Anuncio 2
Colapsar
Anuncio
Colapsar
No hay anuncio todavía.
Fuerzas Armadas de Egipto
Colapsar
X
-
Fuerzas Armadas de Egipto
Espérame y yo volveré, pero espérame mucho.
Espérame cuando las tristes lluvias lleguen y cuando el calor llegue, no dejes de esperar
Espérame aun cuando de lejos mis cartas no lleguen más
Espérame y yo volveré para que la muerte rabie
No comprenderán jamás los que jamás han esperado, cómo tú del fuego me salvaste
Es que sencillamente me esperaste como nunca nadie me esperó.
-Konstantin Simonov-Etiquetas: Ninguno
-
-
Originalmente publicado por Arquitecto Ver Mensaje
France announced Thursday it will sell 24 Rafale fighters plus a frigate to Egypt in a 5 billion euro ($5.7 billion) deal that marks the first foreign contract for the multi-role combat jet. French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian will travel to Cairo on Monday to sign the contact with…
France clinches first foreign sale of Rafale jets with Egypt contract
By Agence France-Presse on Friday, February 13th, 2015
France announced Thursday it will sell 24 Rafale fighters plus a frigate to Egypt in a 5 billion euro ($5.7 billion) deal that marks the first foreign contract for the multi-role combat jet.
French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian will travel to Cairo on Monday to sign the contact with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, a ministry source told AFP.
“The Rafale fighter jet has won its first export contract,” French President Francois Hollande said in a statement issued by his office.
“The signing will take place in Cairo on February 16. I have asked the defence minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, to sign on behalf of France,” he added.
The military hardware would “allow Egypt to increase its security and assume its full role in the service of regional stability,” Hollande said.
The Rafale jets are built by French manufacturer Dassault Aviation and have been used by the French air force in Libya and Mali.
Landing the contract will come as a relief to Dassault Aviation, which had yet to land a single foreign sale after nearly three decades of development that cost tens of billions of euros.
Dassault Aviation has been locked in negotiations to sell 126 Rafale jets to India since 2012, without making much progress.
In another setback, France in 2013 failed to convince Brazil to buy its Rafale jets, losing out to Sweden’s Saab in a multi-billion dollar contract.
The French government initially agreed to buy 11 Rafales a year for its air force to help the program. But in a bid to curb public spending it has since moved to scale back the number to only 26 planes in the next six years.
Comentario
-
-
Originalmente publicado por Goliath Ver MensajeSe concretó el deal. Francia anunció el acuerdo, y el contrato se firma el lunes 16 de este mes.
Y a mí que me habían dicho que Francia "ha minado su credibilidad como proveedor fiable y serio", "se ha puesto la soga al cuello y se está tocando la viablidad del Rafale", y -desde la otra tribuna- que "el Rafale se desempeñó pobremente en Libia, y no pudo ni iluminar blancos".
Interesante que de esos 24 cazas, dos tercios (16 en total) vayan a ser biplazas Rafale B, lo cual sugiere que la función primaria de los mismos será ataque a suelo (nada mal para el avión que se desempeñó "pobremente" en el rol durante la campaña de Libia, ¿eh?)
Saludos"Cada mentira que decimos incurre en una deuda con la verdad. Tarde o temprano, esa deuda se paga" - Valery Legasov, 'Chernobyl'
Comentario
-
-
Con todo lo que esté pasando en el Medio Oriente, cuelgo esta noticia acé antes que pase desapercibida: Egipto compró las Mistral.
France has agreed to sell two Mistral helicopter carriers to Egypt for 950 million Euros after their sale to Russia was canceled in August, French officials said on Wednesday.
French Mistral helicopter carriers, originally for Russia, sold to Egypt
France has agreed to sell two Mistral helicopter carriers to Egypt for 950 million Euros after their sale to Russia was canceled in August, French officials said on Wednesday.
Cairo has sought to boost its military power in the face of a two-year insurgency based across the Suez Canal in the Sinai peninsula and fears the conflict in neighbouring Libya could spill over. Egypt's allies are also keen to burnish its image in a region beset by turmoil.
“We unwound the contract we had with Russia, on good terms, respectful of Russia and not suffering any penalty for France,” Hollande told reporters on his arrival at an EU summit in Brussels.
”Yesterday, I agreed the price and conditions of this sale with (Egyptian) President Abdel Fattah al- Sisi and so France will ensure the delivery of these ships without losing anything, while helping protect Egypt.“
A French defence ministry source said the contract was worth about 950 million euros, but unlike the deal with Moscow would not include any technology transfer. As of yet there had been no talks on the potential armament for the carrier, which can hold up to 16 helicopters and 1,000 troops.
”The ships should be handed over in early March after the training of about 400 Egyptians and some final tests,“ the source said.
A diplomatic source said Cairo wanted to base one ship in the Mediterranean and another in the Red Sea, making it available for future operations in Yemen, where Egypt is part of a Saudi-led coalition fighting Houthi rebels.
The French government agreed to reimburse 950 million euros to Moscow last month after the Mistral sale to Russia was canceled as a result of the Ukraine crisis.
The deal with Egypt comes as France has nurtured new links with Sunni Arab states, which appreciate its tough stance on their Shi'ite rival Iran and similar positions on the region's conflicts.
France has also benefited from what some Gulf countries perceive as disengagement from a traditional ally, the United States. Apparently the deal most likely will be part-financed by Gulf Arab states.
Egypt and Saudi Arabia agreed at the end of July to work together to create a joint Arab military force.
The Mistral is known as the ”Swiss army knife” of the French navy for its versatility. The sale will take the number of French naval vessels sold to Egypt to seven in just two years.
Egypt last year bought four small Gowind warships, built by Mistral manufacturer DCNS, which is 64% owned by the French state and 35% by defense group Thales. It also acquired a French frigate as part of a 5.2 billion Euro contract for 24 Rafale warplanes earlier this year, France's first overseas export of the fighter jet.
Comentario
-
Anuncio 3
Colapsar
Comentario