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US arms sale to UAE amid Iran tensions

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Reuters Washington

The United States has signed a $3.5 billion sale of an advanced antimissile interception system to the United Arab Emirates, part of an accelerating military buildup of its friends and allies near Iran.

The deal, signed on December 25 and announced on Friday night by the US Defence Department, "is an important step in improving the region's security through a regional missile defense architecture," Pentagon press secretary George Little said in a statement.

The US Congress had been notified of the proposed sale in September 2008 by former president George W Bush's administration.

At that time, the system built by Lockheed Martin Corp had been projected to involve more missiles, "fire control" units, radar sets, all at a cost roughly twice as much to UAE.

 

It marks the first foreign sale of the so-called Theater High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD), the only system designed to destroy short- and intermediate-range ballistic missiles both inside and outside the Earth's atmosphere.

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First Published: Jan 02 2012 | 1:15 AM IST

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