August 3,
2008: Iraq wants to buy 140 M1A1M Abrams
tanks, along with over a hundred support vehicles (for maintenance and
transportation, like 35 tank transporters). The request includes training and
technical support. The total contract cost would be $2.16 billion. Iraq would
not be the first Arab country to operate the M1 tank. Egypt, Kuwait and Saudi
Arabia already operate over 1,600 of them, and Egypt has built hundreds of them
(mainly using components imported from the U.S., but with some locally made
parts). Neither Iraq nor the U.S. Army has revealed the details of the "M"
version of the M1A1. All the other Arab users have at least some of the latest
model (M1A2 SEP).
The Arab
users of the M1 have been very happy with their American tanks. This
satisfaction increased when they saw how the M-1 performed in Iraq. While most
Arabs deplored U.S. operations in Iraq, Arab tank officers and M-1 crewmen were
quietly pleased that their tanks appeared invulnerable, and able to assist the
infantry in any kind of fight. Iraqi army officers have spoken to fellow Arab
officers who have used the M-1, and were told this was the way to go.
Selling
the M-1 to Iraq creates the possibility (although remote) of M-1s fighting
M-1s. Saudi Arabia is seen as the champion of mainstream Sunni Arabs, and has
long supported the Sunni Arab minority in Iraq. For a while, after 2003, with
the increasingly savage fighting between Sunni and Shia Arabs in Iraq, there
was talk of Saudi Arabia intervening, or threatening to, in order to halt
attacks against Iraqi Sunni Arabs. This idea quickly went away in the face of
an American army in Iraq, and growing al Qaeda terrorism in Saudi Arabia. But
once U.S. troops leave, and if the ancient animosity between Sunni and Shia
Arabs in Iraq gets ugly again, there could at least be incidents on the border,
and the possibility of a few clashes between Saudi and Iraqi M-1 tanks.
More
realistically, the Iraqis want their M-1s to keep the Turks out. A less likely,
but still possible, aggressor is Iran. Although Iraq and Iran are both run by
their Shia majorities, Iran is ruled by a religious dictatorship, and some of
those Iranian clerics consider part of southern Iraq (where Shia holy places
are) as part of Iran. Iraq figures that 140 M-1 tanks could make short work of
the ramshackle collection of older tanks Iran has (and is unable to upgrade
much because of all the arms embargoes).