Indonesia has purchased more than £100 million worth of air defense equipment from Thales. (Thales Land & Air Systems)
The Indonesian Army has turned to the
British arm of Thales to plug a gap in its short-range air defenses with
a deal to purchase its Forceshield integrated system of vehicle-mounted
missiles and radars.
Under the deal, Thales operations in Britain
and France will equip five Indonesian Army batteries with Starstreak
missiles, ControlMaster200 radars and weapon coordination systems,
lightweight multiple launchers and RapidRanger weapon launchers, said
David Beatty, vice president for advanced weapon systems at Thales UK.
Beatty
said that although there are no options in the contract for additional
deliveries, “once we show we can deliver our solution and the customer
likes it, we hope to develop good relations for follow-on orders from
the Indonesian authorities.”
The purchase is the latest in a
string of orders aimed at modernizing the Indonesian Army. The military
is adding main battle tanks, 155mm artillery, infantry fighting
vehicles, and other weapons to its inventory.
The Indonesians also
purchased next-generation light anti-tank weapons developed by Saab for
the British and Swedish armies. The missiles are built by Thales at the
Northern Ireland weapon facilities that are also responsible for
Starstreak work.
The air defense deal is worth more than £100
million (US $164 million), said Thales, and includes an agreement with
Indonesian state-owned company PT LEN Industri to partner on integration
of some of the systems involved in the contract as well as future
collaboration in the military and civil sectors.
The deal being
announced this week is a combination of two contracts, one going back to
November 2011 with Indonesia to acquire the first of five required
batteries.
No deliveries were made under the earlier arrangement
and the delivery schedule being worked on by Thales combines the two
contracts, Beatty said.
The Thales executive said the company
hopes to get “deliveries of the man-portable elements of the weapon
underway this year but that equipment with longer lead times like the
ControlMaster200 medium-range air-defense radar would take longer and it
would take several years to deliver the complete integrated system.”
Starstreak
will provide air defense out to about 7 kilometers against ground
attack aircraft, pop-up attack helicopters, drones and cruise missiles
and is seen as a replacement for the longer range British Rapier missile
systems previously a mainstay of Indonesian anti-air capabilities.
Operating
at speeds in excess of Mach 3 and able to travel at more than a
kilometer a second, Starstreak is the fastest short-range surface-to-air
missile in the world. Britain, South Africa and most recently Thailand
are all operators of the laser beam-riding weapon.
Thales beat
Saab with its RBS-70-based air defense system, although earlier several
other weapons suppliers had shown an interest in the requirement,
including Poland and China.
The RapidRanger launcher and fire
control system equipped with four Starstreak missile tubes will be
integrated into the Spanish-designed Vamtac vehicle for the Indonesians.
The vehicle is similar in appearance to the Humvee.
A version of
the LandRover Defender will be used to mount a lightweight multiple
launcher version of Starstreak. The lightweight launcher can also be
used dismounted for firing off a man-portable tripod.
It’s the
first sale of an integrated turn-key air defense solution by Thales
since the company relaunched its offerings in the sector under the
ForceShield banner nearly two years ago.
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