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Plans to update Lebonese forces

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StuBie
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Plans to update Lebonese forces

Post by StuBie » Tue Mar 02, 2010 5:02 pm

Hi all,

A couple of stories here posted a couple of weeks apart about the future re-arming/upgrading of the Lebonese forces:

Milplex dated Feb 19th
U.S. 'to give Lebanon light attack planes'

Beirut, Lebanon (UPI) Feb 19, 2009

The United States is reported ready to provide light attack aircraft
to the Lebanese army and to establish an elite Special Forces unit, a major step toward boosting the military's now-feeble firepower.

If the reports are accurate, these moves would also bolster the army, a pivotal multi-sect state institution in a country riven by sectarian rivalry, to counter the power of Iran's key ally in the Levant, the Shiite Hezbollah.

The Americans have been providing Lebanon's military with largely non-lethal equipment since the end of the 1975-90 civil war. But the process accelerated after the Feb. 14, 2005, assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and the subsequent withdrawal of Syrian military forces, which had been deployed in Lebanon for nearly 30 years.

The apparent change in U.S. policy regarding upgrading the capabilities of the Lebanese military coincided with a rapprochement of sorts between Washington and Damascus.

Syria, Iran's key Arab ally, was widely blamed for the Hariri assassination, particularly by the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush. It branded Syria as part of the "axis of evil" with Iran and North Korea and withdrew its ambassador from Damascus after Hariri was killed.

Now, after months of painstaking negotiation by the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama, the United States has appointed a new ambassador amid expectations normal relations can be restored.

Lebanon has a minuscule air force that comprises two 1950s-era British-built Hawker Hunter fighter jets, both currently grounded, and 58 helicopters. These are 13 French-built SA-3241 Aerospatiale Gazelle helicopters, five of them non-operational, and 45 utility/transport helicopters. These include 16 U.S.-supplied Bell UH-1H Vietnam-era Hueys -- seven of them unserviceable -- and a motley collection of Aerospatiale Puma and Alouette II and III craft, most of which are grounded.

None of these aircraft have air-to-ground attack capabilities. During three months of urban fighting in 2007 in northern Lebanon between the army and Islamist militants -- in which 170 soldiers were killed -- helicopters were turned into makeshift attack platforms with crews manhandling bombs out the side doors.

Beirut's leftist As-Safir newspaper reports that the Pentagon has proposed supplying the Lebanese with Hawker-Beechcraft AT-6 or Brazilian-built Embraer Super Tucano propeller-driven aircraft to bolsters its reconnaissance and counter-insurgency capabilities.

The proposal was reportedly made during talks in Washington between Defense Minister Elias Murr, heading a Lebanese military delegation, and U.S. military chiefs, including Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.

Since 2005, Washington has provided Lebanon with military aid worth $500 million, primarily to bolster anti-Syrian forces.

But increasingly Lebanese officials, from President Michel Suleiman on down, have complained that little of this largess enables the military to defend the state against Israel, with the most powerful military in the region, or to counter terrorism.

Murr specifically criticized Washington for not providing Lebanon with combat aircraft. "If we'd had aircraft" during the 2007 fighting "we would not have lost one martyr from the army," he said.

Washington, of course, does not want to provide the Lebanese army with advanced weapons that could be used against Israel, which violates Lebanese airspace almost daily opposed only by obsolete line-of-sight anti-aircraft guns.

Nor does it want these to fall into the hands of Hezbollah, which is a far more capable, combat-tested fighting force than the army.

The Lebanese, then, have looked elsewhere for firepower. Last year Russia offered, free of charge, 10 MiG-29 supersonic interceptors, and Iran, which arms Hezbollah, has offered aircraft and missiles.

Nonetheless, the prospect of a combat-capable air force able to stand up to Israel's top-of-the-line Lockheed Martin F-16s and Boeing F-15s and their seasoned pilots remains extremely distant.

Less so is the special group the U.S. security consultancy Stratfor says the Pentagon wants to establish as an elite army unit. Its main function will be countering Hezbollah. That could lead to a potentially explosive political confrontation that many Lebanese want to avoid.

At present, the army remains weak -- kept that way by Lebanese political barons who do not want their power threatened -- and fractious, heavily penetrated by Hezbollah sympathizers.

"The new unit is expected to selectively recruit and its leadership will consist almost entirely of Maronite Christians and Sunni from Akkar in northern Lebanon, among which Hezbollah has little sway," Stratfor said.
Stu
BECAUSE TYPING IN LOWER CASE WOULD BE EASY.............

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StuBie
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Re: Plans to update Lebonese forces

Post by StuBie » Tue Mar 02, 2010 5:04 pm

Milplex 1st March
Lebanon agrees to Russian choppers

Beirut, Lebanon (UPI) Mar 1, 2009


Lebanon has opted for Mi-24 helicopter gunships from Russia rather than going with initial plans to supply its military MiG-29 fighter jets.

The about-face was announced at the end of Lebanese President Michel Suleiman's three-day visit to Moscow where he met with senior Russian officials about arms procurement deals as well as the situation in the Middle East.

"The Russian authorities agreed to replace the MIG-29 fighters, initially foreseen in their military aid, with Mi-24 helicopters as the Lebanese army urgently needs this type of aircraft equipped with rockets and sophisticated means of defense," a statement from the president's office said.

Suleiman, the first Lebanese head of state to visit Russia, had talks with his Russian counterpart, Dmitry Medvedev. The leaders signed a bilateral defense cooperation pact which Moscow billed a "significant milestone."

Under the agreement, Lebanese officers and military staff will be afforded Russian training for the Mi-24 helicopters.

In December 2008, Russia revealed designs that it would supply Lebanon with 10 MiG-29 type planes. But during his visit, Suleiman revised the deal, opting for an equal number of the Mi-24 state-of-the-art military helicopters and the advanced missiles they carry.

"The army needs this type of helicopters, especially if they are supplied with missiles," the statement said, without clarifying what may have precipitated Beirut's change in order.

Still, in an interview with a local newspaper, the Lebanese president underscored his country's growing concern with the perceived Israeli military threat.

"Israel is trying with its threats to achieve two things -- escape from international pressure placed on it to proceed in the peace process and create an atmosphere of sectarianism within Lebanon," Suleiman, a former army commander, told Russia Today.

In 2007, the Lebanese military launched an three-month offensive against the al-Qaida-inspired Fatah Islam group inside the Palestinian refugee camp Nahr el-Bared in northern Lebanon. The Lebanese army crushed the group, but the victory claimed the lives of 220 militants, 171 soldiers and 47 Palestinian civilians.

French-made Gazelle helicopters were used almost exclusively in staging the Lebanese military's attacks against the militants.

In recent years, however, the United States increased its military aid to Lebanon, hoping that a stronger military could impose the state's authority across the country.

Last year, Washington decided to supply Beirut with battle tanks -- the first since the early 1980s -- after Russia promised to give Lebanon 10 MiG-29 fighter jets.

Earlier this year, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu traveled to Russia in hope of swaying Moscow to scrap plans to provide Iran with S-300 anti-aircraft missiles.
Stu
BECAUSE TYPING IN LOWER CASE WOULD BE EASY.............

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