Qatar could delay $6bn deal for missile defence systems
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Qatar could delay $6bn deal for missile defence systems

Qatar could delay $6bn deal for missile defence systems

Budgetary pressures may delay the sale, according to manufacturer Lockheed Martin’s chief executive

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Qatar could delay its $6bn purchase of two missile-defence systems due to budgetary concerns, according to reports.

The Wall Street Journal cited manufacturer Lockheed Martin’s chief executive Marilyn Hewson as saying a delay in the sale of the Thaad systems was possible.

The country is expected to run a budget deficit of QAR 46.5bn ($12.7bn) this year due to lower revenues from hydrocarbons.

The THAAD deal includes two fire units, 12 THAAD launchers, 150 THAAD interceptors, two THAAD fire controls and communications, two AN/TPY-2 THAAD radars, and one early warning radar, according to a 2012 Defense Security Cooperation Agency report.

Strategic Defense Intelligence forecast military spending in Qatar reached $3.8bn last year and was projected to grow at a CAGR of 12.2 per cent over the next five years to reach $7bn by 2020.

In its 2015 report, the company said 87 per cent of defence imports to Qatar since 2009 had come from United States companies.

The country announced $23bn of potential defence procurement projects in 2014, according to IHS.

(Photo courtesy of Lockheed Martin)


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