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15 février 2013 5 15 /02 /février /2013 13:53

http://www.defense.gouv.fr/var/dicod/storage/images/base-de-medias/espace-collaboratif/redaction-dicod/informelle-des-ministres-de-la-defense-de-l-ue/2183050-1-fre-FR/informelle-des-ministres-de-la-defense-de-l-ue.jpg

 

15.02.2013 International

 

Jean-Yves Le Drian s'est rendu à Dublin le 12 février 2013 pour une réunion informelle des ministres de la Défense de l’Union européenne. Le secrétaire général de l’Otan et le secrétaire général adjoint pour le maintien de la paix de l’ONU avaient fait le déplacement. L’Europe de la défense, la situation au Mali et les opérations de maintien de la paix étaient au menu des discussions.


Le ministre Jean-Yves Le Drian, était à Dublin mardi 12 février 2013, pour la réunion informelle des ministres de la Défense de l'Union européenne. Les discussions se sont tenues sous la présidence du ministre irlandais de la justice, de l’égalité et de la défense, Alan Shatter. Le secrétaire général de l’Otan, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, ainsi que le secrétaire général adjoint pour le maintien de la paix des Nations Unies, Hervé Ladsous, étaient présents.

La situation au Mali était au cœur de cette réunion. Le général François Lecointre, qui commandera la mission EUTM-Mali, a participé aux discussions. Celles-ci ont mis en avant l’importance de cette opération dans la prévention du terrorisme et la sécurité européenne. L'Irlande et le Royaume-Uni ont annoncé qu’ils déploieraient une équipe commune qui contribuera à la formation de l'infanterie malienne.

 

La politique européenne de Défense était également à l’ordre du jour. « Les discussions qui ont eu lieu ces deux jours reflètent une nouvelle impulsion pour développer les capacités militaires pour la PSDC », a expliqué Alan Shatter, en accord avec les conclusions du Conseil européen du 14 décembre 2012

 

Dernier grand thème abordé, les opérations de maintien de la paix des Nations Unies, auxquelles les ministres de la Défense ont renouvelé leur soutien. Alan Shatter a fait part de son espoir de voir « une nouvelle dynamique émerger d'un engagement renouvelé des États membres pour renouer avec les Nations Unies et soutenir les opérations de maintien de la paix en mettant à dispositions des capacités militaires nécessaires quand et où celles-ci sont essentielles »

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15 février 2013 5 15 /02 /février /2013 13:50

Logo LBG 2011

 

15/02/2013 Vincent Lamigeon, grand reporter à Challenges Supersonique

 

Giuseppe Orsi, le patron du géant de l’aéronautique et de la défense italien Finmeccanica, arrêté comme un vulgaire malfrat pour corruption internationale présumée. Le dirigeant de la filiale hélicoptères AgustaWestland, la pépite du groupe, assigné à résidence. C’est un véritable cataclysme qui a touché le fleuron industriel italien transalpin (17,3 milliards d’euros, soit plus que Thales ou Safran) cette semaine. Giuseppe Orsi, qui cumule les postes de président et d'administrateur délégué, était visé depuis avril 2012 par une enquête portant sur la livraison en 2010 de 12 hélicoptères au gouvernement indien par une filiale du groupe, AgustaWestland, un contrat de 748 millions de dollars. Son arrestation décapite un groupe en pleine convalescence, deux ans après la chute du prédécesseur d’Orsi, le patriarche Pier Francesco Guarguaglini, également soupçonné de corruption.

 

Que va devenir Finmeccanica ? Le fleuron transalpin sortait à peine d’une année 2011 marquée par une perte nette record de 2,3 milliards d’euros, et d’une année 2012 encore poussive : Deutsche Bank prévoit seulement 183 millions d’euros de résultat net sur l’exercice, et surtout une dette encore colossale, à 3,5 milliards d’euros. Dès son arrivée, Orsi s’était engagé dans un grand ménage : une quarantaine de cadres dirigeants remerciés, 3,2 milliards d’euros de dépréciations d’actifs en 2011 pour solder le passé, et un plan de cession impliquant notamment la filiale ferroviaire Ansaldo. L’affaire de corruption affaiblit encore le champion industriel dans ses négociations avec les industriels intéressés, mais aussi avec ses créanciers. Elle touche surtout directement la pépite du groupe, l’hélicoptériste AgustaWestland, qui mène la vie dure à Eurocopter depuis quelques années sur le segment des appareils civils.

 

L’arrestation d’Orsi risque aussi d’avoir des conséquences financières désastreuses. L’Inde a déjà annoncé avoir stoppé les paiements à la firme italienne en attendant les résultats de l’enquête. « Une mise à l’écart prolongée sur le marché de défense et de sécurité indien aurait des conséquences significatives pour Finmeccanica, le groupe étant en lice pour plus de 12 milliards de dollars en 2013 », souligne Guy Anderson, analyste chez IHS Jane’s, qui estime l’objectif de 500 millions d’euros de commandes par an en Inde à l’horizon 2015 « clairement menacé ». Eurocopter et Thales, concurrents traditionnels des filiales du groupe (AgustaWestland, Selex) pourraient notamment profiter de cette mise à l’écart.

 

Le scandale Orsi risque enfin d’affaiblir Finmeccanica dans ses relations avec ses partenaires et clients. Le groupe italien collabore avec Thales dans la JV Thales Alenia Space, avec EADS dans le constructeur de turbopropulseurs ATR, avec BAE Systems et EADS dans le consortium Eurofighter (chasseur Typhoon) et dans le missilier MBDA. Il est aussi un gros fournisseur de Boeing pour les tronçons en composites du long courrier 787 Dreamliner, dont il risque aussi de payer les déboires. La situation financière et juridique du groupe va probablement l’amener à faire des choix dans ces alliances où le groupe est rarement en position de force.

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15 février 2013 5 15 /02 /février /2013 12:50

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/db/Gripen_3.jpg/800px-Gripen_3.jpg

 

February 15th, 2013 defencetalk.com (AFP)

 

Military experts said Sweden was probably unable to defend itself on its own in the event of an invasion, in a report published Thursday, saying the armed forces lacked necessary resources.

 

“Can We Defend Ourselves For a Week?” the Royal Swedish Academy of War Sciences asked in the title of its report.

 

Sweden is not a member of NATO and has a policy of military non-alliance, though it does participate in the Alliance’s Partnership for Peace programme.

