logo
Netherlands to buy anti-torpedo weapon, tracked armor, new rifle

Netherlands to buy anti-torpedo weapon, tracked armor, new rifle

Yahoo24-04-2025

PARIS — The Netherlands plans to buy a torpedo-killing torpedo as early as 2029, replace the armed forces' standard assault rifle starting this decade and equip its heavy infantry brigade with tracked armored general-purpose vehicles, as part of 17 equipment projects for the coming years.
Total spending on the planned projects will be at least €1.45 billion (US$1.65 billion), based on the lower end of the budget range for each project, according to a so-called 'A letter' from the Dutch Ministry of Defense sent to parliament on Wednesday outlining equipment requirements.
'It's essential that the Ministry of Defense has the necessary defense equipment at its disposal in good time to increase our deterrence and be a reliable NATO ally,' State Secretary of Defence Gijs Tuinman wrote. 'With this omnibus A letter, the Ministry of Defense is taking the next step toward greater flexibility and less internal bureaucracy in the procurement process.'
The Netherlands lifted its 2025 defense budget to €22 billion, after spending €21.4 billion last year. The country is in the process of renewing its fleet of air-defense frigates, anti-submarine warfare frigates and submarines, and on land is beefing up its 43 Mechanized Brigade into a heavy infantry brigade with a full-fledged tank battalion and mobile air-defense systems.
The Dutch plan to equip the future frigates, submarines and new amphibious transport vessels with a hard-kill system to defend against unmanned underwater vehicles such as drones and torpedoes. The first platform to be fitted with the anti-torpedo torpedo (ATT) system will be the anti-submarine warfare frigates, according to Tuinman.
Development of the anti-torpedo weapon from a demonstration model to a production-ready design will continue within the European Union's Permanent Structured Cooperation through to 2028, according to the Dutch MoD. Subsequently, the Netherlands expects to acquire a 'qualified ATT' starting in 2029, when the first new Dutch ASW frigate is scheduled to become operational.
The investment for the anti-torpedo torpedo is €250 million to €1 billion for the 2025-2039 period, the ministry said. Potential international military cooperation through PESCO will reduce the technical development and financial risks, according to Tuinman.
European navies chase the white whale of torpedo-busting torpedoes
Other Navy investment projects include a replacement for the Mark 48 torpedoes for the new Orka-class submarines to be built by Naval Group, with delivery of the new torpedoes planned in the early 2030s. The Netherlands also plans to invest in unmanned aerial vehicles and unmanned surface vessels for maritime intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance and to contribute to anti-submarine warfare. Both projects are in the €50 million to €250 million range.
For the land forces, the Netherlands plans to buy an estimated 100 to 150 tracked armored vehicles for use by the heavy infantry brigade in roles including transport, command, ambulance, engineering and troop transport, for between €250 million and €1 billion.
The MoD plans to buy the tracked vehicles through a negotiated procedure without tender from a single source, buying systems that are already known and have been acquired previously, Tuinman said. 'This ensures that contracting can be done quickly, which benefits delivery time.'
While Tuinman didn't provide details on the model the Dutch plan to buy, the 43 Mechanized Brigade operates the CV90 infantry combat vehicle from BAE Systems Hägglunds, alongside Leopard 2 main battle tanks. The CV90 exists in an armored-personnel carrier version that is the base for other non-turreted variants.
Sweden, Finland, Norway and Lithuania are preparing a joint purchase of the CV90, the Swedish government said earlier this week.
The Dutch list of projects also includes replacing the armed forces' Colt C7 standard assault rife and C8 carbines, with a budget of €250 million to €1 billion for the 2027-2041 period. The existing rifles have been modernized since 2009 and will reach the end of their technical lifespan in 2030, and the ministry targets the first deliveries of the new arms before the end of the decade.
The MoD plans to buy multiple variants of the same weapon from a single supplier, and is looking for a possible purchase in cooperation with partner countries to increase interoperability. The Netherlands said several partners and allies either use similar weapons or are planning to acquire them in the short term.
The Netherlands will also buy around 200 multi-barrel machine guns that will equip helicopters and ships, for between €50 million and €250 million. The speed of engagements has increased, and the MoD said it's looking for a weapon with a higher rate of fire than the current MAG 7.62 mm and Browning .50 machine guns.
Technical improvements on a multi-barrel machine gun make it less likely to malfunction than current weapons, and the improved combat capabilities increase the survivability and operational availability of platforms including naval vessels and helicopters, the ministry said.
The ministry said the Dutch F-35 jets need a tactical armament that can be deployed against well-defended targets, with high survivability to avoid anti-munition weapon systems, and the ministry has budgeted €50 million to €250 million from 2027 to 2032 to acquire such a weapon.
The current weapons for tactical deployment equipping the Dutch F-35 fleet are precision-guided and short-range, free-fall munitions with low survivability due to lack of speed or because of high radar reflectivity. They are limited in their deployment due to vulnerability to weather conditions, camouflage, deception and jamming, the ministry said.
The Netherlands has changed its defense procurement to cut red tape and accelerate the process, doubling the threshold that requires notification to parliament to €50 million and lifting the investment amount that needs parliamentary approval to €250 million from €100 million.
'Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Defense has taken new measures to increase agility, speed up processes and reduce internal bureaucracy,' Tuinman said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NATO Scrambles Fighter Jets After Russia's Largest Air Assault on Ukraine
NATO Scrambles Fighter Jets After Russia's Largest Air Assault on Ukraine

