Overblog Tous les blogs Top blogs Entreprises & Marques Tous les blogs Entreprises & Marques
Suivre ce blog Administration + Créer mon blog
MENU
2 septembre 2013 1 02 /09 /septembre /2013 07:55
Le centre d'études et de recherches scientifiques de Barzah, laboratoire central de l'arsenal chimique. (Renseignement national français)

Le centre d'études et de recherches scientifiques de Barzah, laboratoire central de l'arsenal chimique. (Renseignement national français)

02 septembre 2013 Par RFI

 

Un jour après Washington et son rapport de quatre pages sur l'attaque chimique attribuée au régime syrien, le 21 août dernier près de Damas, la France déclassifie aussi des documents révélant l'étendue de l'arsenal chimique syrien. Quatre pages, aussi, établies par la Direction générale de la sécurité extérieure et la Direction du renseignement militaire destinées à être rendues publiques.

 

Suite de l’article

Partager cet article
Repost0
2 septembre 2013 1 02 /09 /septembre /2013 07:50
Danish F-16 in flight - photo Danish Ministry of Defense

Danish F-16 in flight - photo Danish Ministry of Defense

Sep. 1, 2013 - By GERARD O’DWYER – Defense News

 

HELSINKI — Job creation will stand as the chief factor when the Danish government convenes to select a replacement type for its aging F-16 fleet in mid-2015.

 

Denmark will look for substantial long-term industry value from bidders in the restarted Fighter Replacement Program (FRP), said newly appointed Defence Minister Nicolai Wammen, who replaced Nick Hækkerup following a Cabinet reshuffle by Prime Minister Thorning-Schmidt’s coalition government on Aug. 9.

 

The government, which hopes to use the FRP as a mechanism to inject significant new investment into an economy weakened by the global financial crisis, has set job creation as the cornerstone of its revised fighter procurement policy, Wammen said.

 

Moreover, the FRP will be used to bolster sustainable export growth within the country’s tiny defense industry

 

“All four candidates will be informed of our thinking and requirements. It will be made crystal clear that if there are not jobs coming to Denmark, then we will not be buying planes from that quarter,” Wammen said in a statement.

 

The bidding line-up includes Boeing’s F/A-18E/F Super Hornet, Lockheed Martin’s F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter, Saab’s Gripen-DK NG and Cassidian’s Eurofighter Typhoon. Denmark is looking to begin retiring the first of its F-16 fighters in 2020.

 

Denmark is expected to purchase 24 to 30 new fighters at an estimated cost of $3.8 billion to $5.5 billion. A final decision on the number of aircraft to be acquired is anticipated in the next six months.

 

All bidders will need to bring real jobs to the negotiating table for what will be a “huge” capital investment undertaking by the Danish state, Wammen said.

 

Denmark’s defense industry has welcomed the government’s clear message to potential bidders. However, industry chiefs want the government to ensure any future supplier agreements with 100 percent countertrade guarantees.

 

“This is about maximizing gains for Denmark, the national economy and for industry,” said Jan Falck-Schmidt, CEO of Falck-Schmidt Defence Systems, a domestic supplier of missile, force protection and life-cycle systems and services. “It is not enough to ask candidate manufacturers if jobs will emerge. What is needed is for the Danish government to demand 100 per cent countertrade. This will focus attention on value-added contracts and serious job creation initiatives.”

 

Only time will tell if the Danish government is serious about pushing job creation to the front when it comes to implementing the FRP, said defense analyst Jens Ringsmose. Other considerations, including a wish to retain a strong political alliance with the U.S, can also be expected to play a crucial role in the aircraft selection process, he added.

 

“The message is that jobs will be the most important parameter in this massive acquisition. In this way [Wammen] avoids having to explain the other major contributory reasons that are at least as important; not least the alliance with the United States,” Ringsmose said.

 

While the FRP competition needs to be industry and value centered, it must also be run in a fair and equitable manner, said Lene Espersen, the opposition Danish Conservative party’s defense spokeswoman.

 

“This is a very large item of expenditure for Denmark, and we must derive as much value in terms of jobs and long-term economic growth as possible. The project must be used not alone to expand the order books of our defense groups but help them grow into more export-driven niche suppliers of weapons and military systems in the future,” Espersen said. “Above all this competition must be about buying the best aircraft from European and the American bidders in an environment of trust where all are competing on a level playing field.”

 

The government’s final decision could favor the purchase of a reduced number of fighters as part of a broader strategy to purchase specialized unmanned aircraft, Espersen said.

 

“Drones will never replace conventional combat aircraft, but they will play an increased role in international operations. They will become increasingly used in Denmark’s Arctic territories. The drone dimension could add an interesting feature to the fighter replacement competition,” Espersen said.

 

The mistakes made in the original competition, which saw Eurofighter withdraw from the contest due to what it perceived as a contest weighted in favor of Lockheed’s F-35 JSF, cannot be repeated, said John Dyrby Paulsen, the Social Democrat’s spokesman on defense.

 

“There is already a perception that Lockheed Martin has an advantage in this competition because Denmark has invested in the JSF project. This must be a real competition. We must not be bound by some sense of loyalty to choose an American plane. The final decision must be based on the economic value to Denmark on the one hand and the need to buy the best aircraft for our needs on the other,” Paulsen said.

 

Denmark, which is a Tier-3 partner in the JSF project, restarted the FRP in March after suspending the competition in 2010 due to a need to divert funds in a battle to fight off recessionary fears and support the country’s then-ailing banking system. As a Tier-3 partner, Denmark has so far invested around $200 million in the JSF development program.

 

“Industry’s position has always been very clear: Military procurements must result in concrete contracts for the Danish defense equipment and aerospace industries,” said Frank Hall, general secretary of the Danish Defense & Security Industries Association (DDSIA).

 

The DDSIA plans to hold regular meetings with all bidders in the coming months. Talks will be routed through the organization’s dedicated FRP unit, the Danish Industry Fighter Aircraft Team, which was established in 2008 to explore the potential for partnerships and contract work with all candidates in the competition.

Partager cet article
Repost0
2 septembre 2013 1 02 /09 /septembre /2013 07:50
GDELS presents the EAGLE V 4x4 recently awarded by the German Army at DSEI 2013

31.08.2013 General Dynamics - army-guide.com

 

Madrid -- General Dynamics European Land System (GDELS) will present the EAGLE V 4X4, recently selected and awarded by the German Army, at the DSEI 2013 exhibition in London from the 10th to the 13th of September 2013. As part of a portfolio of solutions and systems integration know-how for military forces, will also feature the latest development of the armoured tracked vehicle family ASCOD.

 

General Dynamics European Land Systems will be displayed on Stand No. S9-250.