 

The report echoed comments made by Sweden’s chief of the armed forces Sverker Goeranson in the media in early January, when he said the Scandinavian country would only be able to hold off an attack for “about a week”, following repeated cuts to the defence budget.

 

Goeranson has been on sick leave for exhaustion since making his remarks.

 

The Academy’s study, conducted in 2011 and 2012, supported his analysis of the situation.

 

“We think the military does not have a credible ability to defend all of Sweden … In the event of a possible attack against Sweden, we would always need help from abroad,” it wrote.

 

“We think that the authorities should rapidly carry out a study on the conditions and possibilities of obtaining such assistance so that any potential crisis in the Baltic region can quickly be resolved, thereby avoiding any act of war from being undertaken,” it said.

 

The Academy highlighted a lack of personnel, logistic capacity to supply troops, anti-air defence, anti-tank weapons and aircraft. It singled out the Baltic Sea island of Gotland, located between southern Sweden and Latvia, as particularly strategic and vulnerable.

 

However, it said “the military’s capacity for international operations is good, even excellent.”

 

In Sweden’s 2013 budget, the defence allowance accounts for only 1.2 percent of gross domestic product, a level that has been in continuous decline. In 2007, it was 1.5 percent.

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15 février 2013 5 15 /02 /février /2013 12:50

VBCI - French Army in Afghanistan with flexible wire cage R

 

15 February 2013 army-technology.com

 

The Danish Defence Acquisition and Logistics Organisation (DALO) has shortlisted five out of eight vehicles for the Royal Danish Army's ageing M113 armoured personnel carriers (APC) fleet replacement contract.

 

CV90 Bae Systems

 

Vehicles selected in the tracked category include BAE Systems Hagglunds CV90 Armadillo, Flensburger Fahrzeugbau Gesellschaft (FFG) with G5 protected mission module carrier (PMMC), and the General Dynamics European Land Systems - Santa Barbara Sistemas ASCOD 2 vehicle, as reported by Shephard.

 

Decazub 2012 photo FdSV

 

Nexter Systems' vehicule de combat d'infanterie (VBCI) and General Dynamics European Land Systems - Mowag Piranha V vehicles have been shortlisted in the wheeled vehicles category, while the remaining three bidders, Rheinmetall Landsysteme, Patria Land Systems and ARTEC were rejected.

 

The companies submitted bids in July 2012 for the contract, which seeks delivery of approximately 360 vehicles in six different configurations, with options ranging from 206 to 450 vehicles.

 

Expected configurations include an infantry APC, command and control, ambulance, mortar carrier, as well as engineering and repair vehicles.

 

Featuring a 15-year framework agreement, the contract also involves provision of support services for the vehicles while they remain in operational service.

 

The shortlisted vehicles are set to undergo a 17-week long evaluation programme at Oksbøl camp, Denmark, as well as several other locations on the Jutland Peninsula starting from the middle of April 2013.

 

Deliveries are scheduled to start in 2015 and finish in 2022; the vehicles will also support 45 BAE CV9035 MkIII infantry fighting vehicles and 90 Mowag 8x8 Piranha III APCs currently is use with the army.

 

The Danish Army operates 632 heavily-armoured M113s in different configurations, which also includes tactical air control party carrier and fire-fighting capacities.

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15 février 2013 5 15 /02 /février /2013 08:50

LogoEDA COLOR

 

Brussels | Feb 14, 2013 European Defence Agency

 

http://www.eda.europa.eu/images/default-source/news-pictures/ec-eda-logos-2

 

Following the joint European Defence Agency - European Commission workshop on Regional Smart Specialisation for Europe’s defence sector on 28 January 2013, the Agency now publishes all presentations as well as the proceedings of the event:

 

    Proceedings


    Presentations (.zip file, 13 MB)

 

More information

 

    News "Strengthening the Defence Industrial Sector" (28 Jan 2013)

 

Download more information here

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15 février 2013 5 15 /02 /février /2013 08:50

The Union Jack Flag photo UK MoD

 

11 Feb 2013By Craig Hoyle – FG

 

At first glance, the confirmation of a UK Ministry of Defence plan to spend £159 billion ($240 billion) on equipment and support by 2022 is an encouraging sign for the nation's armed forces, especially during a time of financial belt-tightening.

 

Left unchanged since it was revealed by defence secretary Philip Hammond in May 2012, the 10-year allocation includes a 1% increase in real terms per annum after 2014-2015. This will see spending rise from £13.2 billion in the 2012-2013 financial year to more than £18.8 billion at the end of the cycle.

 

 

RAF Eurofighter Typhoon Crown Copyright

 Crown Copyright    

Expanding the Typhoon's multirole potential is a priority for the use of unallocated funds 

An ongoing restructuring of the UK military will, in time, lead to the air force, army and navy coming under a so-called Future Force 2020 structure, which was outlined in the current coalition government's Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR) of September 2010. This process has already resulted in deep cuts to personnel and equipment levels as part of an effort to eradicate what Hammond describes as past "poor project management, weak decision-making and financial indiscipline". Such factors had contributed to a gap of about £74 billion between the MoD's procurement commitments and ability to pay, according to a review by the UK National Audit Office (NAO).

 

The MoD's 31 January publication of the Defence Equipment Plan 2012 confirms Hammond has now balanced the books, with the budget for the first time also containing a financial risk and contingency provision of £13.2 billion to cover unexpected cost over-runs and £8 billion in unallocated funding to be used against emerging needs.

 

"All three services now have greater input and more certainty than ever before about what equipment they will have and when," says chief of the defence staff Gen Sir David Richards. "The clarity provided by the equipment plan shows that Future Force 2020 is affordable and achievable."

 

But while the document has brought some fresh clarity to the military and its suppliers in terms of the MoD's procurement commitments, a deeper assessment of its only 20 pages of text and funding graphs leaves key questions unanswered. In truth, the armed services will each be faced with making more difficult decisions during the next several years, most immediately as they scale down their more than decade-long combat involvement in Afghanistan.

 

According to the MoD's plan, combined procurement activities will account for about £60 billion, or roughly 38% of its £159 billion spending until 2021-2022. The bill for supporting its in-service and newly acquired equipment will account for £86 billion, or 54%, it says.

 

SERVICE ALLOCATIONS

 

With the UK's land forces having received major investment during the past several years because of their action in the fight against the Taliban in Afghanistan, the Royal Air Force and Royal Navy will each now receive substantially more than the British Army.