Newsweek

time10 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

NATO Scrambles Fighter Jets After Russia's Largest Air Assault on Ukraine

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. NATO countries scrambled fighter jets early on Sunday, according to the Polish military, after a Ukrainian official said Moscow had launched its largest-scale air attack on the country in more than three years. Poland's Operational Command said its fighter jets, along with other NATO aircraft, were scrambled with ground-based air defenses and reconnaissance systems put on the "highest state of readiness" after Russia launched overnight attacks on Ukrainian territory. Warsaw's military said in a later statement NATO aircraft had finished operations after the "level of threat from missile strikes by Russian aviation on Ukrainian territory" reduced. No Russian missiles or drones entered Polish airspace, the command said. Ukrainian authorities said Russia had launched 477 drones and decoys, as well as 60 missiles of various types, at Ukraine overnight. FILE - An F-16 fighter jet takes part in the NATO Air Shielding exercise near the air base in Lask, central Poland on October 12, 2022. FILE - An F-16 fighter jet takes part in the NATO Air Shielding exercise near the air base in Lask, central Poland on October 12, 2022. RADOSLAW JOZWIAK/AFP via Getty Images The attacks into Sunday were the largest airstrikes on Ukraine of more than three years of full-scale war in the country in terms of number of incoming threats, Colonel Yuriy Ignat, an official with Ukraine's air force, confirmed to Newsweek. Russian missile and drone attacks on Ukraine have occasionally spilled over into NATO nations like Poland and Romania, which border Ukraine. NATO members are collectively obliged to respond to attacks on alliance nations with full force. Drones and missiles entering NATO airspace have not been treated as attacks on the alliance so far, but Polish authorities have repeatedly scrambled aircraft because of Moscow's aerial attacks on Ukraine. Ukrainian authorities in the western Lviv and Volyn regions, bordering Poland, reported air alerts overnight, but no casualties. Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovyi said overnight "a massive attack on the western regions of Ukraine is underway," targeting critical infrastructure. Updates to follow.

Russia launches biggest aerial attack on Ukraine since start of the war
Russia launches biggest aerial attack on Ukraine since start of the war

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Russia launches biggest aerial attack on Ukraine since start of the war

Russia launched its biggest aerial attack on Ukraine overnight, a Ukrainian official said on Sunday, part of an escalating bombing campaign that has further dashed hopes for a breakthrough in efforts to end the three-year-old war. Russia fired a total of 537 aerial weapons at Ukraine, including 477 drones and decoys and 60 missiles, Ukraine's air force said. Of these, 249 were shot down and 226 were lost, probably having been electronically jammed. Yuriy Ihnat, head of communications for Ukraine's air force, told the Associated Press that the overnight onslaught was 'the most massive air strike' on the country, taking into account both drones and various types of missiles. The attack targeted regions across Ukraine, including western Ukraine, far from the frontline. Poland and allied countries scrambled aircraft to ensure the safety of Polish airspace, the Polish air force said Sunday. Kherson regional governor Oleksandr Prokudin said one person died in a drone strike, and another was killed when a drone hit a car in the Kharkiv region, according to its governor Oleh Syniehubov. Six people were wounded in Cherkasy, including a child, according to regional governor Ihor Taburets. In the Lviv region in the far west of Ukraine, a fire broke out at an industrial facility in the city of Drohobych after a drone attack, which also forced parts of the city to lose power. Ukraine's air force also said one of the F-16 warplanes Ukraine received from its western partners to help fight Russia's invasion crashed after sustaining damage while shooting down air targets. The pilot died when the fighter jet went down. Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Friday that Moscow is ready for a fresh round of direct peace talks in Istanbul, however the war shows no signs of abating as US-led international peace efforts have so far produced no breakthrough. Two recent rounds of talks between the Russian and Ukrainian delegations in Istanbul were brief and yielded no progress on reaching a settlement. Long-range drone strikes have been a hallmark of the war, now in its fourth year. The race by both sides to develop increasingly sophisticated and deadlier drones has turned the conflict into a testing ground for new weaponry.