 

EAGLE - The Superior Tactical Mobility and Payload

 

General Dynamics European Land Systems presents the EAGLE V, a further development of the EAGLE IV fleet, already in service. The EAGLE V features a higher payload capacity and increased crew protection at superior tactical mobility. Recently, GDELS was awarded a contract by the German Army for the delivery of 100 EAGLE V Vehicles. To meet the increasing demand for mobility, protection and payload, General Dynamics European Land Systems offers the EAGLE vehicle family comprising 4x4 and 6x6 versions. Due to its higher payload capacity, it can carry more equipment or heavier protection solutions, depending on the military or police customer’s requirements. This highly mobile vehicle, with a crew capacity of up to 5 soldiers, offers outstanding protection against ballistic, mine and improvised explosive device (IED) threats. Interchangeable automotive parts and components with DURO vehicles provide a cost-effective logistics commonality. The total cost of ownership of these vehicles will be reduced through the EAGLE Family of Vehicles concept, with its high degree of commonality, maintenance-friendly design and proven support solutions.

 

ASCOD – Maximum Protection and High performance affordable

 

In the stand, General Dynamics European Land Systems display also information about the latest development of the armoured tracked vehicle family ASCOD. The ASCOD provides maximum protection and high performance at a very competitive market price. Its rubber track version is currently participating in an international competition in Denmark, with a design that integrates lessons learned from the “Specialist Vehicle (SV)” Program of the British Army. More than 250 units variants of the ASCOD are presently in service with the Spanish and Austrian Armies.

Partager cet article
Repost0
2 septembre 2013 1 02 /09 /septembre /2013 07:50
Safran finalise le rachat de la participation de Rolls-Royce dans le programme commun de turbines d’hélicoptère RTM322

Paris, le 2 septembre 2013 - Safran

 

Safran (NYSE Euronext Paris : SAF) annonce avoir finalisé l’acquisition à Rolls-Royce de la participation de 50 % de cette dernière dans leur programme commun de turbines d’hélicoptère RTM322. Le montant en numéraire de la transaction s’élève à 293 millions d’euros.

 

Désormais, Turbomeca (filiale de Safran leader dans les turbines d’hélicoptère) assumera la totalité de la responsabilité de la conception, de la production, du support des produits et des services (pièces de rechange et maintenance, réparation et révision) pour le moteur RTM322. Ce modèle équipe les hélicoptères Apache, EH101 et NH90. Rolls-Royce s’engage à accompagner pleinement Turbomeca dans la phase de transition au cours de laquelle les activités de Rolls-Royce liées à ce programme feront l’objet d’un transfert progressif.

 

Le programme RTM322 est une priorité pour Turbomeca, qui a la volonté d’en poursuivre le développement technique et commercial et envisage notamment une amélioration de ses performances, ainsi que des investissements afin de répondre sur le long terme aux besoins du segment stratégique du marché des turbines d’hélicoptères les plus puissantes (3 000 shp et au-delà).

 

Les objectifs et aspects financiers de la transaction ont été communiqués lors de l’annonce de sa signature le 23 avril 2013.

****

 

Calendrier :

 

    Chiffre d’affaires T3 2013 : 24 octobre 2013

    Résultats annuels 2013 : 20 février 2014

 

Safran est un groupe international de haute technologie, équipementier de premier rang dans les domaines Aérospatial (propulsion, équipements), Défense et Sécurité. Implanté sur tous les continents, le Groupe emploie 62 500 personnes pour un chiffre d’affaires de 13,6 milliards d’euros en 2012. Composé de nombreuses sociétés, le groupe Safran occupe, seul ou en partenariat, des positions de premier plan mondial ou européen sur ses marchés. Pour répondre à l’évolution des marchés, le Groupe s’engage dans des programmes de recherche et développement qui ont représenté en 2012 des dépenses de 1,6 milliard d’euros. Safran est une société cotée sur NYSE Euronext Paris et fait partie de l’indice CAC 40.

Pour plus d’informations, www.safran-group.com / Suivez @SAFRAN sur Twitter

Partager cet article
Repost0
2 septembre 2013 1 02 /09 /septembre /2013 07:35
ISAF Troop Numbers and Contributions (Valid as of 1 Aug 2013)

ISAF Troop Numbers and Contributions (Valid as of 1 Aug 2013)

02 septembre 2013 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

JALALABAD (Afghanistan / Nangarhar) - Un groupe d'insurgés talibans a lancé lundi matin une attaque contre une base américaine située dans l'est de l'Afghanistan, près de la frontière pakistanaise, ont indiqué des responsables.

 

Un groupe de kamikazes a attaqué une base américaine à Torkham, a déclaré à l'AFP le porte-parole de la province locale du Nangarhar, Ahmad Zia Abdulzai, ajoutant que des affrontements étaient toujours en cours.

 

L'attaque a été revendiquée dans un communiqué par un porte-parole des talibans afghans, Zabihullah Mujahid.

 

Il y a eu plusieurs explosions près d'une base opérationnelle étrangère dans la province de Nangarhar, a indiqué à l'AFP le service de presse de la Force internationale de l'Otan en Afghanistan (Isaf), sans confirmer que l'attaque était toujours en cours.

 

Aucun membre de l'Isaf n'a été tué à la suite de l'incident et nous procédons actuellement à une estimation de la situation, a ajouté la coalition.

Partager cet article
Repost0
2 septembre 2013 1 02 /09 /septembre /2013 07:30
Moscou ne pourra livrer des armes à l'Iran qu'après le retrait des plaintes

VLADIVOSTOK (Extrême-Orient russe), 30 août - RIA Novosti

 

La Russie ne pourra négocier les livraisons d'armements défensifs analogues aux systèmes sol-air S-300 à l'Iran qu'après l'abandon de toutes les plaintes déposées par ce dernier contre Moscou, a déclaré vendredi aux journalistes le vice-premier ministre russe Dmitri Rogozine.

"Des négociations ne seront possibles que si les plaintes déposées contre la Russie sont retirées", a indiqué M. Rogozine.

Il a souligné que la Russie respectait toutes les normes du droit international.

"Nous agissons strictement dans le cadre de la liste qui limite les fournitures d'armements à différents pays, y compris à la République islamique d'Iran. Nous n'avons jamais outrepassé cette liste", a affirmé le vice-premier ministre, ajoutant que Moscou était prêt à engager une "coopération technico-militaire normale" avec Téhéran.

Conclu en 2007, le contrat de livraison de missiles sol-air S-300 à l'Iran engageait la Russie à fournir cinq batteries complètes de cet armement pour un montant d'environ 800 millions de dollars. Or, l'exécution du contrat a été suspendue en septembre 2010 par le président russe Dmitri Medvedev en application de la résolution 1929 du Conseil de sécurité de l'ONU, qui interdisait de fournir des missiles, des chars, des hélicoptères d'assaut, des avions de combat et des bâtiments de guerre à Téhéran.

L'Iran a intenté à la Russie un procès en arbitrage pour annulation du contrat. La République islamique réclame quatre milliards de dollars d'indemnités.

Le directeur général du consortium d'armement russe Almaz-Antei, Vladislav Menchtchikov, a fait savoir jeudi que les systèmes S-300 destinés à l'Iran avaient été démontés et partiellement recyclés.