 

 

RAF Reaper UAV Crown Copyright

 Crown Copyright

Reaper UAVs must attract core funding if operations are to continue after 2015

A total of £44.5 billion - 28% of the 10-year allocation - will be spent on aviation projects, with "combat air" programmes including the Eurofighter Typhoon, Lockheed Martin F-35 and unmanned air vehicles to account for £18.5 billion of this sum. RAF transport, tanker and air support projects including the Airbus Military A400M, AirTanker-provided Airbus A330 Voyager and Airseeker electronic intelligence fleets will get £13.9 billion.

The RN's total 33% share of the money will allow both of its Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carriers to be completed, along with other new surface ships for £17.4 billion. The Astute-class attack submarine programme, early work leading to the replacement of its Trident-armed Vanguard-class ballistic missile boats, and other activities to maintain the UK's independent nuclear deterrent capability will account for £35.8 billion; little more than 22% of the spending total.

 

By contrast, spending on armoured fighting vehicles and other land equipment for the army will total £12.3 billion, or about 7.7% of the procurement and support allocation.

 

"The RAF are the past masters of political massage, and the Royal Navy have shown a surprising turn of speed in this area of late," says Francis Tusa, editor of UK publication Defence Analysis. "The result is that both will leave the army in their wake, especially as it is pushed out of the limelight as the Afghan mission draws to an early end."

 

Rotorcraft projects, including upping the RAF's Boeing CH-47 Chinook fleet to 60 aircraft, will cost £12.1 billion, and programmes to buy missiles, torpedoes and precision-guided bombs are to value about £11.4 billion.

 

UNCOMMITTED FUNDS

 

With several major new acquisitions to be considered as part of the next SDSR process during 2015, parts of each equipment area include planned, but as-yet uncommitted, segments of core budget.

 

For the air domain, this includes planned new spending on the Eurofighter Typhoon. "Further investment to develop and enhance the aircraft's multirole and intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition and reconnaissance capabilities are priorities for use of unallocated headroom in the plan budget," the MoD says. Another priority when funds allow "will be to expand our investment in simulated pilot training", it adds.

 

The RAF is due to retire its last Panavia Tornado GR4s in 2019, and the Eurofighter is not yet cleared to use either the MBDA Brimstone air-to-surface missile or Raytheon Systems Paveway IV precision-guided bomb - the service's weapons of choice in Afghanistan and Libya - or ­MBDA's Storm Shadow cruise missile, used in Iraq and Libya.

Funding has yet to be guaranteed to produce a new Captor-E active electronically scanned array radar for Typhoon partners Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK, or to fully integrate MBDA's Meteor beyond visual-range air-to-air missile. Money for such work will have to be made available later this decade as spending on the F-35 also begins to ramp up with increased production.

 

It is uncertain whether the UK will proceed with its previously planned final Tranche 3B purchase of Eurofighters for the RAF. In January, the service received its 100th Typhoon, against an original 232-aircraft commitment, later revised to 208.

 

 

 RAF F-35B Crown Copyright

 Lockheed Martin

A planned 48 STOVL F-35Bs should be acquired during the 10-year spending period

 

In May 2012, the UK reverted its procurement plans to buying the short take-off and vertical landing F-35B, following a brief but expensive dalliance with the carrier variant C model. A last-minute attempt to switch was abandoned when the massive costs linked to converting at least one of the RN's aircraft carriers became apparent, but only after the planned shift had wasted £100 million.

 

"Our commitment over the first 10 years is for 48 [F-35Bs]," the MoD's permanent secretary Jon Thompson told the House of Commons defence committee in late 2012. "Over time, we would expect the number to rise to beyond three figures, but that would be in the second decade," he added. The MoD is expected to order its first operational example during the course of 2013, but exact numbers should become clearer via the next SDSR.

 

The MoD says decisions on how to spend the £8 billion of "headroom funding" which has yet to be allocated will be taken by the Armed Forces Committee.

 

"This will allow us to fund, incrementally and flexibly, a number of additional programmes that are a high priority for defence, as soon as we can be sure that they are affordable," Hammond says. "We will do so only at the point when commitment is required to meet the operational requirement and only in accordance with the military assessment of priority at the time."

 

But the UK's equipment profile faces a major challenge as it moves towards withdrawing its last combat forces from Afghanistan before the end of 2014. The MoD must decide which of the equipment acquired under the urgent operational requirement (UOR) model will be retained within its core budget. Many systems, including the RAF's General Atomics Aeronautical Systems Reaper remotely piloted air systems and Raytheon-modified Hawker Beechcraft King Air 350ER-based Shadow R1 surveillance aircraft, have been acquired and supported under UOR deals using money from the Treasury reserve fund, and not the MoD equipment budget.

 

The MoD estimates the net additional cost of operations in Afghanistan as having totalled £17 billion between 2001 and March 2012, including about £3.8 billion each in the financial years starting in 2009 and 2010.

 

Decisions on what to bring back - and fund - as part of the core defence fleet have yet to be taken, with the MoD repeatedly having stated it has yet to determine what will happen to its armed Reapers post-2015. This is despite an expected programme spend of more than £500 million since the type was introduced in 2007, and an ongoing fleet expansion which will take the number of air vehicles available to the RAF's 13 and 39 squadrons to 10. A UK ground control station for the type has also been established at its Waddington base in Lincolnshire, with 31 service personnel qualified to pilot the type and 16 more to follow by September 2013.

 

URGENT ATTENTION

 

Primarily used to deliver intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition and reconnaissance services, the UK's Reapers are flown from Kandahar airfield. The MoD says its aircraft had released 52 Raytheon Paveway II-series 226kg (500lb) laser-guided bombs and 293 Lockheed Martin AGM-114 Hellfire air-to-surface missiles by 22 October 2012.

 

Elsewhere, the UK's current Defence Equipment and Support (DE&S) organisation also faces a major structural overhaul from later this decade, with a private sector-operated successor being considered by the MoD. In 2012, private-sector company Serco was selected to assist with a review process.

 

In its Defence Acquisition report of 5 February, the cross-party House of Commons defence committee says it "agrees with the government that the current arrangements for acquisition, constrained by public sector employment rules, are unsatisfactory. But the proposal to entrust acquisition to a government-owned, contractor-operated company is not universally accepted as the best way forward, and there are particular concerns about how the MoD's overall responsibility for acquisition could be maintained."

