August 2, 2018 (Reuters) - Sweden will buy the Patriot air defense missile system from U.S. arms manufacturer Raytheon Co, the government said on Thursday, as it looks to boost its defenses amid growing tensions with Russia. Sweden's Defence Materiel Administration (FMV), which handles military logistics, began negotiations over Patriot in November last year aiming to replace the current air defense system which cannot shoot down ballistic missiles. Negotiations were concluded in April and the government was expected to go ahead with the purchase.
"The government has decided to
authorize the FMV ... to sign a contract with the United States to buy the
American air defense system Patriot," the Defence Ministry said in a
statement. The deal will include four firing systems and two types of missiles
as well as other equipment and training, the government said, with delivery
completed before 2025.
In April, the FMV said the initial
deal would be worth around 10 billion Swedish crowns ($1.13 billion). But that
could triple if Sweden uses an option to increase the number of missiles it
purchases to a maximum of 300. The government did not say how many missiles
would be included initially or give its long term plans. The center-left
government has the backing of the main, center-right opposition for the
purchase, but there have been disagreements about whether to fund the deal
separately, or include it in the current military budget, which could lead to
defense cuts elsewhere.
Russia's actions in Ukraine and the
Crimean Peninsula have pushed Sweden, which is not a member of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), to start rebuilding its defenses after
decades of neglect following the end of the Cold War.
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