Partager cet article
Repost0
2 septembre 2013 1 02 /09 /septembre /2013 07:20
Frappes US contre la Syrie: le Congrès se prononcera au cours de la semaine du 9 septembre

01.09.2013 par P. CHAPLEAU Lignes de Défense
 

La Maison blanche a annoncé avoir formellement transmis au Capitole un projet de loi l'autorisant à recourir à la force militaire pour "dissuader, interrompre, empêcher et dégrader" le potentiel de nouvelles attaques chimiques. Cliquer ici pour lire un article sur ce sujet.

Cliquer ici pour lire le texte de ce projet de loi qui s'il est voté attribuera au Président des War Powers que lui confére la loi de 1973 (cliquer ici pour lire le texte de cette loi).

Le Sénat se prononcera "pas plus tard que dans la semaine du 9 septembre" sur ce projet de loi, a annoncé samedi le président de la majorité démocrate. Harry Reid a ajouté qu'il estimait le recours à la force "justifié et nécessaire".

Le président de la Chambre des représentants, le républicain John Boehner, a déclaré que le débat et le vote à la chambre basse du Congrès se tiendraiont également dans la semaine du 9 septembre. 

Samedi, le président Obama avait annoncé qu'il demandait le feu vert du Congrès avant de lancer des frappes (cliquer ici pour accéder soit à la vidéo de son allocution, soit à la transcription de sa déclaration).

Partager cet article
Repost0
2 septembre 2013 1 02 /09 /septembre /2013 07:20
Opposition To Syria Attack Emerges In Congress

Sep. 1, 2013 By PAUL SINGER – Defense News

 

WASHINGTON — US Secretary of State John Kerry said Sunday he does not believe Congress will reject military action against Syria, but lawmakers are making it clear that the vote will not be easy and the outcome is not assured.

 

President Obama announced Saturday that he believes the United States should launch a military attack on Syria in response to an Aug. 21 chemical weapons attack in Damascus. But he said he would first seek approval from Congress for use of military force.

 

 

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that he thinks the Senate “will rubber-stamp what (Obama) wants, but I think the House will be a much closer vote.” Paul said he believes “it’s at least 50-50 whether the House will vote down involvement in the Syrian war.”

 

Paul, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said it’s not clear whether American interests are at stake in Syria, or whether opponents of the Assad regime would be any more friendly to the United States.

 

Paul recalled that Kerry said during the Vietnam War, “How do you ask a man to be the last man to die for a mistake?”

 

“I would ask, ‘How do you ask a man to be the first to die for a mistake?’” Paul said. “I’m not sending my son, your son or anybody else’s son to fight for a stalemate.”

 

Paul said he was “proud” of Obama for following the Constitution and asking for congressional support. But he said the president made a “grave mistake” in setting a “red line.” Obama’s push for military action, he said, is an effort to “save face and add bad policy to bad policy.”

 

Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., a member of the House Intelligence Committee, said the president may have trouble winning the backing of Congress.

 

King, appearing on “Fox News Sunday,” said, “I think it is going to be difficult,” noting that there is an “isolationist” tendency in the Republican Party.

 

Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said he believes “at the end of the day, Congress will rise to the occasion,” but he also said, “it’s going to take that healthy debate to get there.”

 

But Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., told “Fox News Sunday” that he didn’t think Congress would approve a war resolution. He said budget cuts have rendered U.S. forces “degraded and unready.”

 

Several lawmakers raised objections to military action in the hours after Obama announced he will ask Congress to approve the use of force.

 

Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.Y., an Army veteran with multiple foreign deployments, said Saturday, “I hope my colleagues will fully think through the weightiness of this decision and reject military action. The situation on the ground in Syria is tragic and deeply saddening, but escalating the conflict and Americanizing the Syrian civil war will not resolve the matter.”

 

Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., said, “The apparent chemical weapons attack by the Assad regime is an appalling, unconscionable act by a bloodthirsty tyrant. The ‘limited’ military response supported by President Obama, however, shows no clear goal, strategy, or any coherence whatsoever, and is supported neither by myself nor the American people.”

 

Opposition to the use of force is not limited to the Republican Party. Democrat Betty McCollum, D-Minn., said in a statement: “Unilateral U.S. military action against the Syrian regime at this time would do nothing to advance American interests, but would certainly fuel extremist groups on both sides of the conflict that are determined to expand the bloodshed beyond Syria’s borders.”

 

While Congress remains on recess, the White House has begun its campaign to sway opinions, holding a classified briefing for lawmakers Sunday to show them evidence against the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

 

“We’re not going to lose this vote,” Kerry said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week With George Stephanopoulos.”

 

Singer writes for USA Today. Contributing: The Associated Press; Gregory Korte; Brian Tumulty and Raju Chebium, Gannett Washington Bureau

Partager cet article
Repost0
2 septembre 2013 1 02 /09 /septembre /2013 06:30
President Obama meets in the Situation Room with his national security advisors to discuss strategy in Syria on Aug. 31. (Pete Souza / White House)

President Obama meets in the Situation Room with his national security advisors to discuss strategy in Syria on Aug. 31. (Pete Souza / White House)

Sep. 1, 2013 By DAVID JACKSON and AAMER MADHANI – Defense News

 

WASHINGTON — The president’s decision to seek congressional approval for a military strike against Syria came out of the blue — none of his national security team saw it coming, according to three senior administration officials.

 

Obama told some of his senior advisers during a National Security Council meeting last weekend that he was leaning toward taking action against Syria, but had not made a final decision, said the officials, who spoke on the condition they not to be identified discussing internal deliberations. As Obama mulled his next steps, the aides advised him not to seek congressional authorization for a military strike, they said.

 

But when Obama convened his senior advisers Friday night to tell them he had settled on launching a narrowly focused strike against the Bashar Assad regime, he also told them something stunning: He would ask Congress to authorize it first.

 

The president raised this idea to his national security team for the first time Friday night after a one-on-one chat with White House chief of staff Denis McDonough. In discussions Friday night and again Saturday morning in the Situation Room, Obama laid out his reasoning to his aides, some of whom were opposed to seeking congressional approval, according to the officials who declined to name the skeptics.

 

“Many people have advised against taking this decision to Congress, and undoubtedly, they were impacted by what we saw happen in the United Kingdom this week when the Parliament of our closest ally failed to pass a resolution with a similar goal, even as the prime minister supported taking action,” Obama told the nation Saturday. “Yet, while I believe I have the authority to carry out this military action without specific congressional authorization, I know that the country will be stronger if we take this course, and our actions will be even more effective.”

 

In the months leading up to Saturday’s announcement, Obama made clear his desire to have broad support for any potential action against Syria — crystallizing his long-held view that the credibility of military action comes with numbers. But Russia, Syria’s most powerful patron, would block any United Nations Security Council resolution against Syria. After the British Parliament rejected Prime Minister David Cameron’s call for military action last week, it became clear to Obama that a groundswell of international was not coming.

 

Notably, Obama called President Francois Hollande of France — the one major U.S. ally that has endorsed a military strike — before he publicly announced his decision to seek backing from Congress.

