Gulf News

Riyadh shows strong interest in robotic warfare systems

Demand for weapons that can be controlled from kilometres away are on the rise in the region

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Saudi Arabia is showing strong interest in autonomous weapons systems, said Kuldar Vaarsi, Chairman of the Board of Milrem, an Estonian defence company that specialise­s in robotic warfare systems.

“Speaking modestly, there is a very high interest in Saudi. There is also interest across the entire Gulf, specifical­ly Oman and Qatar,” said Vaarsi in an interview yesterday.

According to a report released by Deloitte in January 2017, several GCC countries spend a significan­t percentage of their GDP on defence, with Oman and Saudi Arabia being two of the top three. Saudi Arabia and the UAE remain the Middle East’s top spenders overall, with IHS Jane’s Annual Defence Budgets Report listing them at numbers 5 and 14 respective­ly globally.

On Monday, Milrem signed a letter of intent with the UAEbased Internatio­nal Golden Group (IGG) to develop and arm unmanned ground vehicles (UGV) at Idex, the defence exhibition in Abu Dhabi.

“Warfightin­g is moving very strongly towards autonomous systems. However, for some period of time, a human has to be in the loop — you need a soldier pressing the fire button,” Vaarsi said.

The THeMIS, designed by Milrem, is the world’s first fully modular hybrid UGV, meaning it can have different weapons swapped on and off the top. “The soldier operating the THeMIS can be up to 2km away. That means the soldier is very safe, operating the system at a distance via camera,” he added.

Letter of intent

The letter of intent is to develop the concept further, and actually start testing it with the UAE Armed Forces, according to Vaarsi.

“The partnershi­p with IGG is a very good collaborat­ion for us, and it will take our systems in to action with the armed forces.”

This, he hopes, will lead to an order.

“This is the beginning of the road to a sale,” he said. “We have met the expectatio­n of the market, and our solution has hit the perfect spot that the market is looking for.”

In a survey of defence executives in 2014, consultanc­y McKinsey found that half of those polled saw unmanned equipment as a product most ripe for disruption by nontraditi­onal players.

Whilst unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) feature prominentl­y in the arsenals of many countries, UGV’s have yet to feature to the same degree on the battlefiel­d.

“These are very affordable solutions, hard to detect on the battlefiel­d, and very dangerous. They reduce the need for manpower, and most importantl­y, they take soldiers out of harm’s way.”

“There is a very good understand­ing of UGVs in the region,” Vaarsi added.

 ?? Abdul Rahman/Gulf News ?? Visitors look at the rocket launcher Vampire 4D on display at the Czech Republic Pavilion.
Abdul Rahman/Gulf News Visitors look at the rocket launcher Vampire 4D on display at the Czech Republic Pavilion.
 ?? Courtesy: Milrem ?? THeMIS, designed by Milrem, an Estonian defence company, is the world’s first fully modular hybrid UGV, meaning it can have different weapons swapped on and off the top.
Courtesy: Milrem THeMIS, designed by Milrem, an Estonian defence company, is the world’s first fully modular hybrid UGV, meaning it can have different weapons swapped on and off the top.

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