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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 13:45
photo EMA (Archives)

photo EMA (Archives)

 

23-03-2015 par RFI

 

Un civil malien a été tué et décapité il y a quelques jours dans la région de Tombouctou dans le nord-ouest du pays. Il était accusé par ses assassins d'être un informateur des forces françaises.

 

L’homme accusé d’être un informateur des forces françaises de l’opération Barkhane serait âgé de 39 ans. Ce civil malien a dans un premier temps été enlevé, puis conduit à 120 kilomètres au nord de Tombouctou.

 

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 13:30
détroit de Bab el Mandeb - photo NASA

détroit de Bab el Mandeb - photo NASA

 

Aden, 23 mars 2015 Marine & Occéans (AFP)

 

En progressant vers le sud-ouest du Yémen, les miliciens chiites Houthis, proches de l'Iran, font planer une menace sur le détroit stratégique de Bab al-Mandeb par lequel transite une bonne partie du trafic maritime mondial.

 

Ce détroit entre la mer Rouge et le Golfe d'Aden qui séparent l'Afrique de la Péninsule arabique est situé à proximité de la grande ville de Taëz, contre laquelle les Houthis ont lancé une offensive ces derniers jours. Et il suffit pour eux de pousser un peu plus vers l'ouest pour parvenir à la côte.

Dimanche déjà, selon des sources de sécurité, des détachements de Houthis faisaient route vers le port de Mocha, à 80 km de Taëz, qui permet un accès direct au détroit de Bab al-Mandeb.

Un tel scénario donnerait une dimension internationale au conflit yéménite, les grandes puissances ne pouvant rester insensibles au fait qu'une force ayant des liens présumés avec l'Iran, pays qui contrôle déjà le détroit stratégique d'Ormuz, prenne pied au détroit de Bab al-Mandeb.

"Dans ce cas, l'Iran serait le principal bénéficiaire (...) et aurait en main une carte pour faire pression sur les puissances mondiales dans les négociations sur le dossier du nucléaire iranien", affirme l'analyste politique yéménite, Bassem al-Hakimi.

"L'Arabie saoudite pourrait parallèlement en pâtir car ses exportations de pétrole vers les marchés asiatiques passent par le détroit de Bab al-Mandeb", ajoute-t-il. L'Iran aurait ainsi un outil de pression sur Ryad".

En entrant dans Taëz, où ils se sont emparés ce week-end de l'aéroport sans toutefois se rendre maîtres de la cité, les Houthis ne se trouvent plus qu'à quelque 160 km d'Aden, la deuxième ville du pays, tout au sud.

Le détroit de Bab al-Mandeb est situé quant à lui à 150 km à l'ouest d'Aden. La route entre Aden et Bab al-Mandeb longe la côte et l'armée régulière n'y est que faiblement présente, selon des spécialistes yéménites.

 

- 'ligne rouge' -

Le détroit revêt une importance stratégique pour d'autres pays, comme l'Egypte et Israël, en plus des grandes puissances.

Parmi celles-ci, les Etats-Unis disposent depuis quelques années d'une base à Djibouti, non loin de la rive africaine du détroit, où la France a une présence militaire plus ancienne.

Pour Le Caire, Bab al-Mandeb, qui donne accès au Canal de Suez, "constitue une ligne rouge", a affirmé devant la presse l'ambassadeur égyptien au Yémen, Youssef al-Charkaoui. "Plus de 38% du trafic maritime mondial passent par ce détroit", a-t-il précisé pour en souligner l'importance stratégique.

"La sécurité nationale du Yémen est intimement liée à la sécurité de la mer Rouge, du Golfe et de Bab al-Mandeb", a ajouté le diplomate égyptien après avoir rencontré la semaine dernière à Aden le président yéménite Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi.

L'Egypte, qui soutient M. Hadi, a fermé son ambassade à Sanaa, comme d'autres pays occidentaux et arabes, après la prise du pouvoir par les Houthis dans la capitale yéménite début février.

 

- ingérences -

M. Hadi a fui Sanaa et s'est réfugié à Aden et, dimanche soir, le Conseil de sécurité de l'ONU lui a réaffirmé son soutien, tout en appelant les Etats membres de l'organisation à "s'abstenir de toute ingérence" au Yémen.

L'ambassadeur égyptien s'était exprimé après avoir remis à M. Hadi une invitation à participer au sommet arabe prévu fin mars en Egypte.

Parmi les pays arabes, les monarchies sunnites du Golfe, en particulier l'Arabie saoudite, sont à l'avant-garde du soutien au président "légitime" du Yémen.

La menace potentielle des Houthis sur Bab al-Mandeb est également un sujet d'inquiétude pour Israël, dont le port d'Eilat est situé sur la mer Rouge.

Le Premier ministre Benjamin Netanyahu n'a pas manqué, dans son discours du 3 mars devant le Congrès américain, de dénoncer les "menaces" que fait peser l'Iran sur le "monde entier".

"Pendant que beaucoup espèrent que l'Iran va rejoindre la communauté des nations, l'Iran est en train d'avaler plusieurs nations. Nous devons être unis pour stopper la marche terrible de l'Iran", a déclaré M. Netanyahu, en faisant référence notamment au Yémen et au "détroit stratégique à l'entrée de la mer Rouge".  

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 13:25
photo CCH Serpillo

photo CCH Serpillo

 

23/03/2015 Sources : Etat-major des armées

 

Le jeudi 12 mars 2015, le personnel du Service Interarmées des Munitions des Forces Armées en Guyane (FAG) a procédé à une destruction de munitions, mesure de sécurité appliquée pour les stocks éprouvés par les déploiements.

 

Basé sur la Montagne des Serpents à une trentaine de kilomètres de Cayenne, les pyrotechniciens du dépôt munitions ont procédé à la destruction par « pétardement », c’est-à-dire en recouvrant les munitions d’explosifs. Ces munitions utilisées dans le cadre des missions des FAG étaient fortement oxydées en raison des caractéristiques du climat et devenues sujettes à des dysfonctionnements. 88 kilos de munitions ont ainsi été éliminés.

 

En 2014, le dépôt de munitions des FAG a détruit 2,4 tonnes de munitions appartenant aux trois armées et au ministère de l’intérieur. Ces opérations de maintenance de munitions permettent d’assurer la sécurité de l’utilisateur mais aussi l’efficacité opérationnelle de la munition.

 

Placé sous les ordres du détachement de liaison du service interarmées de munition, le dépôt de munitions est armé par 6 personnels, dont deux civils. Il gère la comptabilité des munitions, le suivi et l’inventaire du stock. Il est aussi en charge de la perception et du reversement des munitions auprès des unités.

 

A 7 000 km de la métropole, les forces armées en Guyane (FAG) garantissent la protection du territoire national et de ses ressources. Fréquemment engagées en appui de l’action de l’Etat dans des missions au caractère interministériel, les FAG agissent sur un territoire rendu exigeant par son étendue (1 100 km de frontières terrestres), son littoral difficile et sa forêt équatoriale.

photos CCH Serpillo
photos CCH Serpillo

photos CCH Serpillo

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 13:20
Des satellites GPS de Boeing affectés par une erreur technique

Le premier GPS IIF de Boeing pour le compte de l'Armée américaine a été lancé le 27 mai 2010.

