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Offline tigershark

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France expects "good news" on arms sales this year
« on: October 24, 2008, 08:16:47 PM »
France expects "good news" on arms sales this year
Wed 22 Oct 2008, 15:32 GMT
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(Adds details on 2007 orders in paras 11-12)

PARIS, Oct 22 (Reuters) - French Defence Minister Herve Morin said on Wednesday he expected some "good news" this year on France's attempts to sell arms abroad despite its continued failure to find a foreign buyer for its flagship fighter jet.

Morin has expressed frustration at the lack of sales of Dassault Aviation's high-tech Rafale fighter in the face of competition from less expensive models, such as U.S. F-16s, made by Lockheed Martin.

But when asked by LCI television about the prospects for deals in Libya and Greece, he struck an optimistic note.

"I think that during the year, at one moment or another, we will have good news from such and such a country, and there are others that are interested in French products," he said.

France has not found a foreign buyer for the Rafale since it was put on the market several years ago.

"These are subjects on which, by their nature, the less one says, the better one does," Morin added.

In a separate interview with business newspaper La Tribune, Morin said Paris was aiming to increase its share of the global arms market to 13 percent, roughly the same as Britain, from its current level of 6 percent.

In the nine months to Sept. 31, France signed contracts worth close to 4 billion euros ($5.28 billion), compared with 2.8 billion euros in the same period last year, he said.

"In the first three-quarters of the year, the results are in line with our objective of 6 billion euros for the year, which would amount to a 10 percent increase in signed orders compared with last year."

Morin said contracts in 2007 totalled 5.5 billion euros and Paris wants that figure to be 7 billion euros in 2010.

A report released later on Wednesday showed Saudi Arabia, with orders totalling 1.16 billion euros, was France's top arms buyer in 2007, followed the United Arab Emirates, Spain, and the United States.

A Defence Ministry official said on condition of anonymity that Saudi Arabia's orders were for a wide variety of equipment, while the UAE's main orders involved military satellites.

France decided last year to overhaul the way it handles major arms export negotiations after Morocco shunned the Rafale in favour of F-16s, and Morin said Paris needed to be more aggressive in promoting French products abroad.

"Arms exports have a strongly political dimension. The French state ... is making a considerable effort which is starting to bear fruit, as much for securing landmark contracts as for more modest contracts," he said.

Morin added he was personally involved in sales pitches.

"In a Latin American country we are today aiming for a contract worth around 40 billion euros for the sale of 105 mm (artillery) cannons," Morin said.

"If I did not have a close relationship with my counterpart from that country, we would long have been eliminated from the competition in favour of our rivals," he added. (Reporting by Francois Murphy and Brian Rohan; Editing by Matthew Jones)


Source
http://africa.reuters.com/wire/news/usnLM273217.html

 



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