Netherlands to double MQ-9A order to eight aircraft

 The Royal Netherlands Air Force (RNLAF) has agreed to double an order for four MQ-9A Reaper medium altitude unmanned aerial vehicles to eight aircraft, according to manufacturer General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI).

The US firm revealed the move in a company statement on Monday, although the plan to order eight aircraft was previously disclosed in a national defense paper, published by the Netherlands Ministry of Defense in June 2022.

GA-ASI said that the first four MQ-9A Block 5 Reapers and associated ground control stations were delivered to the RNLAF in 2022. The aircraft are all due to be operated out of Leeuwarden Air Base, which also hosts Dutch F-35 fifth-generation fighter jets. Only one of the four MQ-9A drones is currently based at the facility for training purposes with the 306th Squadron, while the other three continue to cover missions out of Curacao, a Dutch Caribbean island, according to an August 15 RNLAF social media post.

“We are doubling the number of MQ-9A Reapers so we can increase our maritime and overland intelligence, reconnaissance, surveillance (ISR) capacity,” Lt. Col. Jan Ruedisueli, commander of 306 Squadron, said in the GA-ASI statement. “The MQ-9As will receive external pods for Electronic Intelligence, a communications relay, a Maritime Radar, and also be armed in the future.”

The aircraft are all unarmed currently, but Christophe van der Maat, Netherlands state secretary of defense, informed the House of Representatives by letter in May 2023 that weapons will be procured for the drones.

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