 

Still, as Obama edged toward calling for a limited military strike against the Assad regime following Syrian forces’ alleged killing of more than 1,400 in a chemical attack in rebel stronghold outside of Damascus Aug. 21, White House officials maintained their view that the president did not need to seek congressional approval.

 

But aides said Obama, who as a candidate for the White House criticized President George W. Bush’s for rushing to war in Iraq, saw formal consultation with Congress as a central part of his desired legacy to take the United States off a permanent war footing.The president was further convinced that this was the best course of action after the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey, told him a Syria operation was not time-sensitive, and there was no negative impact for waiting, the officials said.

 

Congress is set to return from its summer recess Sept. 9 and is expected to debate and vote on an authorization that week. Obama would not rule out taking action immediately if Assad deploys chemical weapons before Congress is set to vote, the officials said.

 

The officials also stressed that the president changed his own mind, and no congressional leaders directly asked him to seek authorization, even though about a third of rank-and-file House members have called for it. They won’t speculate what Obama would do if Congress does not approve use of force, while maintaining that Obama retains the authority to go it alone

 

Obama made clear in his remarks on Saturday that a “no” vote would send the wrong message to Assad and America’s enemies. “Here’s my question for every member of Congress and every member of the global community: What message will we send if a dictator can gas hundreds of children to death in plain sight and pay no price?” Obama said.

 

“What’s the purpose of the international system that we’ve built if a prohibition on the use of chemical weapons that has been agreed to by the governments of 98 percent of the world’s people and approved overwhelmingly by the Congress of the United States is not enforced?”

 

Jackson and Madhani write for USA Today.

Partager cet article
Repost0
2 septembre 2013 1 02 /09 /septembre /2013 06:30
Syrie: la Ligue arabe appelle l'ONU et le monde à assumer leurs responsabilités

01 septembre 2013 22h22 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

LE CAIRE (Qahirah) - Les ministres arabes des Affaires étrangères ont appelé dimanche soir l'ONU et la communauté internationale à assumer leurs responsabilités dans le dossier syrien, alors que plusieurs pays envisagent des frappes contre le régime accusé d'avoir mené une attaque chimique.

 

Réunis au Caire, les ministres des pays de la Ligue arabe ont appelé l'ONU et la communauté internationale à assumer leurs responsabilités conformément à la Charte des Nations Unies et au droit international afin de prendre les mesures de dissuasion nécessaires contre les auteurs de ce crime odieux dont le régime porte la responsabilité, en référence à l'attaque qui a fait des centaines de morts le 21 août près de Damas.

 

Les ministres réclament en outre que les auteurs de cette attaque soient traduits devant la justice internationale comme les autres criminels de guerre.

 

Ils demandent également que soient fournies toutes les formes de soutien requises par le peuple syrien pour se défendre et rappelle l'obligation de concerter les efforts arabes et internationaux pour aider les Syriens.

 

Cette décision finale n'évoque toutefois pas précisément l'éventualité de frappes étrangères sur la Syrie, l'institution panarabe étant profondément divisée sur ce sujet, qualifié dingérence étrangère par certains Etats comme l'Egypte, l'Algérie, l'Irak ou le Liban. Ces trois derniers pays se sont d'ailleurs abstenus au cours du vote.

 

Plus tôt, devant les ministres réunis, le chef de la Coalition nationale syrienne, Ahmad Jarba, avait plaidé en faveur d'une intervention étrangère pour arrêter la machine de guerre et de destruction du régime de Bachar al-Assad.

 

La Syrie est en proie depuis mars 2011 à une révolte populaire devenue guerre civile qui a fait plus de 110.000 morts et a valu à la Syrie d'être suspendue fin 2011 des travaux de la Ligue arabe avant que son siège ne soit réattribué à l'opposition syrienne.

Partager cet article
Repost0
1 septembre 2013 7 01 /09 /septembre /2013 11:40
S-500 missile defense system source armyrecognition.com

S-500 missile defense system source armyrecognition.com

MOSCOU, 30 août - RIA Novosti

 

Le système de missiles anti-aériens S-500 pourrait être mis en service en Russie dès 2017, a fait savoir à RIA Novosti une source haut placée au sein du ministère russe de la Défense.

 

"Le système de missiles anti-aériens S-500 est en cours d'élaboration. Sa mise en service militaire est programmée pour 2017", a indiqué l'interlocuteur de l'agence.

 

Selon lui, le futur système sera capable de détruire des cibles se trouvant dans l'espace.

 

Les missiles sol-air S-500 sont destinés à remplacer les S-400 Triumph, capables d'organiser la défense échelonnée des sites contre une attaque aérienne massive. Développés par le bureau d'études Almaz-Anteï, les S-500 sont en mesure de détruire 10 cibles simultanément volant à une vitesse de 7 km/sec à 200 km d'altitude, ainsi que les ogives de missiles de croisière hypersoniques.

 

D'après le commandant en chef des forces aériennes russes Viktor Bondarev, les capacités de combat du système S-500 seront supérieures non seulement à celles des S-400 mais aussi à celles des Patriot РАС-3 américains.

Partager cet article
Repost0
1 septembre 2013 7 01 /09 /septembre /2013 11:35
Australian MRH90 helicopter aboard HMAS Manoora.: Photo Descon7.

Australian MRH90 helicopter aboard HMAS Manoora.: Photo Descon7.

30 August 2013 army-technology.com

 

The Australian Defence Materiel Organisation (DMO) has commissioned the first of two MRH90 full-flight and mission simulators (FFMSs) at the Army Aviation training centre in Oakey, Queensland, Australia.

 

Manufactured by CAE under a A$180m ($160.8m) contract awarded in December 2007, the simulator is designed to enable both Australian Army and Navy pilots to practice skills in all flight regimes, day or night, by precisely replicating the actual feel of the aircraft in flight.

 

Defence Materiel Organisation chief executive officer, Warren King, said the flight simulator will contribute to the Australian Defence Forces' (ADF) helicopter capability for many years to come.

 

''The MRH90 simulator has a cockpit that functions just like that of a real aircraft, and replicates the aircraft's unique instrument display which is projected onto the pilots' visors,'' King said.

 

Army Aviation training centre commander colonel, David Burke, said the simulator helps instructors to present pilots with a range of operational training scenarios, including flying into remote bush landing sites, flying in formation with other aircraft and being safely exposed to complex emergency situations.

 

''The majority of basic training will now be conducted in the simulator before pilots get to the real aircraft,'' Burke said.

 

''The aim of the training is to immerse the pilots in the simulation, so they feel as though they are flying the real aircraft, completing real missions and dealing with real emergencies.''

 

Manufactured in collaboration with Thales, MRH90 simulator is formally certified to Level D, which represents highest standards of fidelity in the aviation industry.

 

The second simulator is scheduled to be installed at the main MRH90 operational base in Townsville during 2014.

 

MRH 90 is a 10t-class medium-lift helicopter designed to conduct troop transport, search and rescue, special operations and counter-terrorism missions in adverse conditions.

