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19 novembre 2013 2 19 /11 /novembre /2013 08:20
U.S. Navy orders more radars, fire control systems for Aegis

 

 

TEWKSBURY, Mass., Nov. 18 (UPI)

 

More AN/SPY-1 radar transmitters and MK99 fire control systems for the U.S. Navy's Aegis missile system are being produced by Raytheon.

 

Raytheon, which has produced the systems critical to Aegis for decades, said the multi-year order from the Navy is worth $406 million.

 

"Through our long-standing role on the Aegis program, we continue to build on our core radar expertise, consistently delivering reliable and highly-capable components to support the mission needs of naval fleets," said Kevin Peppe, vice president of Seapower Capability Systems for Raytheon's Integrated Defense Systems. "Our history of performance is a testament to our extensive legacy of experience in the design and development of complex radars."

 

Aegis is an advanced weapons system deployed on U.S. Japanese, Korean and Norwegian ships to protect against airborne threats, including ballistic missiles.

 

The AN/SPY-1 radar transmitters and MK99 Fire Control Systems perform the search, track and missile guidance functions of the system, which is being adapted for shore use as part of the U.S. ballistic missile defense system.

 

Additional contract details were not provided.

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18 novembre 2013 1 18 /11 /novembre /2013 18:55
Mistral fired from a prototype MPCV platform based on Renault Sherpa. Photo: MBDA

Mistral fired from a prototype MPCV platform based on Renault Sherpa. Photo: MBDA

 

November 17, 2013 defense-update.com

 

MBDA has completed the integration and factory acceptance test of the first Multi-Purpose Combat Vehicle (MPCV) vehicles designed to operate the Mistral surface to air missile. Built for export, these vehicles represent the first production batch. In the next few days, they will be shipped for delivery to the customer country before the end of the year, as announced at the contract signing in February 2011. The customer is believed to be the Saudi-Arabian National Guard (SANG), which ordered 68 MPCV air defense vehicles from French company Lohr in 2011.

 

The MPCV, developed by MBDA in cooperation with Rheinmetall Defence Electronics (RDE) of Germany, has been designed to meet emerging requirements for a highly mobile weapon system which can be adapted for different missions, either air defence or land combat, depending on the type of missiles it operates. The first development, which is now being delivered, is aimed at air defence and comprises a motorized and stabilized turret that includes electro-optical sensors, a small caliber gun and four, ready-to-fire Mistral missiles with four more missiles stored in the vehicle for re-loading. Additional versions dedicated to land combat are planned for development. The MPCV (Multi-Purpose Combat Vehicle) is based on the German-produced Mercedes Unimog 5000 chassis, a high-mobility 4×4 armored vehicle offered by SOFRAME (of the French Lohr group). The deal also includes 264 Aravis armored vehicles, produced by Nexter and 15 ambulances, all to be provided by Lohr.

 

This automatic system in its air defence configuration was validated by several Mistral missile firings, including the engagement in only a few seconds, of two targets approaching simultaneously from two different directions. The success of this test demonstrated MPCV’s ability to counter a saturating attack. With this first version in full production, MBDA is now ready to move ahead with a land combat version of the MPCV. This will deploy the totally new MMP surface attack missile which is currently being developed by MBDA.

 

According to Antoine Bouvier, CEO of MBDA the development of the MPCV took four years and was fully funded by the company. “It then took less than three years after the signing of the first contract to integrate the systems on a vehicle chosen by the end customer, deliver at the agreed date and implement a technology transfer under which the customer will be able, in complete autonomy, to keep its equipment in operational condition.” Parallel to the delivery of factory-finished systems MBDA is completing the installation of a final assembly line in the customer country where the remaining vehicles will undergo final integration, using MBDA provided MPCV kits.

 

Mistral is a short-range (6 km class) surface-to-air missile capable of intercepting a wide variety of aerial targets including those with even a low infrared signature. It is characterised by an outstanding success rate (96% from more than 4,500 live firings), a high effectiveness against manoeuvring targets, and has demonstrated its capabilities against fixed-wing aircraft, nap-of- the-earth helicopters, unmanned aerial vehicles, cruise missiles as well as moving land vehicles and Fast Inshore Attack Craft at sea. Mistral, in its land, naval and airborne applications, has been selected by 40 armed forces of 28 countries. More than 17,000 missiles have been produced. Saudi-Arabia is believed to have acquired 600 missiles prior to the MPCV acquisition.