 

23 Mars 2015 par Dominique Filippone - lemondeinformatique.fr

 

 

L'US Air Force et Lockeed Martin travaillent à la résolution d'une erreur technique impliquant un système de contrôle au sol utilisé par certains satellites GPS IIF construits par Boeing. La précision des signaux ne serait pas perturbée par cet incident.

 

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 12:50
Millimeterarbeit - Luftbetankung eines Awacs Flugzeuges


23 mars 2015 Quelle: Redaktion der Bundeswehr 03/2015 15E15402

 

Rendezvous in 8.000 Metern Höhe: Ein AWACS (Airborne Warning & Control System) -Flugzeug der NATO nähert sich einem amerikanischem Tankflugzeug bis auf wenige Meter. Die Piloten müssen manuell genau Kurs halten, um den Tankrüssel richtig platzieren zu können. Danach fließen rund 20.000 Liter Kerosin in die AWACS-Maschine.



 

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 12:45
Tunisie: un soldat tué dans l’explosion d’une mine posée par des jihadistes

 

23 mars 2015 45eNord. Ca (AFP)

 

Un soldat tunisien a été tué dimanche soir dans l’explosion d’une mine posée par des jihadistes dans une région montagneuse de l’ouest de la Tunisie, à la frontière avec l’Algérie, a annoncé à l’AFP le porte-parole du ministère de la Défense.

 

Un militaire a été tué et deux autres ont été blessés lorsqu’une mine a explosé au passage de leur véhicule sur les hauteurs ouest, à la frontière avec l’Algérie, a indiqué Belhassen Oueslati, sans vouloir préciser le lieu exact parce qu’une opération était en cours.

 

La mine a été posée par des éléments terroristes, a-t-il ajouté.

 

La Tunisie, qui vient d’être frappée par un attentat revendiqué pour la première fois par le groupe Etat islamique (EI), tente depuis la fin 2012 de neutraliser – sans succès pour l’instant – un groupe lié à Al-Qaïda au Maghreb islamique (AQMI), actif dans les massifs montagneux et forestiers à la frontière algérienne.

 

Plusieurs dizaines de soldats, policiers et gendarmes ont été tués dans des incidents liés à une mouvance jihadiste en plein essor depuis la révolution de 2011, notamment lors d’attaques les visant ou dans l’explosion de mines.

 

Mercredi, deux hommes armés ont ouvert le feu au musée du Bardo à Tunis, tuant 20 touristes et un policier tunisien. Revendiquée par l’EI, il s’agit de la première attaque à viser des étrangers depuis la révolution.

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 12:36
A French Rafale Marine Flotille 11F - carrier qualifications aboard the USS Carl Vinson photo US Navy

A French Rafale Marine Flotille 11F - carrier qualifications aboard the USS Carl Vinson photo US Navy

 

New Delhi, March 20: telegraphindia.com

 

French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle, heading a battlegroup of ships involved in strikes against the Islamic State from the Persian Gulf, will be in the Arabian Sea next month for 10 days of war games with the Indian Navy.

 

The exercise, the latest of a series named "Varuna", will also involve India's aircraft carrier, the INS Vikramaditya, other Indian warships and a submarine.

 

The nuclear-powered Charles de Gaulle carries on board the navalised Rafale fighter jet that also landed on and took off from the American USS Carl Vinson aircraft carrier earlier this month in the Persian Gulf.

 

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 12:35
India Developing Network of Coastal Radars

Indian PM Narendra Modi inspects the Guard of Honour, at the Ceremonial Reception, in Seychelles on March 11.(Photo M.Asokan -Indian Prime Minister's Office)

 

March 20, 2015 By Oscar Nkala – Defense News

 

GABORONE, Botswana — Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has activated the first of the Indian Navy's planned 32 coastal surveillance radar (CSR) stations in the Seychelles, marking the beginning of the rollout of an Indian-led maritime surveillance project set to have stations in the Seychelles, the Maldives, Mauritius and Sri Lanka.

 

Modi activated the radar system during his recent tour of the Seychelles as he visited key Indian Ocean region allies in a move some military strategists view as an effort to forge a strong alliance to counter aggressive expansion by the Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) in the region since October.

 

Addressing senior Indian Navy and Seychelles Coast Guard officers during the commissioning, Modi said India's plan includes setting up radar stations in the Seychelles, Mauritius and the Maldives. Negotiations to set up at least 10 more in Sri Lanka are ongoing.

 

He said the CSRs will improve the operational capabilities of the maritime security forces of partner nations and the overall security of the exclusive economic zones which make up the region's "blue economy."

 

"We regard Seychelles as a vital partner in our Indian Ocean neighborhood. Our relationship is unique and special. It is founded on a deep sense of mutual trust and confidence. Our security partnership is strong and has enabled us to fulfill our shared responsibility to advance maritime security in the region," he said.

 

"It is a privilege to be a partner of the Seychelles in the development of its security capabilities. We also hope that Seychelles will soon be a full partner in the maritime security cooperation between India, Maldives and Sri Lanka," Modi said.

 

Regional defense analysts say that once completed, the 32-station surveillance project will enable the Indian Navy, through its allies, to monitor the movements of all ships operating in the Indian Ocean.

 

Modi pledged to donate a second Dornier maritime surveillance aircraft to boost the intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities of the Seychelles Coast Guard.

 

India donated the first Dornier (Do 228) aircraft and some naval vessels to the Seychelles in mid-2013. Seychelles President James Michel said the stations are proof of his country's exemplary defense and security relationship with India.

 

"Everybody recognizes India's footprints on many facets of our economic, social and cultural development. We have an exemplary partnership in the defense and security sectors.

 

"This is very much reflected in our fight against piracy and the joint patrolling of our oceans and also the training of our defense personnel. We are very encouraged by the willingness of the government and people of India to work with us in the context of the development of our blue economy,"

 

In addition to the newly commissioned CSR on the main island of Mahe, more will be installed on the smaller islands of Farqhuar, Astove and Assumption. All are expected to be commissioned into service between July and August.

 

In neighboring Mauritius, Modi signed an agreement to set up eight Indian-controlled CSR stations and pledged to continue strengthening the Mauritius Coast Guard with new aircraft, naval vessels and Indian training for its seamen.

 

The IOR surveillance project is widely seen as India's response to China's aggressive new operations in the region. In January, the Chinese Ministry of National Defense said it will step up the deployment of Navy vessels in the area to protect its security and economic interests while contributing to regional international anti-piracy operations.

 

The Indian move follows recent reports suggesting that China is pushing for the establishment of at least 18 deepwater ports with African and Asian littoral states to set up bases and maintenance yards for vessels.

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 12:35
Rafale Vs. Su-30MKI - The New Indian Dogfight


March 23, 2015 by Shiv Aroor - Livefist
 

Intensifying since the turn of the new year, you couldn't possibly have missed the roar of AL-31s in all talk of India's turbulent final dash for a Rafale jet deal. It's unmissable. The fact that the Su-30 MKI was pushed into the M-MRCA conversation by none other than India's defence minister ensured the notion strengthened quickly, unscathed by intrigue and rumours. And then, it exploded.
 

On the evening of December 30, when Manohar Parrikar suggested to reporters that 'additional Su-30s' could save the IAF in the event that 'complications'-ridden negotiations with Dassault Aviation for 126 Rafale fighters didn't end in a purchase contract. That the seed of the idea came from the proverbial horse's mouth, and not South Block hearsay, gave it furious immediacy.

