UAE's military push likely to anger Western arms suppliers

Visitors tour the Edge display during the fifth day of Dubai Air Show in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, November 21, 2019. (By Reuters)

The United Arab Emirates has reportedly launched a program to build military weapons on its own, in a move likely to frustrate the country's traditional arms suppliers. 

The UAE has established a government-owned conglomerate to spearhead development of advanced weapons for its military, Reuters reported.

The new entity, known as EDGE, will take more than 25 state-owned companies under its umbrella, employing a combined workforce of approximately 12,000 with annual revenues topping $5 billion, it said. 

Those ambitions were put on display at Dubai Airshow in Dubai last month, where the country’s military handed an EDGE subsidiary a $1 billion contract for guided missiles.

According to Reuters, the UAE’s defense industry now manufactures drones and small ammunition under the EDGE.

Observers believe the program is likely to anger long-time arms suppliers, chiefly the United States, which have traditionally looked at the oil-rich Arab states as a source of lucrative ventures.

The UAE has recently cultivated military relations with China and Russia and bought some weapons from them. 

According to US-based defense analysis firm Teal, the UAE is expected to spend $17 billion on its military next year, up from $14.4 billion in 2014.


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