Poland in advanced talks with Sweden for early warning aircraft

by Gareth Jennings

Poland is set to acquire two Saab 340 Erieye AEW&C aircraft from Sweden, according to a statement made by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of National Defence, Mariusz Błaszczak, as well as a briefing slide shown by the Polish Air Force. (Saab)

Poland is in the advanced stages of negotiations with Sweden to acquire airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) aircraft for the country's armed forces.

The Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of National Defence, Mariusz Błaszczak, made the disclosure on 22 May, saying he expects a contract to be finalised in the near term.

“I wanted to say publicly for the first time that we are very advanced in obtaining early warning aircraft from Sweden. We are already conducting detailed negotiations. I hope they will be successful in a short time,” Błaszczak said during a meeting of Northern Group NATO members. “In this way, we strengthen the resilience of Poland, but also of the entire eastern flank of the [NATO] alliance,” he added.


Get the full article by
Already a Janes subscriber? Keep reading


Quantum navigation sensor tested by RN

by Richard Scott

The quantum accelerometer has been developed by Imperial College London. (Imperial College London)

A prototype quantum sensor device developed by Imperial College London completed the first period of at-sea testing onboard the UK Royal Navy (RN) trials and experimentation vessel XV Patrick Blackett .

The experiment is seen as a potential first step in understanding the application and exploitation of quantum-enabled navigation, which could provide significant navigational advantages when operating in environments where global navigation satellite systems (GNSS), such as Global Positioning System (GPS), are degraded or denied.

The quantum sensor developed by Imperial College London is a type of accelerometer. While conventional accelerometers are used in many different devices such as mobile phones and laptops, these sensors cannot maintain precise accuracy over long periods of time without an external reference to correct ‘drift'.


Get the full article by
Already a Janes subscriber? Keep reading


LIMA 2023: Havelsan to supply CMS for Indonesia's new frigates

by Manasvi Shanker Sharma

A computer-generated rendering of the Arrowhead 140 design, which is the basis for Indonesia's ‘Red White' frigate programme. (Babcock)

Turkey's Havelsan will equip the Indonesian Navy's new Arrowhead 140 frigates with its Advent combat management system (CMS), the company told Janes at the Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace (LIMA) Exhibition 2023 in Malaysia.

The frigates are being constructed by state-owned Indonesian shipbuilder PT PAL, with steel cutting of the first ship in December 2022.

The Arrowhead 140 is the third different class of Indonesian warships planned to be equipped with the Advent CMS. Other classes include 90 m offshore patrol vessels (OPVs) under construction at PT Daya Radar Utama and KCR-60M missile craft built by PT Tesco Indomaritim.

UK defence group Babcock signed a design licence agreement with PT PAL in September 2021, which supported the build of two Arrowhead 140 frigates at the Indonesian shipbuilder's facilities in Surabaya. The Arrowhead 140 is based on the Iver Huitfeldt-class frigate design previously developed for the Royal Danish Navy. The project has been locally branded as the ‘Red White' frigate programme.


Get the full article by
Already a Janes subscriber? Keep reading


IDET 2023: Inflatable Leopard 2A4 decoys sent to Ukraine

by Nicholas Fiorenza

Inflatech displayed an inflatable Leopard 2A4 tank decoy system at IDET 2023. (Janes/Nicholas Fiorenza)

Inflatable Leopard 2A4 tank decoys are being supplied to Ukraine, Janes learnt at the International Defence and Security Technology Fair (IDET) 2023 held in Brno, Czech Republic, from 24 to 26 May. At the show, Czech-based company Inflatech displayed Leopard 2A4 and Czech STARKOM communication jammer inflatable decoys.

The decoys are designed to deceive and mislead an enemy by simulating objects and for use in electronic warfare training. The Leopard 2A4 decoy weighs 44 kg and the STARKOM decoy 35.2 kg. Their optical granularity is 0.2 m, thermal granularity is 0.6 m, and electronic granularity is 4 m, according to Inflatech. The company claims that they appear to an RQ-20 unmanned aerial vehicle as a real object from approximately 1,500 m.

The decoys can be inflated by a 150 ccm four-stroke petrol or diesel engine and take two people 10 minutes to deploy or pack. It is stable in winds up to 15 m/s, according to Inflatech.


Get the full article by
Already a Janes subscriber? Keep reading


https://www.janes.com/defence-news/c4isr-command-tech/latest/poland-in-advanced-talks-with-sweden-for-early-warning-aircraft

Poland is in the advanced stages of negotiations with Sweden to acquire airborne early warning and c...

Latest Podcasts

Tradecraft in Open Source Intelligence

In this episode we look at tradecraft in Open Source Intelligence with Neil Wiley, former Chair of the National Intelligence Council and former Director for Analysis at the Defense Intelligence Agency

Listen now

Iran at a crossroads

Next Level OSINT Considerations - Part 2

Next Level OSINT Considerations - Part 1

OSINT – What we learnt in 2022

Janes Case Studies

Using Janes Intara to build a common intelligence picture: Russian build up on the Ukrainian border

View Case Study

Assessing threats in the South China Sea 

A competitive assessment of the military aircraft market

Identifying an unknown aircraft

Case study: Using Interconnected Intelligence to Monitor Russian Troop Movement

News Categories

Request Consultation

Request a free consultation to discover how Janes can provide you with assured, interconnected open-source intelligence.

C4ISR Details