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UAE May Fund Next-Gen Rafale

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UAE May Fund Next-Gen Rafale - Defense News



LONDON and PARIS - The United Arab Emirates and France are discussing a proposed joint effort to develop a more capable, new-generation Dassault Rafale strike fighter, sources in the Arabian Gulf and Europe said.

"The conversation has moved forward from buying the Rafale to how to co-develop the next-generation Rafale," a defense source in the Arabian Gulf said. The prospective new model would meet UAE requirements and "take the plane to the next level," the source said.

A co-development with a foreign customer and partner would be a big boost for the twin-engine fighter jet, which is seen in France as a jewel of aeronautical excellence and the crown of the country's arms-export efforts. Dassault Aviation has entered the Rafale in bidding for contracts in Brazil and India, and has offered it to Kuwait and Libya.

The UAE negotiations center on the systems and engine the upgraded aircraft would carry, the Gulf source said.

The main upgrades are said to be an active electronically scanned array radar, frontal sector optronics and an electronic warfare suite, systems supplied by Thales, and a 9-ton-thrust M88 engine, up-rated from the 7.5-ton engine that powers the French Air Force and Navy Rafales.

Last June, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the United Arab Emirates was in discussions to buy the Rafale, which Dassault bills as an omnirole fighter. The jets would replace the Mirage 2000-9s bought from France in 1998.

Some 50 French executives were in Abu Dhabi in the week of April 12 as part of the talks, an executive at a rival fighter maker said.

"I can confirm the first," said a French executive close to the discussions. "We are working flat out on negotiating the contract and ancillary contracts."

The executive confirmed that the negotiations go beyond just a purchase, and are aimed at agreeing on co-development of an advanced version of the Rafale.

"There are, effectively, discussions between the two governments on how to finance the additional functionality," the executive said.

The co-development work is expected to take years, he said, adding that whether the work will make the new variant a "next-generation" Rafale is a question of semantics.

The executive said industry is working on the technical definition of the aircraft, while the financial aspects are being negotiated at the government level.

A June date for concluding a deal "is possible, not guaranteed," he said.

A second French defense executive said of the negotiations, "All the lights are green."

A Dassault spokesman would not confirm that a joint development effort might be part of the UAE-French discussion about the possible purchase of Rafales.

"Talks are continuing," he said.
Fighter Swap?

One European executive with knowledge of the deal said Paris has agreed to buy back the Mirage 2000-9s and put them into service with the French Air Force, then put its Mirage 2000-5s on the secondhand market and retire the Mirage 2000N nuclear strike version.

Asked about the buyback of Mirage 2000-9s, the Gulf source said, "It is all linked."

Such a deal would be expensive, said Etienne de Durand, director of security studies at the Institut Français de Relations Internationales, a Paris think tank.

De Durand said Rafale export sales help fund the development of new capabilities, maintain design skills and keep French industry at the cutting edge of world fighter technology. That is why France is ready to agree to extensive technology transfer to sell the Rafale to Brazil, and why "smart arrangements" are being offered to the United Arab Emirates, he said.

But de Durand said that it often takes years to see whether the arrangements really do make sense. Maintenance of technological capabilities needs to be balanced against funding the operational needs of the armed forces, notably among middle-rank powers such as Britain and France, he said.

If the deal brings Mirage 2000-9s into the French Air Force, it could reduce the money available for buying and upgrading the Rafale, de Durand said.

Privately, French Air Force officials worry about taking in the 2000-9, which will mean operating and supporting a mixed fleet when the Rafale was intended to replace seven different types of aircraft in the Air Force and Navy.
Engine Upgrade

Snecma, which declined to comment on the talks, announced several months ago that it was considering developing a more powerful variant of its M88 engine for UAE Rafales.

In a press pack distributed at the Singapore Air Show in February, the French aircraft engine and equipment maker said, "For the UAE Air Force & Air Defense, which require more power for enhanced combat agility and improved performance in very hot weather, Snecma is considering the development of a more powerful variant of the M88 jet engine.

"Snecma has already demonstrated the feasibility of the 9-ton version of the M88, allowing for the design-related risks to be under control."

