[#content_spinnerchief]
As the World Defense Show (WDS) enters its third edition, the event has moved decisively from launch phase to global fixture. Speaking during World Defense Show 2026, Mansour Al-Babtain, Vice President for Commercial Partnerships and Liaison at the World Defense Show, reflects on the show’s growing international stature, its role in advancing Saudi Arabia’s defense localization agenda, and how WDS is positioning itself as a serious, integrated platform for long-term industrial and strategic collaboration. Q1: World Defense Show has quickly established itself on the global defense calendar. From your perspective, what defines this edition of WDS?This edition reflects maturity. World Defense Show is no longer introducing itself to the global defense community; it is operating as a fully established platform. What defines WDS 2026 is the scale of engagement and the seriousness of intent we are seeing across government, industry, and international delegations. Crucially, it remains the only global defense exhibition structured around five fully integrated domains: air, land, sea, space, and security.From the outset, the Show has been designed around integration — not only across these five domains, but across people, institutions, and industry. That is particularly visible this year in the depth of dialogue, the quality of participation, and the outcomes emerging throughout the week.Q2: Many global defense exhibitions focus on scale or spectacle. How does WDS distinguish itself in practical terms?WDS distinguishes itself through operational realism and structure. It is a purpose-built venue that allows companies and delegations to see capabilities operating in realistic conditions, including live air displays, land demonstrations, unmanned systems, and integrated content programs, all within a single environment.This year, that operational realism is further enhanced through four new dedicated zones: the Future Defense Lab, the Saudi Supply Chain Zone, the Unmanned Systems Zone, and the Naval Zone. Each provides a focused environment where specific capabilities can be demonstrated, assessed, and discussed in context.That matters because defense decision-making today is increasingly about systems working together, not standalone platforms. WDS moves the conversation beyond brochures and static displays into something tangible and credible.Q3: What does the level of international participation at WDS say about Saudi Arabia’s position in the global defense ecosystem today?It reflects confidence. International companies and delegations participate where they see long-term opportunity and seriousness of purpose. The breadth of participation at WDS — with exhibitors from more than 80 countries, spanning established defense primes, technology providers, SMEs, and innovators — signals that Saudi Arabia is viewed as a central and credible player in the global defense and security landscape.Importantly, this participation is not symbolic. It is structured around engagement, dialogue, and partnership exploration, which is what gives the Show its relevance beyond the exhibition halls.Q4: World Defense Show is closely aligned with Vision 2030. How does that alignment translate in practice during the Show?Vision 2030 is ultimately about building sustainable capability — economic, industrial, and human. WDS supports that by acting as a platform where those elements intersect.From an economic perspective, the Show contributes directly to GDP and employment. The previous edition generated approximately SAR 500 million in GDP impact and supported more than 4,600 jobs across event delivery, services, logistics, and the wider ecosystem. This year builds on that trajectory, with the Show now spanning 273,000 square meters across four fully sold-out exhibition halls, alongside significantly expanded participation and programming.At the same time, WDS creates visibility and access by connecting Saudi entities with international partners, investors, and technology providers within a structured and transparent environment.Q5: Localization is a national priority, led by the General Authority for Military Industries. What role does WDS play in supporting that agenda?WDS does not define localization policy; that role sits clearly with the General Authority for Military Industries. What WDS does is provide the platform that enables those conversations to happen efficiently and credibly.The Kingdom has made substantial progress, reaching 24.89% defense localization by the end of 2024, demonstrating clear momentum toward the Vision 2030 target of 50%. WDS supports that trajectory by bringing together the entire ecosystem — Saudi industry, international companies, supply-chain players, technology providers, investors, and decision-makers — in one place.Localization outcomes emerge from these interactions, but the value of WDS lies in convening the right stakeholders and creating visibility around opportunity at scale.Q6: The Saudi Supply Chain Zone has been a visible feature at this year’s Show. Why is this important from WDS’s perspective?The Saudi Supply Chain Zone reflects the practical side of engagement. With 57 Saudi companies participating, it creates a dedicated environment where Saudi SMEs and industrial players can connect directly with international primes, systems integrators, and potential partners.From WDS’s perspective, it is about creating structured visibility and access, allowing conversations around capability, partnership models, and supply-chain integration to happen efficiently and transparently. The Zone facilitates supplier qualification discussions, joint venture exploration, and technology collaboration pathways that support the broader localization agenda.While the Show does not lead localization policy, it plays an important enabling role by bringing the ecosystem together in one place.Q7: Beyond exhibitions and demonstrations, how important are the leadership and content programs at WDS?They are critical. Defense today is as much about strategy, integration, and resilience as it is about hardware. The leadership discussions and content theaters provide context, helping participants understand how capabilities fit into wider operational, economic, and geopolitical realities.The programs address real-world challenges, including multi-domain integration, operational resilience, AI and autonomous systems, cyber defense, and the shift toward co-development and localization. They elevate the quality of engagement by enabling structured exchanges between policymakers, industry leaders, and innovators.Q8: Talent development has featured strongly at WDS this year. Why is that significant?Long-term capability depends on people. The Future Talent Program reflects a clear recognition that defense ecosystems are built not only on technology, but on skills, education, and human capital.By exposing Saudi students and young professionals to real industry environments — including engineering, advanced manufacturing, innovation, and emerging technologies — the Show supports workforce readiness and awareness, complementing national efforts to build a future-ready talent pipeline aligned with Vision 2030.Q9: From your vantage point, what does success look like for World Defense Show beyond headline announcements?Success is measured by continuity. It is not just about what is announced during the week, but about what continues afterward — partnerships that progress, discussions that deepen, and relationships that evolve into long-term collaboration.Previous editions of WDS facilitated multi-billion-riyal agreements and industrial partnerships, many of which have matured into operational programs, joint ventures, and technology collaborations. That continuity is the true measure of impact.Q10: Looking ahead, how do you see World Defense Show evolving over the coming editions?The evolution of the Show will continue to be guided by relevance rather than size alone. As defense technologies, supply chains, and partnership models evolve, WDS will continue adapting its programs, platforms, and structure to reflect those shifts.The objective remains consistent: to provide a serious, international platform that supports integration, industrial development, and long-term collaboration, aligned with Saudi Arabia’s ambitions and the needs of the global defense community.