Five biggest f-bombs in political history
Five biggest f-bombs in political history

The Hill

timean hour ago

  • The Hill

Five biggest f-bombs in political history

President Trump made waves this week when he used the f-word while updating reporters on efforts to settle Iran's military conflict with Israel. 'We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the f‑‑‑ they're doing,' Trump told reporters as he departed the White House for a NATO summit on Monday as the Middle East rivals appeared to waffle on their temporary truce after the U.S. bombed Iran's key nuclear sites over the weekend. Trump isn't the first president to use the expletive, and former President Nixon left Americans wondering what words were uttered in the White House with the release of transcripts with the phrase '[EXPLETIVE DELETED]' throughout in 1974. The Hill reported in April that Democrats have been embracing the f-word more as they campaigned against Trump's policies, prompting a National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) spokesperson to accuse Democrats of being 'obsessed with saying 'f‑‑‑ing' and 'a‑‑' as the strategy to win back the voters that rejected them in 2024.' The Hill and GovPredict found in 2019 that the use of curse words from lawmakers on the social media site then-called Twitter dramatically increased in the first year of Trump's first term. Here are five of the most explosive f-bombs in recent politics: Trump's use of the f-word to describe Iran and Israel's attitudes toward their long-standing conflict and latest military strikes against each other was the first time that a president used the word intentionally on live television, though Trump said the word in a hot mic moment before addressing the nation about the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. Jon Krosnick, a social psychologist at Stanford University who studies political communication and behaviors, told The Hill that Trump's use in the context of the Middle East conflict was 'very interesting and very revealing.' 'It was one sentence, but it was an important sentence,' Krosnick said. 'It was not carefully scripted — it was just something that came out.' 'This communicated that he's basically exasperated with the situation, but also that he is feeling confident that he can communicate in that way,' he added. Former President Biden, while he was vice president, was caught on a hot mic describing the Affordable Care Act as a 'big f—ing deal' during then-President Obama's signing ceremony for the legislation that's commonly known as Obamacare. The two joked about the f-word slip a decade later when then-President Biden invited Obama to the White House for an executive order signing event in 2022. 'Now, I'm gonna sign an executive order, and, Barack, let me remind you: It's a hot mic,' Biden said, eliciting laughs and applause from the crowd. Obama, when it was his turn to speak, joked that he was quoting a 'famous American' in describing the Biden's order as a 'pretty big deal.' During a photo-op on the Senate floor in 2004, then-Vice President Dick Cheney (R) reportedly told Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) to 'go f— himself.' The New York Times reported at the time that Leahy said he was 'kind of shocked to hear that kind of language on the floor.' Trump made a rare trek to Capitol Hill to pressure Republicans to pass his agenda-setting 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act' in March, but word quickly spread that he warned members not to 'f‑‑‑ with Medicaid.' Rep. Mark Amodei (R-Nev.) said after the president's closed-door meeting with House Republicans that the members took his use of profanity lightheartedly. Trump described the gathering as 'a meeting of love.' 'That was love in that room. There was no shouting,' the president said. Then-President Kennedy reportedly told a general in 1963 that the Air Force spending thousands on first lady Jackie Kennedy's maternity suite at Otis Air Force Base was 'a f— up.' Then-President Lyndon Johnson (D) reportedly used the f-word in a warning to then-Greek ambassador to the U.S. Alexander Matsas in 1964. 'Fuck your parliament and your constitution,' Johnson reportedly told Matas, as quoted in a 1977 biography.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store