 

The suggestion caught the Indian Air Force completely off guard, flying as it did in the face of an unusually defiant stance the IAF leadership had decided on in 2012 about there being 'no Plan-B' in the event that the Rafale failed. But this time, the IAF resisted an immediate rebuttal. This was, after all, the Defence Minister who had weighed in. But what truly unnerved the IAF -- and several planners within the MoD -- was that Parrikar had gone out on a limb less than two months after being handpicked as Defence Minister. His specific comments on the negotiations revealed three things: One, that he'd hit the ground running and was fully abreast of the negotiations and where they were stuck. Two, that he was fully willing to question for the first time the presupposition both within the MoD (and especially the IAF) that there would was likely to be extended turbulence, but a deal would finally be signed. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, it showed that Parrikar has been empowered by the PM to lead decision-making on a deal that's so large that it has everything to do with the political leadership, and little to do with the act of hardware procurement.

 

But there was blood in the water that couldn't be ignored. If Parrikar's pre-New Year comment sparked a fire, he pretty much flung a barrel of gasoline at it two weeks later when in an interview to Karan Thapar on Headlines Today, he said in response to a question on the possibility of the Rafale deal not working out, "Sukhoi-30 choice is always there. What I mean to say is: upgrade the Sukhoi-30, make it more capable."

 

The latch-on was instantaneous. Hours after Parrikar's comments were broadcast, Russian think-tank the Center for Analysis of World Arms Trade declared on Jan 13 that India's potential choice of more Russian Su-30 MKIs instead of Rafales would "advantageous to the country’s air force in terms of cost, tactical and technical characteristics of the plane and a series of other reasons". For good measure, the Russians stoked France's controversial hold-back of Mistral-class amphibious intended for Russia. The example had been broached before, but Moscow really ground it in this time.

 

A month later, Livefist learns, a concerted effort was made by Russia's mission & trade office in New Delhi to pull India's External Affairs Ministry into the conversation. The specifics of what was on the table isn't fully known. A curious Russian media report quotes junior minister in the MEA, former Army chief, Gen (Retd.) Vijay Kumar Singh as having said that the Su-30 was cheaper than the Rafale and more reliable.

 

In February, with the Su-30 vs. Rafale debate stewing for nearly two months to the consternation of Dassault, IAF chief Arup Raha was fairly buttonholed into saying, "There's M-MRCA and there's Sukhoi-30. The requirements are slightly different. And they have their own capabilities. They compliment each other but do not replace each other." A statement, it was immediately clear, that practically subverted what the Defence Minister had suggested.

 

At Aero India 2015, where the IAF chief made that comment, the spotlight also shined on friction between Sukhoi and the IAF over the unexplained seat ejection that caused the type's fifth accident last year. The Russians weren't happy. "When we are wrong, we will say so. When the Indian pilot is wrong, the IAF should not be shy to admit that," an irritated UAC officer told me at the time.

 

Dassault Aviation and the French government were always prepared for rumblings of power-play and suggestive pressure from the Indian MoD, but the speed at which the conversation heated up caught all involved by surprise. For Dassault, it would now be fighting on two fronts -- one with a confident new government that promised quick action either way. And two, with the Russians, India's largest supplier of military hardware, practically invited into the tense last lap of the M-MRCA fight by the Indian MoD. The French Defence Minister, who visited Delhi last month for the second time in less than two months, didn't bring up the Su-30 MKI. The French didn't have a direct play, political or otherwise. It was felt that things were too delicate at the negotiations table to poke at something that was, Paris understood, a direct message that India wasn't going to budge on final sticking points. Informed that it needed to work on a joint liability matrix with HAL for the license build programme, Dassault decided to bide its time.

 

Of course, by this time, plenty of journalism in India, Russia and France -- and the furious online military aviation subculture -- had gotten the Rafale and Su-30 to dogfight on paper. It wasn't until March that France's patience cashed out. It was a veritable neutron bomb on the Su-30's two month supercruise through arms & diplomatic circles, and even the French couldn't have expected such a break: a statement by Defence Minister Parrikar himself that the Su-30 fleet had serious problems.

 

For Dassault and the French government, the new conversation was 

 

Here's the latest state of play:

 
  1. Russia smells real blood. Through their Trade Office and the Embassy, an existing conversation about additional numbers of the Su-30 & upgrades of earlier units has been re-energised with the additional sweetener of a markedly higher degree of local content and sourcing on any additional Su-30s India may choose to license build in Nashik.
  2. Livefist can confirm that Russia has also offered India the Su-35 'Super Flanker', but kept the details open. The type is officially on the table now with Russia inviting India to help configure a Su-35 'MKI'.
  3. Russia is attempting to contain the twin damage of (a) information about engine trouble and fleet availability. Rosoboronexport has begun discussions with the IAF and HAL. And (b) the issue of the mysterious seat ejections. Both sides have decided to sort out the issue cordially and in private. It doesn't want to lose the momentum it received from the initial suggestion that more Su-30s could cushion the potential collapse of the M-MRCA.
  4. Dassault and HAL are currently working at a furious pace to have something to show to the MoD in the next one week, though it remains unlikely that there will be anything for Prime Minister Modi & President Hollande to announce next week in Paris.
  5. On March 18, Defence Minister Parrikar said, "They have to tell us whether they can do it or not. Can’t keep waiting."
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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 12:20
Is the Pentagon Losing the Arms Race in Space?

 

March 18, 2015 By Franz-Stefan Gady – The Diplomat

 

Pentagon officials are deeply worried about Chinese and Russian anti-satellite weapons. Are their concerns justified?

 

This year, the Pentagon will try to step up its weapons modernization programs and boost investments in cutting-edge defense technology. As the principal rationale behind the Pentagon’s push, top Department of Defense officials cite the fear that the United States will lose its relative technological superiority thanks to the burgeoning technical capabilities of the Chinese and Russian militaries .

Yesterday, speaking at the McAleese/Credit Suisse Defense Programs Conference, Robert O. Work, deputy U.S. secretary of defense, noted that “because of budget uncertainty and restrictions imposed by Congress, and because of our unrelenting focus on the readiness of forward deployed forces, we’re chronically underinvesting in new weapons and capabilities.”

He further emphasized, “That should give all of us pause because our technological dominance is no longer assured (…) We see several nations developing capabilities that threaten to erode our long-assured technological overmatch and our ability to project power.” Chinese and Russian growing military capabilities are  particularly worrisome for the Pentagon’s leadership.

The American military’s chief weapons buyer, Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics Frank Kendall, said during his presentation at the conference that the erosion of the U.S. technological edge in the space domain is “particularly bad” due to Chinese and Russian growing anti-satellite capabilities.

These capabilities potentially include cyber and electromagnetic attacks, jamming operations, and ground-based lasers as well as anti-satellite (ASAT) missiles. For example, China destroyed a defunct weather satellite with a missile in 2007. In addition, Beijing tested a missile-fired anti-satellite kill vehicle in the summer of 2014, disguising it as a ballistic missile defense test. Russia is allegedly developing a satellite hunter — a spacecraft able to track enemy satellites and destroy them — according to media reports.