Snecma would adapt the M88, not design a new engine, the company said.
Ordering Advanced Arms

The United Arab Emirates is known for funding state-of-the-art fighter development. In a forerunner to the potential Rafale deal, the Emirates funded the development of the Block 60 variant of the U.S.-designed F-16, adding an active electronically scanned array radar, new engine, electronic warfare and infrared gear, better cockpit avionics and conformal fuel tanks.

The Gulf state also has a history of working with France to develop advanced military equipment.

The Damocles laser targeting pod was co-developed for the UAE Air Force's Mirage 2000-9 under the name Shehab. The French arms procurement office bought nine Damocles pods in 2008 for its Mirage 2000D and Rafale F3 aircraft.

If the Emirates does buy the Rafale, no immediate orders are expected for missile maker MBDA, as the Gulf nation has a stock of Mica air-to-air missiles and Black Shaheen cruise missiles for its Mirage 2000-9 fleet, which would be compatible with the Rafale.

The Dassault static display at the Paris Air Show last year included a Rafale with three mock-up cruise missiles, demonstrating its long-range strike capabilities.

Later market prospects for MBDA would come with the AASM guided propelled bomb and the Meteor beyond-visual-range missile. The long-range weapon is due to enter service with the French Air Force around the middle of the decade.

The United Arab Emirates has ordered three Airbus A330 multirole tanker and transport aircraft, and is potentially interested in buying more. The Abu Dhabi government bought France's Leclerc tank in the early 1990s, becoming the only export customer.

France last year opened a naval base in Abu Dhabi as part of a shift of its military strength to the Gulf and away from Africa. The Gulf region is seen as strategically important because of the transit of petroleum tanker ships through its waters, the perceived threat from Iran and the sovereign wealth funds that are based in the Gulf states. ■

can iaf get those 2000-9s ???? coz originally the french wanted rafale to be the single type retiring almost 9 different types of aircraft...i think not ..what do you think
 
can iaf get those 2000-9s ???? coz originally the french wanted rafale to be the single type retiring almost 9 different types of aircraft...i think not ..what do you think
Hmmm intresting but do IAF really need that ? I mean apart form MRCA we dont need that many aircrfact in our inventory.
 
That solves the INDIAN NAVY's Problem

For its NMRCA of 40-50 fighters -
Funding to build some of lacking essential in Rafale will not be headache of our's if sales of rafale happen right now to Brazil + UAE.
Even better if it wins Indian tender of air-force , but that is difficult considering other contenders and options.

Given Navy's choice is rafale and not F35/F18

As far as buying second hand Mirage is concerned , that is out of question .
It was a option in 2004-05 when Qatar tried to act smart and deal fell,
IAF ordered more Su30 and if falling nos bcoz of MMRCA is worry they will order more su30 . And LCA coming of successfully has completely closed this chapter
 
What makes you think that Pakistan.Largest operator of Mirage will let go of such a chance.
 
What makes you think that Pakistan.Largest operator of Mirage will let go of such a chance.

Pakistan will not go for M-2k9 no matter how good they are. At the moment PAF is fully concentrating on its on baby and trying to take it to the next level. If the deal with France for Avionics & Armament goes through, that will make the thunder better then M-2K9 standards. Going For UAEs Mirages will for surely castrate the on going development of JF-17, which we cannot afford and that's why PAF is not thinking on that lines. Apart from that we are also in for another new platform in the shape of FC-20 in a few years time, so literally no room left for M-2K9s, No way of finding fiances even if they cost cheap as rocks.

On a side note I even don't think IAF will go for them.

:pakistan:

Adios
 
I cant answer that - Its a matter of Air-force of Pakistan and their requirements.

As far as India is concerned , it dosen't fit in req of IAF rt now .
Plz check my prev post as i said 6-7 years back - Yes .
But rt now nope - IAF will simply order more Su30 and they did that when Qatar tried to act smart. And they will do it again if MMRCA is delayed for some reason.
 
What makes you think that Pakistan.Largest operator of Mirage will let go of such a chance.

nope.Pakistan can also try,my hope is uae had to get permission from France to sell these birds to Pakistan.and persons like Nahyan bin Mubarak Al Nahyan are not now at uae.
 