 

MBDA has completed the integration and factory acceptance of the first MPCV vehicles in surface-to-air configuration. Photo: MBDA

MBDA has completed the integration and factory acceptance of the first MPCV vehicles in surface-to-air configuration. Photo: MBDA

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18 novembre 2013 1 18 /11 /novembre /2013 08:40
Tor-M2 image Yuriy Lapitskiy

Tor-M2 image Yuriy Lapitskiy

 

15/11/2013 by Paul Fiddian - Armed Forces International's Lead Reporter

 

Russian defence firm Almaz-Antey has upgraded the Tor-M2 air defence system to give it increased range, higher precision and the ability to carry more weapons.

 

Now equipped with 9M331 surface to air missiles, the redeveloped Tor-M2E was put through its paces last month, as a company representative explained.

 

"We can say now that a unique air defense system in its class with an astounding precision and range has been created", Almaz-Antey's R&D head, Sergei Druzin, told news agency RIA Novosti. "Its performance surpasses all planned parameters."

 

He continued: "We carried out five launches targeting highly manoeuvrable drones. Three of the targets were hit head-on, while the other two were destroyed by shrapnel from exploding warheads. It is an excellent result, astounding precision."

 

Tor Air Defence System

 

The Tor air defence system has been in service since 1986. An all-weather capable surface to air missile launch platform, it is designed to counter aircraft, helicopters, UAVs, precision-guided bombs, cruise missiles and other airborne threats.

 

A large number of upgraded models have been developed from the original Tor, namely the Tor-M, Tor-M1, Tor-M1T, Tor-M2, Tor-MTA and Tor-MTB. Various Tor versions are in service with numerous nations, including Egypt, Iran, Venezuela, Cyprus, China and Russia itself. Presently, Tor-M1 and Tor-M2s equip the Russian Army. These are armed with 9M331 missiles but it's the more capable 9M338s that have been involved in the Tor upgrade missile launch trials.

 

Upgraded Tor-M2

 

According to Druzin, the upgraded Tor-M2s and 9M331 missiles are now approved to enter series production. "We can now start producing these missiles in quantities that would meet the demand of the Russian army", he confirmed.

 

Next to come for the Tor air defence system is a firepower upgrade, allowing it to launch a constant missile stream. "The [mobile] launcher currently stops for two or three seconds to launch a missile, but it could be done on a move, without stopping", Druzin concluded.

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16 novembre 2013 6 16 /11 /novembre /2013 13:56
Le Caire achètera des armes en Russie

 

MOSCOU, 15 novembre - RIA Novosti

 

Des négociations russo-égyptiennes ont eu lieu au Caire entre les ministres des Affaires étrangères et de la Défense des deux pays. Ce format était une première dans les relations bilatérales, écrit le vendredi 15 novembre le quotidien Nezavissimaïa gazeta.

 

Il s'agit de la première visite du ministre russe de la Défense au Caire depuis 40 ans. Une attention particulière a été accordée aux exportations d'armes russes à l'Egypte. En effet, la Russie passe à l'offensive, profitant du retrait temporaire des Etats-Unis du marché de l'armement égyptien.

 

L'ensemble des contrats potentiels pourrait atteindre 4 milliards de dollars, selon certains experts. Toutefois Rouslan Poukhov, directeur du Centre d'analyse stratégique et technologique et membre de la délégation du ministère de la Défense qui a participé aux négociations en Egypte, a mentionné un montant plus modeste : "Il s'agira de plusieurs centaines de millions de dollars, voire d'un milliard".

 

Selon lui, l'Egypte est avant tout intéressée par l'achat de systèmes antiaériens et d'avions militaires : "Je pense qu'ils n'auront pas suffisamment d'argent pour les S-300, et nous en avons nous-mêmes besoin. Les Egyptiens ont déjà reçu les systèmes de courte et moyenne portée Tor-M2 et Buk-M2. Par le passé ils en achetaient à doses homéopathiques par manque de moyens, aujourd'hui ils peuvent en acheter un plus grand nombre. Bien sûr, nous voudrions vendre aux Egyptiens des chasseurs MiG-29. Ils seront également promus sur le marché égyptien".