Partager cet article
Repost0
1 septembre 2013 7 01 /09 /septembre /2013 11:35
Taiwan Builds Killer Catamaran

August 30, 2013: Strategy Page

 

 building a class of twin hull (catamaran) patrol ships that are very fast and very heavily armed. The WPC (High Efficiency Wave Piercing Catamaran) type ships are under 1,000 tons, 60.4 meters (180 feet) long and have a top speed of 68 kilometers an hour. The crew of 34 operates several weapons systems, including eight anti-ship missiles (Hsiung-feng 2 and 3 models) a 76mm cannon, a 20mm anti-missile autocannon and four 12.7mm machine-guns. There is no anti-aircraft system (other than some shoulder fired missiles) and no helicopter hanger (but a rear deck that a helicopter can operate from). The waterjet propulsion system makes for a very maneuverable ship. Sufficient supplies are carried for patrols of up to a week.

 

The anti-ship missiles are designed and built in Taiwan. The 6.1 meter (19 foot) long Hsiung-feng 3 weighs 1.5 tons (with a 181 kg/400 pound warhead) and has a top speed of 2300 kilometers an hour. Max range is 130 kilometers. It uses inertial and GPS guidance to get to the general vicinity of the target, then several other sensors to lock on to a specific ship and hit it. Hsiung Feng 2 anti-ship missiles (subsonic speed, range of 160 kilometers, half the weight of the Hsiung Feng 3) have a less advanced guidance system.

 

The WPC type ships are part of a program to replace older patrol craft with newer and more effective designs. Three years ago Taiwan commissioned the first of 21 Kuang Hua-6 (KH-6) guided missile patrol boats. These 34.2 meter (106 foot) long, seven meter (22 foot) wide, 170 ton ships have a crew of 19. They are armed with four Hsiung Feng 2 anti-ship missiles, a 20mm autocannon, two 7.62mm machine-guns and two decoy (for incoming missiles) launchers. Top speed is 55 kilometers an hour. At cruising speed of 22 kilometers an hour, the ships can stay at sea for about two days at a time. The other twenty KH-6s are all in service now. The KH-6s replace thirty older, and smaller (57 ton) Hai Ou class boats. These patrol boats guard the coast, and especially the 180 kilometers wide Taiwan Straits that separate China and Taiwan.

Partager cet article
Repost0
1 septembre 2013 7 01 /09 /septembre /2013 11:35
Japanese Defense Ministry Seeks 3% Budget Hike

Aug. 30, 2013 – Defense News (AFP)

 

Eyeing Marines-like Force, More US Cooperation

 

TOKYO — Japan’s defense ministry is looking for its biggest budget hike in two decades, partly to create a Marines-like force, it revealed Friday, as neighbors fret about Tokyo’s rising assertiveness.

 

Military bosses want more than 4.8 trillion yen (US $49 billion) — three percent up on last year — with much of their focus on safeguarding remote islands as a sovereignty row with China refuses to fade.

 

The move mirrors Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s policy of a more assertive diplomacy and a more active military.

 

Tokyo and Beijing have repeatedly butted heads over the ownership of the Tokyo-controlled islands called the Senkakus, which Beijing claims as the Diaoyus, with official Chinese ships and aircraft regularly testing Japanese forces.

 

Abe has long voiced worries over defense at a time when China is increasing its naval activities in waters around Japan, and as unpredictable North Korea continues its missile and nuclear programs.

 

He has also called for a stronger military alliance with the United States, which is in the process of a rebalancing of its forces under President Barack Obama’s so-called “pivot” to Asia.

 

China and South Korea — victims of Japan’s military misadventures in the first half of the 20th century — have expressed unease in recent months about noises in Tokyo toward bolstering its military.

 

The budget request for fiscal 2014, which will begin in April, represents a three-percent spending increase, making a second-straight annual increase after a 0.8-percent rise in the initial budget for the current fiscal year to March 2014.

 

If approved, it would mark the largest rise since fiscal 1992.

 

Under the request, the ministry plans to create a special amphibious unit designed to protect the southern islands and to take them back in case of enemy invasion.

 

It would spend 1.3 billion yen to buy two amphibious assault vehicles and increase participation in US-led training programs with the US Marines.

 

The Marines are generally regarded as an offensive force, while Japan’s constitution bars it from taking hostile acts and limits the role of its already well-equipped armed forces to that of defense.

 

The air defense force would create a new early-warning unit in the southern region with radar-capable planes.

 

The ministry will conduct a full study on future purchases of Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft that can takeoff vertically like helicopters.

 

Among big ticket items, the navy wants to buy a 73.3 billion yen destroyer, a 51.3 billion yen submarine, and a 50.8 billion yen submarine rescue ship.

 

The ministry also wants to have a battery of PAC-3 surface-to-air anti-ballistic missile systems permanently located at its Tokyo headquarters. The system was deployed when North Korea conducted what is largely viewed as ballistic missile tests.

 

The ministry wants 24 billion yen for programs related to cyber defense.

 

Some 3.7 billion yen would go toward studies of technologies to detect and track stealth jets.

 

Although the shopping list appears quite extensive, the vast bulk of the increased budget request accounts for personnel costs, with the expected expiration of a multi-year salary freeze for civil servants.

 

The freeze was implemented to pay for the reconstruction of the region hit by the 2011 tsunami-earthquake disasters that prompted the Fukushima nuclear crisis.

 

The increased request also came as a result of foreign exchange fluctuations, with a lower yen boosting the prices of foreign-made military equipment.

 

The request might also change, as it currently does not account for an expected increase of the consumption tax.

 

Abe is yet to announce whether he will go ahead with the tax hike from the current five percent to eight percent from April.

Partager cet article
Repost0
31 août 2013 6 31 /08 /août /2013 16:40
Russia’s New Bomber to Carry Hypersonic Weapons – Source

MOSCOW, August 30 (RIA Novosti)

 

Russia’s next generation long-range bomber PAK-DA will be armed with hypersonic weapons, a Defense Ministry source told RIA Novosti Friday.

 

“PAK-DA will be equipped with all advanced types of precision guided weapons, including hypersonic,” the source said, adding that the bomber itself will be subsonic.

 

Earlier this week, Boris Obnosov, general director of the Tactical Missile Systems Corporation, revealed that Russia has developed a hypersonic missile. However, he added that although it has been developed, it can only make seconds-long flights.

 

In September 2012, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin, whose brief covers the defense industry, announced plans to merge the Tactical Missile Corporation and NPO Mashinostroyenie.

 

Lt. Gen. Anatoly Zhikharev, commander of the Russian Air Force Long-Range Aviation, previously said the first PAK-DA bombers will enter service by 2020.

 

In August 2012, Rogozin told the Rossiya 24 TV network “I think we need to go down the route of hypersonic technology and we are moving in that direction and not falling behind the Americans.”

Partager cet article
Repost0
31 août 2013 6 31 /08 /août /2013 11:40
Russie: le bombardier de 5e génération remplacera trois types d'avions (Armée)

JOUKOVSKI (région de Moscou), 30 août - RIA Novosti

 

Le bombardier russe de 5e génération PAK DA, qui sera livré à l'armée à partir de 2020, pourrait remplacer trois types d'avions actuellement en service dans l'armée russe, a annoncé vendredi le général Victor Bondarev, commandant en chef de l'Armée de l'air russe.

