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Old 02-01-2022, 07:57 AM
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Arrow Egypt inks $1.7 billion deal for K9 howitzers from South Korea

Egypt inks $1.7 billion deal for K9 howitzers from South Korea
By: Brian Kim & Agnes Helou - Defense News - 02-01-22
Re: https://www.defensenews.com/land/202...reaking%20News

Photo link: https://www.defensenews.com/resizer/...KHHRFLWIGM.jpg
K9 Thunder howitzers with the South Korean Army fire during a March 2011 drill. Egypt recently purchased the weapons. (Dong-a Ilbo/AFP via Getty Images)

SEOUL and BEIRUT — Hanwha Defense has signed the largest deal to export its K9 self-propelled howitzers and other support vehicles to Egypt, South Korea’s Defense Acquisition Program Administration announced Feb. 1.

The arms agency did not disclose the details of the deal, valued around $1.7 billion, but a source privy to the deal told Defense News that about 200 K9 artillery systems will be supplied to the Egyptian military, along with scores of support vehicles, such as the K10 ammunition resupply vehicles.

Under the deal, most of the artillery and vehicles are scheduled to be locally produced at Factory 200, a state-run defense manufacturing facility just outside the Egyptian capital, while an initial batch is to be delivered by Hanwha Defense, according to the source.

According to the DAPA, the signing ceremony was held at Artillery House in Cairo. The long-awaited deal goes back to at least 2009, when Egypt expressed interest in updating its artillery systems. But efforts were postponed for nearly a decade as the country underwent a revolt — part of what was dubbed the Arab Spring, a wave of pro-democratic protests, revolutions and civil wars in the region that began in 2011.

“The latest deal is the first export of the K9 Self-Propelled Howitzer to Africa following the artillery’s successful exports to European and Asia-Pacific nations,” DAPA said. “This is the largest K9 deal in scale, making Egypt the eighth country to operate the K9.”

Hanwha Defense, a land systems developer affiliated with Hanwha Group, participated in the Egypt Defence Expo from Nov. 29 to Dec. 2, during which it displayed its self-propelled gun. On the opening day of the show, Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi met with Son Jae-il, president and CEO of Hanwha Defense, to discuss bilateral cooperation, including the potential acquisition of the artillery systems.

At the time, the Egyptian presidential office said the meeting “reviewed opportunities to strengthen joint cooperation in light of the modern technological and manufacturing capabilities of the Korean company.”

Also in attendance were the minister of defense and military production, Gen. Mohamed Zaki; the head of the Armed Forces Financial Affairs Authority, Maj. Gen. Ahmed El-Shazly; and the director of the military’s Armament Authority, Maj. Gen. Osama Ezzat.

The K9 accounts for nearly 50 percent of the global self-propelled howitzer market, as it is in service with seven countries: South Korea, Turkey, Poland, India, Finland, Norway and Estonia. Australia recently signed a deal for the K9 under its Project LAND 8116 Phase 1.

The tracked artillery system meets NATO standards and can be deployed in a large range of environments, including snowy terrain and deserts.

Equipped with a 360-degree rotating turret, the 47-ton weapon has a firing range of 40 kilometers and moves as fast as 67 kph. Fitted with an automatic fire control system, the howitzer can fire within 30 seconds from a stationary position and within 60 seconds while on the move, with a burst rate of fire from six to eight rounds per minute.

Egypt’s land forces currently operate versions A2, A3 and A5 of the American-made M109 howitzer.

About the writer(s): Brian Kim and Agnes Helou
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Brian Kim is the South Korea correspondent for Defense News.
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Agnes Helou is a Middle East correspondent for Defense News. Her interests include missile defense, cybersecurity, the interoperability of weapons systems and strategic issues in the Middle East and Gulf region.
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Personal note: You can see where all the worlds money goes
to foreign supplies of Weapons Defense Purchases.
-
Today it seems "Defense is only as good as the weapons one has"
in their inventory. But I also see many of the suppliers are non-US
weapons - is it a price issue or quantity discount that gets the better
deal? US weapons seem to be a premium - whereas the foreign sales
are copies of the same US product - or close to it. Money talks
suppliers need the work and the money - to stay in the weapon sales
market. Waring supplies & materials are the biggest money makers today.
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Boats

O Almighty Lord God, who neither slumberest nor sleepest; Protect and assist, we beseech thee, all those who at home or abroad, by land, by sea, or in the air, are serving this country, that they, being armed with thy defence, may be preserved evermore in all perils; and being filled with wisdom and girded with strength, may do their duty to thy honour and glory; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

"IN GOD WE TRUST"
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