 

Actuellement, 60% de la défense antiaérienne égyptienne est d'origine soviétique. Le parc aérien de la république arabe comporte notamment des MiG-21 mais ils sont obsolètes. D'après les experts, le Caire est également intéressé par les chasseurs Su-30, les avions d'entraînement et de combat Iak-130, les hélicoptères de transport militaires Mi-17 et les vedettes lance-missiles.

 

Les dépenses pour la défense pourraient, par ailleurs, être prises en charge par l'Arabie saoudite qui avait soutenu le renversement des Frères musulmans représentés par l'ex-président Mohamed Morsi. Selon certains analystes, Riyad pourrait régler la facture du Caire à la société russe Rosoboronexport. Et même si Riyad refusait de le faire, la Russie étudierait la possibilité d'accorder un crédit à l'Egypte.

 

La présence, au sein de la délégation du ministère de la Défense, de personnalités comme Andreï Boïtsov, directeur général adjoint du Service fédéral pour la coopération militaro-technique, et Ivan Gontcharenko, directeur général adjoint de Rosoboronexport, n’est pas anodine. Cela signifie qu'on parle actuellement de choses concrètes.

 

L'aspiration de l'Egypte à diversifier ses achats d'armements s'explique par les récents problèmes dans la coopération militaro-technique avec les USA. Washington a décidé de sanctionner les autorités militaires égyptiennes pour leur "antidémocratie" en renonçant à la livraison de pièces détachées et d'armements pour l'armée égyptienne, ainsi qu'en suspendant son aide annuelle de 1,5 milliard de dollars. Après cette annonce le ministre égyptien de la Défense al-Sissi avait dévoilé ses projets de trouver une alternative en Russie.

 

Le Caire ne souhaite certainement pas renoncer complètement aux armements américains mais voudrait montrer à Washington qu’il est capable de diversifier ses sources de livraisons. De plus, ces contrats permettraient de renforcer la légitimité des autorités militaires égyptiennes grâce à cette confiance accordée par la Russie.

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16 novembre 2013 6 16 /11 /novembre /2013 08:20
Scott Webster nommé CEO de MBDA Incorporated

 

15.11.2013 Mariama Diallo - journal-aviation.com

 

Scott Webster a été nommé CEO (chief executive officer) de MBDA Incorporated, la filiale américaine du missilier européen MBDA. Succédant à Jerry Agee, il prend également les rênes du conseil d’administration de la société.

 

Scott Webster siégeait au conseil d’administration de MBDA Incorporated depuis 2009.

 

Il est le cofondateur d’Orbital Sciences Corporation, un des principaux fabricants américains de systèmes spatiaux.

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15 novembre 2013 5 15 /11 /novembre /2013 17:40
TOR M2E firing a 9M331 interceptor. The missile is capable of defeating aerodynamically maneuvering targets at ranges of seven to 10 km.

TOR M2E firing a 9M331 interceptor. The missile is capable of defeating aerodynamically maneuvering targets at ranges of seven to 10 km.

 

November 14, 2013 by Tamir Eshel - defense-update.com

 

Russia’s Almaz-Antey defense corporation has developed an advanced version of the Tor-M2 air defense system (NATO reporting name SA-15 Gauntlet), utilizing a new interceptor missile that has improved performance, doubled the ammunition capacity and enabled firing on the move capability. According to Sergei Druzin, head of research and development at Almaz-Antey, the enhanced version represents a “unique air defense system in its class with an astounding precision and range.”

 

The Tor system is a low- to medium-altitude, short-range surface-to-air missile system designed for intercepting aircraft, cruise missiles, precision-guided munitions, unmanned aerial vehicles and ballistic targets.

 

Tor-M1K and Tor-M2U variants, armed with 9M331 missiles, are currently in service with the Russian army. The new system, equipped with new 9M338 missiles, was successfully tested at the end of October 2013. “We carried out five launches targeting highly maneuverable drones. Three of the targets were hit head-on, while the other two were destroyed by shrapnel from exploding warheads. It is an excellent result, astounding precision,” Druzin said.

 

In addition, the smaller size of the 9M338 compared with its predecessor has allowed the carrying capacity of the launcher to be doubled, from eight to 16 missiles. The official said the improved Tor-M2 systems and 9M338 missiles have been approved by a state commission for mass production. “We can now start producing these missiles in quantities that would meet the demand of the Russian army,” Druzin said. The Tor M2E missile system has also been exported to Azerbaijan, Belarus, Ukraine, China, Venezuela and Iran. Earlier versions (M1) were also exported to Greece, Cyprus and Egypt.

