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10 avril 2014 4 10 /04 /avril /2014 06:40
Missile Voevoda RS-20V

Missile Voevoda RS-20V

 

 

MOSCOU, 9 avril - RIA Novosti

 

Le ministère russe des Affaires étrangères est préoccupé par les informations selon lesquelles l'usine ukrainienne Yuzhmash négocierait la vente des technologies de production des missiles Voevoda, qui sont actuellement en service dans l'armée russe.

 

"En tant que membre du Régime de contrôle de la technologie des missiles et signataire du Code de conduite de la Haye, l'Ukraine (…) s'est engagée à ne pas apporter son assistance à d'autres pays développant des missiles balistiques capables de porter des armes de destruction massive", rappelle le ministère russe dans un communiqué.

 

Auparavant, certains médias ont rapporté qu'une délégation de l'usine Yuzhmash s'était rendue en Turquie pour mener des négociations en vue de vendre les technologies de production des missiles Voevoda, des lanceurs Zenit-2 et du complexe polyvalent Sapsan (en développement).

 

Capable de porter des charges nucléaires, le missile intercontinental à deux étages R-36M Voevoda (code OTAN: SS-18 Satan) est doté d'une ogive multiple composée de 10 têtes (16 têtes selon certaines informations). Sa portée maximale est de 11.500 km malgré une masse de plus de 210 t au décollage. Le missile de 3 m de diamètre peut emporter une charge utile de 8,8 t. Il s'agit du plus puissant missile balistique intercontinental russe.

 

Selon l'ex-chef de l'état-major des Forces stratégiques russes Viktor Iessine cité par le journal Moskovski Komsomolets, la vente éventuelle des technologies en question ne se répercutera pas sur les capacités de défense de la Russie.

 

"Le missile Voevoda est très ancien, et il sera dans tous les cas retiré d'ici 2020. En ce qui concerne le complexe Zenit-2, il n'y a presque pas de secrets: il s'agit d'un lanceur qui n'est utilisé que pour les tirs spatiaux. Quant au complexe Sapsan, c'est un projet ukrainien, et la partie ukrainienne est en droit d'en disposer comme bon lui semble", a indiqué M.Iessine.

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9 avril 2014 3 09 /04 /avril /2014 21:40
Mer Noire: le destroyer américain ne fera pas escale en Ukraine

 

MOSCOU, 9 avril - RIA Novosti

 

Le destroyer lance-missiles américain USS Donald Cook, qui doit arriver en mer Noire le 10 avril, ne fera pas escale en Ukraine, a annoncé à RIA Novosti une source au sein du ministère russe de la Défense.

 

"Le navire portant des éléments du bouclier antimissile américain évoluera dans la partie orientale de la mer Noire sans faire escale dans des ports", a fait savoir l'interlocuteur de l'agence.

 

Equipé du système antibalistique Aegis et de plusieurs dizaines de missiles antimissiles SM-3, l'USS Donald Cook sera le deuxième destroyer américain déployé au large de l'Ukraine.

 

Auparavant, le porte-parole de la Maison Blanche Josh Earnest a annoncé que Washington avait décidé de prolonger le stationnement de son destroyer USS Truxtun en mer Noire et d'y dépêcher des "ressources supplémentaires".

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9 avril 2014 3 09 /04 /avril /2014 07:20
Les forces stratégiques US en 2018: 1150 ogives nucléaires, 800 vecteurs en parc, 700 en ligne


08.04.2014 par Philippe Chapleau - Lignes de Défense
 

En vertu du traité START, le DoD a revu la composition de ses forces stratégiques. D'ici à février 2018, il va (un peu) réduire ses vecteurs.

En parc: 454 missiles ICBM de type Minuteman, 280 Trident (à bord de sous-marins lanceurs d'engins) et 66 bombardiers stratégiques de type B-2 et B-52H.

En ligne: 400 ICBM, 240 SLBM à bord de 14 SNLE et 19 B-2 et 41 B-52H.

Le DoD disposera aussi de 1 150 ogives.

Actuellement, la force de frappe US dispose de 454 Minuteman, 336 Trident et de 96 bombardiers stratégiques. 30 B-52H seront convertis pour des missions conventionnelles.

Cliquer ici pour en savoir plus.

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8 avril 2014 2 08 /04 /avril /2014 19:20
Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) test launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base,

Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) test launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base,

 

Apr. 8, 2014 - By JENN ROWELL, (GREAT FALLS, MONT.) TRIBUNE – Defense News

 

The Pentagon announced Tuesday that it will remove 50 Minuteman III missiles from its silos to meet nuclear reductions called for under an arms-reduction treaty with Russia.

 

The empty silos will remain in warm status, meaning they will remain fully operational and can be armed with missiles at any time.

 

The Air Force and U.S. Strategic command will determine which 50 missiles will be pulled from the 450 silos currently deployed across the three missile fields operated by Malmstrom, F.E. Warren and Minot Air Force bases.

 

The empty silos count toward the non-deployed launcher limit of 800 under the New START treaty, which was ratified by the Senate and entered force in 2011.

 

The determination of which missiles will be removed hasn’t been made yet and there’s currently no timeline for that decision other than the New START deadline of February 2018.

 

To keep all 450 silos, the military has to make other cuts to the nuclear force to meet the limits of 800 non-deployed and 700 deployed launchers.

 

The Navy will convert 56 launch tubes, or four on each of its 14 nuclear submarines, so they can’t be used to carry nuclear weapons. They will also remove weapons from 40 launch tubes and keep 240 armed, for a total of 280 counted toward the New START limit of 800.

 

The Air Force will also convert 30 B-52H bombers to conventional aircraft so that they cannot carry nuclear weapons.

 

The Air Force will maintain 66 nuclear-capable bomber aircraft.

 

Because the silos will remain fully operational, no ICBM squadrons will be cut, according to defense officials. An environmental assessment also is no longer needed.

 

Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., said Monday night that the plan is good for Montana and good for national defense strategy. He also said ICBMs continue to be the most cost-effective leg of the nuclear triad.

 

“Right now, for the dollars spent, the ICBMs are the most effective component,” he said. “No ifs, ands or buts about that.”