 

 

HMS Victorious submarine Crown Copyright

Crown Copyright

Updating the Royal Navy's ballistic missile submarine force and also retaining the UK's independent nuclear deterrent will account for 22% of the total defence equipment plan

 

Support and maintenance costs are substantial, with contracts linked to the RAF's Tornado and Typhoon fleets having valued more than a combined £880 million during the 2011-2012 financial year, the MoD says. Reforming DE&S to deliver greater efficiency and cost savings remains a key priority.

 

Meanwhile, a separate factor which could affect the cost and schedule performance of the UK's defence acquisition projects concerns the MoD's new and more stringent requirements for the certification and release to service of new aircraft and systems. Established following the recommendations of the Haddon-Cave review, which investigated the loss of Nimrod MR2 XV230 over Afghanistan in 2006, the UK Military Aviation Authority is driving through tougher controls over the safety standards acceptable for incoming and operational equipment.

 

The MoD's desire to bring the British Army's Watchkeeper unmanned air system into use with civilian certification continues to delay the type's planned introduction to use in Afghanistan, despite this objective having originally been scheduled during 2010. A new announcement on when the asset will be fielded is expected later in 2013.

 

A senior RAF official also warned late last year that while the service's acquisition of three RC-135 Airseekers from the USA remains on budget and on time to enter operational use in October 2014, difficulties could be encountered during certification of the Boeing 707-based system.

 

Despite such challenges, the NAO says the MoD's equipment planning is now being performed "on a more prudent basis", although it suggests the department's attitude to risk "is still over-optimistic", when judged against its past performance in buying new equipment. However, Hammond notes: "The [NAO] assessment of the equipment plan will take place annually so that parliament will gain ever greater levels of confidence that the MoD equipment plan is affordable and will fulfil our capability requirements."

 

Only time will tell if the UK has truly brought the desired level of military precision and adaptability to its buying practices to meet the challenges of the future.

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15 février 2013 5 15 /02 /février /2013 08:50

cavour1

 

15/02/2013 Mer et Marine

 

Emmené par le porte-aéronefs Cavour, le groupe aéronaval italien a quitté sa grande base de Tarente pour un déploiement de plusieurs semaines en Méditerranée orientale. L’objectif, pour la Marina militare, est notamment de renforcer la coopération avec deux de ses alliés au sein de l’OTAN, la Grèce et la Turquie. A cet effet, la Task Force italienne intègre, au fil des exercices, des unités provenant des flottes turque et grecque, alors que des escales ont été organisées au Pirée, à Marmaris et Aksaz. En plus du Cavour, qui embarque 8 avions à décollage court et appontage vertical AV-8B Harrier, le groupe aéronaval italien comprend les frégates de défense aérienne Caio Duilio (du type franco-italien Horizon) et Luigi Durand de la Penne, la frégate Zeffiro et le pétrolier-ravitailleur Stromboli. Ces bâtiments embarquent également 7 hélicoptères, dont des AW101 et AB212. Concernant le Cavour, on notera que le navire amiral italien a reçu ses tourelles de 76mm dont l’une est bien visible à la proue, près du tremplin servant au décollage des Harrier.

 

Reportage photo : ICI

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15 février 2013 5 15 /02 /février /2013 07:50

Syria

 

14 février 2013 à 21:08 Guysen International News

 

Plus le conflit syrien durera, plus le risque sera grand de voir émerger une nouvelle génération d'extrémistes islamistes aguerris qui seront une menace pour l'Europe, a averti jeudi le chef de la diplomatie britannique.

 

William Hague s'adressait indirectement à la Russie, qui, comme la Chine, s'oppose à une initiative du Conseil de sécurité de l'Onu pour hâter le départ de Bachar al Assad, aux prises depuis deux ans avec un soulèvement réprimé dans le sang. La Syrie est aujourd'hui "la destination numéro un des djihadistes du monde entier", a affirmé le secrétaire au Foreign Office, qui exposait la stratégie britannique en matière de lutte antiterroriste aux membres du Royal United Services Institute, un cercle de réflexion londonien. "Parmi eux se trouvent des individus ayant des liens avec le Royaume-Uni et d'autres pays européens. Ils ne représentent peut-être pas de menace pour nous quand ils se rendent en Syrie, mais, s'ils survivent, certains peuvent revenir endurcis sur le plan idéologique et avec l'expérience des armes et des explosifs", a-t-il souligné.

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15 février 2013 5 15 /02 /février /2013 07:50

http://www.thalesgroup.com/Resizer.ashx?i=/assets/0/95/161/226/005412f0-6abc-4b2d-8096-bf18a23c4307.jpg&w=230

 

14 February 2013 Thales

 

Stuttgart, 14 February, 2013 - Thales and Vinghøg AS, a Norwegian subsidiary of Rheinmetall Defence, signed a contract for the delivery of 44 Squire battlefield surveillance radars, to be deployed by the Norwegian Armed Forces. The first 10 systems will be delivered in the second half of 2013. The last delivery is scheduled for beginning of 2017.

 

The Norwegian Armed Forces will receive an updated version of Squire, which incorporates a new processor board that enables various new features to be built into the system. The client has selected Squire for various tasks. The majority of these radars will be mounted on Vingtaqs II (Long range Surveillance, Observation and Reconnaissance System) fitted to armored vehicles.

 

Peter Obermark, CEO of Thales Deutschland is proud of this contract: “With our radars BOR-A, Squire and GO12 Thales GSR is the most successful battlefield surveillance radar supplier world-wide. With this contract Thales has sold more than 400 Squires which are manufactured in Hengelo, NL and more than 300 BOR-A. Thales’ ground surveillance radars are operational all over the world.”

 

About Squire

 

Squire is a man-portable medium-range ground surveillance radar that can detect and classify moving targets on, or close to, the ground at ranges up to 48 km. Squire consists of compact components to be carried in backpacks.. Squire is light, compact, and has a very low output power thanks to the application of FMCW technology. Squire features the Frequency Modulated Continuous Wave (FMCW) radar principle for very low Probability of Intercept. With only one Watt output power, Squire is capable of detecting walking persons at ranges of 10 km. The low power output makes the system virtually undetectable. Squire features automatic target classification facilities for persons, wheeled vehicles, tracked vehicles and helicopters. The solid state techniques that are applied result in very high reliability and low life cycle cost.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 19:45

http://assets.digital.cabinet-office.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/image_data/file/6542/s300_MNT-20130211-019-Unclass-108g.jpg

Lieutenant Colonel Mustapha of the Ghanian Army talks

to his first group of soldiers prior to their departure for

Mali on an RAF 99 Squadron C-17 aircraft

Picture: Sergeant Ralph Merry RAF, MOD 2013]

 

14 February 2013 Ministry of Defence

 

A Royal Air Force C-17 aircraft has flown Ghanaian troops to Bamako in Mali as part of the UK's support for the international intervention in the country.