 

According to Druzin, the next step in the improvement of the system would be for launching missiles at acquired targets while on the move. “The [mobile] launcher currently stops for two or three seconds to launch a missile, but it could be done on a move, without stopping,” Druzin said.

 

The export version known as TOR M2E is also armed with the 9M331 interceptor, is designed as a short range air defense system, capable of intercepting air breathing and maneuvering targets at ranges of 1-12 km and altitudes from ground level (10 meters) to 10 km. Cruise missiles and drones could be killed at ranges of 1.5 km to 7 km maximum with precision guided weapons intercepted at a minimum distance of 50 meters and maximum range of six kilometers. Maximum target speed is 700 m/sec (2,520 km/h). A Tor M2E can engage four targets simultaneously, having up to eight missiles airborne. (four actively guided).

 

The export variants are also expected to be offered with the new interceptor.

The improved TOR M2 is claimed to offer ‘firing on the move’, enabling the unit to launch its missiles instantly upon stopping. Existing TOR M2K systems require about three minute set-up time.

The improved TOR M2 is claimed to offer ‘firing on the move’, enabling the unit to launch its missiles instantly upon stopping. Existing TOR M2K systems require about three minute set-up time.

9M331 missiles are loaded in two stacks of four missiles each.

9M331 missiles are loaded in two stacks of four missiles each.

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15 novembre 2013 5 15 /11 /novembre /2013 12:40
Un système de missiles Iskander transmis aux militaires russes

 

14.11.2013 Par La Voix de la Russie

 

La brigade de missiles de la région militaire Sud a reçu jeudi un système de missile Iskander-M. La cérémonie a eu lieu sur le polygone de Kapoustine Yar dans la région d'Astrakhan (basse Volga).

 

Le système de missiles tactiques Iskander, unique au monde, est destiné à détruire les cibles ennemies terrestres. Sa portée est de 500 km.

 

Selon les spécialistes, il dépasse sensiblement ses analogues étrangers de par sa précision de tir et la rapidité de préparatifs des missiles au lancement.

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15 novembre 2013 5 15 /11 /novembre /2013 08:30
Chinese S-300 (HongQi 9 [HQ-9]) launcher during China's 60th anniversary parade, 2009. photo Jian Kang

Chinese S-300 (HongQi 9 [HQ-9]) launcher during China's 60th anniversary parade, 2009. photo Jian Kang

 

November 15th, 2013 defencetalk.com (AFP)

 

Turkey is hoping to finalise negotiations to acquire its first long-range anti-missile system from China in six months’ time, the head of the country’s procurement agency said Thursday.

 

“The immediate goal for us is in about six months to come to a reasonable level in our contract negotiations and to understand whether it’s possible to implement this program,” Murad Bayar, head of undersecretariat for defense industries, told reporters in Istanbul.

 

In September, Turkish decision-makers gave the greenlight to begin contract negotiations with the China Precision Machinery Export-Import Corporation (CPMIEC), which is under US sanctions for selling arms and missile technology to Iran and Syria.

 

CPMIEC, which makes the HQ-9 missile system, beat competition from a US partnership of Raytheon and Lockheed Martin, Russia’s Rosoboronexport, and Italian-French consortium Eurosam for the deal, estimated at $4 billion (2.9 billion euros).

 

Bayar said if negotiations with the Chinese company that made the top of the Turkish list failed, the authorities would then evaluate the other bidders.

 

“If there are difficulties that we may have not foreseen, if this is not possible then we will go down” the list, he said.

 

The decision to go with CPMIEC irritated Turkey’s NATO allies, particularly the United States, which voiced “serious concerns” and sent delegations for expert-level discussions with Turkish authorities.

 

NATO has said the missile systems within the transatlantic military alliance must be compatible with each other.

 

Turkey, a NATO member since 1952, has defended its decision to enter into talks with the Chinese company, but said it is open to new bids should the negotiations collapse.

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15 novembre 2013 5 15 /11 /novembre /2013 08:20
DARPA Works On New Anti-Ship Missile

 

November 14, 2013 by Richard Sisk - defensetech.org

 

The Defense Department’s top research agency has focused on developing a program to make sure that the Navy is not “outsticked” by China as U.S. forces re-balance to the Pacific.

