US authorizes $10.5bn Patriot missile sale to Poland
The US State Department has authorized the sale of $10.5 billion in Patriot missile systems to Poland, the linchpin of the NATO military alliance’s Eastern frontier against Russia.
The proposed sale includes four radar sets, four control stations, sixteen launching stations, and 208 Patriot Advanced Capabilty-3 (PAC-3) missiles, the Pentagon said Friday.
The deal now awaits the US Congress’ approval as it involves the purchase of advanced technology.
Under US law, Congress must be formally notified before the administration can take the final steps to conclude a government-to-government foreign military sale of major defense equipment with a significant value.
According to officials in Warsaw, US lawmakers were likely to let Poland get the missile systems, which are manufactured by US weapons manufacturer Raytheon.
The deal was expected to be accompanied by an undisclosed agreement which could see some technology transfer as well as significant investments in the Polish military industry, Polish media reported.
A State Department official said that the deal would give Poland “greater flexibility” in joint operations with the US and other NATO allies that also possess the missile system.
“Poland’s ongoing efforts to modernize its military provide us with new areas of potential defense cooperation between our two countries,” the unnamed official said.
Poland’s defense minister, Antoni Macierewicz, said earlier this year that he expected a deal on the Patriot systems to be sealed before the end of 2017.
Warsaw has been modernizing its armed forces since 2014, after the Crimean peninsula in neighboring Ukraine was reintegrated into Russia in a referendum.
SS