 

Keeping 50 silos empty at all times allows the Air Force to conduct more thorough maintenance without disrupting normal operations, Tester said. The empty sites will also continue to be secured by Air Force security units.

 

“[ICBMs] are still our ace in the hole, and we need to make sure that’s there so that our country has a strong defense,” Tester said. “We have got these assets, we don’t ever want to have to use them, but if we need to use them, they’re there.”

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8 avril 2014 2 08 /04 /avril /2014 18:30
The Iron Dome Turns 3

 

 

01.04.2014 Naomi Tzoref - iaf.org.il

 

Although it seems like the "Iron Dome" system has always been a part of the protection of the residents of Israel, today actually marks only three years since its first interception. Since then, the system has recorded hundreds of interceptions, been deployed around the country and boosted drafting percentages

 

Three years have passed since the "Iron Dome" system has become a significant part of the lives of the residents of southern Israel. Since the first interception above the city of Ashkelon, "Iron Dome" batteries have been deployed across Israel and the system is considered a central layer of defense against the threat of rockets.

 

The military service of the combat soldiers and technicians who operate the "Iron Dome" is unique: the location of the batteries in open areas close to population centers requires dealing with field conditions that are especially complex, as their location changes on short notice depending on intelligence picture.

 

The operators have to deal with an intensive routine, to adapt to the front and to stay alert all the time.

"Unlike other units, we don't have work plans that are determined ahead of time. Our activities are the result of the conduct of the enemy", explains Lieutenant Colonel Gilad Biran, commander of the unit. "The soldiers serving in the unit are called up on short notice over and over without warning. In fact, most of the soldiers continuously spend the duration of their service on high alert".

 

Because Of The Spirit

 

In the last three years, the unit has managed to grow and develop in all areas: from the integration of batteries and weapons to the accumulation of rich operational experience that includes hundreds of rocket-fire incidents.

 

"The spirit forged in the unit is what enables us to perform the complex task as efficiently as possible", explains Lieutenant Colonel Biran

Men and women serve side-by-side in the many posts at the "Iron Dome" battery: combat soldiers, interceptors and soldiers in the technical branch-everyone is greatly influential at the moment of truth.

 

"It's important to understand that the operations of the unit are not one-man show", Lieutenant Colonel Gilad stresses. "It's a team effort; it's just like an orchestra, in which every player plays a certain role. Only if everyone works precisely, with vigor and to the best of his/her abilities will overall tune come out fluent and accurate".

 

Someone Watching Over You

 

The tune Lieutenant Colonel Gilad mentions is frequently heard in the southern communities: in the last three years, the system has become a significant tool in the lives of the residents of the southern communities and it takes part in every round of fighting.

 

"Every single one of us feels the weight of responsibility", says Lieutenant Colonel Gilad. "It is clear to us that there isn't a unit similar to us in the IDF, there isn't anyone who can do the job for us. There is a deep understanding of the meaning of our operations, we provide a clear and substantive answer to the security of the country, we protect the home and, in so doing, we save a lot of lives".

 

The unit, which started its operations in the Gaza strip borders, operates on the northern border today and even on the Sinai border and its batteries are ready to be deployed at any time at any point on the map.

 

"It's hard for us to expect the security reality and we are prepared for different scenarios", he clarifies. "We are ready for the threats, but it's important to adjust the expectations to the reality: the unit cannot provide a hermetic solution during a large-scale war. This type of solution cannot only include defense capabilities; it must also include offensive ones in addition to detection, reliable deterrence and adherence on the part of the civilian population to the instructions of the Home Front Command".

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8 avril 2014 2 08 /04 /avril /2014 11:40
Russia warns Ukraine against missile technologies proliferation

Yuzhmash produces the silo-based Voyevoda (SS-18, or Satan in NATO classification) inter-continental ballistic missiles capable of carrying eight-piece nuclear warhead.

 

Apr 08, 2014 (XNA)

 

Moscow - Russia on Monday drew Kiev's attention over media reports that a Ukrainian military-space enterprise had allegedly been negotiating with third countries on missile technology sale.

 

Referring to the Yuzhmash plant based in the city of Dnepropetrovsk in eastern Ukraine, the Russian Foreign Ministry reminded that Ukraine is a participant of the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) and a signatory of The Hague Code of Conduct against Ballistic Missile Proliferation (HCoC).

 

Moscow said Kiev has been bearing serious political obligations and must be especially restrained when it comes to technologies of building the missiles with the range over 300 km and workload over 500 kg.

 

"According to the MTCR, the most likely outcome of these negotiations must be refusal to hand over those technologies," the ministry said in a statement.

 

Yuzhmash produces the silo-based Voyevoda (SS-18, or Satan in NATO classification) inter-continental ballistic missiles capable of carrying eight-piece nuclear warhead. Yuzhmash also produces Dnepr space rockets conversed from the Voyevoda.

 

Russia reminded that participants of the HCoC have obligations not to facilitate, nor to support other countries in their efforts to build the ballistic missiles capable to carry weapons of mass destruction.

 

Russia hoped that despite complicated political situation in Ukraine in the absence of legitimate authorities, the leaders of the country should show due responsibility and stick to their obligations under the MTCR and HCoC not to undermine non- proliferation regimes.

 

Established in 1987 by Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States, the MTCR has been signed by 34 countries to date. The Hague Code of Conduct was signed in 2002 with the number of its participants currently reaching 137.

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8 avril 2014 2 08 /04 /avril /2014 11:35
US outlines possible $98 million South Korean Sidewinder deal

 

 

Apr 08, 2014 by Greg Waldron – FG

 

Singapore - The US State Department has notified congress of a possible sale of 76 Raytheon AIM-9X-2 Sidewinder Block II infrared (IR) homing missiles.

 

The proposed $98 million Foreign Military Sales deal also includes captive air training missiles, other equipment, and training associated with the weapons, said the US Defense Security Agency in a statement.

 

“The ROK intends to use these AIM-9X missiles to supplement its existing missile capability and current weapon inventory,” says the DSCA.

 

“This sale will contribute to the Republic of Korea’s force modernization goals and enhance interoperability with U.S. forces. The ROK will use this enhanced capability to strengthen its homeland defense and deter regional threats.”