 

“We’re looking at a long-range anti-ship missile” to counter China’s development of its own long-range strike assets, said Dr. Arati Prabhakar, director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. “We’re concerned about being ‘out-sticked’” in what has been dubbed the “Pacific pivot” of troops and ships following the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Prabhakar said.

 

Prabhakar spoke at the opening of an all-day forum on military issues sponsored by the Defense One website.

 

DARPA Works On New Anti-Ship Missile

China’s development of the DF-21D ASBM (Anti-Ship Ballistic Missile), technically a cruise missile dubbed the “carrier killer,” has raised alarms on Capitol Hill. “We are technically ‘out-sticked’ by Chinese anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCM) right now,” Rep. Randy Forbes, R-Va., head of the Readiness Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee.

 

Forbes told the RealClearDefense website last week that that the Navy’s main anti-ship missile, the Harpoon, “does not have the range or survivability” to match the threat from the Chinese Navy.

 

However, the non-partisan Congressional Research Service last spring reported that the threat from the Chinese anti-ship missiles was not quite the “game changer” that some defense analysts had feared.

 

The Navy and the Air Force could counter by “employing a combination of active and passive measures” against the Chinese missiles, the CRS said in a report. One of the methods suggested by the CRS to defeat the Chinese system would be to equip Navy ships with electronic warfare systems that could generate radar “smoke clouds” to confuse the terminal guidance systems of the Chinese missiles.

 

In August, DARPA and the Office of Naval Research conducted the first flight of a prototype in the Long Range Anti-Ship Missile (LRASM) program, which is meant to develop a weapon that can hit enemy ships out of the range of a counter-strike.

 

A B-1 bomber from the 337th Test and Evaluation Squadron conducted the mission from Dyess Air Force Base, Tex., to the Point Mugu Sea Test Range off the coast of southern California and successfully hit a moving target, DARPA said. Halfway to the target, the missile switched to its autonomous guidance system, which completed the mission, DARPA said.

 

“This fully functional test is a significant step in providing the U.S. Navy and U.S. Air Force with a next-generation anti-ship missile capability,” Artie Mabbett, the DARPA program manager for the LRASM, said after the test.

 

At the Defense One forum, Prabhakar said the autonomous guidance system for the LRASM was vital vital to counter an enemy’s potential ability to jam Global Positioning Satellite guidance.

 

Prabhakar also noted DARPA’s difficulty in doing work on space systems in an era of cost-cutting and declining budgets.

 

Space “is a place where cost is just an overwhelming issue,” Prabhakar said. “It’s so hard, it takes so long to do anything in space. Even the smallest satellite costs tens of millions of dollars,” she said.

 

The budget cuts also put the future of defense research at risk, Prahhakar said. Unless Congress lifts the sequester cuts that will take about $500 billion out of defense spending over the next 10 years, “we’re going to have a future of power point (presentations) and not real systems,” she said. “We want to do things that really get built.”

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14 novembre 2013 4 14 /11 /novembre /2013 08:30
photo Voice of America Scott Bobb

photo Voice of America Scott Bobb

 

 

Nov. 13, 2013 Defense News (AFP)

 

ANKARA — Turkey has asked NATO to extend for another year the deployment of surface-to-air Patriot missiles to protect its troubled border with Syria because of a continuing “serious” threat, officials said on Wednesday.

 

“We have received a letter from the Turkish government requesting the continuation of the Patriot mission,” a NATO official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

 

“The North Atlantic Council has regularly assessed the situation and the implementation of the Patriot mission. It is clear that the overall risks and threats to Turkey remain serious,” the official said.

 

A Turkish foreign ministry diplomat, contacted by AFP, also confirmed Ankara’s request.

 

Turkey turned to its NATO allies after a mortar bomb fired from Syrian territory killed five Turkish civilians in the border town of Akcakale in October last year.

 

Since the deadly attack, Turkey has retaliated in kind for every Syrian shell that has landed on its soil and beefed up its volatile 910-kilometer (560 mile) frontier.

 

Washington confirmed that Turkey has asked NATO “to continue to augment its air defense capabilities to aid in the defense of its population and territory.”

 

“We look forward to working through NATO to address the request,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said, adding that “we respect and value Turkey as a long-standing NATO and US ally.”

