Regional 'threat' cited in sales
By Richard S. Ehrlich
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
BANGKOK, Thailand
The United States
is supplying Advanced Medium
Range Air-to-Air Missiles
(AMRAAMs) to Thailand
because of "an imminent
threat" posed by Russian
rockets offered to China and
Malaysia, according to
weapons monitors.
The Bush administration
decided to deliver eight
AMRAAMs to Thailand after
having earlier said the
air-intercept missiles would
be exported only if Bangkok
suffered a potential military
threat.
"We have no comment on
arms deliveries to Thailand," a
tight-lipped U.S. Embassy
spokesman said when asked
about the report.
But the respected Bangkok
Post reported recently that the
missiles have already been
delivered to "maintain the
military balance in the
region," according to an
unidentified source in
Thailand's air force.
The weapons "arrived two
months ago, shortly after the
[Thai] air force received 16
second-hand F-16 fighter jets
worth a total of $130 million,"
the newspaper said.
Matthew Schroeder, an
Arms Sales Monitoring Project
research associate at the
Washington-based Federation
of American Scientists, was
less certain.
"There were reports that the
U.S. planned to deliver the
missiles in September or
October, but I have not seen
any confirmation that they
have been delivered," he said
in an e-mail interview.
"Raytheon has at least one
contract to produce eight
AMRAAM air vehicles for
Thailand," Mr. Schroeder said.
Wade Boese, research
director of the
Washington-based Arms
Control Association, said the
United States "committed to
sell Thailand AMRAAMs a few
years ago, but did hold off on
delivery because U.S. policy
regarding AMRAAMs is not to
be the first to introduce that
particular type of missile into a
region unless other
comparable missiles already
exist there.
"The strict U.S. policy on
exporting AMRAAMs reflects
the lethality of the missile,"
Mr. Boese said in an e-mail
interview.
The AIM-120C AMRAAM is
prized for being able to knock
out an enemy plane or
intercept an incoming rocket
before the AMRAAM-firing
pilot actually sees the target.
The sophisticated air-to-air
missile offers
"beyond-visual-range
capability," which also allows
the AMRAAM-firing pilot to fly
away before the missile
explodes — an action
colloquially known as "fire and
forget," "launch and leave" or "shoot and
scoot."
"Essentially, the missiles are pilot equalizers in
the sense that it puts the outcome of a potential
dogfight more on the missile's technical
capabilities and not the skills of a pilot," Mr.
Boese said.