Arab News

China ‘is driving use of armed drones in Middle East’

- AP Beirut UN humanitari­an coordinato­r for the Palestinia­n territorie­s A model of the Wing Loong II weaponized drone for the China National AeroTechno­logy Import & Export Corp. is displayed at a military drone conference in Abu Dhabi. File/AP

The use of armed drones in the Middle East, driven largely by sales from China, has grown significan­tly in the past few years with an increasing number of countries and other parties using them in regional conflicts to lethal effects, a new report said Monday.

The report by the Royal United Services Institute, or RUSI, found that more and more Mideast countries have acquired armed drones, either by importing them, or by building them domestical­ly like Israel, Iran and Turkey.

China has won sales in the Middle East and elsewhere by offering drones — otherwise known as UAVs or unmanned aerial vehicles — at lower prices and without the political conditions attached by the US.

The Associated Press reported earlier this year that countries across the Middle East locked out of purchasing US-made drones are being wooed by Chinese arms dealers, helping expand Chinese influence across a region vital to American security interest.

It noted the use of Chinese armed drones across Mideast battlefiel­ds, including in the war on Yemen, employed by the Emirati air force. Iran has also violated Israeli airspace with armed UAVs from bases in Syria, provoking armed Israeli response on the suspected bases.

The RUSI report, titled “Armed Drones in the Middle East: Proliferat­ion and Norms in the Region,” said that by capitalizi­ng on the gap in the market over the past few years, Beijing has supplied armed drones to several countries that are not authorized to purchase them from the US, and at a dramatical­ly cheaper price.

“China, a no-questions-asked exporter of drones, has played and is likely to continue playing a key role as a supplier of armed UAVs to the Middle East,” it said.

The report explored where and how each of the states have used their armed drones and whether they have changed the way these countries approach air power. It found that Iran, the UAE and Turkey all changed the way they employ airpower after they acquired armed drones.

For Turkey and the UAE, armed drones enabled them to conduct strikes in situations where they would not have risked using convention­al aircraft, it said. Iran developed armed drones from the outset specifical­ly to project power beyond the reach of its air force, which is hamstrung by obsolete aircraft and sanctions, the report added.

The report said it remains to be seen whether and how the loosening of restrictio­ns on the exportatio­n of armed drones by the Trump administra­tion will alter dynamics in the region. The administra­tion in April permitted US manufactur­ers to directly market and sell drones, including armed versions, although the government must still approve and license the sales.

Anizeh Bassiri Tabrizi, who authored the report along with Justin Bronk, said proliferat­ion of armed drones in the Middle East is unlikely to stop and could in fact accelerate despite the changes introduced by the US administra­tion.

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 ?? Jamie McGoldrick ?? “We have taken this humanitari­an response plan to the most focused and prioritize­d it could possibly be.”
Jamie McGoldrick “We have taken this humanitari­an response plan to the most focused and prioritize­d it could possibly be.”

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