 

"Il accomplira les missions qui sont actuellement assignées aux avions Tupolev Tu-160, Tu-95MS et Tu-22. Il sera équipé d'armes hypersoniques", a indiqué le général lors d'une conférence de presse au Salon aérospatial international MAKS-2013 à Joukovski, dans la région de Moscou.

 

Le commandant de l'Armée de l'air a ainsi confirmé les informations selon lesquelles le bombardier à long rayon d'action PAK DA, en cours de conception, serait doté d'armes hypersoniques.

 

L'avion PAK DA quant à lui sera subsonique, sur décision d'une commission spéciale du ministère de la Défense.

 

Le groupe russe "Missiles tactiques" a annoncé le 28 août dernier avoir créé un missile hypersonique, qui pour le moment n'arrive à voler à une vitesse hypersonique que pendant quelques secondes.

 

D'après le commandant de l'Aviation à long rayon d'action russe Anatoli Jikharev, les premiers bombardiers PAK DA seront livrés à l'armée d'ici 2020.

Partager cet article
Repost0
31 août 2013 6 31 /08 /août /2013 11:35
Desert Rats prepare for Afghanistan

An RAF Chinook brings in a light gun (and plenty of dust) for the gathered media [Picture: Richard Watt, Crown copyright]

 

30 August 2013  Ministry of Defence

 

7th Armoured Brigade personnel have displayed their skills on Salisbury Plain prior to deploying to Afghanistan later this year.

 

It is nearly time for the ‘Desert Rats’, as members of 7th Armoured Brigade are known, to return to the desert. Although, this time, the desert that the famous brigade will be heading to is in Helmand province, where they will be taking over the role of Task Force Helmand (TFH).

The deployment on Operation Herrick 19 will see personnel from all 3 Services working closely with 3/215 Brigade of the Afghan National Army. And, as is the norm, the media were invited to Salisbury Plain to see some of the skills that the Rats have honed over an extensive period of pre-deployment training.

Media days tend to illustrate the main role that the troops will be playing during their tour. Not long ago the event would have had a dramatic pyrotechnic theme as troops displayed their patrolling and soldiering skills; helicopters would worry their way into contested areas to pick up the wounded.

The media day for Herrick 18 on a snow-swept Salisbury Plain focused on troops working with the Afghan Army and Police, advising and mentoring them and helping them to develop their skills.

Corporal Ed Grace demonstrates the Dragon Runner
Corporal Ed Grace, from 11 Explosive Ordnance Disposal Regiment, demonstrates the Dragon Runner bomb disposal robot [Picture: Richard Watt, Crown copyright]

Yesterday, 29 August, the main event was the drawdown of a forward patrol base, which will be an important feature of Herrick 19. Brigade Commander, Brigadier James Woodham, said:

In preparation for the tour I visit Afghanistan often to talk to those doing the job there at the moment, and it is clear to me that there has been great progress.

The Afghan Army in Helmand are without doubt showing themselves to be brave, competent and able to plan and conduct their own complex operations, the vast majority of which are conducted with no support from ISAF.

The police have clearly benefited from the concerted training effort over the years.

The success that has been seen in transferring responsibility for security to the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) and the development of public trust in their government has meant that the current Task Force has been able to press ahead with disengagement and to close those bases for which there is no longer any operational need:

I fully expect that this process will continue,” said the Brigadier. “As a result the force that I deploy with will be smaller. As I take over, the full force numbers will be about 6,000, falling to 5,200 by the end of the year.

Brigadier James Woodham
Brigadier James Woodham, Commander of 7th Armoured Brigade [Picture: Richard Watt, Crown copyright]

Brigadier Woodham said that he expected Herrick 19 would see the ANSF continuing to develop and that TFH would work with them only when required, with the focus being on increasing their independence and sustainability:

I fully expect in my time to conclude the process of closing and transferring the UK’s bases in Helmand. And as this process takes place we will be able to redeploy more of our people and equipment back to the UK and to Germany.

Which is why the showpiece of the day was the breaking down of a patrol base. Of course, in itself this is nothing new. British troops have been breaking down bases for generations.

But, whereas in years gone by the field guns and equipment would have been moved out on horseback, yesterday it was an upgraded RAF Chinook Mk4 helicopter, dubbed the workhorse of the skies, that took the strain of lifting a 105mm light gun, while a demountable rack offload and pickup system (a big army lorry) hauled away the more standard items.

An Apache attack helicopter provided air cover while an outer ring of Ridgback armoured vehicles and an inner platoon of soldiers held the ground secure as sappers dismantled a watchtower.

An Apache attack helicopter
An Apache attack helicopter providing air cover during the media day on Salisbury Plain [Picture: Richard Watt, Crown copyright]

It was an important reminder that, while this tour for UK troops will be less kinetic and more advisory than in the past, basic soldiering skills must nevertheless be maintained to the highest level:

What you will see today is our chance to polish our skills, before using them for real in Helmand,” said Brigadier Woodham. “I’m pleased to say that the training progression has gone from strength to strength, and the training my soldiers have received has been first class, hugely realistic and challenging.

The training for Afghanistan which has been delivered by the Army has been really well-focused; we don’t just roll out the same training as last time. The training organisations work really hard to reflect the sorts of roles that the troops are going to do.

All the way through it was clear that Herrick 19 was going to be different. Therefore that’s been bedded into all the training courses and exercises and I’m confident that our soldiers are prepared for whatever will come their way.

Private Danny Greenhalgh with military working dog Amy
Private Danny Greenhalgh, from the Royal Army Veterinary Corps, with his military working dog Amy, a 4-year-old Belgian Shepherd [Picture: Richard Watt, Crown copyright]

That was certainly an opinion that was echoed by the soldiers manning the stands:

It’s my first tour,” said Lance Corporal James Carstairs, part of a 2 Medical Regiment combat medical team. “I feel prepared for everything to do with my job, and I’m very comfortable about going.

Another first-timer will be reservist Lieutenant Jabez Crisp, a watchkeeper in 2 Logistic Support Regiment. It will be his job to keep a close eye on the movements of the logistic convoys as they supply troops and bring back kit and equipment from those bases that are closing or being handed over. He said:

I admit to a healthy level of stage fright. But I’m very ready to go.

There was another army asset that could not be displayed on the day, but to which the Brigadier wanted to pay tribute:

I must mention some unsung heroes, our families,” he said, “for on the eve of deployment they too are preparing for the challenges that lie ahead. But they are not alone. Each unit has on hand a dedicated team to assist and help make the time pass as painlessly as possible.

Partager cet article
Repost0
31 août 2013 6 31 /08 /août /2013 11:35
Chuck Hagel secrétaire américain à la Défense (Photo Glenn Fawcett DoD)

Chuck Hagel secrétaire américain à la Défense (Photo Glenn Fawcett DoD)

Aug. 30, 2013 – Defense News (AFP)

 

MANILA — The United States and the Philippines are moving toward an agreement that will expand the American military’s presence in the Philippines, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Friday during a visit to Manila.

