PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Armed Forces of Saudi Arabia
rdfs:comment
  • The Saudi armed forces (, ) consists of the Saudi Arabian Army, the Royal Saudi Air Force, the Royal Saudi Navy, the Royal Saudi Air Defense, the Saudi Arabian National Guard (SANG), and paramilitary forces, totaling over 200,000 active-duty personnel. In 2005 the armed forces had the following personnel: the army, 75,000; Royal Saudi Air Force, 18,000; air defense, 16,000; Royal Saudi Navy, 15,500 (including 3,000 marines); and the SANG had 75,000 active soldiers and 25,000 tribal levies. In addition, there is a military intelligence service, the General Intelligence Presidency (GIP).
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
foaf:homepage
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
deployed
  • 1000
amount
  • 4.82E10
Branches
commander-in-chief
Active
  • 233500
Commander
  • Lt. General Huseen ibn Abdullah Al Gubayel
Age
  • 5.680368E8
Fit
  • 4725514
Country
  • Saudi Arabia
Name
  • Royal Saudi Arabian Armed Forces
Ranked
  • 24
reserve
  • 25000
Available
  • 8240714
reaching
  • 246343
foreign suppliers
Headquarters
  • Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
ranks
Minister
  • Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
native name
  • القوات المسلحة الملكية السعودية
percent GDP
  • 11.4
manpower data
  • 2004
domestic suppliers
manpower age
  • 15
Founded
  • 1944
abstract
  • The Saudi armed forces (, ) consists of the Saudi Arabian Army, the Royal Saudi Air Force, the Royal Saudi Navy, the Royal Saudi Air Defense, the Saudi Arabian National Guard (SANG), and paramilitary forces, totaling over 200,000 active-duty personnel. In 2005 the armed forces had the following personnel: the army, 75,000; Royal Saudi Air Force, 18,000; air defense, 16,000; Royal Saudi Navy, 15,500 (including 3,000 marines); and the SANG had 75,000 active soldiers and 25,000 tribal levies. In addition, there is a military intelligence service, the General Intelligence Presidency (GIP). The Saudi Arabian National Guard is not a reserve but a fully operational front-line force, and originated out of Abdul Aziz’s tribal military-religious force, the Ikhwan. Its modern existence, however, is attributable to it being effectively Abdullah’s private army since the 1960s and, unlike the rest of the armed forces, is independent of the Ministry of Defense. The SANG has been a counterbalance to the Sudairi faction in the royal family; Salman bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, the minister of defense, is one of the so-called ‘Sudairi Seven’ and controls the remainder of the armed forces
is Strength of
is command structure of