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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, March 30, 2017
China's Saudi drone factory compensates for US ban
Long-time
US ally looks east to develop own drone arsenal as part of $60 billion
package also including agreement to co-operate on moon mission
Saudi Arabia's King Salman meets Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing (Reuters)
Wednesday 29 March 2017
China has struck a surprise deal to manufacture military drones at a factory in Saudi Arabia.
It forms part of a suite of agreements totalling $60 billion agreed
during King Salman's visit to the country last month that will also see
the two countries develop oil refineries and co-operate on China’s Chang
E-4 moon mission.
The deal comes as Saudi Arabia and its Gulf neighbours continue an
unprecedented rush for arms to cope with what they see as a number of
counter-terrorism threats across the region.
Meanwhile, long-standing ally, the United States shows no sign of
granting those countries access to its own military drone technology.
A Chinese-made Pterodactyl unmanned aerial vehicle at a military parade in Beijing in 2015(AFP)
"For a long time, China and Islamic countries have respected each other
and had win-win cooperation, and have created a model of the peaceful
coexistence of different cultures," Xi said, according to China's Foreign Ministry.
The factory, China’s first in the Middle East, will produce state-owned
China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation's (CASC) CH-4
Caihong, or "Rainbow" drone as well as associated equipment, which would
improve after-sales services for clients in the Middle East.
China plugs arms gap left by US
The conflicts in Syria and Yemen and the rise of the Islamic State (IS)
group have led countries in the region to increase their arms imports by
86 percent over the past five years, accounting for 29 percent of
global imports, according to the Stockholm Peace Research Institute.
Saudia Arabia has become the world's second-largest arms importer, yet
the United States, its closest ally and main exporter of arms, refuses
to sell its Predator and Reaper drones which go only to a small number
of European nations.
The Saudis also felt incensed when last December then-US President Barak
Obama blocked an arms shipment to Saudi Arabia after concerns were
raised in Congress over civilian casualties in the Saudi-led war in
Yemen.
This is despite the US waging a controversial drone campaign to take out
what it sees as suspected al-Qaeda targets in Yemen for more than a
decade.
Saudi has since turned to China, who unlike the US, is not signatory to
the international Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) and so has fewer restrictions
on the sale of drone technology.
Chinese drones are cheaper too.
The CH-4 costs $4 million while a low-end Chinese drone can cost about
$1 million. On the other hand, American Reaper drones can cost in excess
of $17 million. Added to this a slump in world oil prices and it's
easier to see why the CH-4 has become the killer drone of choice for
countries across the Middle East.
“The CH-4 has recorded outstanding performance in anti-terrorist attacks
in Iraq, Yemen, as well as in Africa’s Sudan, Ethiopia and China’s
neighbouring Pakistan,” Zhou Chenming, who previously worked for CASC’s
drone-development subsidiary, told the South China Post newspaper.
“That’s why our Saudi friends are so interested in the drone cooperation project,” he added.
It is believed that Saudi Arabia and UAE have used it for airstrikes in
Yemen. Last year the Iraqi defence ministry released a video of a CH-4
strike on a car belonging to alleged IS fighters in Iraq.
The CH-4 has a range of about 3,500km and can carry the AR-1
precision-guided missile that can hit a distant target with a margin of
error of less than 1.5 metres.
At the launch last month of a report assessing the military and defence
capabilities of countries across the world, John Chipman, Director of
the International Institute of Strategic Studies said, according to
AFP: "an emerging threat for deployed Western forces is that
with China looking to sell more abroad, they may confront more advanced
military systems, in more places, and operated by a broader range of
adversaries."
The report found that in terms of air power "China appears to be reaching near-parity with the West".
China's growing role in Middle East
Despite Chinese arms accounting for under one percent of Saudi Arabian
arms imports, arms deals were central to formalising of Saudi
Arabian-Chinese relations.
In 1988 China sold $3.5 billion worth of state-of-the-art
nuclear-capable ballistic missiles to Saudi Arabia, and two years later
the oil-rich kingdom cut-off diplomatic ties with Taiwan and formally
recognised Beijing.
Despite its reliance on the region for oil, China has traditionally
played a little role in Middle East conflicts or diplomacy. This has
begun to change with China trying to get more involved in efforts to end
Syria's six-year-old civil war, where Riyadh supports rebels fighting
President Bashar al-Assad.
China has also offered support for Yemen’s embattled government, which
is backed by a Saudi-led Gulf Arab coalition in a war against the
Iranian-aligned Houthi movement.
But China will be mindful to tread a careful line as it also enjoys a
close relationship with Iran. Xi visited both China and Iran in January
last year.
One Beijing-based diplomat from a Muslim-majority country told Reuters that
China was trying to play the role of “honest broker” in the Middle East
as it lacks the historical baggage of the Americans or Europeans.