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by AFP Staff Writers Prague (AFP) Sept 27, 2021
The Czech government said Monday it would buy four Spyder short-range air defence system batteries from Israel by 2026 to replace obsolete Soviet-made weapons. The purchase comes as the country seeks to upgrade its military equipment -- and further boost ties with Israel, already a close Czech ally. The defence ministry said it would pay 13.7 billion Czech crowns (540 million euros, $630 million) for the system made by Israeli state-run company Rafael. The contract also involves supplies by Czech companies amounting to more than 30 percent of its value. The ministry added in a statement that it had considered nine different systems from seven producers. "Israel's Spyder emerged as the most efficient one from the comparison. It is a solution adjusted to Czech needs, compatible with NATO standards and with the involvement of Czech industry," it said. Defence Minister Lubomir Metnar hailed the purchase as a step towards getting rid of a Soviet-made system from the 1970s which "does not correspond to current air defence standards". The Czech Republic joined NATO in 1999, 10 years after former Czechoslovakia shed the totalitarian Communist regime that had been in power for four decades.
South Korea: new kid on the SLBM block Seoul (AFP) Sept 16, 2021 Missile test headlines on the Korean peninsula are almost invariably about the nuclear-armed North, but this week the South fired a submarine-launched ballistic missile of its own as it rapidly scales up its military capabilities. The successful test puts the South among the elite flotilla of nations with proven SLBM technology, and Seoul is on a multi-billion-dollar drive to develop its defence forces. On the other side of the Demilitarized Zone that splits the peninsula, the North maintains th ... read more
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