Posted on 11/19/2015 5:21:07 AM PST by sukhoi-30mki
The tragedy of Paris this past weekend may eventually prove to have been the beginning of the end for the Al-Baghdadi Gang in Al-Raqqah.
Wantonly attacking the citizens of two UN Security Council members in a week wasn't just heinous, it was stupid. So if the Coalition air forces have been running through a lot of ordnance pummeling troops and infrastructure, the pace is only stepping up. Getting them the weapons, though, hasnât been easy. As Air Force Secretary Debbie James stressed at last weekâs Dubai Air Show, her department has been trying to speed up its part of the export review process. Some of the bureaucratic anguish is about maintaining Israelâs âqualitative military edgeâ (QME), an American policy since 1968, and a matter of law since 2008. At a certain point, however, obsession with Israelâs security undermines American efforts to help Arab states help themselves, and Arab security calls out for whatever America can reasonably send.
This week, itâs the Saudis who are buying a lot of bombs. As noted by Andrea Shalal at Reuters, the US State Department has just approved the sale of 22,000 bombs, including 5,000 GPS-guided Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs) from Boeing, and 1,000 laser-guided Paveway IIs from either Raytheon or Lockheed Martin. The total bill will come to about $1.29 billion. The Houthis are absorbing a lot of damage, and now there will be more coming their way. Itâs not clear just when that request went in, but we can imagine how the interagency ground its gears on this one. As William Wunderle and Andre Briere of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy noted in a paper in 2008, the process by which State and Defense have sought to determine just what might breach that QME hasnât always been rigorous. But itâs important to remember that a qualitative edge doesnât necessarily demand a quantitative edge, so at least large munitions sales have been getting through.
The United Arab Emirates, after all, have been getting resupplied with what they need. Back in October 2013, the Defense Department reported to the Congress that the UAE had applied to undertake a huge shopping trip with American weapons manufacturers: 5,000 of Boeingâs Small Diameter Bombs, 1,200 of Raytheon's JSOW-C glide bombs, and 300 of Boeingâs SLAM-ER cruise missiles. The Emiratis already had gobs of Textronâs Sensor-Fuzed Weaponsâantitank cluster munitions that can take out whole squadrons of vehicles at once. The UAE Air Force also already had the fighter-bombers to drop them: about 79 F-16E/F Desert Falcons, and 68 Mirage 2000s.
Itâs true that at one point, much of the Arab world had large air forces. Egypt still does. But these days, some of the less developed countries are spending much more on their armies than their air forces, because their security problems are mostly internal. The lingering big inventories of old aircraft will not be replaced; outside the Gulf, none of the countries can afford it. Consider that the Libyan Air Force under Qaddafi had about 400 jetsârather few of them flyable, of course. Even before the place fell apart, according to the Libyan Herald and other sources, the long-term plan for the Libyan Air Force included only 30. Those squadrons upon squadrons were built up only because the Soviets were spending about 25 percent of their GDP on military hardware, and giving a lot of it away at âfriendship pricesâ. That gravy train left the station twenty-five years ago. It's not just that the inventories today aren't going to be replaced; after 1989, they were never going to be replaced.
The mere size of an air fleet and its munitions, of course, hardly captures its military power. In âLessons from Ground Combat in the Gulf: the Impact of Training and Technologyâ (International Security, Fall 1997), Daryl Press argued that training is what matters most, given reasonably good equipment. In Military Power: Explaining Victory and Defeat in Modern Battle (Princeton University Press, 2006), Stephen Biddle argued that what matters is actually a closely coupled combination of training and technology. There is the separate problem that bombing can prevent al-Baghdadiâs maniacs from taking any more territory, but only boots on the ground can take the territory back. So far, those boots have been mostly Kurdish, and while the Peshmerga are tough, they are not legion.
So bean-counting doesnât produce a meaningful answer, for few Middle Eastern countries can handle even the equipment theyâve got today. When planes are needed in Syria, Assad gets a fighter-bomber regiment direct from Russia. The regime probably doesnât have the absorptive capacity to fly even another two dozen jets on its own. But thereâs a marked contrast in whatâs happening in the Gulf States. The Emirates have already figured out how to integrate drones into their airspace, while the FAA in the more spacious USA cannot. There was the arms deal signed with Ukraine in Februaryâa rare show of support for the embattled European state. Alenia is pitching gunships to the Emirati air marshals, and for good reason, theyâre interested. That sale of V-22 Ospreys has been rumored for about three years now, and thereâs an understandable need. Indeed, American arms makers are setting up not just sales offices, but the beginnings of more serious facilities. For as my colleague Bilal Saab has written, along with Saudi Arabia, the UAE is one of the few places in the Arab world with a budding arms industry.
ndeed, that confluence of capabilities is already far ahead of what most countries in the region can manage. Almost everywhere else, either the armed forces lack the institutional capacity to wage modern war, or their treasuries lack the monies to pay for it. In some cases, itâs both, and that doesnât add up to too a worrisome threat to Israel. But that also means that if the Emirates and the rest of the GCC can continue to improve their military performance by concentrating on training, doctrine, and organization, they should be able contain threats with much less outside assistance. Together, they have almost the population of Iran, and more disposable income. At this point, if Iran is no longer the clear and present danger, Daesh is. Either way, since 1991, we've known that tanks and technicals coming across the desert make really good targets for precision weapons. So letâs continue to get them the weapons they need.
James HasÃk is a senior fellow at the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security where this piece first appeared.
Tons? The bombs are heavy, the smart doesn’t weigh much.
Are they arming their citizens, also?
Gulf States buying smart bombs?
Are we talking Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana?
This is hugh and series.
Shiites vs Sunnis. You ahead kill each other off. Saving us from having to.
What is needed is low cost, mass kill stuff like carpet bombing and diesel bombs, plus giving the Kurds all of the flame throwers they can carry.
That is funny and sick at the same time.
“Smart bombs are and expensive and ineffective way to kill jihadis. You can’t bomb them into the stone age; they are there already.”
Yep, I suspect these arms sales worry the Israelis more than ISIS.
“What is needed is low cost, mass kill stuff like carpet bombing and diesel bombs, plus giving the Kurds all of the flame throwers they can carry.”
Napalm and cluster bombs. Too bad they’ve both been “outlawed”. It’s ridiculous to say that some lethal weapon is “less humane” than some other lethal weapon. Tell that to someone who’s lungs have been shredded by a conventional bomb shock wave...
Cluster bombs in particular are highly effective, and the technology is there to almost completely prevent dud bomblets.
That's funny right there.
Keep selling it to them so as to fund our research and development. The key point is to have them use THEIR money.
“Revealed: The Gulf States are Buying Tons of American Smart Bombs”
I’m sure Texas will use them wisely.
RTN, LMT, GD, OSK, NOC, TXT, COL These are were people should have some money invested.
Eagles Up !!!!!
Yep! Time to seize the whiskey fields of Tennessee and Kentucky!
Smart bombs to ME countries? Big mistake!
You know the ultimate target!!
I’m fond of cluster bombs.
Blood for whiskey has been an Appalachian thing for a huner’d plus years.
The bombs they’re buying aren’t for their own use.
They’re for OUR use. When WE have to come in and save their a**es from Iran.
What does Louisiana, Texas, Florida, Alabama and Mississippi want with a bunch of smart bombs? Planning to start another Civil War?
The bombs theyâre buying arenât for their own use.
Theyâre for OUR use. When WE have to come in and save their a**es from Iran.
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