 

Hagel and President Benigno Aquino “reaffirmed the progress being made” in talks begun earlier this month to allow a bigger military footprint in the Philippines, the Pentagon chief said.

 

“This progress is welcome and encouraging. I noted that our negotiating teams are working hard to finish the framework agreement in the near future,” he told reporters.

 

Hagel’s optimistic comments appeared to open the possibility that the negotiations, which resumed this week in the US capital, could be wrapped up in time for President Barack Obama’s expected visit to Southeast Asia later this year.

 

An accord opening the way to a more visible role for the American military marks a shift in relations between the two countries more than two decades after the United States closed large bases amid anti-American sentiment.

 

But the Philippines faces territorial disputes at sea with China and has asked for US assistance to better monitor coastal waters. The United States, meanwhile, is seeking to bolster its ties across Southeast Asia, partly to counter China’s growing military power.

 

The proposed deal would allow more US troops, aircraft and ships to temporarily pass through the Philippines at a time when Washington is refocusing its attention on Asia after a decade of war.

 

Hagel sought to reassure Filipinos, whose senate voted out the American presence in the early 1990s, saying Washington had no interest in setting up permanent outposts.

 

“The United States does not seek permanent bases in the Philippines — that would represent a return to an outdated Cold War mentality,” he said at a joint news conference with his Filipino counterpart.

 

“Instead, we are using a new model of military-to-military cooperation befitting two great allies and partners,” he said.

 

The Philippines once hosted tens of thousands of US soldiers at two bases near Manila, but they were forced to leave in 1992. A new accord in 1999 allowed troops to return to the Philippines for joint military exercises every year.

 

Philippine Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin said the proposed agreement could permit US forces to regain access to Subic Bay, a large naval base north of Manila that the Pentagon handed over to Philippine control in 1992.

 

“Subic Bay is one of the facilities that was mentioned for the US forces to (have) access in. As soon as the framework agreement is complete, we will provide the necessary access to all these facilities,” Gazmin added.

 

The US defense chief went ahead with his overnight visit to Manila despite a tense showdown over Syria, with US forces prepared to launch punitive strikes against the Damascus regime if ordered.

 

Even with the turmoil in the Middle East, Hagel said the US remained committed to a strategic focus toward Asia, as well as its 1951 mutual defense pact with Manila.

 

Hagel was in Manila at the end of a week-long Asian tour amid fresh strains between the Philippines and China over rival territorial claims in the South China Sea.

 

The tensions have forced Aquino to call off a planned visit Sept. 3 to the Chinese city of Nanning to attend a trade conference.

 

The Philippines accuses China of aggressively pushing its territorial claims over most of the South China Sea, including waters close to Philippine shores.

 

Hagel endorsed efforts by China’s smaller neighbors in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to negotiate a South China Sea “code of conduct,” as well as Philippine efforts to solve the disputes.

 

Without mentioning China, he said that Washington wanted nations to settle their disputes through international law “without coercion or militarized attempts to alter the status quo.”

 

Hagel held separate talks with Gazmin and Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario, and visited the US military cemetery in Manila before heading back to Washington.

Partager cet article
Repost0
30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 18:57
Missile Scalp-EG sur son berceau de chargement, devant un Mirage 2000D du CEAM.

Missile Scalp-EG sur son berceau de chargement, devant un Mirage 2000D du CEAM.

30/08/2013 Vincent Lamigeon, grand reporter à Challenges Supersonique



Le vote négatif de la chambre des Communes sur la participation de l’armée britannique à une intervention en Syrie aura eu au moins un mérite : clarifier la situation. Si frappes il y a, elles seront le fait, essentiellement, des Etats-Unis et de la France. François Hollande confirme cet après-midi dans le Monde la position française: « Si le Conseil de sécurité est empêché d’agir une coalition se formera […] Il y a peu de pays qui ont les capacités d’infliger une sanction par des moyens appropriés. La France en fait partie. Elle y est prête. Elle décidera de sa position en étroite liaison avec ses alliés.»

 

MdCN, - SCALP naval

MdCN, - SCALP naval

Que peut faire la France dans le cadre d’une intervention de portée limitée, la plus probable à ce jour ? On peut déjà renverser la question, et dire ce qu’elle ne peut pas faire : les Etats-Unis devront se charger des frappes de missiles de croisières Tomahawk, tirés de leurs destroyers. L’équivalent français des Tomahawk, le missile de croisière naval (MdCN, connu aussi sous le nom de SCALP naval), est encore en cours de développement par l’industriel MBDA : il pourra être tiré des frégates françaises à partir de 2014, et des futurs sous-marins nucléaires d’attaque Barracuda à partir de 2017.

 

Scalp - photo MBDA

Scalp - photo MBDA

En attendant, la France s’appuie sur son missile de croisière aéroporté SCALP-EG, dont une quinzaine d’exemplaires avaient été tirés lors de l’opération Harmattan en Libye. Ces missiles, d’une portée annoncée de 250 km, sont embarqués sur Rafale (version armée de l’air et marine) et Mirage 2000. Ils permettent le tir à distance de sécurité, mais leur portée est quatre fois inférieure à la future version navale, et l’armement ne peut être emporté qu’à raison d’un missile sur Rafale Marine et deux sur Rafale de l’armée de l’air.

 

Syrie : de quels moyens dispose la France ?

Pour assurer la protection de ces chasseurs, la France dispose de frégates de défense aérienne dont l’une des plus modernes, le Chevalier Paul, a quitté Toulon hier, selon les informations du Point. Ce bâtiment dispose de missiles Aster 15 et Aster 30 (MBDA) d’une efficacité redoutable, même contre les missiles à grande vitesse. Il est aussi probable, même si ce ne sera probablement jamais confirmé, qu’un sous-marin nucléaire d’attaque soit déjà à pied d’œuvre en Méditerranée orientale pour des missions de renseignement. Le bâtiment collecteur de renseignement ultra-moderne Dupuy-de-Lôme peut également être envoyé sur zone, si ce n’est pas déjà fait.

 

Syrie : de quels moyens dispose la France ?

Reste le cas du porte-avions Charles-de-Gaulle. Mon confrère Hubert Levet citait cette semaine une source au ministère de la défense affirmant que la décision d’envoyer le fleuron de la marine nationale « a été prise, même si elle n’est pas encore officielle », ce qu’a démenti l’état-major des armées. S’il quitte Toulon pour la Méditerranée orientale, le porte-avions, opérationnel après un « entretien intermédiaire » de six mois à Toulon, partira avec son groupe aéronaval (frégates, sous-marin nucléaire d’attaque, pétrolier ravitailleur…). L’autre solution pour projeter des chasseurs est d’utiliser les bases aériennes françaises, les bases à l’étranger (Djibouti, Abu Dhabi) ou alliées (Chypre, Turquie…).

