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August 23, 2008
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Conventional Armed Forces in
the Gulf
Anthony H. Cordesman
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Conventional Armed Forces in the
Gulf
Anthony H. Cordesman
The Arleigh A. Burke Chair in Strategy, Center of Strategic
and International Studies
Synopsis:
Conventional
military strength is only one aspect of the trends in Gulf
security, but it is important to understand how Gulf forces
now compare and the mix of quantitative and qualitative
strength that shapes national forces. The attached report
summarizes the development of Gulf states� conventional
military strengths and weaknesses in force strength, force
quality, capabilities and leadership. This report can be
downloaded from the CSIS
web site.
The Key Factors Shaping Southern Gulf Forces
The
Iraq War, war on terrorism, and the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict may have made the U.S. and outside forces unpopular,
but this has done little to push Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar,
Saudi Arabia, and the UAE towards finding an effective
collective alternative to dependence on the U.S. All are
members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), but the GCC
remains largely a myth in war fighting, deterrence, and force
development terms. |
The Southern Gulf states have not yet adjusted their national
force plans to take account of the disappearance of Iraq as a
major regional threat, and must now further adjust their
forces to deal with Iran�s growing missile forces and the
threat it will become as a nuclear power. They also face the
risk that the power vacuum in Iraq will become a threat of a
different kind and/or give Iran decisive influence over a
Shi�ite-dominated Iraq. This latter risk seems to be
steadily diminishing but cannot be ignored.
Most Southern Gulf states still have some degree of tension
with their neighbors, although they do seem to have resolved
many past border and territorial disputes. The end result is
that the Southern Gulf States continue to have closer
real-world military cooperation with the U.S. than with each
other, although the smaller Southern Gulf states now cooperate
more closely with the U.S. than Saudi Arabia.
Saudi-U.S. military cooperation was key to the quick coalition
victory in the Gulf War. Some aspects of Saudi-U.S.
cooperation have been curtailed as a result of the events of
�9-11,� and tensions over the war on terrorism. U.S.-Saudi
cooperation was much closer in the Iraq War in 2003, however,
than is generally apparent.
This cooperation involves far more than simply hosting U.S.
forces. A wide range of U.S. advisory, training, and exercise
activity takes place with Southern Gulf states, as well as
British and sometimes French forces, at the multilateral
level. The U.S. has also tried to encourage the Southern Gulf
states to strengthen the GCC as part of this effort.
Military Developments in the Northern Gulf
The
virtual destruction of Iraq�s military forces and its
capability to deploy or acquire weapons of mass destruction in
2003 has fundamentally changed the Gulf military balance.
Yet the longer-term trends described earlier have also had a
major effect. While some Southern Gulf states have faced
recent problems in recapitalizing their forces, these problems
have been far more severe in the case of Iran and Iraq and
have affected their military development far longer.
The future of Iranian force development remains unclear. One
focus is deploying long-range missiles. Another focus is
irregular or asymmetric warfare. Iran continues to develop its
capabilities for asymmetric war both on land and at sea, as
well as its ability to train and support potential proxies
like various Iraqi militias, the Lebanese Hezbollah, and
movements like Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
Conventional modernization still lags behind the decline in
conventional weaponry imposed by age, past combat, and wear.
Trends in Comparative Military Manpower
The fact that Iraq�s 2,600 main battle tanks and 316 combat
aircraft are no longer part of the count illustrates just how
much the regional balance has changed as a result of the Iraq
War.
This further emphasizes Iran�s lead in force size over those
of the Southern Gulf states. Iran continues to have far more
military manpower than Saudi Arabia, but the effectiveness of
this manpower is severely limited by the problems in Iran�s
pool of military equipment.
Saudi manpower has increased sharply relative to that of Iran
over time. In practice, however, coordination and
interoperability remains extremely limited, robbing the
smaller Gulf States of much of their potential military
effectiveness.
The manpower pool of most smaller Southern Gulf countries is
too limited to properly crew and support the pool of weaponry
in their land forces. There is also a relatively heavy
emphasis on air force and air defense manpower for most
countries, and naval manning too small to support effective
navies without extensive foreign civilian support.