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8 avril 2014 2 08 /04 /avril /2014 07:35
Rafael targets Indian Rafale opportunity

 

Apr.7, 2014 By Arie Egozi – FG

 

Tel Aviv - Israeli guided weapons manufacturer Rafael is offering its Python 5 and Derby air-to-air missiles for integration with some of the Dassault Rafales expected to enter service with the Indian air force.

 

India in January 2012 selected the Rafale for its 126-unit medium multi-role combat aircraft deal, with the first 18 examples to be completed by Dassault with a full complement of integrated weapons. The type is flown by the French air force and navy with air-to-air and air-to-surface weapons produced by MBDA and Sagem.

 

An earlier request for proposals also required airframers to “integrate additional weapons of the Indian air force’s choice, as required”.

 

Joseph Horowitz, director of business development and marketing for Rafael's air superiority directorate, confirms that the Israeli company is in the competition to arm later Indian air force aircraft. Russian industry is also pursuing potential opportunities, with the air force still evaluating its options.

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8 avril 2014 2 08 /04 /avril /2014 06:35
South Korea tests missile bringing entire North in range

 

April 8th, 2014 defencetalk.com (AFP)

 

South Korea said Friday it had successfully test-fired a new ballistic missile capable of carrying a one-tonne payload to any part of North Korea.

 

The launch was carried out March 23, just two days before North Korea test fired two medium-range ballistic missiles capable of striking Japan.

 

The announcement of the test is likely to fuel the current tensions on the Korean peninsula which saw the two rivals fire hundreds of live shells into each other’s territorial waters earlier this week.

 

The new South Korean missile, capable of carrying a one-tonne payload up to 500 kilometers (310 miles), was developed under an agreement reached in 2012 with the United States to almost triple the range of the South’s ballistic missile systems.

 

The United States stations 28,500 troops in South Korea and guarantees a nuclear “umbrella” in case of any atomic attack.

 

In return, Seoul accepts limits on its missile capabilities and had previously operated under a range and payload ceiling of 300 kilometers and 500 kilograms (1,100 pounds).

 

Given the ambitions of nuclear-armed North Korea’s own missile program, the South had long argued for the limits to be extended.

 

The 2012 agreement, which was denounced as a provocation by Pyongyang, allows the South to deploy missiles with a maximum range of 800 kilometers.

 

While the maximum payload for that range remains 500 kilograms, the two parameters are inversely linked, so that for shorter ranges corresponding payload increases are allowed.

 

Just one month ago, inter-Korean relations appeared to be enjoying something of a thaw.

 

In February the two rivals had rare, high-level talks, after which they held the first reunion in more than three years for families divided by the 1950-53 Korean War.

 

Even when annual South Korean-US military exercises began at the end of February, the protests from Pyongyang were relatively muted, and there was talk of further high-level meetings and greater cooperation.

 

But the mood soon soured, and recent weeks have seen North Korea conduct a series of rocket and missile tests, culminating last month in the test-firing of the two medium-range ballistic missiles.

 

On Monday, North Korea conducted a live-fire drill along the disputed maritime border. After some shells crossed the boundary, South Korea responded and the two sides fired hundreds of artillery rounds into each other’s waters.

 

North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un warned this week that the situation on the peninsula was “very grave” and vowed to “thoroughly crush” what he called a US-engineered policy of hostility.

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7 avril 2014 1 07 /04 /avril /2014 21:40
Ukraine: un destroyer lance-missiles américain en route vers la mer Noire

 

WASHINGTON, 07 avr 2014 marine-oceans.com  (AFP)

 

Un destroyer lance-missiles américain se dirige vers la mer Noire où il devrait arriver "d'ici une semaine" pour rassurer les alliés est-européens inquiets de l'intervention russe en Crimée, a-t-on appris lundi de sources concordantes.

 

"Nous avons décidé d'envoyer un navire en mer Noire. Il devrait arriver là-bas d'ici une semaine", a affirmé à la presse le colonel Steven Warren, un porte-parole du Pentagone, sans préciser le type de navire en question pour des questions de "sécurité opérationnelle".

 

Un responsable américain de la Défense a précisé à l'AFP qu'il s'agissait du destroyer lance-missiles USS Donald-Cook.

 

Equipé du système antibalistique Aegis et de plusieurs dizaines de missiles antimissiles SM-3, le Donald-Cook a été déployé de manière permanente il y a deux mois sur la base espagnole de Rota dans le cadre du projet de bouclier antimissiles de l'Otan.

 

Ce projet est selon l'Otan officiellement "purement défensif" pour répondre à d'éventuelles "menaces provenant de l'extérieur", de pays comme l'Iran. Mais le bouclier est depuis plusieurs années un sujet de discorde majeur entre l'Alliance atlantique et la Russie, qui le perçoit comme une menace pour sa sécurité.

 

"La raison (de ce déploiement) est avant tout de rassurer nos alliés et partenaires dans la région", a expliqué le colonel Warren.

 

Une fois en mer Noire, le navire effectuera des manoeuvres navales et plusieurs escales dans des ports de pays alliés, mais aucune ne semble prévue dans un port ukrainien, selon le colonel Warren.

 

Un autre destroyer américain, l'USS Truxtun, avait croisé en mer Noire depuis le début de la crise entre l'Ukraine et la Russie mais l'avait quittée le 21 mars.

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7 avril 2014 1 07 /04 /avril /2014 19:35
L'Inde teste un missile de croisière russo-indien BrahMos

 

NEW DELHI, 7 avril - RIA Novosti

 

Les forces armées indiennes ont effectué lundi un tir d'essai d'un missile de croisière supersonique russo-indien BrahMos, a annoncé l'agence indienne PTI se référant à un représentant du polygone de Pokharan, situé dans le nord-ouest de l'Etat indien du Rajasthan.

Tiré par une rampe de lancement mobile, "le missile a détruit sa cible", a indiqué le responsable cité par l'agence.

Utilisé par l'armée indienne depuis 2005, BrahMos est un missile supersonique à propergol solide pesant 2,55 tonnes. Doté d'une ogive de 200 à 300 kg, le BrahMos est capable de neutraliser les cibles à une distance de 290 km. L'Inde a déjà testé ses versions terrestre et navale et compte également en équiper les chasseurs Su-30MKI.