Le porte-avion Charles-de-Gaulle à quai à Toulon le 28.08.2013 photo France 3 Provence-Alpes

Le porte-avion Charles-de-Gaulle à quai à Toulon le 28.08.2013 photo France 3 Provence-Alpes

Partager cet article
Repost0
30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 18:55
Saudi Arabia Raises Military Alertness Over Syria

August 30, 2013 voanews.com

 

DOHA — Saudi Arabia, a supporter of rebels fighting to topple President Bashar al-Assad, has raised its level of military alertness in anticipation of a possible Western strike in Syria, sources familiar with the matter said on Friday.

 

The United States has been calling for punitive action against Assad's government for a suspected poison gas attack on a Damascus suburb on Aug. 21 that killed hundreds of people.

 

Saudi Arabia's defense readiness has been raised to "two" from "five," a Saudi military source who declined to be named told Reuters. "One" is the highest level of alert.

 

"It is a must, no one knows what will happen," he said.

 

The source said other countries in the region, including Jordan, Turkey and Israel, appeared also to have raised their level of military readiness.

 

A second source said Saudi Arabia's defense readiness had been raised last week, and meant that all leave for the armed forces would be cancelled.

 

The sources declined to give further details of what a change in alert level would mean, but analysts said it was likely some forces would be moved closer to national borders.

 

In Kuwait lawmakers have asked their government to inform them about plans for readiness to deal with repercussions of a strike on Syria, Kuwaiti newspapers reported.

 

The prime minister, Sheikh Jaber al-Mubarak al-Sabah, held an extraordinary cabinet meeting on Thursday, al-Watan reported.

 

Interior minister Sheikh Mohammad al-Hamad al-Sabah was told to take all necessary measures in case of an emergency that might arise as a result of strikes, the paper said.

 

Saudi Arabia, a major U.S. ally, Qatar and other Sunni Muslim powers back the mainly Sunni rebels battling Assad, who is from Syria's minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam. The rebels have been joined by foreign Sunni jihadis.

 

Assad enjoys military support from Iran, Lebanon's Hezbollah and among Iraqi Shi'ites.

Partager cet article
Repost0
30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 18:50
Syrie : Hollande prêt à intervenir sans le Royaume-Uni

30 août 2013 JDD

 

Dans une interview au Monde datée de samedi, François Hollande affirme que "la France veut une action proportionnée et ferme contre le régime de Damas". Le refus des Britanniques de participer à une telle opération ne change pas la position du président.

 

Malgré le "non" du Parlement britannique, François Hollande maintient sa position. Dans une interview au Monde datée de samedi, le président affirme que "la France veut une action proportionnée et ferme contre le régime de Damas". Et ce, malgré le refus des Britanniques de participer à une telle opération. Le chef de l'Etat ajoute qu'il aura ce vendredi "un échange approfondi avec Barack Obama".

Quand est ce qu'aura lieu une telle intervention? Pas avant le départ de Syrie des inspecteurs onusiens, qui ont entamé vendredi leur dernier jour d'enquête sur le site de l'attaque présumée chimique près de Damas. Mais François Hollande n' exclut pas une opération avant que le Parlement ne se réunisse ce mercredi. "Et si j'ai engagé la France, le gouvernement l'informera des moyens et des objectifs poursuivis, conformément à l'article 35 de la Constitution", assure-t-il.

 

Suite de l'article

Partager cet article
Repost0
30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 18:48
Syrie : les experts de l'ONU ont fini d'enquêter

30/08/2013 - 19:02 JDD

 

Les experts de l'ONU ont terminé leur travail en Syrie et vont désormais "rapidement" faire un rapport sur l'usage éventuel d'armes chimiques dans le conflit syrien, a déclaré vendredi le porte-parole des Nations unies.

 

"L'équipe a terminé de récolter des échantillons et des élements", a déclaré Martin Nesirky à des journalistes. "Ils préparent maintenant leur départ et quitteront Damas, puis la Syrie demain" samedi, a-t-il ajouté.

Partager cet article
Repost0
30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 18:46
Syrie : ce ne sera pas l'Irak, promet Kerry

30/08/2013 - 19:15 JDD

 

Le secrétaire d'Etat américain John Kerry s'est engagé vendredi à ce que les Etats-Unis ne "répètent" pas l'expérience de la guerre en Irak s'ils devaient agir militairement contre la Syrie accusée d'avoir utilisé des armes chimiques. "Nous ne répéterons pas ce moment", a-t-il déclaré devant la presse à Washington. "Ce que feront les États-Unis ne ressemblera pas à l'Irak, à l'Afghanistan ni même à l'intervention en Libye, a-t-il poursuivi.

 

Une éventuelle action aura une durée déterminée, a précisé le secrétaire d'Etat, et prendra la forme d'une action "ciblée" sans troupes au sol.

Partager cet article
Repost0
30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 16:50
photo Airbus Military

photo Airbus Military

Aug 30, 2013 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: Airbus Military; issued August 29, 2013)

 

First A400M Wings for Royal Air Force Leave for Final Assembly Line

 

The wings for the first Airbus Military A400M Atlas new generation airlifter for the Royal Air Force have left the Airbus plant in Filton, UK where they are made, bound for the final assembly line at Seville, Spain.

 

The wings were loaded onto the Airbus roll-on-roll-off ferry at Royal Portbury Docks.

 

The aircraft, the first of 22 ordered by the United Kingdom, is due to be delivered in September 2014.

Partager cet article
Repost0
30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 16:40
Moscou dévoile le SU-30SM

29 août Aerobuzz.fr

 

A l’occasion du salon aéronautique MAKS de Moscou (27 août-1er septembre 2013 à Joukovski), la Russie met l’accent sur son nouveau biplace de combat SU-30 SM. Il s’agit d’un dérivé du biplace SU-30 MKI en service en Inde. Cet avion hyper manoeuvrant est doté de plans canard et de tuyères à poussée dirigée. Côté avionique, il s’agit d’un appareil 100% russe : il possède un radar à antenne active signé NIIP Tikhomirov, dérivé du « Bars » en service sur le MKI. Le SU-30 SM dispose d’un cockpit « tout écran » et d’un calculateur analogue à celui du SU-35. Ce calculateur gère le système d’arme et assure la sécurité du vecteur et de ses occupants. Il décide par exemple d’éjecter les pilotes en cas de danger. Il est piloté par Mr Averyanov, un pilote d’essais réputé qui est entré dans la légende lors de son éjection d’un SU-30 MKI pendant un salon du Bourget.

 

Moscou qui se dit très satisfait du SU-30 SM, aussi à l’aise en combat rapproché qu’en combat hors de portée visuelle, en a commandé 60 exemplaires. Ils serviront à former les pilotes de SU-35 et de T-50 qui constituent le renouveau des forces aériennes russes (VVS).

Partager cet article
Repost0

Présentation

  • : RP Defense
  • : Web review defence industry - Revue du web industrie de défense - company information - news in France, Europe and elsewhere ...
  • Contact

Recherche

Articles Récents

Categories