File photo: US soldiers walk next to a Patriot missile defence battery during join exercises at the military grouds in Sochaczew, near Warsaw |
Sweden will close a deal in the next few weeks with U.S. arms maker Raytheon Co to buy the Patriot air defence missile system as it modernises its armed forces amid heightened tensions with Russia.
Moscowโs brief war with Georgia in 2008 and its annexation of the Crimea Peninsula six years later has pushed Sweden, not a NATO member but with close ties to the alliance, to rebuild its armed forces after decades of neglect.
โWe are now done negotiating with the U.S. about Patriot and will now ask the governmentโs permission to sign the contract,โ said Joakim Lewin, head of the Army Design Office at the Swedish Materiel Administration (FMV), which procures and maintains equipment for the military.
The deal is initially worth around 10 billion crowns ($1.13 billion) and is the biggest military purchase since 2013 when Sweden started to upgrade 60 Saab Gripen fighters, a deal worth around 47 billion crowns.
Swedenโs current air defence system, which is over a decade old, cannot shoot down enemy ballistic robots.
According to Lewin, the Patriot deal includes four firing units, parts, training and an undisclosed number of missiles.
The contract also includes an option to expand the purchase to up to 300 missiles. If the option is used, the final bill will be around $3 billion, Lewin said.
Delivery is expected to start in 2021.
So far, 15 other countries have purchased the Patriots, including NATO members Germany, the Netherlands, Romania and Poland. Neutral Switzerland has said it is considering Patriot among other systems.
The Swedish government has until August 10th to make a final decision on the deal.