Kuwait to buy Eurofighters in a deal worth up to $9bn
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Kuwait to buy Eurofighters in a deal worth up to $9bn

Kuwait to buy Eurofighters in a deal worth up to $9bn

Sources said the 20-year-long deal for 28 Eurofighters would be finalised “in a few weeks”

Gulf Business

Kuwait signed a memorandum of understanding to buy 28 Eurofighter jets, the consortium that makes the aircraft confirmed, making it the eighth country to purchase the combat planes.

Italian industry sources had told Reuters earlier that the Gulf state had agreed to buy Eurofighter jets in a deal worth up to 8bn euros ($9bn).

“We consider this agreement as a strong market signal for additional orders in the next few years,” Eurofighter spokesman Theodor Benien said, adding that Denmark, Belgium, Malaysia, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia were among other interested customers.

He declined to comment on the size of the deal.

The Eurofighter aircraft are produced by Italy’s Finmeccanica, BAE Systems and Airbus. The sources said the 20-year-long deal with Kuwait would be finalised “in a few weeks”.

Kuwait is also continuing separate negotiations with the U.S. government about buying 24 Boeing Co F/A-18E/F Super Hornets, a deal valued at over $3bn, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

“There was always a possibility for a split deal,” said one of the sources, who was not authorised to speak publicly since the expected Boeing deal has not been formally announced.

The news, first reported on Italian daily Corriere della Sera‘s web site, drove up Finmeccanica shares by more than 5 per cent. The company, which has a 36 per cent stake in the Eurofighter programme, could not be reached for comment.

An industry source said Finmeccanica was the leading partner of the Kuwait deal and expected to get over 50 per cent of its value. The agreement, which includes future maintenance services, was for 28 jets, of which 22 would be single seaters and six double seaters, the source added.

Kuwait and other Gulf and Middle Eastern countries are looking to acquire new high-tech military equipment to protect themselves from neighbouring Iran and internal threats unleashed by the 2011 Arab Spring uprising.

The Eurofighter Typhoon jets, which came into service in 2003, have been purchased by Germany, Britain, Italy, Spain, Austria, Saudi Arabia and Oman.


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