BrahMos tient son nom des premières syllabes du fleuve indien Brahmapoutre et de la rivière russe Moskova.

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7 avril 2014 1 07 /04 /avril /2014 07:30
Air Weapons: Turkish Hellfire

 

April 6, 2014:  Strategy Page

 

Turkey recently conducted a successful test of its Hellfire clone, the Mizrak-U. With a range of 8 kilometers the Turkish missile can use either an infrared imaging guidance system or laser homing. Turkey becomes one of a growing list of nations that have produced their own version of the Hellfire. Britain produces a Hellfire variant, called Brimstone which is unique mainly in that it can be fire from jets. This version has become very popular as well. Several other countries, like China, have produced missiles similar in weight, size and capabilities to the Hellfire. Now Turkey is doing so as well.

 

The American AGM-114 Hellfire missile entered service since 1984 and proved enormously useful in the war on terror. An improved Hellfire II appeared in 1994 and over 30,000 have been produced so far. The Hellfire II weighs 48.2 kg (106 pounds), carries a 9 kg (20 pound) warhead and has a range of 8,000 meters. These have been the most frequently used American missiles for over a decade, with over 16,000 fired in training or (mostly) combat since 2001. A growing number of these Hellfires are for foreign customers. Hellfire missiles cost about $100,000 each depending on warhead and guidance system options.

 

Hellfire was originally designed for use by helicopter gunships against masses of Cold War era Russian tanks. That never happened, except in Kuwait during the 1991 war against Russian tanks owned by Iraq. Hellfire was quite successful in Kuwait. With the end of the Cold War the Hellfire seemed destined for the history books, as just another missile that worked but never distinguished itself. This all changed in 2002 when the CIA first used a Hellfire fired from a Predator UAV to kill a hard-to-find terrorist. The U.S. Air Force wasn’t really interested in this sort of thing and the CIA used its own money and authority to buy Predator UAVs and arm them with Hellfires. It quickly became apparent that the air force was wrong about UAVs and, well, the Hellfire was an army weapon used on helicopters and the air force never considered such a combination of UAV and missile useful for anything. The army soon found that Hellfire was an excellent weapon for supporting troops in urban areas or when going after terrorists anywhere.

 

Turkey plans to use Mizrak-U on its new T129 helicopter gunship. This aircraft is based on the Italian A129 which is roughly comparable to the upgraded versions of the U.S. AH-1 (especially the AH-1W SuperCobra). The 4.6 ton A-129 was the first helicopter gunship designed and built in Western Europe and was introduced in the 1980s. While it has been upgraded frequently, the only customer so far has been Italy, which bought 60 of them. The manufacturer, Agusta/Westland, has been desperate to get an export customer and made a deal for Turkey to produce over a hundred T129s under license.

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7 avril 2014 1 07 /04 /avril /2014 07:20
US Navy Scores 4 Hits with Griffin Missile

ARABIAN GULF (March 20, 2014) - The coastal patrol ship USS Typhoon (PC-5) launches an MK-60 surface-to-surface missile during a Griffin missile exercise. The Griffin missile exercise is a surface-to-surface live-fire missile exercise conducted to train for small boat threats in the U.S. 5th Fleet Area of responsibility. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Doug Harvey/Released)

 

April 4, 2014 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: U.S Navy; issued April 3, 2014)

 

Four for Four: Successful Griffin Missile Test Fire In US 5th Fleet

 

MANAMA, Bahrain --- A flotilla of coastal patrol (PC) ships launched four missiles at target sleds last week to test the operational capability of the system.

 

Each missile fired resulted in a successful test of the system and destruction of the target.

 

The U.S. Navy recently completed the installation of the Griffin Missile System (GMS) aboard USS Firebolt (PC 10), USS Sirocco (PC 6), USS Typhoon (PC 5) and USS Whirlwind (PC 11), which represent four of the eight U.S. 5th Fleet PC force.

 

PC crews are quickly mastering the new weapon.

 

"The entire Griffin system has proven to be a reliable and accurate weapon system that has a relatively low training threshold requirement," said Capt. Joe Naman, commander, Destroyer Squadron 50. "After only a few days of hands-on training, operators are confident in their ability to operate and execute engagements with the Griffin missile."

 

GMS not only significantly extends the range of the PC's self-defense capability, but also enhance s the performance of core mission sets like maritime infrastructure protection, escort duties and defense of commercial shipping.

 

"The coastal patrol force greatly enhances U.S. Navy capacity to conduct more partnered and more complex operations and exercises with our Arabian Gulf allies and other coalition members," said Naman. "We continue to modernize our patrol boat force to match our partners and maximize our defensive capabilities"

 

Guided missiles like the Griffin give a greater punch to the PC's and will be used alongside existing crew-served weapons and the 25mm MK 38 Mod 2 stabilized chain guns. This layered defense provides PC crews with an enhanced capability to defeat small boat threats.

 

GMS consists of a government-designed launcher and weapons control system, Forward Looking Infra-Red (FLIR) Systems' BRITE Star II sensor/laser designator, and Raytheon's Griffin B (Block II) missile.

 

Adapted from aviation and special operations platforms, the 43-inch-long, 33-pound missile has proven itself to be lethal against small boat threats.

 

All ten Bahrain-based PCs will be outfitted with GMS by 2016.

 

PCs are in Bahrain based on a strong demand signal for increased Maritime Security Operations in this region. The cost effective ships are ideal platforms for conducting regional engagements with our regional partners.

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6 avril 2014 7 06 /04 /avril /2014 20:50
Navy's European Missile Sites Move Forward

 

Apr. 6, 2014 By DAVID LARTER – Defense News

 

The military could speed up deployment of a land-based missile defense shield in Europe to hem in a resurgent Russia, the Navy 3-star in charge of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency said in early April.

 

Vice Adm. James Syring said it was possible to speed up the deployment of the second Aegis Ashore installation, planned for Poland in 2018, but such a move would require some help from Congress.

 

“We’d need some additional funds in the [fiscal year 2015] budget, and we’d need to move up the development of the [Standard Missile-3 Block ]IIA,” Syring said, referring to the faster, larger interceptor missile being developed for the Aegis Ashore system being built in Poland. The first site is being stood up in Romania and is slated to go live in 2015.