 

The transport aircraft flew more than 120 soldiers of Ghana’s Engineering Company 1 to Mali’s capital with vehicles and equipment in response to a request for assistance from Ghana.

 

They will build accommodation and support engineering projects as part of the African-led International Support Mission to Mali (AFISMA).

 

The UK, concerned by the situation in Mali and the threat that violent extremist groups in the north pose. The UK is assisting the Ghanaians by making a C-17 aircraft available this week.

 

Minister for the Armed Forces, Andrew Robathan, met RAF crew members working on the airlift at Bamako during a 2-day visit.

 

He said:

I came out on behalf of the government to see first-hand what is happening out here, where our troops are deploying, where there’s a huge French presence and where there is a terrorist situation that actually threatens the United Kingdom as well.

 

We have said we don’t want to have troops on the ground but we are helping the French effort and we’re helping the African effort as well. We’re going to help train Malians with the EU training mission too.

 
A fully loaded RAF 99 Squadron C-17 aircraft A fully loaded RAF 99 Squadron C-17 aircraft carries the first deployment of Ghanian troops into Mali [Picture: Sergeant Ralph Merry RAF, Crown Copyright/MOD 2013]

The evolving threat in Mali requires international partnerships, which is why the UK has been a firm supporter of the UN Security Council Resolutions on Mali as well as regional leadership from Economic Community of West African States and the African Union and EU training to help rebuild the Malian army.

 

Colonel M’Bawine Atintande, Director of Public Relations for the Ghana Armed Forces, said:

Ghana is sending an Engineer Company that’s more than 120 of all ranks. The company will play every specific role. We expect the forces to be there as long as it takes to solve the problem. Normally we stay in the six months and then rotate.

 

The UK has given us so much support. Before AFISMA we have had so much support from Britain, including a training team.

 

There is training assistance they have given us in preparing the troops for the mission so by and large the UK government has given us so much that we need in the mission.

As well as providing logistical support and C-17 aircraft to support the French-led intervention in Mali last month, the UK also offered up to 40 personnel for the EU training mission to Mali and up to 200 personnel in support of the African-led support mission.

 

Negotiations are continuing on the details of the UK’s contribution.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 14:03

FASGW-1

 

14/02 Par Alain Ruello – LesEchos.fr

 

Jean-Yves Le Drian s'est fait présenté lundi les dossier du missile anti-navire léger, l'un des projets majeurs du traité de Lancaster House.

 

Antoine Bouvier ronge son frein. Le PDG de MBDA espérait que le comité ministériel d'investissement de lundi présidé par Jean-Yves Le Drian soit l'occasion pour le ministre de la Défense de donner son feu vert à l'un des projets les plus importants identifié dans le traité franco-britannique de Lancaster House : celui de missile anti-navire léger ou ANL. Raté. Le dossier a bien été présenté, mais la décision de faire ou de ne pas faire a été renvoyée à plus tard.

 

Dans les jours qui ont précédé le CMI, les augures étaient pourtant favorables, de l'avis général. Cherchant à montrer aux Britanniques qu'ils prenaient le traité de Lancaster House avec tout le sérieux nécessaire, les responsables politiques français du dossier avaient la ferme intention de lancer le programme. Estimé entre 400 et 500 millions d'euros, l'ANL (ou FASGW-ANL de l'autre côté de la Manche), est un missile de nouvelle génération destiné à armer des hélicoptères.

 

Date butoir

 

Les Britanniques sont pressés de s'équiper, à telle enseigne que leurs secrétaire à la Défense, Philip Hammond, a écrit à Jean-Yves Le Drian pour lui indiquer qu'il attendait une réponse fin février au plus tard. Le hic, c'est que les Français, eux, ne partagent pas du tout la même urgence  : non seulement l'Etat major et la DGA rejettent un projet qu'ils ne jugent absolument pas prioritaire, mais en plus la situation budgétaire est telle, que le lancer demanderait se sacrifier autre chose.

 

Antoine Bouvier a semble-t-il fait des propositions d'aménagement de calendrier de production touchant d'autres programmes de missiles pour essayer de trouver une solution, mais cela n'a pas suffit à infléchir la position des militaires à ce stade.

 

Pour MBDA, l'enjeu est aussi industriel car l'ANL doit marquer le « T0 » du projet « One MBDA » de spécialisation des bureaux d'études du missilier entre les branches française et anglaise de l'entreprises. C'est l'un des objectifs du volet industriel du traité de Lancaster House.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 13:50

 

 

Sergeant Carl Boyd shows off a remote controlled miniature helicopter with three cameras on-board.

 

14 Feb 2013telegraph.co.uk

 

Sergeant Carl James Boyd of the 1st Royal Regiment of Fusiliers demonstrates how the Norwegian-designed Black Hornet Nano will be used by troops on the front line in Afghanistan.

 

The tiny handheld surveillance helicopters contains a camera that beams back video and still images to a handheld control terminal, allowing soldiers to see past obstacles to identify potential hidden dangers.

 

The remote-controlled drone measures about 4in by 1in and weighs 0.6oz

 

Sergeant Boyd described the piece of kit as a "lifesaver".

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 08:50

JAS-39 Gripen source Defence Talk

 

13.02.2013 Romandie.com (ats)

 

Le ministre de la défense Ueli Maurer prévoit de se passer des services de la célèbre Patrouille Suisse à l'horizon 2016. La formation de vol acrobatique de l'armée de l'air enthousiasme depuis des décennies les spectateurs en Suisse et à l'étranger.

 

Les avions Tiger F-5E aux couleurs rouge-blanc devraient disparaître du paysage aérien, a révélé Ueli Maurer dans le cadre d'une réunion de la commission de la politique de sécurité du Conseil national (CPS) portant sur les avions Gripen. La présidente de la commission Chantal Galladé (PS / ZH) a confirmé à l'ats cette information parue dans la "Basler Zeitung" mercredi.

