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Pakistan, Ƶ conclude two-week long ‘Al Kassah IV’ joint military exercise

Pakistan, Ƶ conclude two-week long ‘Al Kassah IV’ joint military exercise
Special Services Group navy commandos take part in the navy's Multinational Exercise 'AMAN-19' in sea view in Karachi on February 9, 2019. Exercise Aman is scheduled from February 8 to 12, 2019, in which over 45 countries are participating with ships and observers. (AFP)
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Updated 16 February 2023

Pakistan, Ƶ conclude two-week long ‘Al Kassah IV’ joint military exercise

Pakistan, Ƶ conclude two-week long ‘Al Kassah IV’ joint military exercise
  • Troops from Pakistan Army, Royal Saudi Land Forces take part in the joint military exercise
  • Exercise focuses on sharing experiences in route and area search, clearance operations, says ISPR

ISLAMABAD: The closing ceremony of the “Al Kassa-IV,” a joint military exercise between Pakistan and Ƶ, was held at the Military College of Engineering in Pakistan’s northwestern city of Risalpur on Thursday. 

Royal Saudi Land Forces soldiers and Pakistan Army troops participated in the exercise, according to the military’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR).

“The two week-long exercise was aimed at sharing mutual experiences in the field of Route Search, Area Search, Vehicle/ Personal search and Area clearance operations,” the ISPR said. 

The special focus areas of the exercise included drills and techniques relating to Improvised Explosives Devices (IED), Vehicle Improvised Explosive Devices (VIED), anti-suicidal, victim-operated improvised explosive devices and handling of explosives the ISPR said. 

This was the fourth joint exercise of the Al-Kassah series, which is a part of the bilateral military cooperation between both friendly countries. 

Engineer-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army witnessed the closing ceremony as its chief guest while a high-level military delegation from Ƶ, headed by Director General Engineers Major General Saad Misfer Alqahtani, also attended the closing ceremony.

Joint military relations between the two countries expanded with the mutual cooperation program of 1967 under which Pakistan provides large-scale combined military training to Saudi armed forces. 

A 1982 protocol agreement widened the scope of military cooperation to include cooperation in defense production and science and technology.

Since then, both Ƶ and Pakistan have continued sharing military and intelligence data under a number of joint drills between their armies, navies, and airforces.