U.S. officials are especially concerned about threats to U.S. Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF) satellites. “If an adversary were to take out one, just one satellite in the constellation, a geographic hole is opened and we potentially have a situation where the president can’t communicate with forces in that part of the world,” one official underlined.

However, many analysts note that the current threat scenarios have much more to do with the ongoing debate about sequestration — across the board budget cuts — and the fiscal year 2016 defense budget request (see: “The Defense Budget Debate Rages On”) than the actual danger to U.S. satellites from Chinese and Russian weapons.

As Diplomat contributor Jaganath Sankaran noted back in 2014: “While these concerns have some validity, all U.S. military satellites are not equally vulnerable to a Chinese ASAT attack. Furthermore, the benefits from an ASAT attack are limited and would not confer decisive military advantage in every plausible conflict.”

“The substantial range of orbital altitude — 1,000 kilometers to 36,000 kilometers — from which satellites operate poses a challenge to China’s ability to attack U.S. military satellites (…) Unlike the U.S., China has a very limited satellite tracking capability, most of which are based in its territory and possibly a few ships,” he adds.

More importantly he emphasized that “the presence of alternate platforms and built-in redundancies substantially limit the advantages that China can obtain from anti-satellite operation against the U.S.”

In November 2014, the Pentagon launched the Defense Innovation Initiative (DII), an initiative to maintain America’s military dominance for the 21st century and to develop a new third offset strategy. “The DII’s leading focus is to identify, develop and field breakthrough technologies and systems and to develop innovative operational concepts to help us use our current capabilities in new and creative ways,” Deputy Secretary Work said.

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 11:55
A400M (photo Armée de l'Air) - FREMM (photo DCNS)

A400M (photo Armée de l'Air) - FREMM (photo DCNS)

 

19 mars 2015 l’Oeil du 20 heures

 

Et si notre armée partait bientôt en guerre avec des véhicules de location ? Si l’idée paraît étonnante, elle n’en est pas moins prévue par le ministère de la Défense. Dans le cadre de la loi Macron, le gouvernement a fait passer un amendement qui a attiré l’Oeil du 20h. Ce texte permet au ministère de la défense d'effectuer un drôle de passe-passe budgétaire en l'autorisant à vendre des frégates militaires et des avions de transports à des sociétés créées de toute pièce pour l'opération puis à louer ce même matériel à ces mêmes sociétés.

 

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 08:55
Mirage 2000H - photo Guillaume Carré

Mirage 2000H - photo Guillaume Carré

 

Defens'Aero

 

Au mois de Juillet 2011, Dassault Aviation et Thalès ont signé avec l'Inde un contrat portant sur la modernisation d'une cinquante de Mirage 2000H (monoplace) et Mirage 2000TH (biplace) appartenant à la Force Aérienne Indienne.

 

Ces appareils, acquis dans les années 80, commençaient sérieusement à vieillir, et à devenir obsolètes face à des avions construits ces dernières années. C'est pourquoi, l'Inde, qui veut s'assurer d'être un pays leader et puissant en Asie, tout en ayant les moyens de pouvoir contrer les menaces qui déstabiliseraient son état, en particulier avec les tensions très vives qui existent avec son voisin, le Pakistan.

Cette modernisation, d'un montant de 2,4 milliards de dollars, apporte donc à Delhi et à sa flotte de Mirage 2000H/TH un nouveau souffle avec l'implantation d'un nouveau radar plus puissant, d'un système de contre-mesures plus efficace, la possibilité d'emporter des missiles air-air MICA IR et MICA EM, dont 500 ont été commandés, un viseur de casque, une nouvelle avionique, ainsi que des calculateurs internes modernes.

 

Suite de l'article

 

Galerie Flickr du photographe, à visiter : Cliquez ici .

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 08:50
USS Theodore Roosevelt and its accompanying warships - photo US Navy

USS Theodore Roosevelt and its accompanying warships - photo US Navy

 

22 March 2015 from Ministry of Defence and The Rt Hon Michael Fallon MP

 

The 100,000 tonne aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt has anchored off Portsmouth on a round-the-world deployment.

 

The giant aircraft carrier and her escort, the destroyer Winston S Churchill, arrived on Sunday for five days on the first stop of a world wide deployment.

The visit forms part of an ongoing partnership between the US and UK on carrier operations in the run-up to the Royal Navy’s two new 65,000-tonne ships – HMS Queen Elizabeth and Prince of Wales – entering service.

Among the 5,226 crew on board the carrier are six Royal Navy aircraft handlers who are honing their skills ahead of serving on board HMS Queen Elizabeth which is due to arrive in Portsmouth in 2017.

Another crew member is on board the support ship Winston S Churchill, 27 year-old Royal Navy officer Lieutenant Lynsey Sewell is the ship’s navigating officer. The position is always filled by a UK navigator to honour the ship’s British connection.

Senior officers on board both ships will call on senior Royal Navy officers during the visit to discuss recent global operations and get an update on the UK’s carrier programme.

Defence Secretary Michael Fallon, said:

The USS Theodore Roosevelt’s visit shows yet again that UK/US relations are as close as ever. Ten days ago, I was the first of his counterparts to meet incoming Defence Secretary Ash Carter.

Having the Roosevelt in Portsmouth today is yet another example of the world’s broadest, deepest and most enduring defence relationship at work. I’m thrilled to be going aboard today to welcome the crew personally.

The Royal Navy’s First Sea Lord, Admiral Sir George Zambellas, said:

It is excellent to see US Navy carrier steel in Portsmouth. And in barely two years we will see UK carrier steel here too.

We warmly welcome the Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group - a reflection of the close partnership between our nations and navies, and the value of credible seapower in support of our shared national interests.

Across the spectrum – from Type 45 destroyers providing area air defence for US carriers launching air strikes against ISIL, to generous US support as we regenerate our own carrier strike capability – our common bond has never been richer.

USS Theodore Roosevelt will anchor off Stokes Bay near Gosport on Sunday at 17:00 and the USS Winston S Churchill arrives at Portsmouth Naval Base at approximately 13:30. Both leave Portsmouth on March 27.

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 08:50
photo MDN

photo MDN

 

Le 22 mars 2015 nouvelles.gc.ca

 

CAMP ADAZI, LETTONIE – Des soldats du 3e bataillon, The Royal Canadian Regiment (3 RCR), basés à Petawawa, Ontario, ajoutent une force militaire à l'exercice SUMMER SHIELD, un exercice d'entraînement militaire de l'OTAN, tenu à Camp Adazi, en Lettonie. Une équipe formée d'environ 45 soldats participera à des exercices tactiques avec tirs réels, du 21 au 31 mars 2015. Les Canadiens, forts de leurs connaissances et de leur expérience, prendront part aux exercices d'entraînement conjoints avec les forces de la Lettonie, de la Lituanie, du Luxembourg, de l’Allemagne et des États-Unis. L'exercice d'entraînement vise à montrer que l'OTAN est résolue et unifiée face au président russe Vladimir Poutine. L'exercice se terminera par une journée de visiteurs distingués le 31 mars.

 

    L'exercice SUMMER SHIELD est un exercice multinational annuel tenu au Camp Adazi, près de Riga, en Lettonie. Cette année, plus de 1100 troupes de l'OTAN s'y entraîneront ensemble dans le cadre d'un scénario de tir réel.

    L'exercice constitue une occasion inestimable pour les Forces armées canadiennes de s'entraîner et d'améliorer leur interopérabilité militaire dans la région de la Baltique avec les forces de l'OTAN.