Pakistan will not go for M-2k9 no matter how good they are. At the moment PAF is fully concentrating on its on baby and trying to take it to the next level. If the deal with France for Avionics & Armament goes through, that will make the thunder better then M-2K9 standards. Going For UAEs Mirages will for surely castrate the on going development of JF-17, which we cannot afford and that's why PAF is not thinking on that lines. Apart from that we are also in for another new platform in the shape of FC-20 in a few years time, so literally no room left for M-2K9s, No way of finding fiances even if they cost cheap as rocks.

On a side note I even don't think IAF will go for them.

:pakistan:

Adios

Sir,

I remember the debate in that Mirage Thread.I mean please don't underestimate m2k9.The stuff we were trying to buy for thunders are already in m2k9.And who says that only PAF needs them.Maybe some sort of agreement between PAF and PN can be reached.If i am correct PN hasn't gone for shopping for more than a decade.and the way things are moving towards U214 deal.I think PN would have plenty of balance in their account.And this deal would also have the approval of 10%.

Do you have any idea how much they cost?


Rafale is a dead bird!!!! Its time is almost over. They market of 4th+ generation fighters almost tapped by SU-30, EFT and F-15. By 2015 when PAK FA arrives Rafale will be buried...

maybe 30-35.Anyways their value isn't worth more in present day.The advantage we have would be the desperation of french.
 
I don't know why but it seems to me that if this news is authentic.
PAF will consider the next generation rafale for induction.If funds not posed a problem to them.
JF-17 upgrade followed by Rafale purchase solves everything and french would not mind to upgrade the avionic suite of JF-17 after the rafale gets an upgrade and also PAF purchase it.Political relations with UAE may play a role as well.:pakistan:

I know my this post surely heading towards a postmortem:lol:
But it's just my thoughts.
 
Sir,

I remember the debate in that Mirage Thread.I mean please don't underestimate m2k9.The stuff we were trying to buy for thunders are already in m2k9.And who says that only PAF needs them.Maybe some sort of agreement between PAF and PN can be reached.If i am correct PN hasn't gone for shopping for more than a decade.and the way things are moving towards U214 deal.I think PN would have plenty of balance in their account.And this deal would also have the approval of 10%.

Hi,

Pak-Yes I know as like Mastan Sahib, you are also in love with these birds, and no disagreements about that. They are absolute beauties. But no matter how good they are, as i said earlier, it does not fit in the current bills.
I am not underestimating M-2k9s in anyway but trying to portray a realistic scenario. It is a fact that our needs already exceed our ragged pockets which force us to take careful and wise decisions of all the available options.
One question, which I now wanna ask you,(keeping the economics aside) is which extra capability M-2k9 gonna provide you which the current Thunders and Blk-52 are lacking?? Although no disagreements about their competencies in certain areas!

Having said that, PAF has made it crystal clear by opting for 14 extra Blk-52, that Mirages are a no go area for them. Other then that, You also wanna develop your Thunders soon(very soon) to the next level, are you willing to sacrifice their development for M-2k9s?? And then FC-20, another huge project (knocking at the doors) leaving other air and air-defense assets aside, Practically how are you going to find a place for them in our already over exceeding bills??

Remember when we bought PGs back in 2002-03, they did a good job in those days by beefing up the numbers but honestly speaking that was a mistimed and misplaced order. They cannot serve you for long in terms of Technological compatibility, although we would drag them till their airframes starts falling apart! These M-2k9s will be at the same cross roads from 7-8 years from now.

And then look at another aspect, the age of 5th generation has arrived, At-least 10 countries will arm themselves with 5th generation in the next decade, including your adversary. Although it kinda looks like a luxury right now but 10 years from now they will be a dire need to stay competitive. For us this decade practically holds no room to arm with 5th generation but post 2020 this would be a real challenge to bring them in. If India is inducting them in 2018 then Pakistan should be doing that or thinking to that in 2023, maximally five years gap or they will have a leap which we will never be able to cover up, so its necessary to start planning and saving for from right now and avoid all unnecessary purchases which can seriously dent our future plans.

:pakistan:

Regards!
 

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