 

Raytheon is developing the SM3-IIA. It’s development is on track for a 2018 deployment, company spokesperson Heather Uberuaga said, but she declined to speculate on whether speeding up the development was possible.

 

Elaine Bunn, deputy assistant secretary of defense for nuclear and missile defense policy, said the missile shields in the Mediterranean and the planned deployment to Romania and Poland were designed to counter threats from Iran, not Russia.

 

Russia is banned from owning or developing medium- and intermediate-range missiles by a Reagan-era treaty. But U.S. intelligence has indicated that Russia may be violating the treaty and testing a new ground-launched cruise missile, according to a January report in the New York Times.

 

Russian President Vladimir Putin declared the treaty obsolete in 2007, though it has never been formally scrapped. Russia has vehemently objected to the deployment of missile shields in central Europe, even threatening to use “destructive force” if the shields are put in place.

 

The plan to deploy sea- and shore-based missile shields in Europe is part of the Obama administration’s plan to protect Europe from ballistic-missile attack.

 

The first Aegis Ashore site will be up and running by 2015 in Romania, followed by another installation in Poland in 2018.

 

They will complement the missile defense work provided by BMD-capable ships. As part of this, the Navy has begun moving four destroyers to Rota, Spain, to serve as in-theater BMD patrol assets. The Donald Cook arrived in February and will be joined by destroyers Ross, Porter and Carney over the next two years.

 

The Navy is now seeking sailors to man the Romania site, set to come online next year. The duty, especially the operational time, is sure to be demanding.

 

The Aegis Ashore sites will be run round-the-clock by three crews. Each shift has an 11-person watch team, including rates that typically work in a ship’s combat information center: fire control technicians, operations specialists, and cryptologic technicians (technical). One watch officer will oversee them.

 

Officials plan to deploy three of these specially trained watch teams for six months at a time. This will be an operational tour, similar to a ship’s cruise, and won’t come with permanent change-of-station orders or the possibility of bringing dependents to Romania.

 

All of the watch teams will be assigned to a stateside command and will deploy from there. Their workups are four months of indoctrination and team trainers, culminating in a BMD certification. The first watch teams will go through the trainers starting in early 2015 and are set to deploy in the early summer, Navy officials said.

 

The battery’s commanding officer, executive officer and command master chief will stay in Romania and oversee the rotating teams on yearlong orders

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6 avril 2014 7 06 /04 /avril /2014 16:35
Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel and Japanese Minister of Defense Itsunori Onodera photo US DoD

Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel and Japanese Minister of Defense Itsunori Onodera photo US DoD

 

06.04.2014 Le Monde.fr (AFP)

 

Le secrétaire américain à la défense, Chuck Hagel, a annoncé dimanche 6 avril que les Etats-Unis allaient envoyer au Japon deux navires en plus de ceux déjà présents afin de répondre à la menace nord-coréenne. L'annonce a été faite après la rencontre du secrétaire américain avec son homologue japonais, Itsunori Onodera, à Tokyo.

 

« En réponse aux provocations et aux actions déstabilisatrices de Pyongyang, y compris les lancements récents de missiles en violation des résolutions du Conseil de sécurité de l'ONU, je peux annoncer aujourd'hui que les Etats-Unis prévoient de déployer deux navires équipés du système antimissile Aegis supplémentaires au Japon en 2017. Ces mesures vont fortement élever notre capacité à défendre le Japon et le sol américain des menaces de missiles balistiques nord-coréen », a déclaré Chuck Hagel.

 

Ces navires viendront s'ajouter aux cinq navires équipés de système antimissile déjà stationnés au Japon, où les Etats-Unis disposent d'importantes bases et de près de 50 000 militaires. En octobre dernier, les Etats-Unis avaient décidé de déployer un second radar d'alerte au Japon, à Kyoto (ouest), et d'augmenter le nombre de missiles antimissiles basés en Alaska (nord-ouest des Etats-Unis).

 

Ces dernières semaines, la Corée du Nord a multiplié les gestes de provocation, lui ayant valu d'être condamné par l'ONU. Pyongyang a notamment testé en mars deux missiles balistiques de moyenne portée capables de frapper le Japon. D'après la presse, Tokyo a ordonné à son armée de détruire tout missile nord-coréen qui traverserait son espace aérien, et a déployé ses propres navires équipés du système Aegis en mer du Japon (appelée mer de l'Est par les Coréens).

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6 avril 2014 7 06 /04 /avril /2014 07:35
Hyeonmu missiles - source patriotdaily-com

Hyeonmu missiles - source patriotdaily-com

 

4 April 2014 army-technology.com

 

The South Korean Defence Ministry has developed a new long-range ballistic missile to boost its defences against North Korean missile threats, an unnamed South Korea military official has revealed.

 

The missile, with a range of 500km and a 1t payload, was successfully test-fired by the state-funded Agency for Defense Development (ADD), at a testing range in Taean, South Chungcheong Province late last month, Yonhap News Agency reports.

 

An official said: "The missiles accurately hit the intended target."

"We are now developing 500km ballistic missiles and plan to make 800km missiles."

 

The test launch of the missile, which is scheduled to be deployed in 2015, follows the firing of a series of short-range rockets and mid-range missiles by Pyongyang in the last few weeks, which was in response to the ongoing annual joint-military drills between South Korea and the US.

 

South Korean Defence Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok was quoted by the news agency as saying that the missile development forms part of follow-up measures after the revision of missile guidelines by South Korea and the US.

 

"We are now developing 500km ballistic missiles and plan to make 800km missiles in the future," Min-seok said.

 

Signed in 1979, the bilateral missile pact saw the US assist in missile technology development, but limited the South Korean ballistic missile range to 180km. However, this was revised in October 2012 to extend the range from the existing 300km to 800km, with a maximum payload of 500kg.

 

This also enabled Seoul, which currently operates Hyunmoo ballistic missiles with a range of 300km, to develop heavier payloads for short-range missiles.

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5 avril 2014 6 05 /04 /avril /2014 22:35
Le Japon se dit prêt à réagir à tout nouveau tir de missile balistique nord-coréen

 

05 Avril 2014 Par Marine & Océans (zonebourse.com)

 

Un destroyer de la marine japonaise a reçu l'ordre de détruire tout missile balistique tiré de Corée du Nord, a-t-on appris samedi de source gouvernementale à Tokyo, dix jours après l'essai d'un vecteur nord-coréen Rodong de moyenne portée qui s'est abîmé en mer.

