Defense

Estonia selects Blue Spear land-to-sea missile system

0

Last Updated on 10/07/2021 by OTC

The Estonian Defense Forces are due to receive the Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI)-made Blue Spear land-to-sea missile system, IAI said in a statement on 6 October.

According to the statement, the Estonian Centre for Defence Investment (ECDI) signed a contract with Proteus Advanced Systems, a joint venture company of IAI and ST Engineering Land Systems, which is headquartered in Singapore, to supply the missiles.

The project, with tight timescales and encompassing a complex set of requirements, is one of the biggest projects in Estonian defence procurement and definitely the most complex.

Asko Kivinuk the Strategic Category Manager for maritime defence systems said: โ€œI am pleased with our team for managing to stay in the given time frame and keeping the tender competitive up till the very end. The award was based on several evaluation criteria including total cost of ownership, involvement of local industry and on the delivery time.โ€

Hand in hand with the new capability development in the maritime domain, the contract provides opportunities for the Estonian defence industry.

Minister of Defence of Estonia said: โ€œThis weapon system substantially improves our coastal defence and sends a clear message that we are contributing to the regional and collective defence effort. This is one of the most complex and high-tech weapon systems of all time and a huge leap forward for the Estonian Defence Forces. I am very glad that Estonia has a defence industry capable of participating in such high-tech projects.โ€

Commander of the Estonian Navy commodore Jรผri Saska added: โ€œThe chosen weapon system will form the cornerstone of Estonian naval defence for decades to come. Estonian Navy will be able to contribute significantly both to national, regional and collective defence effort.โ€

The image belongs to Gabriel V missile. While developing Blue Spear, IAI used the know-how and technological experience gained from the Gabriel missile family

โ€œWe are proud to be selected to equip the Estonian Defence Forces with the advanced Blue Spear missiles. We greatly value this opportunity and look forward to deepening our cooperation with the Estonian Defence Forces. This is a very advanced, operational proven system, leading the sea battlefield by its capabilities and based on IAIโ€™s many years of experience in the field of missiles, particularly with the Gabriel missile family.โ€ said Proteus Advanced Systemsโ€™ General Manager, Ron Tryfus.

โ€œThe strong cooperation of IAI and ST Engineering expresses the capabilities of the two companies in developing advanced battle systems. The Blue Spear system, being the advanced member of the Gabriel missile heritage, will serve as the next generation of surface to surface missile systems.โ€ Tryfus added.

The Blue Spear missile system is an advanced precision weapon that can operate at all weather conditions, day and night and enables strike capabilities beyond the line of sight, against mobile and stationary targets at sea. The missileโ€™s maximum range is 290km. Blue Spear missiles share a heritage with IAIโ€™s Gabriel missile family system which has been developed over many years.

The Blue Spear system enables launching from several land-based platforms with flight at high subsonic speed. The warhead employs an active radar-homing seeker, accurate INS-based navigation capabilities and a robust system that is immune to GPS disruptions and maximal accuracy target acquisition. The systems are equipped with a variety of deception means to achieve their mission and cope with the different battlefield challenges.

Check outย Naval Library Appย to find out more about the specifications of the Blue Spear missile.

app store 2 - naval post
Apple App Store
google play - naval post
Google Play

USS Porter Completes FOST successfully

Previous article

Saudi Arabia presents World Defense Show 2022 global exhibition Land Naval Air military products

Next article

You may also like

Comments

Comments are closed.

More in Defense