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U.K. on shortlist of Brazil arms suppliers

End of US controls to boost India military trade: Locke
Bangalore, India (AFP) Feb 8, 2011 - The United States said Tuesday an end to export restrictions for India's defence and space industries would help ramp up military trade with the South Asian country. US Secretary of State for Commerce Gary Locke said US officials would hold talks Wednesday with state-run Indian firms which were previously on a so-called US "entities list" which barred them from importing critical technologies. Nine Indian defence and space research firms were unshackled last month from the restrictions -- imposed as a penalty on India for its 1998 nuclear tests.

"These are the first steps to relax US export partnership as we are eager to help India meet its ambitious goals" of self-reliance, Locke said in the southern Indian city of Bangalore. "We are bringing in some of the top US technology companies and we will be having discussions. We believe this is a signal of better and stronger cooperation for years to come," Locke told reporters. Sixty-three US defence and aeronautical firms are among 675 companies from 45 countries participating in South Asia's largest airshow which kicks off on Wednesday in Bangalore.

The groups removed from the US blacklist included the Indian Space Research Organisation, which leads India's space programme, and the weapon-designing Defence Research and Development Organisation. US President Barack Obama announced on a visit to India last November that he was easing the restrictions. US-based Boeing Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp. are vying for a $12-billion dollar Indian contract for 126 warjets and top officials accompanying Locke said the fighter jets would be fitted with the latest US technology. "We have agreed to an unprecedented level of technology transfer to India and we can go even further," said Andrew Shapiro, assistant secretary of state for political and military affairs.
by Staff Writers
Rio De Janeiro (UPI) Feb 7, 2011
Britain is on the shortlist of potential contractors for huge military purchases planned by Brazil to modernize its armed forces and build a defense network for offshore hydrocarbon resources more than 120 miles from the country's vast coastline.

Brazil's 4,644-mile-long front to the Atlantic is the world's 16th longest national coastline and the discovery of oil and natural gas offshore has made maritime border protection an urgent new priority on a grand scale for the government.

Two years ago Brazil began an arms shopping spree, setting targets to invest more than $12 billion in land and water defenses.

A final decision on fighter aircraft and helicopters was postponed before President Dilma Rousseff took office in January. Former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who signed initial agreements with France for the supply of jets and helicopters and wide-ranging defense technology transfers, retreated from what appeared at that time to be a deal favoring France. Now a potential deal for the air defenses inventory has gone back under a government review.

The air force deal is still in the balance but latest media reports suggested BAE Systems was well advanced in negotiations to supply advanced naval craft for an expanded maritime defense force planned in response to huge discoveries of offshore gas and oil, MercoPress reported.

Industry analysts said the BAE Systems' appearance on the shortlist, which includes Boeing, France's Dassault and Sweden's Saab, made Brazil one of the fastest growing defense markets.

Brazil and Britain are in negotiation for the purchase of at least six patrol vessels and six Type 26 frigates similar to those deployed by the British navy. The total initial deal could be worth about $5 billion but BAE Systems also pinned hopes on long-term delivery and maintenance contracts.

Work on developing hydrocarbon deposits deep under the seabed, requiring specialized giant drilling platforms and related services, has heightened Brazil's sense of vulnerability in an exposed environment away from the shore.

BAE Systems is also coming round to Brazil's insistence on technology transfer and may offer, as part of the deal, second-phase manufacturing or assembly of a part of the order for naval vessels after first-phase manufacture and assembly in Britain or BAE units elsewhere.

Brazil says its long-term plan is to keep raising defense spending from the current 1.5 percent of its gross domestic product to 2 percent by 2030. The prospect for defense manufacturers is a lucrative one, industry analysts said, because Brazil's nominal GDP in 2010 was estimated to be $2.181 trillion. That makes yearly defense spending estimates ahead of $35 billion or more.

"Brazil has some very serious aspirations and they have the wherewithal to afford them," Ben Palmer, development director for BAE Systems surface ships division, told the Financial Times last year. "There is an awful lot to fight for and a lot of competition."

France is in the race to supply Brazil with naval craft as well as Dassault's Rafale fighter aircraft.



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