Pages

2010-09-14

Russia to get High Tech Israeli Arms

Vatic Note:  Remember when Israel gave a billion dollars and 1000 IDF soldiers to Georgia to invade and attack Russia?  Yes? Well this is exactly how it works and it did the same in WW II funding both sides, which at that time was a crime. What is becoming clear here, is that our military for the first time is becoming massively separated from the people. 

Its moving closer to the Israeli military both in bonding and in blending in weaponry, arms sales, stategic planning, state secrets and high tech weaponry secrets are now shared with Israel to allow her to use to develp her own to use against us like she has been doing lately, and I guarantee you if we have a nuke false flag, its an israeli nuke that we gave her the tech to develop. Now the emphasis for our military must be "whose" best interest in war will our military consider and implement? 

Someone told me that war is going to happen and there was nothing we could do about it. Remember Russia is the enemy in this world war so what is our ally doing selling them the weapons they will use to kill us??? NOW DO YOU SEE WHY ISRAEL IS THE ONLY COUNTRY WE MUST KEEP AN EAGLE ON??? Only they would betray an ally for a few bucks. Only they are totally without any REGARD FOR ANYONE WHO IS A NON ZIONIST. Greed is god to them.  They don't have any friends, they don't want any friends and they don't NEED any friends,  and its why they don't have any. 


Russia to get High Tech Israeli Arms
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Russia_to_get_high-tech_Israeli_arms_999.html
Staff Writers, Space War, Your world at war
Sept 2010, Tel Aviv, Israel (hmmm, I guess we are fully incorporated into Israel now)
The long-term military cooperation agreement Israel has signed with Russia may be a key part of a deal under which Moscow, badly in need of foreign technology to reboot its moribund defense industry, will cancel or delay plans to sell Syria advanced systems.


Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak and his Russian counterpart, Anatoly Serdyukov signed the deal in Moscow Monday.


Neither side revealed details of the landmark agreement but Serdyukov said in a statement, "It's very important for us that in the transition to a new image, the Russian armed forces use the experience the Israeli armed forces have and the work they have done."

The Israeli media reported before Barak flew to Moscow, the first Israeli defense minister to visit Russia, that high on his agenda was persuading the Russians to cancel plans to sell Syria supersonic P-800 Yakhont cruise missiles that would pose a serious threat to Israel's navy in the Mediterranean Sea.



The Israelis fear these could be transferred to Hezbollah in Lebanon, which almost sank an Israeli corvette with an Iranian-supplied, Chinese-designed C-802 anti-ship missile soon after the 2006 war erupted.


Israel is also uneasy about a Russian agreement in May to sell Damascus MiG-29 interceptor aircraft, Pantsir short-range air-defense missiles and armored vehicles.


It has also been deeply concerned about a 2007 contract under which Moscow would sell Iran five batteries of advanced, long-range S-300PMU air-defense missiles systems.


Moscow initially delayed delivery of the weapons under intense U.S. and Israeli diplomatic pressure, then announced it couldn't deliver the systems after the United Nations on June 9 imposed a fourth round of economic sanctions on Iran over its contentious nuclear program.  Iran needs the powerful systems to boost protection of its nuclear infrastructure, which it fears Israeli will attack.


Western intelligence sources say they suspect that Israel may have concluded that Moscow's commitments to Iran and Syria, the Islamic Republic's Arab ally, weren't considered solid enough to deter closer links with Russia.


If that's the case, this could give the Israelis greater leverage over future Russian military sales to their adversaries in the Middle East.


Serdyukov said Monday's agreement followed Russia's first military purchase from Israel, 12 unmanned aerial vehicles.


Russia doesn't have the technology to build the sophisticated UAVs now used by the Americans, British and French in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Israel is a leading manufacturer of such high-tech craft.


Serdyukov provided no details of the UAV deal but in April 2009 Moscow bought 12 UAVs built by state-run Israel Aerospace Industries, flagship of Israel's defense industry under a $53 million deal.


The craft included IAI's second-tier craft, the Bird Eye 400 mini-UAV, the I-View MK 150 tactical drone and the medium-range Searcher Mark 2.


It was Russia's first purchase of a foreign weapons system.


Last June, the Israeli daily Haaretz reported that negotiations were under way between IAI and Moscow on setting up a $300 million-$400 million plant in Russia to build UAVs.


But Israel, Haaretz said, was reluctant to provide Moscow with sensitive technology that could end up in the hands of Israel's enemies.


The possibility of Moscow delivering the S-300 missiles to Iran was also undoubtedly a factor in Israel's decision at that time. But since Moscow has since formally announced it won't deliver the S-300s to Tehran, that obstacle would appear to have been removed.


At the time, Russia was reportedly seeking to acquire 50 Israeli UAVs, particularly long-endurance craft. These included IAI's Heron, the largest Israeli surveillance drone with a 54-foot wingspan. It can stay aloft for 50 hours at an altitude of 30,000 feet.


In June, the Western media quoted Ruslan Pukhov, director of the Center for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies, a Moscow research institute, as saying Moscow was ready to buy arms worth $12 billion from Europe and Israel, including IAI.


Another indication of how the relationship between Israel and Russia seems to be warming came from Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.


He disclosed after Monday's agreement was signed that Moscow hopes to build a laser ranging ground station in Israel for the Global Navigation Satellite System, or Glonass, the Russian equivalent of the U.S.-designed Global Positioning System.





The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Vatic Clerk Tips: After 7 days, all comments to an article go into the moderation queue for approval which happens at least once a day. Please be patient.

Be respectful in your comments, keeping in mind that these discussions will become the Zeitgeist of our time that future database archeologists will discover. Make your comments worthy and on the founding father's level in their respectfulness, reasoning, and sound argumentation. Prove we weren't all idiots in our day and age. Comments that advocate sedition or violence are not encouraged. Racist, ad hominem, and troll-baiting comments might never see the light of day.