Notable AI Weapons Systems
Doctrine & Strategy
Saudi Arabia's defense doctrine has been shaped by a decade of sustained kinetic conflict in Yemen and the persistent threat of Iranian ballistic missiles and drone proxy attacks against its territory. Unlike most nations developing AI weapons doctrine in theoretical or exercise environments, Saudi Arabia has been stress-testing its systems under daily real-world attack conditions since 2015. The strategic lesson drawn is unmistakable: AI-enabled air defense at scale is not a future requirement but an immediate operational necessity. Investment in integrated battle management, AI target discrimination, and autonomous intercept systems follows directly from this operational reality.
The Vision 2030 defense localization agenda represents the second major pillar of Saudi AI weapons strategy. Saudi Arabia has historically been among the world's top three arms importers, spending enormous sums on systems whose technology remains entirely foreign-controlled. The 50% localization target by 2030 — enforced through mandatory offset requirements from international contractors — is designed to begin transferring AI weapons technology to Saudi domestic entities. SAMI and GAMI serve as the institutional vehicles for this technology absorption, entering joint ventures with Lockheed Martin, BAE Systems, Leonardo, Boeing, and others that require genuine technology transfer as conditions of contract award.
Saudi Arabia's multi-supplier procurement strategy is a deliberate hedge against political dependency. The acquisition of Chinese Wing Loong II UAVs — after US refusal to supply Predator-class armed drones — demonstrated the kingdom's willingness to diversify toward suppliers who impose fewer conditions. This dynamic is expected to continue: where US export restrictions or conditions become politically untenable, Saudi Arabia will source from China, potentially creating AI weapons supply chains that bypass US technology controls. The Abraham Accords' regional context has also opened new channels for Israeli-Saudi defense technology cooperation in areas where direct procurement remains politically sensitive.
Key Organizations
SAMI (Saudi Arabian Military Industries) was established in 2017 as the state-owned defense conglomerate responsible for developing Saudi Arabia's domestic defense industrial base. Operating through subsidiaries and joint ventures covering land systems, aerospace, weapons and missiles, and defense electronics, SAMI serves as the primary vehicle for the Vision 2030 localization drive. SAMI has formalized partnerships with the world's leading defense contractors and is building the institutional capacity to eventually develop AI weapons systems with meaningful domestic content rather than pure assembly of imported components.
GAMI (General Authority for Military Industries) is the regulatory and licensing authority overseeing military industries in Saudi Arabia, including setting and enforcing the localization percentage requirements that compel foreign contractors to transfer technology to Saudi partners. GAMI sets the policy framework within which SAMI operates and approves foreign military partnerships. Together, SAMI and GAMI form the twin institutional backbone of Saudi AI weapons industrialization.
KACST (King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology) funds and coordinates national research programs with defense applications, including AI and autonomous systems research that feeds into military requirements. KACST partnerships with NEOM and the Saudi Data and AI Authority (SDAIA) connect civilian AI research infrastructure to defense AI development pipelines. The kingdom's large-scale civilian AI investment — including NEOM's smart city programs — creates a broader AI talent and technology ecosystem that defense programs can draw upon.