    Les Forces armées canadiennes se sont engagées à travailler avec les alliés de l'OTAN, et elles cherchent toujours des occasions de prendre part à des exercices d'entraînement collectifs en Europe, et plus récemment en Pologne, en Allemagne, en Lituanie et en Lettonie.

 

Citations

 

    « La participation du Canada à des exercices comme celui de SUMMER SHIELD illustre notre soutien vis-à vis de nos alliés de l'OTAN de l'Europe de l'Est face aux actes d’agression du régime de Vladimir Poutine. »

    L'Honorable Jason Kenney, ministre de la Défense nationale

 

    « Cet exercice constitue une occasion unique et stimulante pour les commandants et les soldats de prendre part à un scénario de brigade multinational de tir réel. Nous souhaitons aussi élargir cette expérience à nos unités et notre système d'entraînement et réaliser des gains à long terme dans le cadre de notre compréhension commune avec nos forces alliées. »

    Majeur Jonathan Hubble, commandant de la Force opérationnelle terrestre

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 08:35
Think Tank: Hainan Island and China’s South Sea Fleet

 

20 March 2015 By David McDonough* – Pacific Sentinel

 

Recent reports talk about China’s possible establishment of a ‘fourth’ naval fleet with jurisdiction over the Indian Ocean region (IOR), joining the existing North Sea Fleet, East Sea Fleet, and South Sea Fleet. This mysterious fourth fleet will supposedly be based on Hainan Island—even though the island falls under the jurisdiction of the South Sea Fleet and is some distance away from the IOR. For that reason, many see a prospective Chinese fleet covering the IOR to be either entirely speculative or, at best, a hollow force existing in name only.

 

One should certainly be wary of overstating China’s military capabilities or, indeed, ambitions. Taking a worst-case view of a Chinese naval fleet in the IOR could overshadow more modest but also more plausible concerns about other possible roles for a fourth fleet based out of Hainan Island.

 

The island faces the South China Sea (SCS), over which Beijing has proffered expansive historical claims, such as the famous nine-dash line which encompasses nearly all of this maritime zone. Maritime incidents between China and its neighbours, especially Vietnam and the Philippines, are increasingly frequent.

 

The People’s Liberation Army’s Navy (PLAN) is undoubtedly moving to buttress its presence on the island. On Yalong Bay near the island’s southeastern tip, China’s recently constructed Longpo naval base is a deep-water port complete with submarine piers, an underground submarine facility with tunnel access, and a demagnetising facility to reduce the magnetic residuals on ship hulls. This new nuclear submarine base is expected to be serve as a home for the PLAN’s new Jin-class ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs). It also features long piers designed for surface combatants, making it a multi-purpose base. The PLAN has an existing base at Yulin, situated just west of Longpo and designed to service PLAN’s conventional submarines. Facilities for surface ships and construction of new piers have also been reported there.

 

The Hainan complex underpins the PLAN’s rapidly growing South Sea Fleet. Once the least important of China’s three fleets, the South Sea Fleet has since become the primary recipient of China’s more advanced naval warships, including the Shang-class nuclear attack submarine, conventional submarines (Kilo-, Song- and Yuan-class), the above-mentioned Jin-class SSBN, and a dozen of China’s more advanced guided-missile destroyers and frigates and three new amphibious warfare ships, bringing its total to 29 major surface combatants.

 

Moreover, according to John Patch (PDF), China’s fast-attack Houbei-class missile catamarans are also primarily based with the East Sea and South Sea Fleets. Those small, cheap vessels might have limited range and defensive capabilities but they have an impressive anti-surface warfare capability, each being armed with eight long-range anti-ship cruise missiles.

 

The South Sea Fleet may be based out of Zhanjiang on the Chinese mainland. But, given the new submarine and surface warship facilities on the Hainan naval complex, it’s clear the island plays an increasingly important role in its fleet operations. On one hand, it can be seen as a potential SSBN bastion for the undersea leg of China’s nuclear deterrent—in which attack submarines, fast attack ships, and a surface fleet heavy with both anti-ship and air-defence capabilities would be geared towards providing a protective cover for its Jin-class SSBNs against potential anti-submarine warfare (ASW) assets.

 

On the other hand, this naval build-up could be construed in more offensive terms; less about protecting SSBNs and more about magnifying the country’s sea control. While allowing for greater power projection in the IOR, they’re more likely geared for operations in strategically vital locations like the dispute-laden SCS. Attack submarines provide a particularly formidable capability against both submarines and surface ships, while guided-missile destroyers/frigates could provide protection for China’s fleet of missile catamarans and amphibious warships.

 

Such a possibility puts a worrisome light to recent revelations about land reclamation and construction on numerous reefs in the disputed Spratly Islands. Reports indicate a possible airstrip and anti-aircraft tower being constructed, which could strengthen China’s capacity to operate around these disputed islands. That would be especially true if some of those facilities are capable of providing logistical support for the short-range Houbei catamarans, thereby eliminating one of the key weaknesses of this ‘thoroughbred ship-killer‘.

 

It’s difficult to determine which interpretation of China’s naval activities is correct, and it’s possible (and likely) that both approaches are being pursued simultaneously. China would, after all, need protective cover for its SSBNs for its bastion strategy to succeed, requiring a capacity for sea control equally usable against other maritime claimants in the South China Sea. Indeed, an SSBN bastion near Hainan Island logically places a premium on China’s capacity to control the surrounding ‘near sea’.

 

Rather than being distracted by an unsubstantiated red herring, like a putative fourth PLAN fleet over the Indian Ocean, attention needs to be rightly placed on these more immediate and concrete developments. To do otherwise wouldn’t only be detrimental from a security perspective, but strategically foolish as well.

 
* David S. McDonough is research manager and senior editor at the Conference of Defence Associations (CDA) Institute in Ottawa, Canada. The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the CDA Institute
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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 08:35
News Report: Indonesia, Japan to Sign a Defense Agreement

 

21 March 2015 by Steve Herman (VOA)

 

BANGKOK—Indonesia said it will sign a defense agreement with Japan -- a move certain to raise concerns in China, with which Jakarta already has a military pact.

 

Indonesia on Friday announced that a non-binding defense agreement will be signed with Japan next week when President Joko Widodo visits Tokyo for talks with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

 

Indonesian officials say the agreement will increase cooperation in military technology, training and peacekeeping operations; a significant boost above their current defense relationship, which is essentially limited to the exchange of military students. The new pact might also include exchanging intelligence information.

 

Indonesia has enjoyed a more formal military relationship with China -- with which it has a binding agreement -- and has purchased Chinese missiles and other equipment.

 

President Widodo is also to visit China immediately after Japan.

 

Foreign Ministry spokesman Armanatha Nasir said the president will raise the contentious South China Sea territorial dispute in both Tokyo and Beijing.

 

"Of course the issue of regional peace and stability will be discussed both in Japan and China, because the importance of ensuring that the region continues to benefit from stability and peace, because this is a major factor in the contribution for the region's economic development," Nasir said.

 

Japan does not have claims in the South China Sea, but it and China do dispute the sovereignty of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea, which are controlled by Japan.

 

Indonesia, the largest country in Southeast Asia in terms of size and population, has taken a neutral stance on territorial disputes, as Nasir points out, offering itself as a broker to its neighbors and China.