 

Mme Galladé a évoqué la possibilité de louer des modèles Gripen plus anciens dès 2016 afin d'assurer la transition entre les Tiger F-5E et les nouveaux avions Gripen. M. Maurer n'a pas exclu d'effectuer dans le futur des démonstrations ponctuelles de vol acrobatique avec d'autres appareils. Ceux-ci ne porteraient toutefois plus les couleurs nationales.

 

Grosse popularité

 

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f6/Axalp_F-5E_Patrouille_Suisse.jpg/800px-Axalp_F-5E_Patrouille_Suisse.jpg

 

Fondée le 22 août 1964 à l'occasion de l'Exposition nationale et en prévision du cinquantenaire de l'aviation militaire suisse, la Patrouille Suisse se compose de la crème des pilotes professionnels du pays, apprend-on sur le site officiel des Forces aériennes suisses. Rapidement appréciée du grand public, elle réalise sa première démonstration à l'étranger en France en 1978.

 

Il faudra attendre 1991 et les festivités des 700 ans de la Confédération pour voir les ailes des avions se colorer de rouge et blanc, pour le plus grand plaisir des spectateurs. Un autre changement d'importance intervient quelques années plus tard avec le remplacement des avions Hunter au profit des Tiger F-5E, plus rapides et plus souples d'utilisation.

 

Effets spectaculaires

 

La Patrouille Suisse équipe en 1996 ses six jets d'une installation permettant de cracher de la fumée, rendant ainsi ses "shows" toujours plus attractifs.

 

Basée à Emmen (LU), la formation de vol acrobatique maîtrise un total de 20 figures répondant entre autres aux noms de "chaise à traire" ou de "fourchette à fondue".

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 08:50

EPE source LdDef

 

13.02.2013 par P. CHAPLEAU Lignes de Défense

 

Depuis 2011, les armateurs allemands peuvent employer des sociétés de sécurité privée à bord de leurs navires et les sociétés de sécurité allemandes peuvent aussi offrir des prestations dans le domaine de la sûreté maritime. J'avais parlé de cette avancée dans un post du 23 juillet 2012.

 

La loi allemande va d'évoluer (le projet de loi est en cours de finalisation) et à partir du 1er août prochain, une réglementation plus exigeante (suite à une réécriture de l'article 31 du Code du Commerce) va régir les activités des sociétés qui opèrent sur les navires battant pavillon allemand (environ 640 navires sont concernés).

 

Outre la licence spécifique pour la détention d'armes (un permis de port d'armes est demandé pour chaque employé), les dépôts de garanties et l'obligation d'assurer tous leurs personnels, les entreprises de sécurité maritime doit remplir, avant l'obtention du permis d'embarquer des équipes armées, un dossier détaillant sa structure, ses modes opératoires, ses procédures, et comment ses diriegenats, cadres et employés sont compétents et responsables (formation, casier judiciaire etc).

 

La période de validité de la licence pour offrir des prestations armées embarquées sera de deux ans et son coût maximal de 16 000 €.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 08:50

conference-logo.png

 

By European Defence Agency

 

    Date of the Event: 21 March 2013 09:00 AM

 

The European Defence Agency's annual conference gathers European key decision makers in the defence domain to discuss challenges and possibilities of defence cooperation.

 

Throughout the day, top speakers including the President of the European Council Mr. Van Rompuy, President of the European Parliament Mr. Schulz, EADS CEO Mr. Enders, NATO SACT’s Gen. Palomeros, Belgian Minister of Defence Mr. De Crem, Bulgarian Minister of Foreign Affairs Mr. Mladenov and Dassault Aviation CEO Mr. Trappier will share their views and discuss with each other.

 

The conference is organised in three panels:

 

    Panel 1: Lessons from Defence Cooperation

    Panel 2: Looking ahead: setting the longer-term goals for European Defence Cooperation

    Panel 3: European Defence Cooperation: concrete steps for the next year

 

Registration is strictly on invitation only. Access to the conference only for registered participants.

 

 

For more information:

 

    The draft agenda is ready for download here.

    Video summaries of the annual conference will be made available shortly after the event.

    The event will be covered on social media, using #defencematters.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 08:50

RAF Reaper photo UK MoD

 

February 13, 2013. David Pugliese - Defence Watch

 

The Guardian newspaper is reporting that Almost 450 drones operated by the British military have crashed, broken down or been lost in action during operations in Afghanistan and Iraq over the last five years. The newspaper bases that on statistics released under Freedom of Information law.

 

More from the Guardian:

 

The Ministry of Defence has disclosed for the first time the five Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) systems used in the conflicts and the number that have perished due to pilot error, technical faults or the undesirability of retrieving them from hostile areas.

 

The figures show the military has lost one Reaper drone since 2007 – it is the only UAV that carries Hellfire missiles as well as surveillance and intelligence-gathering equipment. The drone, which has not been replaced, cost £10m.

 

Thales UK Watchkeeper

 

There have been nine losses of another large UAV, the Hermes 450. Eight of the £1m aircraft were lost in Afghanistan and another in Iraq. The surveillance fleet has halved in size because of the incidents.

 

Desert Hawk UAV

 

The UAV to suffer most is the Desert Hawk 3, a small hand-held UAV used by the army: 412 have crashed or been lost in the last five years. British forces have been using other mini-UAVs, the Black Hornet, and the Tarantula Hawk, in Afghanistan; 25 of them have perished during operations. The Black Hornet is the latest piece of UAV equipment to be deployed in the conflict. A mini-helicopter, it is equipped with a camera which gives troops video and still images.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 08:09

EADS

 

14/02 LesEchos.fr (Reuters)

 

Le comité des nominations d'EADS a confirmé mercredi proposer de nommer l'ancien PDG de Thales Denis Ranque à sa présidence dans le cadre de l'évolution de sa gouvernance.

 

Cette proposition sera examinée par le nouveau conseil d'administration à l'issue d'une assemblée générale extraordinaire prévue le 27 mars, qui se prononcera également sur un projet de rachat d'actions, a précisé le groupe européen d'aéronautique et de défense.

 

La maison mère d'Airbus a annoncé le choix de Denis Ranque sur le réseau social Twitter.

 

L'ex-PDG de Thales, âgé de 61 ans, devrait succéder à la présidence à Arnaud Lagardère, dont le groupe prévoit de céder sa participation dans EADS.