Trends Affecting Land Forces
Saudi numbers of medium and high quality tanks have near
parity with Iran (whose tanks are generally still sharply
inferior to those of Saudi Arabia and the tanks in most of the
smaller Southern Gulf states).
Iran does not have anything like the number of other armored
fighting vehicles necessary to support its strength in main
battle tanks.
In general, the smaller Southern Gulf states have developed a
good balance of tanks and other armored vehicles. At the same
time, it is clear that each of the Southern Gulf states have
developed a force mix with little regard to interoperability.
Artillery is the area where Iran has its greatest lead over
the Southern Gulf states. It is also clear, however, that
almost all of the Iranian lead is in towed weapons, and its
artillery maneuver strength is severely limited.
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Trends Affecting Air and Air Defense Forces
The growing importance of armed helicopters in the Southern
Gulf is not insignificant. Iranian holdings are largely worn
and obsolescent and the Iraqi armed helicopter forces no
longer exist.
Saudi Arabia has an advantage over Iran in terms of high
quality aircraft. At the same time, there is a lack of
standardization and persistent interoperability problems of
the Southern Gulf states.
There is only limited emphasis on reconnaissance aircraft
capability in the Gulf region, and the limitations to
situation awareness and targeting. The problems for the
southern Gulf States will, however, be of limited importance
if they operate in a coalition with the U.S.
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Saudi Arabia has the only modern mix of advanced land-based
defenses in the Gulf. Iran has extensive assets, but many are
obsolete or obsolescent, and they are poorly netted and
vulnerable to electronic warfare. Iraq no longer has such
assets. The smaller Southern Gulf states have a wide mix of
assets, purchased with little attention to interoperability.
Trends Affecting Naval Forces
Iran is the only significant Gulf navy. Saudi Arabia has
significant total ship strength, and better and more modern
ships, but limited readiness and proficiency. Once again the
lack of interoperability, specialization, and orientation
around key missions leaves most Southern Gulf navies with only
limited ability to cooperate.
Remaining Hollow at Great Cost
It is clear from both arms transfer and military expenditure
data that Iran cannot hope to keep pace with the Southern Gulf
states in terms of resources. Iraq�s spending is only now
beginning to reflect major self-financing, but it will be a
half decade or more before Iraq can begin to develop a
self-defense capability that might be able to meet a serious
challenge from any of its neighbors. There is no current
prospect that it can again become a major conventional power
in the next decade.
The Southern Gulf leads the regional arms race that the
Northern Gulf states began. Saudi Arabia has by far been the
largest spender in the Gulf, although several small Southern
Gulf states � notably the UAE, Kuwait and Oman � have been
very large spenders in proportion to their size.
The U.S. is the major arms supplier for most of the Gulf
States, although major Western European suppliers have
recently begun to plan an increasing role in supplying Saudi,
Emirati and Omani armed forces. Other Gulf States have chosen
to include Russian arms imports as part of a broader force mix
of systems from the US and Europe.
The Southern Gulf states have not transformed their
superiority in military spending into forces whose
effectiveness are proportionate to their cost. The potential
desirability of regional cooperation, standardization and
interoperability, and training and organization for joint
operations on a GCC-wide level is obvious.
Rivalries and past tensions between the Southern Gulf states
prevented serious efforts at developing joint capabilities and
interoperability. At the same time, a number of states limited
their military efforts because of the fear of coups. The end
result was that the Southern Gulf states largely preferred de
facto dependence on U.S. and British power projection forces
over effective regional and national military efforts.
Click
here for complete report
About
Anthony Cordesman
Dr.
Anthony H. Cordesman holds the Arleigh Burke Chair in Strategy
at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and is
Co-Director of the Center's Middle East Program. He is also a
military analyst for ABC and a Professor of National Security
Studies at Georgetown. He directs the assessment of global
military balance, strategic energy developments, and CSIS' Dynamic
Net Assessment of the Middle East. He is the author of books on
the military lessons of the Iran-Iraq war as well as the
Arab-Israeli military balance and the peace process, a six-volume
net assessment of the Gulf, transnational threats, and military
developments in Iran and Iraq. He analyzes U.S. strategy and force
plans, counter-proliferation issues, arms transfers, Middle
Eastern security, economic, and energy issues. [Click
here for more]
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