Warsaw (AFP) --- Looking east to the
bloody conflict gripping Ukraine, NATO-member Poland has kicked off an
unprecedented military spending spree worth billions to overhaul its forces as
Warsaw believes peace in Europe is no longer a given.
The escalation of tensions
with Russia over its annexation of Ukraine's Crimean peninsula and subsequent
role in the crisis in that country's east has sounded the alarm on NATO's
eastern flank in countries that were under Moscow's thumb during the Cold War.
Submarine ORP "Sep" takes part in NATO's Dynamic Monarch exercises near 22, 2014 (AFP Photo/Janek Skarzynski) |
Even though a Ukraine ceasefire deal was hammered out this
past week in Minsk by Paris ,
Berlin , Moscow
and Kiev , the
risk of the conflict heating up remains, Polish officials believe.
"The key to a
political and military solution lies in Moscow ,"
Poland 's President Bronislaw
Komorowski told reporters Thursday in Warsaw .
"The
possibility of a lasting peace still isn't close," he said, insisting that
the previous Minsk accord failed due to the
"Russian separatists in Donbas ."
- Missiles, choppers,
drones -
The plans bring Warsaw in line with
NATO's recommended defence spending level of 2.0 percent of gross domestic
product.
Its long shopping
list is full of pricey items including multi-role and combat helicopters, an
anti-missile system and cruise missiles for submarines and drones.
Seventy multi-role
helicopters top the list, a contract worth 2.5 billion euros.
The defence
ministry is expected to name the winner of the lucrative tender soon and will
ensure that Polish sub-contractors also reap benefits.
Aeronautics firms
from both sides of the Atlantic have thrown
their hats into the ring. The US-based Sikorsky is up against Airbus
Helicopters -- formerly Eurocopter Group -- and the Anglo-Italian
AgustaWestland.
"The Airbus
offer is the only one that fully meets the specifications," a Western
expert told AFP on condition of anonymity.
"It's
proposing a single platform while the Americans are offering two -- Black Hawk
and SeaHawk -- while the Italians have proposed an unarmed device."
Airbus helicopters
are more pricey. But having a single platform would cut maintenance costs that
account for up to 80 percent of the total expenditures over the lifetime of the
unit.
According to the
expert, this factor will prove decisive in awarding the contract.
- Geopolitical
considerations -
But strategic
alliances will also play a role in Warsaw 's
choice of manufacturers; it regards the United
States as a better bet in case of a conflict in Europe .
European bidders
are therefore sweetening the pot by offering partnerships.
Airbus is opening a
research and development centre in Poland 's
industrial hub of Lodz on February 19 in the
hopes of swaying Warsaw .
The web of
considerations in awarding contracts for anti-aircraft and medium range missile
systems valued at up to ten billion euros is also complex.
Earlier this month,
ten Polish state-owned defence manufacturers formed the PGZ consortium to work
as subcontractors with a future foreign partner.
US-based Raytheon, makers of the Patriot surface-to-air
missile systems, appear to be the favourites in a tender in which the Eurosam
consortium comprising MBDA France, MBDA Italy and France 's Thales Group have also
bid.
Raytheon's units
dovetail perfectly with NATO equipment already installed in Germany , observed Poland 's
Chief of Staff, General Mieczyslaw Gocul, according to Poland 's
leading Gazeta Wyborcza daily.
But doubts cropped
up whether Patriots will still be a perfect fit in the future after the US announced a
review of their anti-aircraft and anti-missile systems.
Those doubts have
boosted the chances for the Eurosam consortium, according to Pawel Wronski, a
defence analyst with Gazeta Wyborcza.
Its Aster 30s have
a 360 degree radar capability while the current generation of Raytheon's
Patriots is limited to 90-degree capability.
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