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Algeria seeks European stealth frigates

Competing firms submit final bids for Brazil jet contract
Three competing firms submitted their final bids Friday for a coverted multi-billion-dollar contract to sell Brazil 36 high performance fighter aircraft, the Brazilian Air Force said. The Rafale fighter, made by France's Dassault Systemes, was favored to win the competition with the Swedish-made Gripen and Boeing's F/A-18 Super Hornet to replace Brazil's aging fleet of 12 French-made Mirage jets, The Brasilian government has openly said it is leaning toward the Rafale because France has offered to share technology with Brazil. The technology transfer offer was repeated and confirmed by French President Nicolas Sarkozy in meetings with his Brazilian counterpart Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, but the other two manufacturers were given an opportunity to improve their bids. A group of Brazilian Air Force experts will finalize a technical report on the three types of aircraft. The winner will be formally announced "at a date that has not yet been set," the air force said. In a potential setback to the French company, the head of the Brazilian Air Force has sought information on a mid-air collision over the Mediterranean Sea last month involving two Rafale fighter jets similar to those it may purchase. The two supersonic jets were flying back to the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle off the coast of Perpignan after completing a test flight when they went down on September 24. French divers found the body of a pilot, the French Navy said Thursday. A second pilot ejected and was rescued. (AFP Report)
by Staff Writers
Algiers, Algeria (UPI) Oct 2, 2009
Italy's Fincantieri shipbuilders find themselves back in the running on a contract to supply the Algerian navy with four advanced stealth frigates in competition, a deal potentially worth $11.6 billion.

A top-level delegation from the Algerian Defense Ministry visited Italy Sept. 12-19 and was given the red carpet treatment by Adm. Salvatore Reja, one of the Italian navy's top commanders.

The Algerians visited Fincantieri's yards near Genoa where the 5,800-ton, multi-role FREMM frigates are built and other Italian companies involved in the construction of the vessels, including the Rome headquarters of Selex Sistemi Integrati, an affiliate of the Italian defense giant Finmeccanica.

In the Italian capital, the Algerian delegation was received by Gen. Aldo Dinelli, the Defense Ministry's secretary-general, and Adm. Dino Nascetti, director general of naval armaments.

According to Intelligence Online, a French Web site that specializes in intelligence and defense affairs, the Italians were thought to have been cut out of the bidding after it was unveiled in 2008.

"Fincantieri never actually submitted a bid, despite being asked to do so twice by an Algerian committee in the summer of 2008," the site reported.

But Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi intervened in August and discussed the issue with Algeria's president, Abdulaziz Bouteflika, in Tripoli during the celebrations marking Col. Moammar Gadhafi's 40th year as Libya's president.

Bouteflika allowed Fincantieri to enter the bidding.

The Italians now compete against France's DCNS shipbuilders, Germany's Thyssenkrupp Marine Systems and Britain's BAE Systems, which is offering its Type 23 frigate.

FREMM is a second-generation French stealth frigate, a project launched in 2002 by Amaris, an affiliate of DCNS and the French defense firm Thales, and by Orizzonte Sistemi Navali, an Italian group headed by Fincantieri and Finmeccanica.

Industry sources say that Algeria would like to purchase two frigates, with the other two built in Algeria as part of a program to revive the Mediterranean shipyard at Mers el-Kebir.

The French are pushing their bid hard, but this is thought to have been weakened by French President Nicolas Sarkozy's reluctance to ask Algerian forgiveness for France's colonial past.

Meantime, Algeria's traditional North African rival, Morocco, is scheduled to receive an anti-submarine version of the FREMM in 2013, under a 2007 contract.

Morocco, which is at odds with Algeria over the disputed Western Sahara, decided to upgrade its military forces after Algeria signed a $7.5 billion arms deal with Russia in 2007.

In 2008, Morocco awarded an $875 million contract for three 2,300-ton multi-mission frigates to Schelde Naval Shipbuilding of the Netherlands. The warships will be built at the company's Vlissingen yards in the southern Netherlands, with delivery scheduled between mid-2011 and mid-2012.

Earlier this month Morocco secured U.S. congressional approval to buy 24 Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Block 52 multi-role fighter aircraft.

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Indian stealth destroyer launched
New Delhi (UPI) Sep 22, 2009
The Indian navy has launched a stealth destroyer capable of carrying nuclear warheads. The INS Kochi, a 6,500-ton warship, will add its force to the existing Indian fleet, which includes the INS Delhi, INS Mysore and INS Mumbai. Defense observers say the latest launch, the second of the Indian navy's three stealthy Project-15-A or Kolkotas-class destroyers, is part of India's ... read more







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