 

L'annonce de mercredi confirme les informations obtenues la semaine dernière par Reuters de deux sources proches du dossier.

 

Ce choix a été perçu comme le signe de la volonté d'EADS de gagner en indépendance par rapport aux Etats actionnaires. Le gouvernement français souhaitait initialement voir Anne Lauvergeon, l'ex-présidente d'Areva, prendre la tête du conseil d'administration.

 

Anne Lauvergeon entrera néanmoins au conseil d'administration d'EADS en tant que représentant de l'Etat français.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 07:52

LogoEDA COLOR

 

By European Defence Agency

 

Date of the Event: 05 March 2013 09:00 AM

 

The aim of this workshop is to assess the participating Member Sstates’ intent in the area of Ground Mobility Assurance, to identify priorities to pursue, to elaborate how respective activities could be taken forward and to prepare following actions.

The objectives are as follows:

- To agree on the exact scope of Ground Mobility Assurance and discuss related definitions;

- To identify overlapping national interests in the area of Ground Mobility Assurance;

- To gather and elaborate proposals for cooperation and studies;

- To agree on a draft way ahead.

 

The workshop will take place at the EDA premises in Brussels.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 07:51

cbrn1.jpg

 

8 Feb 2013 By European Defence Agency

 

    Date of the Event: 13 March 2013 02:30 PM

    Contact: Security Research Team

 

"Civ-Mil research cooperation: achievements & future challenges"

 

The objective of the workshop is to report for the first time on progress achieved between the European Commission (EC) and the European Defence Agency (EDA) under the newly established European Framework Cooperation (EFC) in the area of Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) research. The EC FP7 Security Research Programme and the EDA CBRN Joint Investment Programme (JIP CBRN) have indeed been specifically identified in 2011 to serve as a pilot case for exploring further potential and concrete CIV-MIL research synergies.

 

This workshop is jointly organized and chaired by the European Commission (EC) and the European Defence Agency (EDA), as a side event of the Security Conference at HOMSEC 2013.

 

The workshop will bring together a wide range of EU Civilian and Defence research partners, end-users, authorities, SMEs and larger Industries.

 

Current challenges and future European perspectives on CIV-MIL research synergies will also be discussed.

 

If you are interested in attending, please register online as soon as possible at the following link: http://sre2013madrid.es/eda.htm

 

Note that the workshop has only a limited number of participants. You will receive a confirmation of your attendance as soon as possible. Missing and/or incorrect information provided in the registration will void the latter.

 

Registration is open until 28 February 2013.

 

Please note that neither the European Commission or the European Defence Agency under no circumstances can be held liable for any changes in the program or its cancelation.

More information:

 

    Draft workshop programme (8 Feb 2013)

    European Commission, Directorate-General Enterprise and Industry, workshop announcement

 

Contact:

 

     Security Research Team entr-security-research@ec.europa.eu

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 07:50

UK MOD

 

Feb. 13, 2013 by Craig Hoyle – FG

 

London - The UK is to extend its membership of the European Defence Agency (EDA) until at least late 2013, but says a decision on its longer-term involvement remains in the balance.

 

Continued membership in the currently 26-nation EDA organisation was considered and approved as part of the UK coalition government's Strategic Defence and Security Review of September 2010, subject to further review.

 

"In consultation across government, my department has reassessed the benefits of remaining in the EDA and reviewed progress made by the agency since 2010 against identified shortfalls," says defence secretary Philip Hammond.

 

LogoEDA COLOR

 

"The EDA has made progress in some areas requiring reform, but there is more to be done to improve its operational effectiveness, and so the case for continued membership remains finely balanced," Hammond said on 13 February. "Overall, I have concluded that for now the UK should remain a member of the EDA, with our continuing membership to be reviewed again in late 2013 in light of progress made during the year."

 

Current initiatives being pursued by the EDA include seeking the better coordination and pooling of its member states' air-to-air refuelling assets, maritime patrol aircraft and helicopter fleets, and also in developing a set of harmonised certification guidelines for military aircraft.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 07:50

Denis-Ranque-souce-LesEchos.fr.jpg

 

14/02 Par Alain Ruello – LesEchos.fr

 

AERONAUTIQUE : La prochaine nomination de Denis Ranque comme président du conseil d'administration d'EADS est désormais officielle puisque la recommandation en ce sens apparaît dans les documents publiés hier en vue de l'assemblée générale du 27 mars. L'ancien patron de Thales remplacera Arnaud Lagardère, dont le groupe de médias va se désengager de la maison mère d'Airbus.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 07:50

Logo LBG 2011

 

Feb. 13, 2013 - By TOM KINGTON  - Defense News

 

ROME — Italian defense group Finmeccanica has named Alessandro Pansa as its new CEO and COO following the arrest of CEO Giuseppe Orsi on suspicion of corruption.

 

After meeting on Wednesday in Rome, the firm’s board of directors decided to confer on Pansa — who was COO of the company — all powers previously held by Orsi, “insuring comprehensive management of the company and the group,” the firm said in a statement.

 

The board also appointed senior member retired Adm. Guido Venturoni as vice chairman. Orsi had held the title of chairman as well as CEO, but a new chairman has not been named. The firm also said it would hold shareholders’ meetings in April to complete the composition of the board.

 

Orsi was arrested on Tuesday by Italian police in connection with a probe into suspected bribes paid on a deal to sell 12 AW101 helicopters to India in 2010. He denies the allegations.

 

Besides Orsi’s arrest, Bruno Spagnolini, head of Finmeccanica helicopter unit AgustaWestland, was placed under house arrest.

 

Orsi’s arrest follows his bid to restructure Finmeccanica and reduce debt after he took full control of the company in late 2011, which he did after the resignation of then-CEO Pierfrancesco Guarguaglini. A key aspect of Orsi’s strategy was the sell off of 1 billion euros ($1.3 billion) worth of assets by the end of 2012 to cut debt. The major part of the cash was due to come from the sale of energy unit Ansaldo Energia, but the plan was hamstrung by political opposition and appeared likely to be put on hold until after Italian elections planned for Feb. 24-25.

 

Now, with the arrest of Orsi, the likelihood of a rapid sell-off could diminish further.

 

Pansa served as CFO of Finmeccanica under Guarguaglini before becoming COO under Orsi. The two men reportedly battled for power at the firm, leading to an uneasy relationship.