 

"We're a non-claimant country, but we're committed to helping ensure that there can be trust within the countries, claimant countries, on this issue," noted Nasir. "We have pushed for the negotiation through ASEAN in particular, and I think there's certain progress there where China and the other claimants who are ASEAN members have been discussing this issue."

 

Under Prime Minister Abe, Japan has bolstered its security policy, increasing ties with the Philippines and Vietnam, which also have territorial disputes with China.

 

Closer military ties with Jakarta would make the Japanese defense industry more competitive with South Korean manufacturers of military equipment.

 

At home, Abe has sought to loosen restrictions contained in Japan's pacifist constitution imposed on it by the United States after the Japanese defeat in the Second World War. But that has caused considerable anxiety in China and on the Korean peninsula, which suffered at the hands of Japan's colonialism in the first half of the 20th century.

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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 08:35
Soryu class submarines (photo kure-news)

Soryu class submarines (photo kure-news)


18 March 2015 by Aurelia George Mulgan, Professor at the University of New South Wales, Canberra.- Pacific Sentinel
 

In July 2014, the Abe government adopted the ‘Three Principles on Transfer of Defense Equipment and Technology’, which approved Japanese weapons exports as long as certain conditions are met.

 

Based on this new, less restrictive policy on weapons exports Japan has concluded two major deals. The first is to supply surface-to-air missile parts to the US and the second to conduct joint research on air-to-air missiles with the United Kingdom. The proposed Australian submarine deal would eclipse both of these in terms of scale and significance.

 

Japan is yet to respond to the Australian government’s announcement that there would be a ‘competitive evaluation process’ to build Australia’s next submarine. But the Japanese Minister for Defense, Gen Nakatani, expressed a wish to hold talks with the Australian government regarding the matter. The Japanese government now understands that the submarine procurement issue is intertwined with Australia’s domestic politics and ‘is keeping a close eye on Abbott’.

 

Despite critical commentary in the Japanese press on the Australian government’s policy backflip, speculation continues that Japan’s Soryu-class submarines are the most likely candidate to replace Australia’s ageing Collins-class submarines. The expectation is that cooperation with Japan will continue because Australian companies are ‘incapable of building submarines on their own’.

 

In early January 2015, the Japanese press reported that the Ministry of Defense (MOD) had proposed joint development and production of the submarine with Australia. Instead of exporting a completed Soryu-class submarine, the proposal suggested joint development of new technology for material that absorbs sound waves and special steel that would be used to manufacture the hull.

 

Japan would be in charge of producing the main parts of the hull and assembling the submarines, while Australia would be in charge of producing some of the parts as well as the final building and maintenance. A Japanese MOD official noted that assembling the submarines in Australia would lead to higher costs and might affect the quality and safety of the product.

 

Other reports point to Japanese caution about completely handing over its submarine technology to Australia. Submarines are categorised as the ‘most sensitive of all sensitive information’. For this reason the Japanese military, and especially the Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF) whose cooperation will be essential if the deal goes ahead, has major reservations about the deal. MSDF officers ‘don’t tell colleagues, let alone family members, where a submarine is headed after it leaves port’. Japan and the US, which share some information gathered by submarines, do not share the location or ability of each submarine.

 

But the Abe government judged that sharing Japan’s submarine technology with Australia would lead to a strengthening of the production capacity of Japan’s domestic enterprises. The fact that Prime Minister Abe decided to examine the provision of Soryu-class submarine technology to Australia despite opposition from the MOD was regarded as proof that he considers Australia to be a ‘quasi-ally’.

 

The Abe administration is gradually putting in place the necessary policy, institutional and financial support framework to enable Japan’s defence industries to become significant players in the international weapons and defence technology market. In 2015, the Japanese government will launch a Defence Equipment Agency in the MOD. The new agency will have centralised control over defence equipment development, acquisition and exports. It will lead the expansion of weapons exports and is part of the so-called ‘Abe line’ that links the development of defence enterprises with the government’s growth strategy.

 

The MOD’s 2014 Strategy on Defense Production and Technological Bases includes financial assistance for the overseas expansion of defence enterprises and funding to research institutions that work on developing technology that can be used in weapons and equipment. A new executive panel for promoting weapons exports and joint development was also appointed to the MOD in December 2014. It will help the ministry to respond to the many requests for a framework to support the private enterprises involved and establish a system to determine the needs and technological standards of partner countries.

 

While the government has given the green light to weapons sales, companies that manufacture defence equipment are more mindful of the difficult practicalities of particular deals and the need to gain real profits. Some have strong reservations about the Australian submarine deal. An executive of Kawasaki Heavy Industries remarked ‘there is no way Australia will be able to look after the submarines properly even if we give it to them’. But at this stage it is ‘almost impossible’ for a private company to become even partially involved in the operations of the Australian Navy.

 

If the agreement goes ahead this deal could signal an inseparable security relationship between Australia, Japan and the US with both Japan and the US supplying their relevant technology to Australia and cooperating in Australia’s submarine development.

 

For Prime Minister Abe, weapons exports are a key element in a broader strategy of building a network of ‘quasi-alliances’, which includes Australia, India and Southeast Asian countries, with the Japan–US alliance maintained as the strategic ‘trump card’.

 
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23 mars 2015 1 23 /03 /mars /2015 08:35
Korea Aerospace Industries FA-50 fighter (KAI photo)

Korea Aerospace Industries FA-50 fighter (KAI photo)

 

21 March 2015 By Jose Katigbak, STAR Washington bureau – Pacific Sentinel

 

WASHINGTON – The Philippines is planning to purchase 24 more combat aircraft, adding to the 12 FA-50 fighter jets it had ordered from South Korea in 2014, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) said.

 

It did not specify when or from whom the aircraft would be ordered.

 

The FA-50s were the first order by the Philippines for advanced combat aircraft in decades amid the increasing tensions with China over disputed territories in the South China Sea.

 

The SIPRI report from Stockholm on Monday said the five biggest weapons exporters in 2010-14 were the United States, Russia, China, Germany and France, and the five biggest importers were India, Saudi Arabia, China, United Arab Emirates and Pakistan.

 

The top five exporters were responsible for almost 74 percent of all arms exports.

 

Read the full story at The Philippine Star

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22 mars 2015 7 22 /03 /mars /2015 17:40
Space: Russian Spy Birds Enter The 1970s

Main modules and key components of the Bars-M satellite - source russianspaceweb.com

 

March 22, 2015: Strategy Page

 

While Russia lost the space race back in the 1960s, they are still trying to catch up. The Russians quickly realized that putting people on the moon and bringing them back alive was not really wirth it  and concentrated on trying to catch up in more practical areas. Thus on February 28, 2015 Russia put its first photo satellite using digital photography into orbit. Called Bars M, it is expected to last five years. This is behind schedule as the last old-style (using film that had to be sent back to earth) photo satellites was supposed to go up in 2005. Instead Russia has had to launch another eight film using photo satellites since 2005 while waiting for the new digital bird to be ready.

 

The U.S. pioneered this technology in the 1970s and replaced the older tech (which Russia still uses) of using film photography. The older method required satellites to eject canisters to send film back to earth. This limits the number of photos a satellite can take and how long it will be useful.

 

The Russians still have a long way to go. Consider the ground the Americans have covered in this area during the last half century. It all began in the 1960s with the first appearance of the KH (Key Hole) series of photo satellites. The first film camera satellite, KH 1, went up in 1959 but the first successful one was in 1960. Thus until the 1970s the film-using satellites supplied coverage of hostile nations. The KH 1 through 9 series satellites sent film back in canisters (for high resolution pictures), to be developed. The Keyhole 9, the first of which went up in 1971, was not only the last of the film satellites but the largest and most capable. Its basic design was used by the subsequent digital camera birds. The KH 9 could cover large areas at high (for the time) resolution of .6 meters (24 inches). This was more than adequate to spot and count tanks, aircraft, and even small warships. The 19th, and last, KH 9 went up in 1984. The KH-9 was a 13 ton satellite with multiple cameras and 4 or 5 reentry vehicles for returning the film for developing and analysis. The KH-9s were nicknamed Big Bird.

 

The age of film began to fade when the first digital satellite, the KH 11, was launched in 1976. These birds were large, nearly 15 tons, and the digital cameras could obtain better resolution and broadcast the photos back to earth. The resolution was such that objects 70mm (a few inches) in size could be identified from 200 kilometers away. Digital cameras were more flexible than film and eventually surpassed film in all categories. The KH-11 telescopic cameras operated like a high resolution TV camera. Images were captured continuously and transmitted to earth stations. Computers were used to finish the process and produce photos identical to those taken by a conventional film camera. You could even have motion pictures, as well as indications of heat and the nature of the various items. KH-11 could often tell what kind of metal an object on the ground was made of.

 

All this did not come cheap. These birds cost over $400 million each and lasted three or four years, depending on fuel usage. Moreover, you needed two of them up at the same time in order to guarantee coverage and save the birds from having to change orbit too frequently. The most recent KH-11, the 16th, was launched in 2013. There have been at least four models of the KH-11, since the first of five "Block 1s" was launched in 1976. Since the 1960s over a hundred KH series satellites have been launched.

 

KH-11 satellite

KH-11 satellite

The next generation, the KH-12, was supposed to have been launched in 1987. But because of problems with the space shuttle (one had exploded during launch), only a belated KH-11 was launched in October, 1987. The KH-12 was delayed, even though it had several advantages over the KH-11. Along with improvements in ground data processing equipment, the KH-12 could send back data in real time. You could watch events on a large, high resolution screen as they were happening. This would also allow military headquarters and other users to get their satellite information directly, without going through a CIA or NRO (National Reconnaissance Office) processing center. Data from the more esoteric sensors would still have to be studied by the specialists elsewhere. The KH-12 was expected to make users even more enthusiastic about satellite reconnaissance. It did, in the form of a much upgraded KH-11. Actually these birds were called KH-12s but are still officially known as KH-11.

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22 mars 2015 7 22 /03 /mars /2015 17:20
F-16C B61 Mod 12 test flight (early 2015) - photo USAF

F-16C B61 Mod 12 test flight (early 2015) - photo USAF

 

March 22, 2015: Strategy Page

 

The U.S. recently successfully tested a JDAM (GPS smart bomb guidance) kit modified to work on a B61 nuclear bomb. The latest version of JDAM includes wings which enable the JDAM equipped bomb to glide up to 70 kilometers. But the main reason for a nuclear JDAM is not enabling the bomber to drop the bomb from a distance but so the B61 ground penetrating version can use a smaller sized explosion to get the same effect as a much larger explosion. Since JDAM lands the bomb within 30 meters of the aiming point a smaller nuclear explosion gets the same effect (on an underground bunker) as the old version that would only land within 150 meters of the aiming point. That means you only need a 30 kiloton nuke to take out a bunker instead of a much larger one of about 150 kilotons. This means less collateral damage and less fallout going into the atmosphere. Yes, even nukes can be ecologically sensitive.

 

The B61 JDAM is, like the B61 itself, hardened to prevent EMP (electromagnetic pulse) from damaging the electronics. Not a lot of adjustment is needed for the JDAM kit as the B61 has a shape similar to that of the non-nuclear bombs JDAMs are normally used on. The air force is spending over $700 million for the five year effort to develop the B61 JDAM kit. This kit will be tested to make sure it works from a B-52, F-15, B-2, F-16, F-35A and the European PA-200 Tornado

 

Meanwhile the $8 billion effort to refurbish the elderly B61 nuclear bombs is proceeding but budget cuts may delay the number to be refurbished (to about 400) and the delivery date (from 2017 to 2020). Getting this refurb into service means that the last American megaton (million tons of TNT equivalent) bomb, the B83 can be retired before it ages out of usefulness. Nuclear weapons have electronic and chemical components that degrade with and either have to be refurbished or retired because of age-related ineffectiveness.

 

The effort to refurbish one of its oldest warhead designs, the B61, began back in 2006. The B61 is a thermonuclear ("H-Bomb") weapon that is available in several versions. The ones being refurbished are those designed for penetrating the earth before going off. Most nuclear bombs with higher yields ones (300-400 kilotons) are detonated in the air rather than allowed to hit or penetrate the ground. Some 3,200 B61s were built since the design went into service in the mid-1960s, and about half of those remain available for use.

 

The refurbed warheads will be good for another two decades. The basic B61 nuclear bomb weighs 320 kg (700 pounds), is 330mm in diameter and 3.56 meters (11.7 feet) long. They are delivered by aircraft as bombs. Back in 2006 about 400 B61s were still stored in Europe and these are not being refurbed. Interestingly, the W80 nuclear weapon used on some two thousand cruise missile warheads are not being refurbished either. Without the refurb all these older warheads will be useless by the end of the decade and that fits in with the continuing arrangements between Russia and the United States to reduce their Cold War era nuclear arsenals.

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22 mars 2015 7 22 /03 /mars /2015 16:40
Mistral, Delayed Submarine Projects May Cause Euro 300 Million loss to DCNS - photo F. Dubray

Mistral, Delayed Submarine Projects May Cause Euro 300 Million loss to DCNS - photo F. Dubray

 

March 17, 2015 defenseworld.net

 

The French Mistral helicopter carrier Vladivostok could be relocated from Saint-Nazaire to Brest Naval base due to high maintenance costs, Local media reported.

 

DCNS and STX shipyard operators are subject to port and maintenance fees of about $2.7 million. It is rumored that the companies might think of relocating the aircraft carrier to join the naval base in Brest, Le Telegramme reported Monday.

 

Controversy erupted with non delivery of the Mistral ships to Russia after US and allied European countries imposed sanctions against Moscow in regard to Ukraine conflicts. France was to deliver the ship in November last year.

 

General Director of Russian state-run arms exporter Rosoboronexport Anatoly Isaykin had announced in January that Moscow will make a final decision on the non-delivery of Mistral ships by May.

 

If the Mistral ships are not delivered, Paris is obliged to return money Moscow paid, Isaykin had said.

 

Non delivery of the Mistral amphibious assault ship to Russia and delays in the Scorpene and Barracuda submarine projects to different customers has weighed down on the financials of DCNS.

 

In addition, a delay in the civil nuclear program of France has affected revenues of DNCS. The loss of DNCS is also expected to affect the financials of Thales which owns 35 percent of DCNS.

 

However, its performance may improve in 2015 due to a recent contract with Egypt to supply warships and another with Saudi Arabia for patrol vessels.

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22 mars 2015 7 22 /03 /mars /2015 15:20
Le commandement des Marines américains appelle à la vigilance après des menaces de l'EI

 

22 mars 2015 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

Washington - Le commandement des Marines américains a appelé dimanche ses personnels à la vigilance après la publication d'une liste de 100 militaires américains à abattre par un groupe se réclamant de l'Etat islamique (EI).

 

La vigilance et la protection de la force restent une priorité pour les commandants et leurs personnels, a déclaré dans un communiqué le lieutenant-colonel John Waldwell, du corps des Marines. Il est recommandé aux Marines et membres de leurs familles de vérifier leurs profils en ligne afin de (...) limiter l'accès aux informations personnelles, a-t-il ajouté.

 

Cet avertissement fait suite à la publication sur internet d'un appel au meurtre de 100 militaires américains, comprenant leurs noms et adresses supposés ainsi que des photos, selon le centre américain de surveillance des sites islamistes (SITE).

 

Le groupe à l'origine de cette publication se présente comme la Division des hackers de l'Etat islamique et affirme avoir piraté ces informations sur des serveurs, bases de données et emails du gouvernement.

 

Selon le groupe, les 100 militaires ciblés ont participé à la guerre contre l'EI en Syrie, en Irak et au Yémen.

 

Interrogés par le New York Times, le département américain de la Défense et le FBI ont dit être informés de ces menaces et avoir ouvert une enquête.

 

Toutefois, selon une source militaire citée par le journal, la plupart des informations publiées pouvaient être accessibles au public et les serveurs du gouvernement ne semblent pas avoir été piratés.

 

Par ailleurs, certains des personnels qui figurent sur la liste publiée n'ont pas été impliqués dans les frappes aériennes menées contre l'EI par la coalition internationale dirigée par les Etats-Unis, ont indiqué des responsables au journal.

 

Ces derniers mois, plusieurs médias et institutions américaines ont été piratés par des hackers se réclamant de l'EI. En janvier, ils avaient ainsi brièvement pris le contrôle des comptes Twitter et YouTube du commandement militaire américain au Moyen-Orient (Centcom), une intrusion embarrassante pour l'armée américaine en pleine guerre contre l'EI en Syrie et Irak.

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22 mars 2015 7 22 /03 /mars /2015 13:55
1er RCA : Engagement en salle d’honneur

 

22/03/2015 M. Boyer - armée de Terre

 

Retour aux sources pour le 1er régiment de chasseurs d’Afrique (1er RCA). Désormais, les engagés volontaires de l’armée de Terre (EVAT) signeront ou renouvelleront leur contrat dans la salle d’honneur du régiment.

 

Un cadre plus formel et symbolique, pour les soldats du 1er RCA. Le brigadier Soni du 1er escadron a ouvert la voie ! Il est ainsi le premier depuis de nombreuses années à signer son contrat de renouvellement d'engagement dans la salle d'Honneur du régiment : "Capitaine Jacques Vauquelin". En présence du directeur des ressources humaines, du président des engagés volontaires du régiment et du chef de corps, c’est avec émotion que le brigadier a renouvelé son contrat. Un retour sur une tradition chargée de sens car, face aux étendards et aux hauts faits d'armes de leurs anciens, les jeunes soldats prennent pleinement conscience de leur engagement au service de la France.

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22 mars 2015 7 22 /03 /mars /2015 13:50
L'Otan qualifie de manoeuvre de diversion les menaces de l'EI

 

Bruxelles, 22 mars 2015 Marine & Océans (AFP)

 

Le commandant des troupes de l'Otan en Europe, Philip Breedlove, a estimé dimanche que la publication d'une liste de 100 militaires américains à abattre par un groupe se réclamant de l'Etat islamique (EI) était une tentative de diversion de la part d'un "califat mis sous pression" sur le champ de bataille.

 

"Sur l'affaire de la publication par l'Isis (l'une des appellations de l'organisation Etat islamique, ndlr) de ces informations, ma question est: pourquoi devrions-nous nous attendre à moins, ou à quelque chose de différent?", a déclaré le général américain lors d'un débat organisé à Bruxelles par l'institut américain German Marshall Fund.

 

"Il s'agit juste d'un moyen sensationnaliste de plus. Nous avons vu ces derniers mois que, chaque fois qu'ils enregistrent une défaite sur le champ de bataille, ou qu'ils sont mis sous pression sur le champ de bataille, ils sortent un gros truc pour faire sensation", a-t-il ajouté.

 

"Ce califat est, je pense, mis sous une grande pression et donc ils essaient d'éloigner l'attention de ce qui se passe sur le champ de bataille en ayant recours à l'un de ces gros trucs", a poursuivi le général Breedlove.

 

"Je pense que nous sommes tous inquiets de lire ces informations", a toutefois estimé, lors du même débat, l'ancienne sous-secrétaire à la politique de Défense américaine Michèle Flournoy.

 

"Je pense que cela montre quels types de tactiques ils utiliseront et que nous devons nous y préparer, tant en termes de protection de nos personnels, mais aussi en faisant le travail très important avec les communautés dans nos pays pour faire en sorte que le processus de radicalisation ait moins de chances de réussir", a ajouté l'ex-numéro 3 du Pentagone, qui dirige à présent un centre d'études, le "Center for a New American Security".

 

A Washington, le commandement des Marines américains a appelé dimanche ses personnels à la "vigilance" après la publication de cette liste comprenant les noms et adresses supposés ainsi que des photos de 100 militaires américains, selon le centre américain de surveillance des sites islamistes (SITE).

 

Le groupe à l'origine de cette publication se présente comme la "Division des hackers de l'Etat islamique" et affirme avoir piraté ces informations sur des serveurs, bases de données et emails du gouvernement. Selon le groupe, les 100 militaires ciblés ont participé à la guerre contre l'EI en Syrie, en Irak et au Yémen.

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22 mars 2015 7 22 /03 /mars /2015 13:35
China may get Top Radar, Air-to-air Missile technology through Pakistan

 

March 22, 2015 asian-defence.net

 

According to Britain’s Jane’s Defense weekly, China may get through Pakistan the technology in Franch MICA air-to-air missile and RC-400 radar, which the EU bans sales to China. Such technology may constitute a threat to the Mirage 2000-5 fighter jets that Taiwan has got from France.

 

Pakistan is to get the above-mentioned missiles and radar from France for its JF-17 fighter jets. As JF-17 is jointly developed by Pakistan and China, when Pakistan has got the missile and radar, it is quite possible that China will get the technologies in the missile and radar.

 

MICA is as good as US advanced AMRAAM air-to-air missile. It is well-known for its accuracy and controllability. China may obtain its technology through reverse engineering from a MICA missile provided by Pakistan.

 

In developing its J-10 fighter jet, China has reference to the technologies in American F-16 fighter jet as it was able to study in details an F-16 provided by Pakistan.

 

To prevent China from obtaining French weapon technologies with similar approach, the US will strongly oppose French sales of the weapons to Pakistan. For the same reason India, a major buyer of French weapons, will also oppose.

 

To avoid such oppositions, MBDA spokesman denied what he previously told Associated Press about its competition with others to get an order for MICA. French defense ministry, however, told Associated Press, there were no reasons that France should not cooperate with Pakistan though it had not confirmed the existence of such transactions.

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