U.S. Army awards Saab radar deal for Estonia Latvia and Lithuania

Key Points
  • Saab receives a $23.88 million U.S. Army contract modification to deliver 10 Giraffe 1X radars to Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.
  • The contract total rises to $70.08 million, with work in East Syracuse continuing through February 28, 2027.

Saab has received a $23.9 million U.S. Army contract modification to deliver 10 Giraffe 1X radars to Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, strengthening air surveillance coverage across NATO’s Baltic front line.

The award, issued to Saab Inc. in East Syracuse, New York, supports a U.S. Army program aimed at building defense capacity among allied partner nations. The latest modification brings the total value of the contract to just over $70 million and covers the procurement and delivery of the radar systems for the three Baltic states.

Work on the contract will be carried out in East Syracuse, with completion scheduled for February 28, 2027, according to the Department of War contract notice. The Army Contracting Command at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, is overseeing the award.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

For Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, the delivery adds another layer to regional air defense at a time when early warning and low-altitude threat detection remain a priority. The Baltic states, all of which border or lie close to Russia, have continued to expand their surveillance and air defense networks in coordination with NATO allies.

The Giraffe 1X is a compact, mobile radar built for short-range air surveillance. It is designed to track aircraft, helicopters, drones, and other low-flying threats that can be harder to detect with larger long-range systems. In practical use, the radar provides crews with early warning data, helping them identify and follow incoming targets before they reach protected areas. The system can be deployed quickly and repositioned as needed, making it well suited for forward operating locations, critical infrastructure sites, and rapidly changing defensive positions.

(Photo by Saab)

The radar has become increasingly relevant as smaller aerial threats, particularly drones, play a larger role in regional security planning. Systems like the Giraffe 1X are intended to give operators a clearer picture of low-altitude airspace, where drones and other small targets can otherwise slip through coverage gaps.

This radar is essentially the “eyes” of an air defense network. It does not fire interceptors itself, but it provides the tracking information needed for other systems and command centers to respond.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

Ukraine and Sweden sign Gripen E fighter purchase deal

Sweden and Ukraine signed an agreement covering the procurement of fighter jets for Ukraine's Air Force, with deliveries set to begin in early 2029,...

Poland signs $4.8B deal for three Saab A26 submarines

Poland signed a $4.83 billion contract with Sweden's Saab on June 29, 2026, for three A26 Blekinge-class submarines under its long-running Orka program, completing...

Estonia tested a spy drone that hunts enemy electronics

Estonian soldiers successfully tested a signals intelligence system mounted on a lightweight FPV racing drone during Exercise Spring Storm, the country's largest annual military...

Polish combat robots train to hold the Suwałki Gap

Polish, Lithuanian, and French troops are conducting a large-scale military exercise in northeastern Poland focused on defending one of NATO's most vulnerable geographic chokepoints,...

Lithuania develops new autonomous interceptor to kill kamikaze drones

A Lithuanian drone company has unveiled a purpose-built interceptor designed to destroy Shahed-class attack drones in flight, adding a new kinetic counter-drone weapon to...