The Jerusalem Post

Israel, Greece partner to build next-gen warship

Verbal agreement reached to manufactur­e six more corvettes for Hellenic Navy, Greek report says

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

Greek ONEX Neorion Shipyards and Israel Shipyards have signed a cooperatio­n agreement for the constructi­on of next-generation corvette ships, which will meet Athens’s needs for future naval warfare in the Eastern Mediterran­ean.

The agreement, which was signed during the recent visit by Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis to Israel on June 16, will see a Themistocl­es-class corvette be built based on plans by Haifa-based Israel Shipyards based.

According to local Greek media, there is a verbal agreement to build an additional six Themistocl­es-class corvettes in the near future. Naval

News reported that the ship will be partially built in Israel by Israel Shipyards – which will be sharing the relevant know-how – and partially in Greece by ONEX shipyards.

Quoting a source at Israel Shipyards, the design of Themistocl­es is “basically the same design” of Israel’s Sa’ar 72 mini-corvettes but with modificati­ons according to the needs of the Hellenic Navy.

The corvette can be used for open sea patrolling and surveillan­ce operations, Maritime Sovereignt­y protection, Off-Shore facilities protection, EEZ protection, anti-terror/ smuggling/illegal activity interdicti­on, Search and Rescue operations in coordinati­on with SAR Helicopter­s, participat­ion in Naval combat operations, Fishing protection and control, and more.

With a total length of 72 meters and a full displaceme­nt of about 800 tons, it will be able to reach a speed of over 30 knots with extended endurance of 21 days and a range of 5,000 nautical miles. It will be staffed by a crew of 45 and be able to carry up to 20 special forces personnel.

A medium-sized marine helicopter will be able to operate from the ship, which will also support the deployment of special forces units.

The vessel will have state-ofthe-art weapons and electronic systems that can be tailored to customer-specific requiremen­ts. It can accommodat­e advanced weapon configurat­ions such as launchers for anti-missile defense missiles, surface-to-surface missile launchers, a 76 mm naval gun, remotely a controlled stabilized naval gun system up to 30 mm, a Command and Control system, ESM & ECM, advanced multi-function search radar, heavy machine guns – 0.5” / 7.62 mm, and an advanced day and night vision system.

“The new design of the

Themistocl­es Corvette brings next-generation operationa­l capabiliti­es to future naval warfare,” read the website dedicated to the multipurpo­se vessel.

As tensions continue to escalate between Greece and Turkey, Athens has been working to strengthen its maritime capabiliti­es. In May Israel’s Defense Ministry signed an agreement with the Hellenic Ministry of National Defense to lease several IAI Heron UAVs to Greece for border defense.

According to Greek media, the two drones will be used to bolster the country’s intelligen­ce-gathering capabiliti­es and will act as a deterrent to Turkey, which has deployed drones to the Evros region and the Aegean Sea, which borders the two countries.

“The great security relations between Israel and Greece are expanding. We see great importance in the choice made by Greece to equip its forces with an Israeli system, particular­ly during the global corona crisis,” said the head of the Internatio­nal Defense Cooperatio­n Directorat­e (SIBAT), Brig.-Gen. (Ret.) Yair Kulas said at the time.

“This is a clear expression of confidence in the capabiliti­es and strength of the Israeli defense industry. We hope to sign additional agreements with Greece as well as other European partners, assisting them in addressing security challenges – in times of the coronaviru­s pandemic and beyond.”

 ?? (Themistocl­es-class corvette official website) ?? THE THEMISTOCL­ES-CLASS corvette will be partially built in Haifa by Israel Shipyards and partially in Greece by ONEX shipyards, a report said.
(Themistocl­es-class corvette official website) THE THEMISTOCL­ES-CLASS corvette will be partially built in Haifa by Israel Shipyards and partially in Greece by ONEX shipyards, a report said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel