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8 avril 2013 1 08 /04 /avril /2013 16:50

First two production F-35 fighters in final assembly. (Phot

 

April 8, 2013 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: Dutch Ministry of Defence; issued April 4, 2013)

(Issued in Dutch only; unofficial translation by defense-aerospace.com)

 

The two F-35 test aircraft which the Netherlands has bought for the operational test phase will be temporarily stored.

They will remain in storage until a decision is taken on the replacement of the F-16 in conjunction with the vision for the future of the armed forces, the government has decided.

The United States and the United Kingdom have recently begun pilot training for the operational test phase, in which Dutch personnel will take no part.

During the storage period, only US pilots will fly the aircraft, to keep them airworthy.

Planning

The Netherlands purchased the two test aircraft to participate in the operational test phase of the F-35.

The first is ready, and the second will be completed this summer. The operational test phase will begin, according to current plans, in 2015.


Click here for the MoD’s related letter to Parliament (in Dutch) on the MoD website.

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8 avril 2013 1 08 /04 /avril /2013 16:20

Ground Combat Vehicle - pic1 BAE Systems

Le projet de BAE pour le futur Ground Combat Vehicle.

Un transport de troupes de 70 tonnes…

 

06.04.2013 Par Frédéric Lert (FOB)

 

L’US Army réfléchit actuellement à la succession de ses M3 Bradley, en cherchant pour ses futurs véhicules une meilleure protection, une mobilité en hausse et une capacité de transport augmentée. Il entre aujourd’hui dans un Bradley cinq à six combattants équipés, jusqu’à sept en bourrant un peu… L’objectif du programme Ground Combat Vehicle (GCV), est de faire mieux que le Bradley sur tous les tableaux, en transportant neuf combattants avec un équipage de deux hommes. L’idée est louable mais tout laisse à penser que l’armée américaine est une fois de plus bien partie pour enfanter un éléphant blanc en or massif… Le chiffre de 70 tonnes est d’ores et déjà évoqué pour le futur GCV, ce qui en fera à tout le moins un équivalent de l’Abrams, et ce pour la modeste somme de 17 millions de dollars par véhicule (70 tonnes, c’est déjà le double du Bradley qui pesait lui-même deux fois plus lourd que le M113 qu’il remplaçait. A ce rythme là, les transports de troupes pèseront autant qu’une rame TGV dans deux ou trois générations…) Encore ces chiffres sont ils purement hypothétiques et on a rarement vu, de mémoire de contribuable américain, un programme du Pentagone perdre du poids et gagner de l’argent en cours de développement…

 

Le Congressionnal Budget Office (CBO), organisme public qui travaille au profit du Congrès américain et rassemble les compétences d’économistes et et de spécialistes des politiques publiques américianes, s’étonne déjà des dérives possibles et propose différents scénarios alternatifs au développement d’un véhicule entièrement nouveau :

 

Namer AIFV source army-technology

-       achat du Namer israélien.

 

LAND M3A3 Bradley Charge lg

-       modernisation du Bradley.

 

Puma IFV

-       achat du Puma allemand, entré en service en 2011 dans la Bundeswehr.

 

Selon le CBO, c’est bien ce dernier véhicule qui offrirait le meilleur rapport qualité/prix au Pentagone. Le Puma a pour lui d’être déjà opérationnel, avec des coûts maitrisés. Sa tourelle téléopérée avec un canon de 30mm fait également forte impression. Le défaut du véhicule serait de ne transporter que 6 combattants, alors que le GCV sera conçu pour en prendre 9. Il faudrait donc acheter plus de véhicules pour offrir la même capacité de transport. Malgré cela, le Puma reste bien meilleur marché selon le CBO, qui évalue à 14,5 milliards de dollars l’achat de 2048 Puma, contre 29 milliards pour 1748 GCV. L’US Army a pour l’instant renoncé à équipé son futur véhicule de missile anti-char, estimant disposer d’assez de puissance de feu par ailleurs. Mais en l’espèce rien n’est jamais gravé dans le marbre. On se souviendra à ce propos que le programme Bradley avait été lancé pour offrir un transport de troupes blindé pour succéder au M113, avant de se transformer en véhicule de combat lourd et complexe, avec une capacité de transport réduite à la portion congrue. La télévision américaine avait d’ailleurs trouvé dans ce programme matière à une excellente fiction « The Pentagon Wars », dont on trouvera ici un délicieux extrait…

 

Pour en revenir au GCV, une dernière option est évoquée par le Congressionnal Budget Office : continuer avec les Bradley actuels pendant quinze ou vingt ans. En l’état actuel des choses, ce n’est pas l’hypothèse la plus improbable…

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8 avril 2013 1 08 /04 /avril /2013 11:50

le-caiman-et-le-tigre-en-vol-a-valence – photo GAMSTAT P.

 

Apr. 7, 2013 - By TOM KINGTON – Defense News

 

ROME — Europe is becoming a hive of activity when it comes to helicopters, as armed forces take deliveries, switch types between services, make upgrades and place a few new orders as lessons are learned from Afghanistan.

 

At the same time, in Germany, and possibly France, officials are also taking the knife to orders as budget cuts kick in.

 

Among the nations prepared to invest is the United Kingdom, which is planning to spend 12.1 billion pounds ($18.4 billion) by 2021 upgrading, supporting and taking delivery of new machines ordered in the last few years.

 

Wildcat helo undergoing trials from HMS Iron Duke – MOD 2

 

The first of 38 new AgustaWestland-developed Wildcat machines for British Army reconnaissance duties and 28 Wildcat surface combatant variants for the Royal Navy arrived last year. This year will see delivery of the first of 24 updated Eurocopter Puma transport helicopters to the Royal Air Force as part of a 300 million pound life-extension and support program.

 

The schedule calls for delivery of 14 new Chinooks, ordered from Boeing in 2011 in a 1 billion pound deal, to begin by the end of the year.

 

Apache helicopters land on board HMS Illustrious- photo MOD

 

Funding is available to upgrade British Army Apache AH-64D attack helicopters and for conversion of the Royal Air Force’s fleet of Merlin AW101 Mk3s from a battlefield transport role to maritime duties, transporting Royal Marine Commandos from ship to shore when their present Sea King fleet is stood down in 2016.

 

Lockheed Martin and AgustaWestland are also part way through a major update of Merlin anti-submarine machines used by the Royal Navy.

 

For France, a burning question is whether the government will go ahead with a second order for 34 NH90 helicopters for the French Army, each costing 28.6 million euros ($36.7 million), according to a 2012 French Senate report. The order was due at the end of March with first delivery in 2016, but the contract has turned into a cliffhanger as defense officials try to limit spending cuts demanded by the Finance Ministry.

 

Eurocopter hopes to find out the fate of the deal in the next few weeks, Dominique Maudet, company executive vice president, said March 27.

 

The NH90 heads the list of programs under threat, followed by the Véhicule Blindé MultiRole troop carrier and the Multi-Role Tanker and Transport aircraft, a French Senate report on the defense budget stated in November.

 

A timely execution of the NH90 program is needed to protect helicopter transport capacity, the Senate report said. France ordered 12 NH90s in 2007 and a second batch of 22 in 2008.

 

Tiger German Army photo German Army

 

In Germany, a deal to cut purchases of Tiger combat helicopters and NH90 transports was reached on March 15. Tigers were reduced from 80 to 57 and industry committed to buying back 11 delivered aircraft.

 

Germany has deployed four of its new Tigers in a special configuration to Mazar-e-Sharif in northern Afghanistan, where they have been flying support, security and surveillance missions since February.

 

NH90 orders, meanwhile, fell from 122 to 82, four of which are due to head to Afghanistan, mainly for medical evacuation.

 

The German military has also transferred Army CH-53 medium-weight helicopters to the Air Force, putting the service in charge of tactical-strategic air transport, while the Army — operating NH90s — keeps tactical air transport capabilities.

 

As Germany cuts, Poland eyes 70 new helicopters for an estimated $3 billion. On Feb. 18, Polish Defense Minister Tomasz Siemoniak approved a program to buy the aircraft in several variants, with the tender due midyear and the first purchases planned at the end of 2014.

 

Under the purchase, land forces would acquire 48 transport copters, the Air Force and Navy would get 10 and six search-and-rescue helos, respectively, and the Navy would also get six anti-submarine versions.

 

Multi-Role EC725 Helicopter

 

Local media have reported that four manufacturers are interested in bidding for the Polish helicopter contract: AgustaWestland, with the AW149; PZL Swidnik, also owned by AgustaWestland, with its W-3 Sokol; Eurocopter, with the EC 725; and Sikorsky, with its S-70i Black Hawk.

 

Siemoniak said the ministry is also planning to acquire new combat helicopters after 2018.

 

The ongoing reorganization of Nordic armed forces into modular-style, rapid-response units more compatible for international missions has strongly influenced helicopter acquisition decisions. Nordic forces have emphasized extreme weather, multirole aircraft with a strong tactical capability, in contrast to the earlier emphasis on infantry support and troop carriers.

 

4-mh-60r-san-diego

 

This transition was evident in Denmark’s selection in November of the Sikorsky/Lockheed MH-60R to replace the Danish Air Force’s maritime Lynx helicopters, beating out AgustaWestland’s AW159 Lynx Wildcat.

 

The shift to multirole helicopter types was also clear in Sweden’s decision to purchase 15 Sikorsky UH-60M Black Hawk utility and general infantry support helicopters in 2012. The first UH-60Ms entered service in Afghanistan in March.

 

Afghanistan has been a proving ground for the NH90, with Italy the first to deploy the type there. It joined Italy’s AgustaWestland AW129 Mangusta attack helicopters, which Army chief Lt. Gen. Claudio Graziano has described as “an enormous help” to Italian special operations forces.

 

Their firepower is due to be increased by the adoption of the Israeli Spike missile, while Graziano also expects the first of 12 new

 

CH-47F Chinook Helicopter source htka.hu

 

CH-47Fs on order to arrive in service by year’s end or early 2014.

 

———

 

Jaroslaw Adamowski in Warsaw, Andrew Chuter in London, Albrecht Müller in Bonn, Gerard O’Dwyer in Helsinki and Pierre Tran in Paris contributed.

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7 avril 2013 7 07 /04 /avril /2013 23:02

http://www.raf.mod.uk/crowales/rafcms/mediafiles/286275DA_1143_EC82_2E5A7E88768B524F.gif

Joint Warrior 2010

 

April 5, 2013  by GvG - informationdissemination.net

 

From 15-25 April the largest military excercise in Western Europe will be held in Scotland.

 

Around 12,500 personnel from 13 countries will be involved. And apart from around 40 aircraft (Typhoons, Tornado's, Rafale's, Super Etendards, EC2 Hawkeye, Sentry E3D, CP-140 Aurora's and other MPA's and tanker aircraft) there will also be a huge naval presence.

 

Here's a list of participants I found.

 

Belgium

BNS Bellis (M 916)

BNS Primula (M 924)

 

Canada

HMCS Iroquois (DDG 280)

HMCS St Johns (FFH3 40)

HMCS Preserver (AOR 510)

 

Denmark

HDMS Absalon (L 16)

HDMS Esbern Snare (L 17)

HDMS Vaedderen (F 359)

 

France

FS Primauguet (D 644)

FS Emeraude (S 604)

FS Marne (A 630)

 

Germany

FGS Bremen (F 207)

FGS Emden (F 210)

FGS Hessen (F 221)

FGS Weilheim (M 1059)

FGS Datteln (M 1068)

FGS Ueberherrn (M 1095)

FGS Werra (A 514)

FGS Frankfurt am Main (A 1412)

FGS Rhon (A 1443)

 

The Netherlands

HNLMS Evertsen (F 805)

HNLMS Rotterdam (L 800)

HNLMS Bruinvis (S 810)

HNLMS Urk (M 861)

HNLMS Vlaardingen (M 863)

HNLMS Luymes (A 803)

HNLMS Mercuur (A 900)

 

Norway

HNOMS Gnist (P 965)

HNOMS Steil (P 963)

HNOMS Uthaug (S 304)

HNOMS Karmoey (M 341)

HNOMS Hinnoey (M 343)

HNOMS Rauma (M 352)

HNOMS Valkyrien (A 535)

 

Poland

ORP Czernicki (511)

ORP Czajka (624)

Sweden

HSwMS Sundsvall (K 24)

HSwMS Visby (K 31)

 

United Kingdom

HMS Illustrious (R 06)

HMS Bulwark (L 15)

HMS Diamond (D 34)

HMS Sutherland ( F 81)

HMS Richmond (F 239)

HMS Montrose (F 236)

HMS Westminster (F 237)

HMS Talent (S 92)

HMS Brocklesby (M 33)

HMS Chiddingfold (M 37)

HMS Hurworth (M 39)

HMS Pembroke (M 107)

HMS Grimsby (M 108)

HMS Echo (H 87)

RFA Fort Austin (A 386)

RFA Lyme Bay (L 3007)

 

USA

USS Stout (DDG 55)

USS The Sullivans (DDG 68)

USS Bainbridge (DDG 96)

USS De Wert (FFG 45)

USNS John Lenthall (T-AO 189)

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7 avril 2013 7 07 /04 /avril /2013 16:50

Foxhound light protected patrol vehicle in Afghanistan. Pho

 

05.04.2013 Sergyi Way - army-guide.com

 

Ricardo has announced today that it has received an order from prime contractor General Dynamics Land Systems-Force Protection Europe (GDLS-FPE), for the assembly of 76 additional vehicles, bringing the total Foxhound fleet size ordered to date by the UK Ministry of Defence to 376. Arguably the world’s most agile and best-protected vehicle in its weight class, all Foxhounds vehicles are assembled by Ricardo at the purpose-designed production line commissioned in 2011.

 

“The Foxhound is exactly the right vehicle for British forces, providing what commanders on the ground in Afghanistan are describing as ‘an enormous leap forward’ in capability,” commented Ricardo CEO Dave Shemmans. “This highly impressive vehicle that has the potential to save many lives, has resulted from our very successful subcontract with prime contractor General Dynamics. Ricardo is proud to have assembled all of the Foxhounds ordered for British forces by the MoD.”

 

“Production of the Foxhound is already well underway at our special vehicle production facility where we have commissioned a dedicated production line for this purpose,” added Ricardo director of manufacturing operations Mark Barge. “Together with our work for premium vehicle customers such as Bugatti, McLaren and the motorsports industry up to and including Formula 1 teams, Ricardo has an enviable track record of manufacturing exceptional products.”

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5 avril 2013 5 05 /04 /avril /2013 12:20

8620820944 bae44e4e31 z F35B First Night Time Vertical Landing

 

April 5, 2013 By Think Defence

 

Small steps forward, small steps

 

An F-35B Lightning II completes the first short takeoff and vertical landing during a test mission at night on April 2, 2013, at NAS Patuxent River, Md.

 

 

8619720797 089c37d387 z F35B First Night Time Vertical Landing

 

Meanwhile

 

8614576982 d95ceeaf71 z F35B First Night Time Vertical Landing

The third United Kingdom Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II speeds down the runway at Naval Air Station Fort Worth Joint Reserve Base, embarking on its first flight, April 1, 2013.

The aircraft, known as ZM137, will complete a series of company and government checkout flights prior to its acceptance by the U.K. Ministry of Defence. ZM137 will join U.K. aircraft ZM135 and ZM136 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., later this year where it will be used for pilot and maintainer training.

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4 avril 2013 4 04 /04 /avril /2013 16:50

Canadian Forces Flag.svg

 

NR - 13.095 - le 2 avril 2013 forces.gc.ca


OTTAWA – Plus de 900 marins et aviateurs canadiens, hommes et femmes des Forces armées canadiennes se sont déployés aujourd’hui afin de participer à l’exercice Joint Warrior, un exercice interarmées multinational de l’OTAN qui aura lieu au Royaume-Uni du 15 au 25 avril. L’exercice Joint Warrior est le plus grand exercice tactique tenu en Europe et est conçu pour préparer les forces militaires de l’OTAN à travailler ensemble à des missions diverses allant de l’aide humanitaire aux opérations de combat.

 

« Cet exercice présente une excellente occasion pour les Forces armées canadiennes d’accroître et de renforcer l’interopérabilité et l’efficacité au combat entre les militaires du Canada et nos alliés de l’OTAN », explique l’honorable Peter MacKay, ministre de la Défense nationale. « Nos marins et nos aviateurs tiendront un entraînement réaliste pour améliorer l’exécution des diverses tactiques, techniques et procédures auxquelles ils et elles auront recours au nom du gouvernement du Canada dans toute une gamme de scénarios opérationnels au pays et à l’étranger. »

 

« L’exercice Joint Warrior prépare à une vaste gamme de scénarios évolutifs de crise et de conflit auxquels nos marins et nos aviateurs pourraient vraisemblablement avoir à faire face dans de futures opérations », déclare le vice-amiral Paul Maddison, commandant de la Marine royale canadienne. « Ces exercices interarmées permettent aux forces de l’OTAN participantes d’apprendre à mieux se connaître sur le plan du personnel et des plates-formes, ce qui rapportera de futures dividendes au fur et à mesure que nous continuerons de développer une confiance mutuelle envers les capacités opérationnelles des uns et des autres. »

 

L’exercice Joint Warrior est organisé par le Royaume-Uni et nécessitera la participation de près de 13 000 militaires, 55 navires et jusqu’à 40 aéronefs de diverses nations de l’OTAN durant une période de dix jours. Les navires canadiens de Sa Majesté (NCSM) Preserver, Iroquois, et St. John’s ont quitté Halifax (N.-.É.) aujourd’hui pour entreprendre leur traversées de l’océan Atlantique et participeront à l’exercice plus tard au cours du mois. Ils sont accompagnés de membres du personnel et d’aéronefs de l’Aviation royale canadienne, y compris deux hélicoptères CH-124 Sea King de la 12e Escadre Shearwater (N.-É.) à bord du NCSM Iroquois et du NCSM St. John’s. En outre, deux aéronefs CP-140 Aurora de la 14e Escadre Greenwood (N.-É.) et de la 19e Escadre Comox (C.-B.), se joindront aux navires à leur arrivée au Royaume-Uni.

 

Le commodore Darren Hawco, commandant de la Flotte canadienne de l’Atlantique, assumera le commandement de l’un des groupes opérationnels de Joint Warrior, formés de six navires de guerre canadiens et britanniques, et mettra en vitrine la capacité des Forces armées canadiennes à jouer un rôle de chef de file dans des opérations de coalition internationales.

 

Durant la traversée de l’océan Atlantique, les navires canadiens mèneront une série d’exercices au niveau de l’unité et du groupe opérationnel pour se préparer à de futures opérations. Le programme à cadence élevée permet aux équipages des navires de s’entraîner et d’acquérir de l’expérience dans toute une gamme d’activités en mer, y compris la navigation et le matelotage, les opérations héliportées et divers exercices de combat simulé. 

 

Pour de plus amples renseignements sur l’exercice Joint Warrior :  (en anglais seulement)

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4 avril 2013 4 04 /04 /avril /2013 16:50

Predator over Afghanistan photo USAF

 

April 2, 2013 defense-unmanned.com

(Source: Local.ge; published April 1, 2013)

 

MPs Stall On German Attack Drones

 

German Defence Minister Thomas de Maizière's plan to buy armed drones for the Bundeswehr received a tempered response on Monday from politicians within his own party, who warned against knee-jerk decisions.

 

In an interview with German daily Welt some months ago, Minister de Maizière argued that "[manned] aircraft are allowed to carry weapons, so why shouldn't an unmanned aircraft also be able to do so?"

 

While there has already been stiff opposition to the plans from the opposition Greens and the Left Party, politicians within the the governing Christian Democrats (CDU) are now also cautioning against hasty action ahead of September's election.

 

“I don’t think there’s any need for a final decision on this before the federal elections. Thoroughness is more important than speed,” said Karl Lamers, deputy chairman of the government's defence committee in comments due to be published in Welt newspaper on Tuesday.

 

Ernst-Reinhard Beck, CDU spokesman on defence policy echoed the sentiment and stressed there was “no urgent need for action” but that a common European solution would be found in the medium-term for an unmanned craft “which could also transport weapons.”

 

Bernd Siebert, member of the CDU working group on defence, said he did not foresee a scenario in this legislative period “which would require a hasty decision to purchase.”

 

At present Germany possesses only unarmed surveillance drones.

 

The country relies on borrowed drones from an Israeli consortium to carry out aerial reconnaissance in Afghanistan. The contract with the Israeli group was due to expire in 2014 but has recently been extended to the middle of 2015.

 

Commentators speculate that pushing back the decision on whether to buy armed drones represents an attempt by the government to avoid it becoming an election issue. (ends)

 

Germany arms itself for the drone age

 

Unmanned aircraft continue to gain an ever more vital role in conflicts around the globe, as well as in domestic security. Germany is no exception. But as one drone pilot reports, the work can be tremendously taxing.

 

Unmanned drones continue to gain an ever-bigger foothold in the strategic and tactical planning for armed conflict and domestic surveillance. But, for pilots who remotely fly the aircraft, the job can be surprisingly arduous, even though he or she is not actually sitting in a cockpit over "enemy territory."

 

Lieutenant Colonel Carsten Endemann worked for three years as a Heron drone pilot in Afghanistan. The pilot, trained in Israel, would start off the drones from a container just 50 meters from where he worked in Afghanistan. On the video recorded from the drone, houses and market squares are visible.

 

"This is the area where rebels are alleged to be," Endemann said. The drone could confirm this. "It's partially visible on the images, that weapons are being carried here," he added. The German patrol then shot off a sort of signal flare in order to let the rebels know that they were seen. "And that was enough to chase them away," Endemann said.

 

Psychic strain, ethical dilemma

 

What looks like a highly realistic video game, with its joysticks and monitors, is actually the cold, hard reality of war. And an experienced pilot, like Endemann, knows this all too well.

 

"The people I'm seeing right now on the screen, I was talking to last night," Endemann said. When he has to watch people get injured, the psychological strain is "immensely high."

 

While Germany to date has only deployed reconnaissance drones, the United States has used armed drones since 2001. Needless to say, this has sparked quite a debate.

 

Jutta Weber, a technology scholar at the University of Paderborn in Germany, researches automated war. She described as "highly problematic" the lacking legal framework for both the military and intelligence services sending drones into countries that have no air force with the express purpose of killing people.

 

Weber pointed to how so-called "signature strikes" have targeted and killed civilians simply because their behavior may have indicated that they belonged to a target group, such as militant Islamists.

 

According to the medical peace organization Medact, 3,000 to 4,500 people in Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen have been killed by armed drones since 2001.

 

Heron to predator

 

German Defense Minister Thomas de Maizaire stated in the German parliament this past January: "I consider the deployment of drones within our existing legal framework as ethical." He stated that the German army maintaining drones is simply "security-oriented, alliance-oriented and technologically sensible."

 

Until now, the German army has used a drone type known as Heron 1. Germany has had three of these, made by the Israeli weapons firm IAI, deployed in Afghanistan since 2009.

 

The Heron 1 has both infrared and daylight cameras, and can remain in the air for up to 18 hours.

 

In the fall of 2014, the leasing contract with IAI expires. Signals indicate that the Herons may be replaced by a pared-down US attack drone known as Predator. As to whether the US can or will sell its tried-and-true drone technology to Germany remains unclear. The German parliament is slated to debate the issue in September.

 

The planned purchase of the Eurohawk surveillance drone has been canceled. Although the figure of more than a billion euros was cited for the purchase of four drones, including their base stations, experts believed the price would have been considerably higher.

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4 avril 2013 4 04 /04 /avril /2013 16:20

A-10-laser-guided-rocket-APKWS-II.jpg

 

Apr 4, 2013 ASDNews Source : US Air Force

 

The 40th Flight Test Squadron completed another first in February when an A-10 Thunderbolt II fired a guided rocket that impacted only inches away from its intended target.

 

The 2.75 diameter, 35-pound, laser-guided rocket is known as the fixed-wing Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System II. Before the Thunderbolt test, the rocket had proved effective in Afghanistan combat operations when fired from Marine helicopters.

 

"Rockets are a staple close-air support weapon, but their weakness has always been their poor accuracy when shot at range," said Maj. Travis Burton, the 40th FTS A-10 pilot who performed the APKWS tests. "In improving rocket accuracy by several orders of magnitude, the APKWS makes the rocket a better weapon for today's low intensity conflicts, where minimizing collateral damage is a top priority."

 

The test squadron performed three sorties to demonstrate the capability and ensure the rocket could be fired safely from a fixed wing aircraft - a test that had never been accomplished before.

 

The first sortie tested whether aircraft flight would be impacted by carrying the rocket and launcher. During the second sortie, the A-10 fired an unguided inert rocket to ensure the weapon would separate from the aircraft without any issues. For the final sortie, two armed, guided rockets were fired at a surface target at altitudes of 10,000 and 15,000 feet. The last APKWS shot was fired into a 70-knot headwind and impacted the target within the two-meter requirement specifications.

 

"The 70-knot headwind didn't allow us to accomplish the second guided shot using the planned delivery parameters, so the test team (myself, the chase pilot, the controllers and engineers) worked real-time to adjust those parameters in a manner that would still accomplish the test objective," Burton said. "In any scenario other than test, we would have adjusted the run-in direction to change the headwind to tailwind, or a crosswind."

 

Both shots were considered successful, but the accuracy of the APKWS made a real impression on the project manager, Joe Stromsness.

 

"We watched real-time video of the test at the central control facility when the rocket hit within inches of the laser spot," he said. "Everyone was ecstatic and high-fived each other. Many hours of work from the Navy, Air Force and the BAE contractor team went into the success of this test. This was a major milestone in moving forward to the next phase. "

 

With the developmental test stage completed, the project will move to operational testing at China Lake Test Range, Calif., with the Air National Guard, Air Force Reserve Command Test Center. In May, Air Force pilots will fire 22 APKWSs from the A-10 and F-16 Fighting Falcon at both moving and stationary targets.

 

With another positive outcome in May, Stromsness sees huge potential for the APKWS.

 

"This is a lighter weapon with a smaller warhead that can potentially minimize collateral damage," he said. "We've added precision guidance; and based on our tests, we're within inches of the intended target. We don't have a precision weapon out there now that can do that."

 

According to BAE Systems, the weapon's manufacturer, the APKWS is one-third the weight and cost of other precision rockets in the DOD inventory. The aircraft could potentially transport seven rockets per launcher and carry two launchers due to the APKWS's relatively small size and weight.

 

Burton agrees with Stromsness about APKWS's potential benefit to the warfighter.

 

"By improving rocket accuracy, the APKWS II gives the pilot the capability to achieve the desired weapons effect with a single rocket," Burton said. "Not only does this increase the lethality of any aircraft carrying rockets on a given day, it also allows the aircraft to do so at a greater range. This keeps the aircraft farther away from the surface-to-air threats typically found in a target area."

 

Moving the APKWS to a fixed-wing aircraft began as an urgent operational need project for the Navy and Air Force in 2009. The tasking, called a joint concept technology demonstration, was to take the rotary-wing version of the rocket and modify it for fast-moving aircraft. The goal for the Air Force was to demonstrate it on the A-10 and the F-16 if possible, according to Stromsness. The Navy would test it on the AV-8B Harrier II and F/A-18 Hornet.

 

Eglin AFB's 96th Seek Eagle office worked with the APKWS team to obtain flight clearance for both aircraft so the developmental testing could begin.

 

An initial hurdle Stromsness and the test team discovered was the guidance section added 18 inches to the rocket. This addition caused it to be too long for the standard LAU-131 launcher. The Navy already had a modified launcher to fit the increased length of the rocket, so Stromsness brought those in to perform the tests.

 

"The great thing about the modified launchers is they can fire the guided and unguided rockets with no problems," Stromsness said. "If this project moves forward and becomes operational, the better modified launchers will replace the legacy ones on an attrition basis."

 

More Air Force testing and assessment will take place throughout 2013. The Navy is just behind the Air Force, successfully firing two APKWSs from an AV-8B, March 27. Once testing is complete, U.S. Central Command will submit a final report and endorsement to the Air Force and Navy program offices. According to Stromsness, if all goes smoothly, the APKWS could be ready for operational use by 2015.

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3 avril 2013 3 03 /04 /avril /2013 11:50

3rd-F-35B-For-UK.jpg

 

Apr 3, 2013 ASDNews Source : Lockheed Martin Corporation

 

Monday, the third United Kingdom Lockheed Martin [NYSE:LMT] F-35 Lightning II sped down the runway at Naval Air Station Fort Worth Joint Reserve Base embarking on its first flight. The aircraft, known as ZM137, departed at 10:16 a.m. with Lockheed Martin F-35 Chief Test Pilot Alan Norman at the controls. ZM137 will complete a series of company and government checkout flights prior to its acceptance by the U.K. Ministry of Defence. ZM137 will join U.K. aircraft ZM135 and ZM136 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., later this year where it will be used for pilot and maintainer training.

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2 avril 2013 2 02 /04 /avril /2013 16:20

bae systems

 

27/03/2013 by Paul Fiddian - Armed Forces International's Lead Reporter

 

BAE Systems has been contracted to supply the US Army with IMX-101 explosives. Worth $18.4m, the US Army IMX-101 order is the first portion of an earlier-placed $780 million contract and calls for a new round of deliveries, following the US Army's successfully-concluded safety assessments.

 

Co-developed by BAE Systems and the US Army, IMX-101 is a high-impact insensitive explosive intended to take the place of TNT in artillery shells.

 

As powerful as TNT, IMX-101 is nonetheless much less volatile. If dropped by accident or struck by enemy forces, it's designed to burn quickly and fragment, rather than detonate. This decreased sensitivity allows IMX-101 to be stored in larger quantities and closer to active personnel than its predecessor.

 

IMX-101 Insensitive Explosives

 

Non-standard explosive ingredients, including Nitrotriazolone and Dinitroanisole, go into the IMX-101 insensitive explosives mix: a more stable and, therefore, safer alternative.

 

BAE Systems' Holston Army Ammunition Plant will now produce IMX-101 for the next five years, as per the announced contract's terms.

 

"The work we do at Holston is critical to the defense of our nation and to the safety of our men and women in uniform", explained Erin Moseley, president of BAE Systems' Support Solutions division. "IMX-101 is truly innovative and is revolutionizing military ordnance. Once fully fielded, it will help to save lives on and off the battlefield."

 

IMX-101 US Army

 

IMX-101 became the US Army's new low-cost insensitive munitions explosive of choice after rigorous field trials, which also involved a 155mm M795 artillery projectile. Typically, this M795 would contain almost 24 pounds of TNT.

 

TNT (Trinitrotoluene) has had a military role since the very early 20th century, when Germany first started placing it inside artillery shells.

 

Last week's deadly explosion at Hawthorne Army Depot served to illustrate the danger posed to armed forces personnel by traditional munitions: a scenario IMX-101 should help eliminate in the future.

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2 avril 2013 2 02 /04 /avril /2013 12:50

euro hawk 1 550x275

 

April 1st, 2013 By German Radio - defencetalk.com

 

When we think of drones we think of flying killing machines in Pakistan. But as the US tries to write rules for the technology, people are realizing that very different kinds of drones could change the way we live.

 

Probably the best illustration of the vivid fears and awesome powers associated with drones was delivered on the floor of the US Senate on March 13, when Senator Rand Paul held his momentous 13-hour filibuster to highlight that “no American should be killed by a drone without first being charged with a crime.”

 

His oratory marathon compelled US Attorney General Eric Holder to write a letter to Paul assuring him that the US president did not have the authority to kill an American not engaged in combat on American soil with a weaponized drone.

 

Whether overblown or not, Paul’s concerns reflect the public’s perception of drones as lethal robots hovering high above remote areas in far-away lands under often dubious legal rules. While drones have regularly – and correctly – been portrayed this way in the press, their use as killing machines is only the tip of the iceberg.

 

The Global Hawk is used for surveillance

In fact, the narrow focus on the military potential of drones tends to underestimate and obfuscate the much broader and much more realistic capabilities of the technology that must be addressed. And unlike Senator Paul’s question for Attorney General Holder, most of the questions raised by the rapid advances in the field of drone technology cannot be answered with a simple yes or no.

 

Complex technology

Drones can come in different sizes and shapes and with diverse technical features. The smallest drone is the coin-sized Dutch-built Delfly Micro, one of the largest, the Israeli Heron, the size of a Boeing 737.

 

“Theoretically every plane can be a drone,” explains Missy Cummings, who advises the US Navy on drones and is director of the Humans and Automation Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute Technology (MIT).

 

While the US military’s Predator and Reaper are technologically still the most sophisticated drones, a good example of what non-lethal drones can do is a robotic helicopter called K-Max. Basically, K-Max is an air-borne work horse. Since 2011 two K-Max delivery drones in use in Afghanistan have transported more than three million pounds of cargo – all without a pilot.

 

And that’s just the beginning, says Cummings:

 

“In the research world we have had helicopter drones that have been able to pick out their own landing sites and were able to land themselves without any help on the ground.”

 

The technology is there, it just hasn’t been operationalized yet, adds Cummings.

 

Multiple uses

The most basic function a drone – or an unmanned aircraft system (UAS) as they are also called – can perform is what is known as remote sensing, that is gathering information about objects without physical contact. Unlike a piloted plane or helicopter drones can remain airborne for long hours, hovering over specified objects or tracking targets incessantly while collecting valuable data for real-time or archival use at the same time.

 

These essential qualities of drones – doing work that is dull, dangerous or dirty – for a fraction of a price that it would cost to hire a pilot and a plane makes UAS so attractive for governmental, commercial and scientific ventures.

 

Law enforcement agencies could use them to monitor traffic and crime hotspots. Real estate developers will want them to survey prospective building sites or residential areas. Film makers could use them for aerial shots. Environmentalists and scientists could deploy them to monitor illegal waste disposal or approaching hurricanes.

 

That’s why after pressure from business interests, the US aviation authority FAA has been tasked by Congress to come up with a regulation framework that will open up the US airspace for drones by 2015. Currently, the commercial use of drones is all but prohibited; only a small number of permits for non-governmental use are issued by the FAA, usually for research and development projects.

 

Dramatic growth

But that is about to change. The FAA predicts 10,000 active small (under 55 pounds) UAS within five years, 25,000 within 10 years and 30,000 by 2030.

 

And that is just drones that fall under the auspices of federal regulation.

 

Drones used for recreational purposes by hobbyists currently are exempted from FAA regulation. To fall in that category they must be flown under 400 feet, a pilot must always be able to take manual control of the UAS and it cannot be flown in densely populated areas.

 

Recreational drones are already a booming business. As the former Wired editor turned drone entrepreneur Chris Anderson told the New York Times recently, his company 3D Robotics sells 7,500 UAVs a quarter. That’s the total number of drones currently operated by the American military.

 

Drones for the masses

To own your own drone, you don’t need a Pentagon-like budget. A basic I-Phone or I-Pod-controlled Parrot AR Drone 2.0 Quadricopter costs just $299 at Internet retailer Amazon. More advanced drones sell for $500 to $600.

 

The fact that drones will become a mass phenomenon or as Chris Anderson put it, “the sky’s going to be dark with these things,” whenever the FAA finally comes up with its rules for UAS has privacy rights experts worried.

 

“Drones are designed and built to carry some of the most invasive surveillance equipment on the market, such as automated license plate readers and facial recognition technology,” said Amie Stepanovich, director of the Domestic Surveillance Project with the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) in Washington via e-mail.

 

Experts say Google could be eyeing drone technology

 

Joseph Lorenzo Hall, senior staff technologist at the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) in Washington, provides this example to highlight the potential power of drone technology. “Drones will be able to do stuff that is very sophisticated like synthetic aperture radar (SAR) which allows extremely fine grained mapping of terrain.” These kinds of systems, explains Hall, allow you to notice whether in some one’s front yard a small children’s toy has been moved three meters to the left or right from kilometers away.

 

Double-edged sword

While privacy advocates are concerned about the possible erosion of personal rights through the advent of drones, all of them also recognize and laud their potential benefits.

 

“Surveillance is not itself a bad thing, especially when we call it ‘transparency,’” notes Patrick Lin, director of the Ethics and Emerging Sciences Group at California Polytechnic State University. “So civilian drones could be used for productive research purposes, such as tracking thunderstorms, wildlife migration, and other events not practical or safe for humans to follow.”

 

Still, the rise of drones as a common feature in our daily life could be a game changer for what we consider privacy.

 

“Drones will likely change our expectation of privacy, which defines the limits to our right to privacy, at least in the US,” predicts Lin. Compared to Europe, privacy rights in the US are largely limited to the private home or to certain sectors of society like health care and finance. “There is no common basis for privacy protection unlike the EU where there is an understanding that privacy is a fundamental right and you can regulate from that upwards,” says Hall.

 

Since drone activities have been conducted almost exclusively by government authorities until now, people often focus their attention on Washington as the main threat for privacy.

 

That however, is not necessarily, true. “It’s not the governments that you have to worry about,” says Cummings. “It’s the Googles of the world. It is all those people around the world you want to do those kinds of mappings and may be sell that data for other reasons.”

 

Rules for eyes in the sky

To prohibit limitless prying and spying from the air by thousands of drones, privacy advocates are demanding clear rules for UAS.

 

First, says, Hall, drones should have a data collection statement that details their purpose and the kinds of information they gather. Second, they should have an identification number and automatically transmit an identification signal on radio frequencies. Third, via their identification number people would be able to look up online exactly what kind of drones are airborne, know what kind of information they collect and eventually even produce maps of drone flight paths.

 

Federal regulators still have until 2015 to come up with drone rules, but some local and state governments don’t want to wait that long. In February, Charlottesville in Virginia, became the first US city to ban drones for two years.

 

While these bans are mostly symbolic and would be overruled by a federal drone law, they highlight the anxiety that surrounds drones and doubts whether the FAA – an agency much more experienced in dealing with safety than privacy issues – can produce drone legislation that addresses privacy concerns.

 

Those concerns are real, agrees Joanne Gabrynowicz, director of the National Center for Remote Sensing, Air, and Space Law at the University of Mississippi. “But we can come up with a regulatory system. If we did it for satellites I am confident we can do it for drones. But it will be difficult and there are a lot of interests involved.”

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2 avril 2013 2 02 /04 /avril /2013 11:50

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2c/RIM-116_Rolling_Airframe_Missile_Launcher_3.jpg/450px-RIM-116_Rolling_Airframe_Missile_Launcher_3.jpg

RAM Launcher on fast attack craft Ozelot

of the German Navy

 

TUCSON, April 1 (UPI)

 

An upgraded quick reaction, fire-and-forget missile for the German navy is to be manufactured by Raytheon, the company announced.

 

The weapon is the Block 2 Rolling Airframe Missile for defense against anti-ship cruise missiles, aircraft and surface threats. It features an autonomous dual-mode, passive radio frequency and infrared guidance design for engaging multiple threats simultaneously.

 

"This sale is the result of more than 35 years of unmatched testing achievements and capability improvements," said Taylor W. Lawrence, president of Raytheon Missile Systems. "It complements the $100 million RAM Block 2 production contracts with the U.S. Navy, signed in 2012, and follows our company's 11 critical Block 2 development test flights.

 

"RAM is on solid footing to begin government testing in May."

 

The contract is worth $155.6 million. Raytheon gave no details as to the number of RAM missiles it will produce for Germany or their delivery schedule.

 

RAM is a cooperative program between the U.S. and German governments. RAMSYS of Germany will share in production of the weapons.

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2 avril 2013 2 02 /04 /avril /2013 07:20

http://www.meretmarine.com/sites/default/files/new_objets_drupal/20130401163409_opc3.jpg

Le design SX 151 proposé par Ulstein aux garde-côtes

américains -

 

02.04.2013 Mer et Marine

 

La compétition est rude entre les constructeurs européens autour du programme OPC (Offshore Patrol Cutter) des garde-côtes américains. Avec un total de 25 nouveaux cotres à réaliser, il s’agit en effet de l’un des plus gros marchés de la décennie ouvert à la compétition internationale. Avec néanmoins un bémol, puisque quelque soit le lauréat, les bâtiments devront être construits aux Etats-Unis. Les industriels européens s’allient donc à des chantiers locaux afin de décrocher cette commande, évaluée à une dizaine de milliards de dollars. Certes, celui qui s’imposera verra son partenaire américain, qui réalisera les bateaux, emporter la plus grosse part du gâteau. Mais les études et les royalties pour le design représenteront un contrat substantiel. Avec en parallèle non seulement l'aura internationale liée au choix de l’US Coast Guard, mais aussi la possibilité de s’implanter ou de se renforcer durablement sur le juteux marché naval américain.

 

 

Le design SX 151 (© ULSTEIN)

 

 

Fin 2012, Ulstein est entré à son tour dans la compétition avec son désormais célèbre design X-Bow à étrave inversée. Le groupe norvégien, qui s’est allié à l’Américain Vigor, propose le SX 151, adaptation des navires de services à l’offshore adoptant le design X-Bow et dont une quarantaine d’exemplaires ont été commandés, le premier (Bourbon Orca), ayant été livré en 2006.  Ces bateaux ont été spécialement conçus pour offrir une grande endurance et une excellente tenue à la mer, avec des coûts d’exploitations optimisés.

Long de 100 mètres pour une largeur de 16.4 mètres, le SX 151peut atteindre la vitesse de 22 nœuds et accueillir 124 personnes. Il dispose d’une plateforme et d’un hangar pour hélicoptère ou drones, ainsi que trois semi-rigides dont les logements et le dispositif de mise à l’eau sont intégrés dans la superstructure. Le système de manutention des embarcations retenu est celui du Norvégien Vestdavit, matériel de pointe conçu pour une mise à l’eau et une récupération rapide  en toute sécurité jusqu’à une mer dépassant force 5.

 

 

Le design SX 151 (© ULSTEIN)

 

 

Côté armement, le SX151 proposé à l’US Coast Guard par Ulstein et Vigor est équipé d’une tourelle de 57mm placée devant la passerelle et surmontant l’imposante étrave inversée. Le logement de l’artillerie principale est d’ailleurs complexe sur ce design dont la partie avant est très haute, limitant le champ de battage du canon pour les cibles se trouvant à faible distance. Pour contrer les menaces asymétriques, il est donc prévu de mettre en place de l’artillerie de petit calibre, mitrailleuses et affûts manuels ou télé-opérés, comme un canon de 25mm Mk 38 situé au dessus du hangar.  

 

A l’image de Rolls-Royce, qui a développé une gamme de patrouilleurs hauturiers à partir de ses designs de navires offshores du type UT, Ulstein cherche donc à diversifier son offre. Toutefois, même si le SX 151 a de quoi surprendre le monde militaire, qui n’est pas habitué à ce type d’architecture, le constructeur norvégien n’est pas le seul en lice, loin s’en faut. En plus de la concurrence américaine, Ulstein doit compter avec d’autres compétiteurs européens. Il y a d’abord le Néerlandais Damen, déjà fournisseur de l’US Coast Guard avec les 14 patrouilleurs de la classe Sentinel (type Stan Patrol 4708) réalisés par Bollinger à Lockport et dont les trois premiers exemplaires ont été livrés en 2012. Damen semble travailler sur une évolution des patrouilleurs néerlandais du type Holland (OGPV), avec comme ceux-ci un mât intégré (réunissant les différents senseurs, dont les radars, en une seule structure) développé par Thales.

 

 

Patrouilleur de la classe Sentinel  (© USCG)

 

Modèle dérivé des patrouilleurs néerlandais du type Holland (© THALES)

 

 

Il y a aussi le Français DCNS, qui a annoncé fin 2012 un partenariat avec le chantier américain VT Halter Marine, filiale du groupe VT Systems. Dans ce cas, le design proposé par l’industriel français est dérivé du design des corvettes de la gamme Gowind Combat, dont les premiers exemplaires ont été commandés par la Malaisie.

 

 

Version dérivée de la corvette Gowind Combat (© DCNS)

 

 

Et on trouve sans doute d’autres candidats, qui ne sont pas forcément encore sortis du bois. Ainsi, l’Italien Fincantieri, dont la filiale américaine FMG réalise les LCS (Littoral Combat Ship) de la classe Freedom destinés à l’US Navy, devrait en toute logique se positionner avec un nouveau design ou une adaptation de modèles développés en Italie.

La concurrence est donc très vive alors que la notification du programme OPC est attendue au plus tôt fin 2014, en vue d’une livraison du premier cotre vers 2019.

Pour mémoire, les 25 nouveaux bâtiments de l’US Coast Guard, qui doivent être réalisés en 15 ans,  sont destinés à remplacer 28 unités de 64 à 86 mètres (14 du type Reliance, 13 de la classe Famous et l’Alex Haley) mises en service entre 1964 et 1991.

 

 

Cotre du type Reliance (© USCG)

 

Cotre du type Bear (© USCG)

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2 avril 2013 2 02 /04 /avril /2013 06:20

568 us-navy-sm-3-block-ib-missile-interceptor-launched US

 

02.04.2013 Mer et Marine

 

Les récents essais nord-coréens comme les recherches entreprises par l’Iran laissent planer le spectre d’une menace nucléaire sur les pays occidentaux et leurs alliés. C’est pourquoi, bien que complexe et coûteuse, la défense contre les missiles balistiques n’en sera pas moins l’un des grands enjeux militaires des prochaines années. Un impératif face à la prolifération d’engins aux portées croissantes.

 

La défense anti-missile balistique (DAMB) constitue une préoccupation croissante à travers le monde, notamment en Europe, autour du Moyen-Orient et dans la zone Asie/Pacifique. La prolifération des armes balistiques représente en effet une réelle menace, d’autant que le nombre et la portée de ces missiles ne cessent de s’accroître et que certains pays ont, ou auront à terme, la possibilité de les doter d’ogives nucléaires, ainsi que de têtes bactériologique ou chimiques.  En 2010, le Conseil de l’Atlantique estimait qu’en dehors de l’OTAN, de la Russie et de la Chine, 5550 à 6250 missiles balistiques étaient en service dans le monde, dont 500 à 700 d’une portée de 2000 à 3000 km et une quarantaine pouvant atteindre de 3000 à 5500 km. Et ces portées devraient continuer de croître avec le recours à des engins multi-étages. Ainsi, le missile iranien Shahab-6, dérivé du Taep'o dong 2 nord-coréen, pourrait atteindre s’il devient opérationnel la barre des 6000 km. Mais, d’ores et déjà, le sud-est de l’Europe est à portée des missiles iraniens, alors que la Corée du nord semble bien partie pour être en mesure, un jour prochain, d’atteindre le territoire américain. 

 

 

Portées des missiles iraniens et nord-coréens (© MER ET MARINE - VW)

 

Missile balistique iranien (© DROITS RESERVES)

 

La mobilité, atout des marines

 

Face à cette nouvelle menace, les Occidentaux veulent développer des boucliers anti-missiles se basant à la fois sur des sites terrestres, mais aussi sur des plateformes navales. Celles-ci offrent comme principal avantage d’être mobiles et, ainsi, peuvent se positionner au mieux pour la détection et l’interception. En dehors de la protection des territoires nationaux, l’enjeu est de pouvoir offrir une DAMB de théâtre à des pays alliés éloignés, ainsi qu’à des forces expéditionnaires, qu’elles soient déployées à terre ou en mer. Car il faut aussi songer à protéger les forces maritimes d’une attaque balistique. Dans les années à venir, les groupes aéronavals ne seront, en effet, probablement plus à l’abri de cette menace car certains missiles, en projet, intègrent des systèmes de guidage terminal infrarouge pour frapper une cible mobile, par exemple un porte-avions. C’est le cas du DF-21 chinois, dont le développement est pris très au sérieux par les Américains. Les Chinois auraient d’ailleurs mené à bien, en 2012, un tir d’essai de ce nouvel engin, imaginé pour frapper un porte-avions en pleine mer, très loin des côtes.  

 

Missile balistique d'essai tiré depuis Hawaii (© US NAVY)

 

Combinaison de plusieurs moyens de défense

 

La défense anti-missile balistique est, néanmoins, une science complexe, qui nécessite des capacités technologiques de pointe, des moyens d’alerte avancée (satellites, radars à longue portée…) et des équipements d’interception spécifiques. Car il existe plusieurs types de missiles balistiques et, en fonction de leur portée et de la nature de la trajectoire, le volume d’interception varie significativement. Au-delà de pouvoir concevoir un missile d’interception capable de neutraliser une cible qui, en phase terminale, atteint une vitesse de 4000 à 6000 m/s, il faut également disposer de systèmes pouvant de traiter la menace à des altitudes très variables. En effet, les missiles balistiques peuvent s’élever jusqu’à 800 kilomètres d’altitude, c'est-à-dire dans l’espace, dans le cas d’une trajectoire en cloche. Celle-ci présente l’avantage d’augmenter significativement la vitesse lors de la phase de descente mais rend le missile détectable de loin. A l’inverse, les trajectoires en tir tendu montent beaucoup moins haut, ce qui permet de limiter les capacités de détection à longue portée de la défense adverse, mais l’énergie cinétique est moindre en phase terminale, ce qui rend l’interception des missiles plus « aisée ». Pour se donner une idée des valeurs, on estime que pour un missile d’une portée de 800 km, l’engin peut monter à 550 km d’altitude suivant un tir en cloche et demeurer sous la barre des 100 km en tir tendu.

 

Tir de missile SM-3 depuis un bâtiment américain (© US NAVY)

 

Tir de missile SM-3 depuis un bâtiment américain (© US NAVY)

 

Actuellement, il existe trois volumes d’interception possibles : le bas endo-atmosphérique (jusqu’à 60 km d’altitude), le haut endo-atmosphérique (60 à 120 km) et l’exo-atmosphérique (au-delà de 120 km). Or, aucun missile anti-missile balistique ne peut couvrir l’ensemble du spectre. Ainsi, l’intercepteur américain SM-3 (150 à 300 km d’altitude), mis en œuvre depuis les destroyers du type Arleigh Burke (USA) et Kongo (Japon), équipés du système de défense aérienne Aegis, est conçu pour l’exo-atmosphérique,  c'est-à-dire plutôt pour la neutralisation de missiles à longue portée (+ de 5000 km) avec trajectoire en cloche. Il ne sera, en revanche, pas capable de s’opposer à un missile d’une portée de quelques centaines de kilomètres à tir tendu, volant beaucoup plus bas. C’est pourquoi les Etats-Unis, qui disposent aussi du système terrestre THAAD  (jusqu’à 150 km d’altitude) souhaitent développer le SM-6 afin de couvrir le bas endo-atmosphérique jusqu’à 25 km d’altitude.

 

Tir d'un missile Aster 30 depuis une frégate française (© MBDA)

 

L’Europe divisée

 

En Europe, des réflexions sont en cours pour se doter d’une DAMB. Mais les points de vue divergent, notamment au sein de l’OTAN, entre les partisans d’un recours aux moyens américains (l’US Navy va d’ailleurs baser quatre Arleigh Burke dotés de SM-3 en Espagne à partir de 2014) et ceux défendant le développement d’un système  européen autonome, qui garantirait la souveraineté opérationnelle et technologique de l’UE dans ce domaine.  Le missile Aster de MBDA s’y prête parfaitement. Alors que l’Aster Block1, qui existe en version terrestre, peut neutraliser des missiles de  600 km de portée pour une altitude d’interception de 10 km environ, le développement d’un nouveau missile, l’Aster Block2, permettrait une interception entre 20 et 60 km, assurant une défense contre des missiles d’une portée allant jusqu’à 3000 km. Un tel outil permettrait de se prémunir contre l’essentiel des menaces, 93% des engins balistiques existant aujourd’hui ayant une allonge inférieure à 1000 km. 

 

L'Aster Block 1 équipe l'armée française (© MBDA)

 

Au passage, l’Europe pourrait développer une composante de DAMB navale, puisque l’Aster 30 équipe les nouveaux bâtiments de défense aérienne britanniques, français et italiens (T45 et Horizon), par ailleurs dotés des indispensables moyens de détection à longue portée (radar SMAR-L) et de poursuite (Sampson, EMPAR). Moyennant certaines adaptations des systèmes de combat et l’optimisation des senseurs, ces navires pourront offrir une première capacité européenne de DAMB navale. Celle-ci fournirait un bouclier anti-missile au territoire de l’UE, à partir de la Méditerranée par exemple, mais pourrait aussi servir à la protection des bases et des unités déployées à l’étranger. On notera qu’en matière d’électronique, les moyens européens commencent déjà à évoluer. Thales développe, ainsi, une nouvelle version du SMART-L, optimisé pour la DAMB. Ce radar équipera les frégates néerlandaises du type LCF, leur offrant une capacité d’alerte lointaine et de désignation d’objectif. Le groupe d’électronique français planche, également, sur une évolution du radar multifonctions Herakles, afin que celui-ci puisse servir à la conduite de tir contre des missiles balistiques.

 

Frégate du type franco-italien Horizon (© MARINA MILITARE)

 

Destroyer britannique du type 45 (© ROYAL NAVY)

 

Frégate néerlandaise du type LCF avec son radar SMART-L en noir (© RNN)

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28 mars 2013 4 28 /03 /mars /2013 17:20

http://assets.digital.cabinet-office.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/image_data/file/8419/s300_0-5g.jpg

The Joint Chiefs of Staffs gathered for the US-UK Chiefs Committee conference at the

national Defense University in Washington DC [Picture: DOD]

 

28 March 2013 Ministry of Defence

 

This week, Britain's most senior military chiefs met with their US counterparts as a group, bringing them together as a Combined Chiefs of Staff Committee for the first time since 1948.

 

This time, the Chiefs were not discussing current or prospective operations but instead met to discuss the strategic challenges the UK and US militaries may face in the future.

 

The meeting in Washington reinforced the close alliance between the two countries’ Armed Forces, after a decade in which UK and US forces have been routinely involved in combat operations together. The end of combat operations in Afghanistan next year seems likely to represent an inflection point.

 

This meeting therefore provided a timely opportunity for the Service Chiefs to consider the future challenges both militaries can expect to face during a period of uncertainty in the international strategic environment and continuing pressure on the resources that will be available for defence.

 

The Chiefs reviewed the circumstances in which UK and US forces seem likely to operate together in the future, and the need to continue to develop interoperability between the two forces.

 

The bilateral military relationship between the UK and US is based on a long and rich shared history.

The Combined Chiefs of Staff Committee meeting in 1948
The Combined Chiefs of Staff Committee meeting in 1948 [Picture: Ted Dearberg, IWM]

The gathering has provided an opportunity to drive forward priorities for defence collaboration set by successive Defence Secretaries and endorsed by President Obama and Prime Minister David Cameron when they met last May.

 

The outcomes of the meeting will include recommendations to the UK and US governments on the next steps with this programme of work.

 

The UK’s Chief of the Defence Staff, General Sir David Richards, said:

The US/UK Combined Chiefs of Staff Committee, meeting as it has for the first time in 65 years, reflects the importance of the military dimension of the Anglo-American alliance and a joint determination to ensure it prospers into the future. Over the past decade of conflict I, and most of the British Armed Forces, have fought side-by-side our US comrades-in-arms. How we build on the mutual respect and confidence this has engendered to ensure we successfully move beyond today’s operations to meet fresh challenges has been at the heart of our discussions.

 

I am delighted that Gen Dempsey and his fellow Chiefs have generously hosted their British counterparts and enabled this important meeting to take place. We will build on these talks to ensure we’re properly structured to cooperate bilaterally, in coalition with others and as part of NATO with our closest military ally.

General Martin E Dempsey and General Sir David Richards
General Martin E Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and General Sir David Richards are joined by their Joint Chiefs of Staffs during an Honor Guard ceremony at the national Defense University in Washington DC [Picture: D, Myles Cullen, DOD]

US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin E Dempsey, said:

The Joint Chiefs and I met with our UK counterparts at historic Fort McNair for a dialogue on strategy. In the spirit of the Combined Chiefs of Staff Committee that convened 71 years ago, we discussed the current challenges both our nation face, as well as those challenges of an uncertain future.

 

The US and UK have benefited from one of the strongest partnerships any two countries can enjoy. From the friendship between Field Marshall Sir John Dill and General George Marshall during World War II, to the young service members serving together in Afghanistan today, this kind of dialogue allows us to think through new ideas to strengthen our mutual interests and serve the men and women who protect both our countries.

As well as discussion sessions involving all the senior officers, the day’s events also included individual one-to-one meetings between the Chiefs to discuss specific areas.

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27 mars 2013 3 27 /03 /mars /2013 17:20

MQ-9 Reaper

 

27 mars 2013 Par Julien Bonnet - Usinenouvelle.com

 

VU SUR LE WEB  Le magazine américain National Journal a publié sur son site une carte des pays utilisant actuellement des drones (usage civil et militaire). Plus de 70 Etats disposent actuellement de ces engins, mais seulement une poignée de pays (Etats-Unis, Chine, Grande-Bretagne et Italie) utilisent des drones armés.

 

Quelle place occupent aujourd'hui les drones dans le monde ? L'hebdomadaire américain National Journal a publié sur son site une carte des pays utilisant actuellement ces aéronefs contrôles à distance.

Plus de 70 Etats disposent actuellement de ces engins, explique l'article, mais seulement une poignée de pays (Etats-Unis, Chine, Grande-Bretagne et Italie) utilisent des drones armés. De nombreux pays développent cependant des projets de drones de combat. C'est le cas de la France avec le démonstrateur NEUROn de Dassault Aviation, qui a réalisé son premier vol en décembre 2012. L'avionneur tricolore compte participer à la préparation de la prochaine génération d'avions de combat sans pilote, attendue dans les années 2030.

Pour le moment, la plupart des drones sont de petites tailles (comme le RQ-7 Shadow utilisé par l'armée américaine en Irak) mais de véritables avions sans pilote existent déjà. Le National Journal cite l'exemple du MQ-9 Reaper, 11 mètres de long et 20 mètres d'envergure. Cet appareil dispose d'une autonomie de 24 heures, ce qui représente un rayon d'action de plus de 1 800 kilomètres, et peut embarquer jusqu'à 16 missiles autoguidés.

 

 

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26 mars 2013 2 26 /03 /mars /2013 12:50

milplex-spix-lg.jpg

 

March 25, 2013 Spacewar.com (AFP)

 

United Nations - More than 100 countries complained Monday that talks on a conventional arms trade treaty had gone "backwards" from a vow to conclude a strong accord on the $80 billion a year trade.

 

The major western powers, which expressed confidence that an accord could be reached, face tough criticism over the treaty as talks at the UN headquarters entered the final straight.

 

A group representing 103 countries blasted the latest text as a step "backwards."

 

A statement by the 103, read by Ghana at the negotiating conference, said there were too many "loopholes" in the proposed treaty. They said it was not tough enough on ammunition, and questioned the definition used for small and light weapons.

 

"Certain central aspects" of the latest draft treaty "have not met our expectations and some seem to be a step backwards from earlier language," said the statement by the 103 countries from every continent.

 

While "there are some improvements in it, we are still concerned about the apparent lack of movement with regards to some issues and with the movement of others, in the wrong direction," said Mexico's Vice Foreign Minister Juan Manuel Gomez Robledo, reading a statement by 11 Latin American states.

 

The Arms Trade Treaty talks opened on March 18 and must finish on Thursday.

 

The aim at the start had been to produce a treaty on small arms, tanks, warships, combat aircraft, ammunition and missile launchers.

 

Any accord must be by consensus and the conference is haunted by the last attempt in July, which collapsed in failure with the United States and others demanding more time to consider the text.

 

"I think we are moving in the right direction both in terms of substance and of process," said Jo Adamson, chief British negotiator at the talks.

 

"We continue to work on those areas where we'll be seeking improvements," she added.

 

"The overall drafting of the text is tightened up and it looks more like a treaty," said another European diplomat, on condition of anonymity. The diplomat highlighted improvements such as the inclusion of an article on the diversion of weapons and the need for states to set up a national checks on its arms trade.

 

Germany's chief negotiator, Jorg Ranau, told the conference the latest text had "important improvements," but "critical amendments still need to be included."

 

The major powers, who are the major arms producers -- the United States, Russia, France, Germany, China and Britain -- have sought an accord that does not threaten their arms industries and interests, said diplomatic observers.

 

The United States has refused to allow ammunition into the main body of the treaty, saying it is too difficult to monitor the trade. China had opposed tough conditions on arms "gifts" which it often makes to allies without any cash changing hands.

 

Non-government lobby groups said the western powers are making too strong an effort to water down the treaty to get the major producers to sign on.

 

"There is too much talk of consensus," said Anna MacDonald of Oxfam. "This treaty must reflect the views of Africa and Latin America and all parts of the world that are affected by armed violence and conflicts."

 

"We are concerned that there is a too narrow range of weapons covered, that ammunitions are not properly covered and the criteria section, by which a government says yes or no to a transfer, has got to be strengthened," MacDonald said.

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25 mars 2013 1 25 /03 /mars /2013 18:21

http://assets.digital.cabinet-office.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/image_data/file/8066/s300_RAFLightningII.jpg

1 of the UK's Lightning II aircraft, taken at Fort Worth,

Texas, USA (llibrary image)

[Picture: Tom Harvey, via MOD]

 

25 March 2013 Ministry of Defence

 

The UK's Lightning II stealth fighter aircraft will be based at RAF Marham in Norfolk, Defence Secretary Philip Hammond announced today.

 

The Lightning II is the most advanced jet our Armed Forces have ever operated and the decision to base it at RAF Marham has secured the future of the base. The decision will also mean new investment and infrastructure to make RAF Marham the Main Operating Base for the aircraft.

 

Lightning II will be jointly operated by the Royal Air Force and the Royal Navy and the aircraft will operate from the Navy’s new Queen Elizabeth Class aircraft carriers as well as from RAF Marham.

A UK Lightning II fighter jet in production (library image)
A UK Lightning II fighter jet in production (library image) [Picture: © 2011 Lockheed Martin Corporation]

The Defence Secretary, Philip Hammond, visited RAF Marham this morning to view the facilities and talk to personnel ahead of the announcement.

Marham decision “makes strategic sense”

Speaking from RAF Marham, Mr Hammond said:

This is the next step in the restructuring of the Armed Forces, providing them with the world’s most capable combat aircraft. Basing the new Lightning II at RAF Marham makes strategic sense and best use of the resources available. It also secures the future of one of the UK’s most operationally-experienced bases.

 

The Lightning II is the most advanced jet our Armed Forces have ever operated, and carries on the tradition of the Harrier, while having far greater range, payload and defensive capability. Now this decision has been taken, we can start the planning and infrastructure investment required for RAF Marham’s future.

An F-35 Lightning II carries out a vertical landing on a US warship
An F-35 Lightning II carries out a vertical landing on a US warship during tests (library image) [Picture: © 2012 Lockheed Martin Corporation]

RAF Marham Station Commander Group Captain David Cooper said:

I am delighted that the Secretary of State today announced that RAF Marham is selected as the Lightning II Base. This is excellent news for my personnel, for the local community and region, and for the Royal Air Force and UK Defence.

Basing announcements

Today’s announcement also provided clarity on a number of other changes to bases in the UK, details of which were announced to Parliament in a Written Ministerial Statement. This includes RAF bases at Lossiemouth, Leuchars and Prestwick in Scotland, RAF Church Fenton in North Yorkshire, RAF Kirton in Lindsey in Lincolnshire; the Army base at Shorncliffe in Kent, and Ministry of Defence sites at St Athan in Wales, Ashchurch in Gloucestershire and Bicester.

F-35 Lightning II in flight
F-35 Lightning II in flight over the United States (library image) [Picture: © 2012 Lockheed Martin Corporation]

These local basing announcements follow the announcement made earlier this month on the future laydown of the Army as it moves back from Germany and provided further detail of the restructuring announced in the Army 2020 report of July 2012.

 

The intention to reduce the sizes and bases of the 3 services was first announced in the Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR) in 2010. Both the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force were to reduce by 5,000 personnel and the Army by 7,000 by 2020. In 2011, the reduction in the Army was increased to 20,000 by 2020.

 

Since 2011, a major study has been undertaken by the Defence Infrastructure Organisation, who are responsible for managing and maintaining the MOD estate. This study has ensured that the plans make better use of the Defence estate and ensures value for money for the taxpayer.

An F-35 Lightning II takes off
An F-35 Lightning II takes off (library image) [Picture: © 2012 Lockheed Martin Corporation]
Lightning II update

The UK’s first 2 Lightning II aircraft are currently participating in the US test programme and will remain in the US. We expect to receive front line aircraft from 2015 onwards with an initial operating capability from land in 2018, followed by first of class flights from HMS Queen Elizabeth later that year.

 

The original intention (announced in 2005) was to base the aircraft at RAF Lossiemouth. Following the Strategic Defence and Security Review in 2010, a number of changes have occurred that justified a further review of the basing options for Lightning II; these include RAF Lossiemouth becoming the new home of the UK’s Typhoon fleet, while the out of service date for the Tornado GR4, currently based at RAF Marham, has been brought forward to 2019.

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25 mars 2013 1 25 /03 /mars /2013 17:50

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/43/USAREUR_Insignia.jpg/456px-USAREUR_Insignia.jpg

 

March 23, 2013: Strategy Page

 

American military forces in Europe continue to shrink and will, over the next few years, shrink to 30,000 troops. That’s a tenth of what it was when the Cold War ended between 1989 (when most communist governments in East Europe collapsed) and 1991 (when the Soviet Union dissolved). But the American troops won’t completely disappear and most Europeans want it that way. The American troops are hostages, to help keep the peace in a part of the world that has brought us some of the most destructive wars in history. While the Russians complain that the continued presence of U.S. forces in Europe is a threat to Russia, most Europeans have a more justifiable fear of Russian aggression. The Europeans pick up most of the cost of keeping the American troops there and it’s not a bad place to be stationed for a few years.

 

All this began after 1952 (when the occupation of Germany ended). In 1945 there were three million American troops in Europe. In the next few years that was reduced by over 90 percent. The Cold War began in 1948, but the forces in Europe did not grow much until the 1950s.

 

The American troops in Europe grew to include two corps and over six divisions (18 combat brigades), plus thousands of warplanes and helicopters and hundreds of ships. During the Cold War there were over 300,000 U.S. troops in Western Europe, now it's about 40,000 and headed for 30,000 in five years. Most of the American units in Europe are being disbanded with some others, mostly combat units, being sent back to the United States.

 

While disturbing to the Russians and reassuring to European politicians, the reduction of U.S. forces in Europe has been particularly good news for people who run military museums. The dwindling U.S. forces in Europe are abandoning bases that contain an enormous quantity of museum-grade military artifacts. There since World War II, American military units casually preserved many historical items. For example, the first U.S. M-4 tank to break into Bastogne during the December, 1944 Battle of the Bulge was found (by checking vehicle serial numbers) to have been sitting in a U.S. base, as a nameless World War II monument, for over fifty years. Many similar discoveries have been made and military historians, and the army brass, are making the best of the situation. Europeans are glad to help the Americans bring back artifacts that will remind the folks back home of the long history of U.S. military involvement in Europe. It’s feared that without preserving those memories the Americans will revert to their traditional isolationism.

 

A good example of all this is found in how the museum of an American armored division in Europe was moved back to the United States. The U.S. Army 1st Armored Division managed to establish a museum in Europe with many of the artifacts its members had collected while in Europe. Although the 1st Armored left Europe in 1946, and only returned in 1971, it was able to collect nearly 3,000 items (including 140 tanks, artillery, and other vehicles) for their museum in Germany. Many other units that were there between World War II and today, collected historical artifacts and used them to decorate their bases or just hang on a wall (in a club or headquarters).

 

All of the 1st Armored has returned to the United States over the last few years and the museum went with it. Established in 1963 in Europe, the museum moved around a bit and now is in Fort Bliss, Texas. The 1st Armored collection is only a fraction of the artifacts found throughout U.S. military bases in Europe. Many of these bases have already been closed. Some artifacts were sold, some were given away or lost. It's an enormous chunk of U.S. military history and much of it is in danger of being lost forever.

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25 mars 2013 1 25 /03 /mars /2013 17:50

http://www.spxdaily.com/images-lg/nuclear-blackmarket-spix-lg.jpg

 

Mar 22, 2013 Spacewar.com (UPI)

 

Washington - The United States and the Kingdom of the Netherlands say they've expanded their cooperation to reduce global nuclear and radiological threats.

 

Under an agreement signed with the National Nuclear Security Administration Office of Global Threat Reduction, or GTRI, the Netherlands will continue its partnership with GTRI to secure and remove vulnerable radiological material by contributing $650,000 to the effort.

 

This is the Netherlands' second major cooperative activity with GTRI, and the third time the Netherlands has partnered with NNSA's nuclear nonproliferation programs, an NNSA release reported Thursday.

 

Under the new agreement, the Netherlands financial contribution will support GTRI's current work in Kazakhstan on projects related to the search, removal and physical protection of radiological material, officials said.

 

"The Kingdom of the Netherlands has made significant contributions to our joint nonproliferation commitments and is a valued partner in the global effort to reduce nuclear and radiological threats," NNSA Deputy Administrator for Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Anne Harrington said.

 

"We look forward to many more years of cooperation between our countries to strengthen global security and prevent nuclear terrorism."

 

The NNSA is a semiautonomous agency within the U.S. Department of Energy responsible for enhancing national security through the application of nuclear science.

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25 mars 2013 1 25 /03 /mars /2013 12:20

bae systems

 

Mar 25, 2013 ASDNews Source : BAE Systems PLC

 

Valued at as much as $780 million over the next five years, the contract allows BAE Systems to continue producing explosives at the Holston Army Ammunition Plant in Tennessee.

 

Under this contract, the company received an initial $18.4 million order to produce additional quantities of IMX-101, an intensive munition that is approved by the Army as a safe and effective replacement for TNT in artillery rounds.

 

"The work we do at Holston is critical to the defense of our nation and to the safety of our men and women in uniform," said Erin Moseley, president of BAE Systems' Support Solution sector. "IMX-101 is truly innovative and is revolutionizing military ordnance. Once fully fielded, it will help save lives on and off the battlefield."

 

BAE Systems developed IMX-101 and fielded it in partnership with the Army at the Holston plant, which the company operates and manages for the government. IMX-101 is part of a new family of explosives under development called Insensitive Munitions eXplosives (IMX). These explosive formulations are significantly more stable than conventional TNT and Composition B, making the weapon systems they support safer for troops to transport and handle.

 

BAE Systems is an industry leader in managing government-owned and contractor-operated munitions sites for the U.S. military. The company has been the operating contractor of the Holston plant since 1999, developing a wide range of explosive formulations for both military and commercial applications. In 2012, the company became the operating contractor of the Radford Army Ammunition Plant in Radford, Virginia. The Radford plant, similar to Holston, manufactures a range of propellants for military munitions.

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24 mars 2013 7 24 /03 /mars /2013 12:30

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3d/UK-US_flag.png

 

Mar. 23, 2013 - By VAGO MURADIAN and MARCUS WEISGERBER – Defense News

 

WASHINGTON — In what is believed to be the first time since the 1940s, the entire British defense staff will be here March 25 to discuss long-range strategy and the impact of budget cuts with their U.S. counterparts, according to U.S. and British sources.

 

The meeting is reminiscent of the Combined Chiefs of Staff, when British and American military leaders joined forces during World War II. Both nations are undergoing significant budgetary reductions and will continue to rely on each other in future years for support. Understanding what capabilities will survive and won’t is essential to long-term strategic planning.

 

“The relationship military to military is very strong. We have common interest in how we meet the financial constraints placed on both nations, but also on issues like how we manage the drawdown in Afghanistan and also how we reconfigure post Afghanistan,” said Sir Gerald Howarth, a member of parliament and the ex-defense minister responsible for international security affairs from 2010 to 2012.

 

“We have a huge amount of strategic issues to discuss where we have a very large level of common interest,” he said.

 

A Defence Ministry spokesman characterized the meeting as private and declined further comment.

 

In the U.S., spokesmen for the Office of the Secretary of Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff did not respond to questions.

 

U.S. and British military leaders regularly discuss ongoing issues. What’s different about this series of meetings is they will focus not on immediate budget, program or operational issues, but the strategic future of the Anglo-American alliance, including deepening cooperation.

 

In addition to the U.S. Joint Chiefs, British attendees are expected to include Gen. Sir David Richards, chief of the Defence Staff; Gen. Sir Nicholas Houghton, vice chief of the Defence Staff, who will take over as chief when Richards retires later this year; Air Chief Marshal Sir Stephen Dalton, chief of the Air Staff; Adm. Sir George Zambellas, incoming Navy first sea lord; Gen. Sir Peter Wall, chief of the General Staff; and Air Chief Marshal Sir Stuart Peach, commander of Joint Forces Command, sources said.

 

The U.S. and U.K. regularly share the most sensitive military intelligence, technology and equipment, including submarine-launched nuclear ballistic missiles. Britain over the past decade in particular has shaped its capabilities to dovetail with U.S. forces.

 

The British are the leading developmental partner on the U.S.-led F-35 fighter program with Lockheed Martin and have in their inventory Boeing C-17 transports, Chinook and Apache helicopters and Lockheed C-130 cargo aircraft. In addition, the Royal Air Force is buying highly sensitive RC-135 Rivet Joint intelligence planes produced by L-3 Communications in the U.S., making London the only international customer for that program.

 

The meeting comes as the Pentagon faces $500 billion in spending cuts over the coming decade, which will force senior leaders to make difficult choices. The British delegation arrives with particular experience in that area, having faced even deeper budget cuts — in percentage terms — over the past several years, forcing major reforms to force structure, organization and acquisition programs in that time.

 

“Getting value for money and efficiency is something we have focused a considerable amount of attention on, and we can offer them advice in that area,” Howarth said.

 

Still, the British budget is a fraction of that of the U.S. In fact, at $62.7 billion in 2011, the British budget is not much larger than the size of the annual cuts faced by the Americans. Under mandatory cuts for the remainder of 2013, the Pentagon is reducing its budget by $46 billion.

 

Yet the U.S. military could learn a thing or two from its British counterparts when it comes to consolidation, especially within the headquarters staff ranks, said Barry Pavel, the director of the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security at the Atlantic Council here.

 

“I think [the U.S.] can learn a lot,” Pavel said. “There’s a lot of inefficiencies in our headquarters. They’ve taken jointness ... to new levels that we haven’t yet done.”

 

But the British, having cut so deeply, are also in need. They are “going to have to leverage the U.S. to a greater degree, or try to,” Pavel said.

 

To get leaner and reduce overhead in recent years, the British military consolidated its war colleges into a single school and created an operational command center outside of London to oversee operations, according to retired British Army Brig. Gen. Ben Barry, now with the International Institute for Strategic Studies think tank in London.

 

The U.S. Defense Department is already preparing for force structure reductions in the coming years and is re-evaluating its military strategy to determine how further budget cuts would affect its plans.

 

U.S. and British forces routinely train together and have fought side-by-side over the past decade in Afghanistan and Iraq. In Afghanistan, British Lt. Gen. Nick Carter serves as the deputy commander to U.S. Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, commander of NATO forces.

 

“On the day-to-day business of military cooperation, the relationship between the U.S. [NATO] commander and the British second in command is another good example of working in partnership,” Howarth said.

 

The two militaries regularly participate in personnel exchanges.

 

Andrew Chuter in London contributed to this report.

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24 mars 2013 7 24 /03 /mars /2013 12:30

bae systems

 

March 23, 2013. David Pugliese - Defence Watch

 

News release from BAE:

 

KINGSPORT, Tenn.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–The U.S. Army has awarded BAE Systems a contract valued at as much as $780 million over the next five years to continue producing explosives at the Holston Army Ammunition Plant in Tennessee. Under this contract, the company received an initial $18.4 million order to produce additional quantities of IMX-101, an insensitive munition that is approved by the Army as a safe and effective replacement for TNT in artillery rounds.

 

“The work we do at Holston is critical to the defense of our nation and to the safety of our men and women in uniform,” said Erin Moseley, president of BAE Systems’ Support Solutions sector. “IMX-101 is truly innovative and is revolutionizing military ordnance. Once fully fielded, it will help to save lives on and off the battlefield.”

 

BAE Systems developed IMX-101 and fielded it in partnership with the Army at the Holston plant, which the company operates and manages for the government. IMX-101 is part of a new family of explosives under development called Insensitive Munitions eXplosives (IMX). These explosive formulations are significantly more stable than conventional TNT and Composition B, making the weapon systems they support safer for troops to transport and handle.

 

BAE Systems is an industry leader in managing government-owned and contractor-operated munitions sites for the U.S. military. The company has been the operating contractor of the Holston plant since 1999, developing a wide range of explosive formulations for both military and commercial applications. In 2012, the company became the operating contractor of the Radford Army Ammunition Plant in Radford, Virginia. The Radford plant, similar to Holston, manufactures a range of propellants for military munitions

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24 mars 2013 7 24 /03 /mars /2013 12:30

chuck-hagel

 

23.03.2013, La Voix de la Russie

 

Le secrétaire américain de la Défense, Chuck Hagel a confirmé l'immuabilité des plans américains de déployer des systèmes de défense antimissile en Europe, en dépit de l'ajustement dans le programme de défense antimissile. Washington envisage toujours de déployer des éléments de la défense antimissile en Pologne et en Roumanie d'ici à 2018.

 

La semaine dernière, les États-Unis ont annoncé le rejet de la dernière phase d'un programme de défense antimissile européenne pour financer le renforcement de la défense antimissile sur la côte ouest des États-Unis dans le cadre de la menace croissante de la Corée du Nord.

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