Automatic defense systems ‘hugely important’ in dealing with threats

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Luke Pollard, Minister of State for Defence Procurement and Industry in the United Kingdom, views Lockheed Martin's unmanned capabilities at the company's booth at the World Defense Show in Riyadh. (@LMMiddleEast)
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Joseph Rank, chief executive and vice president at Lockheed Martin Saudi Arabia and Africa. (AN photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Updated 12 February 2026
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Automatic defense systems ‘hugely important’ in dealing with threats

RIYADH: Automatic defensive systems that respond to threats in real time without human intervention are “hugely important” in modern air defense, a senior executive at Lockheed Martin told Arab News at the World Defense Show in Riyadh on Thursday.

Joseph Rank, chief executive and vice president at Lockheed Martin Saudi Arabia and Africa, said the ability to connect detection systems directly to interceptors without delay is critical when responding to fast-moving threats such as missiles and drones.

“Integration is hugely important today. There’s so many threats, and the way you deal with threats in a real-time basis is by having everything integrated,” Rank said.

He described systems in which sensors identify incoming projectiles and automatically communicate with defensive assets.

“Your sensors or your radars have to see the incoming missiles or drones, but you don’t want to wait and have a human in loop … The sensors communicate automatically to the missiles that are going to knock those out of the air,” he said.

Rank said latency must be minimal to ensure an effective response.

“The latency has to be almost like nothing there, like a nanosecond, so that immediately, when you pick up that incoming missile or drone, it’s automatically communicated, no human in the loop that’s there,” he said.

He spoke about how the company uses a system called Command IQ to support this interconnectivity, linking sensors and interceptors in real time and incorporating artificial intelligence to assess response options.

The system works by “connecting everything together, sensors to shooters in real time, and it also integrates artificial intelligence. So, it gives you the best options.

“You might have three or four options to shoot or eliminate that drone. It gives you what’s the most cost-effective, what has the most probability of kill. And so, it helps you protect your citizens here, the citizens of the Kingdom.”

Beyond system integration, Rank also addressed the company’s operations in Saudi Arabia, describing a shift from supplying equipment to carrying out manufacturing and maintenance activities locally.

“We used to sell things to the Kingdom. Now we actually make things here in the Kingdom,” he said.

The company is meeting or exceeding the country’s 60 percent localization requirement and is investing in workforce development, he added.

Rank said that the company, which has operated in Saudi Arabia for 60 years, intends to continue expanding its role, including through future co-development of systems in Saudi Arabia.

“We’re going to build new things here in the Kingdom that will be for the Kingdom’s use, and we will export abroad.”

The company also announced in a statement on Thursday that it signed a memorandum of understanding with the Arabian International Co. for Steel Structures to expand localized production of components for the advanced Terminal High Altitude Area Defense weapon system.


Separation of Somali conjoined twins Rahma and Ramla begins in Riyadh

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Separation of Somali conjoined twins Rahma and Ramla begins in Riyadh

  • Surgery to take 14 hours in 8 stages with 37-member team
  • Initiative is led by leading surgeon Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah

RIYADH: Surgery to separate Somali conjoined twins Rahma and Ramla is underway at the King Abdullah Specialized Children’s Hospital of the Ministry of the National Guard in Riyadh.

The children came with their parents to Saudi Arabia upon King Salman’s directives in May last year and were transferred to the hospital for tests to determine whether the operation would be safe.

An official of the Saudi Conjoined Twins Program told Arab News that in addition to the complexity of the intervention, there was also a waiting list of other children.

Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah, who heads the SCTP’s teams and is also supervisor-general of the Saudi aid agency KSrelief, said the 13-month-old girls who arrived on May 6 were joined at the lower abdomen and pelvis. 

“Each twin has two complete lower limbs, and they share a pelvic bone, colon and rectum, with overlaps in the urinary and reproductive systems,” said Al-Rabeeah.

He explained that Ramla suffers from complete atrophy of both kidneys and would need immediate dialysis after separation.

Rahma suffers from complete atrophy of her left kidney, and there are cysts in her right kidney, which is currently functioning adequately but would require close monitoring following surgery to ensure its continued function, he added. 

Al-Rabeeah said the risk was 40 percent due to the case’s medical challenges. The situation was explained in detail to the twins’ parents, who accepted the plan to separate the girls, he added.

He said the procedure is expected to take about 14 hours in eight stages, and would involve 37 consultants, specialists, nurses and staff in the fields of anesthesia, pediatrics, orthopedics and plastic surgery.

He said Rahma and Ramla will be the 68th pair of conjoined twins to be separated under the program, which began 35 years ago. 

Al-Rabeeah thanked the Saudi leadership for supporting the initiative over the years. He prayed for the success of the separation, which he said would give the girls the best chance to live happy and healthy lives.