Germany’s parliamentary Defence Committee approved for the first
time the purchase of missiles to arm Israeli-made Heron TP drones.
In
January 2023, Greece announced it
is locally building its first combat drone, the Grypas, of which a scaled
version is expected in 2025.
And
while there has long been talk that Spain might arm its fleet of Reapers, there
has been no official confirmation. Nonetheless, in July the Spanish
government approved the purchase of
nine Airbus-made SIRTAP packages, 27 drones total, that can conduct armed
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance missions, according to Spanish
news outlet Infodefensa.
Prior
to this, in 2021, Italy revealed its intention to arm its Reapers, allocating
$69 million for the effort over the next seven years.
Additionally,
although France operates armed MQ-9s, it unveiled its new French-made Aarok
combat drone at the 2023 Paris Air Show, which could rival the Reaper.
Belgium,
however, has a large number of government officials who remain opposed to
arming the country’s MQ-9B fleet based on ethical issues.
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