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14 février 2013 4 14 /02 /février /2013 07:50

cyber warfare

 

February 13th, 2013 By UK Government News - defencetalk.com

 

A National Audit Office review of the Government’s strategy for cyber security indicates that, although it is at an early stage, activities are already beginning to deliver benefits.

 

The cost of cyber crime to the UK is currently estimated to be between £18 billion and £27 billion. Business, government and the public must therefore be constantly alert to the level of risk if they are to succeed in detecting and resisting the threat of cyber attack.

 

The UK Cyber Security Strategy, published in November 2011, set out how the Government planned to deliver the National Cyber Security Programme through to 2015, committing £650 million of additional funding. Building on ten years’ experience of seeking to protect government information, systems and networks, the strategy placed greater emphasis on the role of the public and industry in helping secure the UK against attacks and also the opportunities to UK business from a growing market in cyber security.

 

Among progress reported so far, the Serious Organised Crime Agency repatriated more than 2.3 million items of compromised card payment details to the financial sector in the UK and internationally since 2011, preventing a potential economic loss of more than £500 million. In the past year, moreover, the public reported to Action Fraud over 46,000 reports of cyber crime, amounting to £292 million worth of attempted fraud.

 

The NAO identifies six key challenges faced by the Government in implanting its cyber security strategy in a rapidly changing environment. These are the need to influence industry to protect and promote itself and UK plc; to address the UK’s current and future ICT and cyber security skills gap; to increase awareness so that people are not the weakest link; to tackle cyber crime and enforce the law; to get government to be more agile and joined-up; and to demonstrate value for money.

 

The NAO recognizes, in particular, that there are some challenges in establishing the value for money of the cyber security strategy. There is the conceptual problem that, if cyber attacks do not occur, it will be difficult to establish the extent to which that was down to the success of the strategy. There is also the challenge of determining the relative contribution to overall success or otherwise of different components of the strategy. And there is the challenge of assigning a value to the overall outcome, to set against the cost of the strategy. The Government has work underway to measure the benefits of the strategy.

 

The report is designed to set the scene in an area likely to be of continuing interest to the Committee of Public Accounts. Although the Committee has not specifically examined the issue of cyber security, it raised concerns about cyber security in relation to the government’s plans for smart meters, which will enable energy suppliers to collect meter readings over the internet, as well as pointing to a lack of detail on cyber security plans in the Government’s 2011 ICT strategy.

 

Amyas Morse, head of the National Audit Office, said today:

 

“The threat to cyber security is persistent and continually evolving. Business, government and the public must constantly be alert to the level of risk if they are to succeed in detecting and resisting the threat of cyber attack.

“It is good that the Government has articulated what success would look like at the end of the programme. It is crucial, in addition, that progress towards that point is in some form capable of being measured and value for money assessed.”

 

Background Information

  • Fifteen government organizations are working together on four objectives: to tackle cyber crime and make the UK one of the most secure places in the world to do business; to make the UK resilient to cyber attack and be better able to protect its interests in cyberspace; to help shape an open, stable and vibrant cyberspace which the UK public can use safely; and to build the UK’s knowledge, skills and capability to underpin all cyber security objectives.
  • In the strategy, the government describes what success would look like at the end of the programme. This includes individuals knowing how to protect themselves from crime online; critical national infrastructure being protected against cyber attack; and working relationships with other countries, business and organizations around the world being strong and well-established.

The UK Cyber Security Strategy: Landscape Review (10)

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13 février 2013 3 13 /02 /février /2013 22:00

Chief Test Pilot VBS armasuisse flies Gripen EF test aircra

 

13.02.2013 Romandie.com (ats)

 

La très populaire Patrouille Suisse pourrait se retrouver clouée au sol à l'horizon 2016. Son sort est lié à l'achat des avions de combat Gripen, a indiqué mercredi le Département fédéral de la défense, de la protection de la population et des sports.

 

La formation de vol acrobatique de l'armée aux couleurs suisses devrait disparaître du paysage aérien, a déclaré le ministre de la défense Ueli Maurer lors d'une réunion de la commission de la politique de sécurité du Conseil national portant sur les avions Gripen. L'information parue dans la "Basler Zeitung" mercredi a été confirmée à l'ats par la présidente de la commission Chantal Galladé (PS/ZH).

 

Le DDPS a précisé à l'ats qu'aucune décision ne serait prise au sujet des six appareils peints en rouge-blanc tant que l'acquisition des 22 avions de combat Gripen ne serait pas réglée politiquement. Le Conseil fédéral veut en effet remplacer dès 2016 les Tiger F-5E, utilisés par la Patrouille Suisse, par les jets suédois.

 

Avenir incertain

 

L'âge des Tiger F-5E constitue la raison principale de leur mise au placard. Il s'avèrerait trop coûteux de les conserver uniquement pour des démonstrations.

 

Ueli Maurer n'exclut pas que les Forces aériennes suisses s'adonnent dans le futur à des démonstrations ponctuelles de vol acrobatique avec d'autres appareils, les F/A-18 ou les nouveaux Gripen par exemple. Ceux-ci ne porteraient toutefois plus les couleurs nationales.

 

Fondée le 22 août 1964 à l'occasion de l'Exposition nationale, la Patrouille Suisse se compose de la crème des pilotes professionnels du pays. Basée à Emmen (LU), elle maîtrise un total de 20 figures répondant entre autres aux noms de "chaise à traire" ou de "fourchette à fondue".

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13 février 2013 3 13 /02 /février /2013 22:00

Nato 03

 

MOSCOU, 13 février - RIA Novosti

 

La Finlande n'étudie pas la possibilité d'adhérer à l'Otan, mais envisage de poursuivre sa coopération avec l'Alliance, a déclaré mercredi à Moscou le président finlandais Sauli Niinistö.

 

"Personne n'a jamais fait de telle proposition, et le gouvernement n'examine pas cette possibilité. Les discussions portent plutôt à présent sur la nécessité de réduire nos dépenses militaires en raison d'un manque de financement", a déclaré le dirigeant finlandais.

 

Selon lui, une partie de la société finlandaise est favorable à l'idée d'adhésion du pays à l'Otan, mais il s'agit d'une minorité.

 

Ces dernières années, la coopération entre la Finlande et l'Otan revêt un caractère de plus en plus étroit. Des troupes finlandaises prennent part aux opérations de l'Alliance atlantique en Afghanistan. Des partisans de l'adhésion du pays à l'Otan sont présents dans la plupart des partis politiques finlandais.

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