L'instruction a été donnée jeudi par le ministre de la Défense Itsunori Onodera, mais n'a pas été rendue publique pour préserver les négociations entre le Japon et la Corée du Nord, renouées après un gel de plus d'un an.

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4 avril 2014 5 04 /04 /avril /2014 22:35
Hyunmoo 2 and Hyunmoo 3 missiles

Hyunmoo 2 and Hyunmoo 3 missiles

 

MOSCOU, 4 avril - RIA Novosti

 

La Corée du sud a effectué en mars un test réussi de son premier missile balistique capable d'atteindre n'importe quelle région de la Corée du Nord, a annoncé vendredi l'agence Yonhap, citant une source au ministère sud-coréen de la Défense.

 

"Le missile a frappé la cible avec une grande précision", a indiqué l'agence.

 

Ce test, qui a réuni des militaires haut placés, dont le ministre de la Défense Kim Kwan-jin, s'est déroulé le 23 mars dans le nord-est du pays, à 100 km de Séoul. Il s'agissait d'un missile ayant une portée de 500 km et une charge d'une tonne. Cette puissance suffirait à détruire toutes les cibles stratégiques en Corée du Nord, y compris les abris souterrains et les silos de missiles.

 

La production en série de cette arme débutera l'année prochaine.

 

A l'heure actuelle, la Corée du sud produit des missiles d'une portée de 180 km (Hyunmu-1) et de 300 km (Hyunmu-2), ces portées étant définies dans un accord signé avec les Etats-Unis. Cependant, selon le quotidien sud-coréen The Chosun Ilbo, une directive adoptée en octobre 2012 autorise Séoul à construire des missiles ayant une portée maximale de 800 km.

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4 avril 2014 5 04 /04 /avril /2014 07:50
Finns May Turn to Russia for Tactical Missile System

Finland has lost interest in buying Lockheed Martin's MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) and may opt instead for the more affordable, Russian-built Iskander-E. (US Army)

 

Apr. 3, 2014 - By GERARD O’DWYER – Defense News

 

HELSINKI — The likelihood of Finland acquiring a new surface-to-surface missile system from Russia has increased following a preliminary decision by the Finance Ministry here to opt for a more up-to-date and cost-efficient launcher-fired tactical missile.

 

The ministry’s decision happens against a backdrop where the government has announced more than $3 billion in public spending cuts across various departments as the government struggles to tame rising national debt.

 

The search for a “more cost-efficient” tactical missile means that Finland has effectively dropped its interest in Lockheed Martin’s surface-to-surface MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) for the Finnish Army.

 

Finland’s Ministry of Defense had signaled interest in acquiring the ATACMS as recently as January, setting aside a budget of about $140 million for the purpose. The ATACMS has a range of up to 188 miles (300 kilometers).

 

“The missile project has been put on hold due to budgetary reasons, and due to the high unit price,” said Arto Koski, a commercial adviser attached to the MoD’s Material and Projects Unit. “The ATACMS is a very expensive and relatively old system. We must now evaluate our entire material development.”

 

The focus has shifted, Koski said, to acquiring a surface-to-surface missile solution that is “more modern and affordable. We know of alternatives that would fulfill the same technological need.”

 

Finland’s interest in ATACMS peaked in mid-2012, when negotiations with the US culminated in a congressional permit to purchase up to 70 tactical missiles. Finland had earlier agreed to acquire US joint air-to-surface stand-off missiles for the Finnish Air Force’s upgraded F-18 Hornet fighter jets.

 

The prospect of an ATACMS deal heightened in 2006, when the Finnish Army acquired a second-hand M270 multiple launch rocket system (MLRS) from the Netherlands for $62 million. A further $50 million was spent to render the MLRS launchers compatible with ATACMS missiles. Because the M270 launchers contain US technology, Finland sought and received US congressional approval for the acquisition.

 

he possibility that Finland, a neutral country, may turn to Russia for a surface-to-surface missile has increased following an agreement between the two countries last June to look at practical ways to cooperate on weapon purchases, sales and, in the case of Finland, offering subcontracting capacity to Russia’s equipment modernization programs.

 

The agreement was reached following talks between Finland’s MoD and Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu during a visit here last May. In the months that followed, separate working groups were established in each country to examine potential areas for commercial cooperation and to evaluate those areas offering the highest potential.

 

An updated export version of the Iskander-E surface-to-surface missile is among the list of weapon systems, which includes combat aircraft, that Russia wants to sell to Finland. The Iskander-E has a range comparable to ATACMS, but Finland could expect to acquire the Russian system at a lower cost.

 

Finland traditionally obtained most of its big-ticket defense systems from the Soviet Union under a bilateral trade agreement that lapsed following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Systems acquired under this arrangement included MiG-21 fighter jets, Mi-8 helicopters and the BUK air-to-air missile system.

 

The near-obsolete BUK system is to be replaced by four batteries of the Norwegian-developed NASAMS II missile system beginning in 2015

 

After 1991, Finland switched to Western suppliers for its big-ticket procurements, acquiring 64 McDonnell Douglas F/A-18C and D Hornet fighters in 1992

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4 avril 2014 5 04 /04 /avril /2014 07:40
Tor-M2U

Tor-M2U

 

MOSCOU, 3 avril - RIA Novosti

 

Deux nouveaux systèmes de missiles participeront pour la première fois au défilé militaire du 9 mai à Moscou à l'occasion du 69e anniversaire de la victoire dans la Grande guerre patriotique de 1941-1945, a annoncé jeudi Kirill Kisselev, porte-parole du ministère russe de la Défense.

"Les missiles sol-air Tor-M2U et les missiles antichar Khrizantema-S défileront pour la première fois sur la place Rouge de Moscou pendant la parade de la Victoire. L'armée russe s'est dotée de ces missiles en 2013", a indiqué le porte-parole.

