Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Greece lending Saudi missile battery

To protect critical energy infrastruc­ture from terrorist threats

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RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AFP) — Greece will lend a Patriot missile battery to Saudi Arabia to protect its critical energy infrastruc­ture, Greek officials said Tuesday, as the Gulf kingdom grapples with growing attacks by Yemen’s Huthi rebels.

Saudi Arabia, the top crude exporter which leads a military coalition against the Huthis, relies heavily on US-made Patriots to intercept missiles and drones fired at the kingdom on a near daily basis by the Iran-aligned rebels.

“We signed the agreement to transfer a Patriot battery here in Saudi Arabia,” Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias said in a statement during a visit to Riyadh with Defense Minister Nikos Panagiotop­oulos.

In a separate statement, Panagiotop­oulos said the Patriot would be “deployed in the coming period and operate on Saudi Arabian soil... to protect critical energy infrastruc­ture from terrorist threats.”

There was no immediate comment from Saudi authoritie­s, who have not disclosed how many Patriots the kingdom currently has.

The announceme­nt comes after the United States announced in May last year that it was pulling out four of its Patriots from Saudi Arabia.

Two of those anti-missile batteries were deployed following September 2019 attacks on two Saudi oil installati­ons, strikes that caused turmoil on global energy markets after they temporaril­y halved the kingdom’s crude output.

Although the Huthi rebels claimed responsibi­lity, Riyadh and Washington held Iran responsibl­e, a charge Tehran denied.

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