Au total, 11.000 militaires et plus de 100 matériels de guerre participeront au défilé du 9 mai à Moscou, notamment des systèmes de DCA Buk-M2U, des rampes de lancement des missiles S-400 Triumf, des systèmes antiaériens Pantsyr-S1, des missiles Topol-M, ainsi que des véhicules blindés GAZ-2330 Tigr et BTR-82A, des chars T-90A et des canons automoteurs Msta-S. Soixante-neuf avions et hélicoptères survoleront la place Rouge à la fin du défilé.

Les missiles Tor-M2U sont en service opérationnel dans trois régions militaires russes. Ils sont capables de détruire des  cibles aérodynamiques et balistiques, des missiles de croisière, ainsi que des dispositifs de reconnaissance aérienne et de lutte radioélectronique.

Le système de missiles antichar guidés Khrizantema-S est destiné à détruire des chars, des navires de petit tonnage et des aéroglisseurs, des aéronefs subsoniques volant à basse altitude, ainsi que des structures en béton armé, des sites blindés et des bunkers.

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3 avril 2014 4 03 /04 /avril /2014 19:20
Défense antimissile américaine : échecs et retards

 

03/04/2014 par Duncan Macrae – Air & Cosmos

 

L’agence américaine responsable du développement et du déploiement des systèmes de défense antimissile (MDA, pour Missile Defense Agency) en prend pour son grade. Dans un nouveau rapport qui fait le bilan des activités de la MDA pour l’année 2013, le GAO (équivalent américain de la Cour des Comptes) critique le manque de progrès dans la mise à niveau de certains composants du "bouclier" antimissile américain, notamment les système d’interception Aegis et GMD.

 

En ce qui concerne les intercepteurs SM-3 déployés sur les frégates Aegis pour contrer les missiles à courte et moyenne portée, le GAO s’interpelle quant au lancement de la production en série de la variante Block 1B, actuellement prévu en 2015. Le GAO souligne que, sur les trois tirs d’essai réalisés en 2013, il y a eu un échec dont les causes restent à déterminer. Et il rappelle que les responsables du programme évoquent un éventuel problème de conception du moteur du troisième étage, un moteur partagé avec la version SM-3 Block 1A déjà déployée.

 

Quant au système GMD (conçu pour intercepter des missiles balistiques à longue portée, actuellement déployé sur deux sites américains), le rapport note que ce programme affiche actuellement un retard de sept ans dans la réalisation d’un premier tir de la version amélioréé, CE-II ,avec interception rélle. Ce tir est actuellement programmé pour le troisième trimestre de l’année fiscale 2014. Le GAO note aussi l’échec, au mois de juillet 2013, d’un essai en vol du missile tel qu’il est déployé actuellement, pour des raisons qui restent à déterminer.

 

Le rapport fait état d’un certain nombre de tirs d’essai réussis au cours de l’année, notamment le premier essai opérationnel « régional » avec tirs simultanés de missiles Aegis et THAAD. Mais le bilan global est mitigé, et la facture est salée — un total de 100 Md$ investis dans la défense antimissile depuis 2004.

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3 avril 2014 4 03 /04 /avril /2014 07:40
Russian Navy puts into service ICBM Liner - source

 

2 April 2014, voiceofrussia.com

 

The Russian Navy has put into service seaborne ICBM Liner designed by the Makeyev State Missile Center based in Miass, Chelyabinsk region, a source from the Russian defense sector said.

 

"The ICBM Liner system was put into service in the beginning of this year. These missiles will be deployed on nuclear-powered strategic submarines of Project 667BDRM," he added, Interfax reports.

 

According to open sources, ICBM LinerICBM Liner can carry a multivariate warhead in contrast to its predecessor, ICBM Sineva. The Sineva warhead consists of four units, and ICBM Liner can carry either ten small-sized warhead units capable of penetration through missile defense or eight units of the same class but with a higher capacity for missile defense penetration or four medium-sized units with missile defense penetration capacities.

 

ICBM Liner was successfully test fired on May 20 and September 29, 2012. ICBM Sineva and Liner will make it possible to extend the period of operation of missile carrying submarines of Project 667BDRM until 2030.

 

Some experts point out that it would not be quite right to call ICBM Liner a brand new missile. "In fact, this is the same Sineva, but with a different, better warhead," one analyst said. He recalled that Liner was the project name of a new warhead rather than a missile. "This theory is supported with the meager number of test launches of the 'new' missile, which was tested as Sineva a long time ago, and the similar indication of both missiles, R-29RMU2 for Sineva and R-29RMU2."

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3 avril 2014 4 03 /04 /avril /2014 07:35
3UBK20 with guided missile 9M119M.

3UBK20 with guided missile 9M119M.

 

Apr 01, 2014 brahmand.com

 

NEW DELHI (PTI): India has signed a deal worth over Rs 2,600 crore with Russia to procure 66,000 anti-tank shells to meet the shortfall of critical ammunition faced by its armoured fleet including the latest T-90 tanks.

 

The two sides signed the deal on March 27 for the supply of anti-tank shells to the Army and agreement in this regard was inked by Defence Ministry officials from India and Rosoboronexport officials from the Russia side, Defence Ministry told PTI here.

 

The Cabinet Committee on Security headed by the Prime Minister had recently cleared the proposal to acquire 66,000 3UBK20 (Mango) tank ammunition from Russia, they said.

 

Under the deal, Russia will also undertake transfer of technology on the production techniques of the specialised tank ammunition to the Ordnance Factory Board, which will produce it indigenously, they said.

 

Faced with shortage of weapon systems, the Defence Ministry has decided to form JVs with the Russian manufacturers to produce them in India like the rockets for the Smerch multi-barrel rocket launcher systems.

 

The severe shortage of tank ammunition was first highlighted by former Army Chief Gen V K Singh in a top secret letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in March this year which later found its way to the media.

 

Gen Singh had noted in his letter that only three to four days of this particular ammunition was left in the inventory of the armoured regiments.

 

Later on, the Army had also informed the Standing Committee on Defence about the shortage and how the situation had worsened by the recent blacklisting of its supplier Israeli Military Industry (IMI).

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2 avril 2014 3 02 /04 /avril /2014 11:30
China’s Push for Turkish Missile Sale


 

April 2, 2014 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: The International Relations and Security Network; issued March 28, 2014)

 

Is The FD-2000 An Albatross Or A Raptor-Killer?

 

Why is China proposing to sell FD-2000 anti-aircraft missiles to Turkey? James Hasik thinks there are three possible reasons – Turkey is impressed with the system, China isn’t expecting a military confrontation with America any time soon, or internal disputes are clouding Beijing’s decision-making processes.

 

The Hurriyet Daily News reported [...] that enthusiasm has begun to wane amongst local subcontractors in CPMIEC’s proposed sale of FD-2000 anti-aircraft missile batteries to Turkey. CPMIEC has been blacklisted by the US government under the Iran, North Korea and Syria Nonproliferation Act, and Turkish firms are wary of winding up on the wrong side of the world’s biggest customer. As early as last October, Raytheon and Eurosam (MBDA and Thales’s joint venture) were asked to extend their pricing, and the bidding was again extended in January, so this deal is hardly done. Yet unexplained remains the motivation from the Chinese side. Why did Beijing allow CPMIEC to offer an important missile system to a NATO ally of the United States?

 

The actual quality of the product is hard to discern through public sources, and the heritage can be confusing. The FD-2000 is the export version of the HQ-9, itself originally a clone of the S-300 from Russia’s Almaz-Antey. Allied governments assuredly have better information. As I wrote earlier, the Slovak Air Force first brought its S-300s to a NATO exercise in 2005. The Hellenic Air Force has had 12 launchers since 2000, and test-fired some missiles back in December. The Bulgarians have the weapon too. Consider the Croatian battery that was actually sold to the US in 2003, and you can guarantee that the S-300 has been analyzed down to the smallest screw.

 

The Chinese missile is not quite the same, though it’s not clear whether it’s better or worse. Many Chinese companies are excellent contract manufacturers, and the industry may have tricked out the old Soviet technology. The record, however, is not good. Chinese efforts to copy Russian aircraft and engines have been thus far unimpressive, so one might wonder about the radars and missiles too. Indeed, in one second-hand report, I heard the FD-2000 described as the air defense equivalent "of a 1991 Hyundai.” Even at a Volkswagen price, that’s not a good deal.

 

But actual quality is not the issue: what matters in discerning motivation is Chinese perception of that quality. So suppose that the Chinese government actually would agree that the FD-2000 is effectively junk. Selling it to Turkey would put it into the NATO exercise cycle, and as many as 20 air forces could eventually fly against it to test its mettle. If CPMIEC had indeed sold the Turks a $3 billion albatross, word would get around, and the brand image of Chinese weapons would drop even lower than it is today. The Americans would be expected to grasp just how unimpressive China’s air defenses really were. So it’s unlikely that the export version could really be much less impressive than the domestic model.

 

On the other hand, over at Airpower Australia, Carlo Kopp and Peter Goon are much more impressed with the HQ-9, and it’s conceivable that their sources are Chinese and trustworthy. Suppose then that the Chinese government is quite proud of the quality of the FD-2000. Selling it to Turkey would put it into the NATO exercise cycle, and as many as 20 air forces could eventually fly against it. Then, if the FD-2000 were indeed a Raptor-killer, the Americans could be expected eventually to have a full understanding of just how impressive China’s air defenses really were. But they might not stay impressive for long, as the Americans would furiously work on countermeasures, and with the actual threat system in hand. So it’s unlikely that the Chinese expect to rely on a weapon like the FD-2000 for defense against the US.

 

This leaves at least three possibilities. The first is that the Chinese have advanced so far in air defense technology that the HD-2000 will be at least modestly impressive to the Turks and their allies, but still nothing compared to what the HQ-9 really is. That certainly would fit with the image that the most alarmed observers hold of China’s ballistic missile technology. But again, the track record in other areas in less impressive.

 

The second possibility is that the Chinese don’t care, as they consider the prospect of war with the United States quite remote. In that figuring, the posturing over shoals in the South China Sea, the bumper-car games with American ships, the Hainan Island incident, and every other “act of belligerent idiocy from Beijing," as Sydney Freedberg recently termed the histrionics, really are just a game. They’re all stage-managed Cold War antics, just like the Soviets used to enjoy. The bluster and the accompanying military modernization campaign is to show that China is not just the world’s outsourced manufacturing floor, but a modern state that should be taken seriously politically. They could do this with far more class and subtlety, but a variety of factors foreign and domestic keep them on the edge.

 

The third possibility is that the Chinese decision wasn’t all that strategically coherent. Perhaps this intended sale is not the result of a deep calculation by the Chinese government, but instead the outcome of a power-contest among Chinese elites, or the resultant of the military’s export sales regime just doing what it does.

 

Unfortunately, there is no clear evidence to support any of these scenarios. The first could be rather comforting around the Pacific Rim, depending on Chinese intentions. The second is quite unsettling for the US and its allies in that region. The third is intriguing, and would argue for a greater effort to understand Chinese interagency politics. Regardless, if the Chinese have badly misjudged their own product, we would know—assuming that the deal closes—when the Turks start howling. If they do know what they’re selling, we might never know—or just not know until the shooting starts.

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2 avril 2014 3 02 /04 /avril /2014 07:40
Véhicule de leurrage Photo Bureau d’études Titan

Véhicule de leurrage Photo Bureau d’études Titan

 

MOSCOU, 1er avril - RIA Novosti

 

Les Troupes balistiques stratégiques russes (RVSN) ont testé mardi pour la première fois des répliques gonflables de missiles sol-air Topol-M et Iars, a annoncé à Moscou le porte-parole des Troupes Igor Egorov.

"Pendant les tests, des rampes de lancement mobiles des missiles changeaient de position, alors que les unités du génie déployaient des fausses divisions à leur place. Une étape des tests prévoyait un déploiement simultané de maquettes gonflables par tous les engins du génie appartenant à l'unité des missiles de Teïkovo", a indiqué le colonel Egorov.

Selon lui, ces manœuvres effectuées pendant la nuit ont permis aux rampes de lancement de missiles de se déplacer en toute sécurité.

En 2014, sept engins du génie universels destinés à camoufler les armements viendront équiper les unités de missiles de Novossibirsk et de Nijni Taguil dotés de missiles sol-air Iars. Les Troupes balistiques stratégiques russes se doteront d'une cinquantaine de véhicules de ce type d'ici 2020.

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