 

Without specifying whether Washington would agree to the demand, Psaki added the US did “recognize the needs they have.”

 

The six batteries of the US-made missiles, effective against aircraft and short-range missiles and dispatched by the Netherlands, Germany and the United States, are deployed in the southern city of Adana and the southeastern cities of Kahramanmaras and Gaziantep.

 

“Allies have shown a strong commitment to protect and defend Turkey,” said the NATO official.

 

“Any continuation of the deployment would reaffirm the determination of NATO to deter threats and defend Turkey, reflecting and confirming once again NATO’s solidarity with Turkey.”

 

NATO approved their initial deployment in December, saying the use of ballistic missiles by the Syrian regime posed a threat to Turkey.

 

But Syria’s allies Iran and Russia opposed the Patriot deployment, fearing that it could spark a regional conflict also drawing in NATO.

 

Originally used as an anti-aircraft missile, Patriots today are used to defend airspace by detecting and destroying incoming missiles. They were made famous during the 1991 Gulf War as a defense from Scuds fired on Israel and Saudi Arabia from Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.

 

NATO deployed Patriot missiles in Turkey during the 1991 Gulf war and in 2003 during the Iraqi conflict.

 

Turkey was once a friend and ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad but relations have broken down since the Syrian conflict began in 2011, sending more than 600,000 refugees across the border.

 

Ankara has backed the opposition fighting to topple the embattled leader.

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13 novembre 2013 3 13 /11 /novembre /2013 08:35
India Expected to Approve Barak Missile Buy

 

Nov. 12, 2013 - By VIVEK RAGHUVANSHI – Defense News

 

NEW DELHI — India is likely to proceed with the purchase of Barak missiles from Rafael despite a probe of alleged corruption involving prime contractor Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) and former Indian Defence Minister, George Fernandes, an Indian Defence Ministry source said.

 

India’s top weapons purchasing authority, the Defence Acquisition Council, said at a Nov. 11 meeting that it had referred the missile purchase to an internal committee for evaluation.

 

India’s Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) had charged Fernandes in a $326 million deal involving the purchase of Barak anti missile systems from IAI, contracted in 2000. So far, the CBI has not released any findings on the probe.

 

But the Defence Ministry source said the CBI is likely to close the case against IAI, and described the internal inquiry is only a formality.

 

The Navy has been demanding the purchase of Barak missiles, but the Defence Ministry has been holding back because of the alleged kickback case. Currently, three of the Indian Navy ships that have the Barak air defense system on board have no missiles.

 

The Navy had given a proposal to the Defence Ministry early this year to procure about 300 Barak missiles for the warships Ranvir, Brahmaputra, Betwa and Beas at a cost of around $100 million.

 

The Barak under purchase is an anti-aircraft, anti-missile system with a range of 70 kilometers, a warhead of 52 kilograms and speed of Mach 2.

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13 novembre 2013 3 13 /11 /novembre /2013 08:20
Tomahawk Block IV TACTOM

Tomahawk Block IV TACTOM

 

Nov 11, 2013 ASDNews Source : Naval Air Systems Command

 

The U.S. Navy marked a significant milestone Nov. 5, as the service joined defense contractor Raytheon Missile Systems in celebrating the delivery of the 3,000th Tactical Tomahawk (TACTOM) missile.

 

TACTOM, also known as Tomahawk Block IV, is a deep-strike, long-range cruise missile often used for land-attack warfare and employed from U.S. Navy surface combatants and U.S. Navy and United Kingdom Royal Navy submarines.

 

Read more

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12 novembre 2013 2 12 /11 /novembre /2013 18:20
Pentagon Needs to Rethink Cancellation of Meads

 

November 8, 2013 Daniel Goure*, Ph.D. -  defense-update.com



The Department of Defense has a long and unhappy history of spending tens of billions of dollars bringing weapons programs well along the path to completion only to terminate them in the 11th hour. Remember the A-12 attack aircraft, Comanche helicopter, Future Combat System, Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter, CG(X) cruiser, VXX Presidential Helicopter and Crusader howitzer.

Often the military service and contractors involved fail to salvage any of the advanced technologies or manufacturing capabilities developed as part of the program. If the political stars are properly aligned, the Pentagon may be pressured into producing a small number of extremely capable but controversial platforms at very high unit prices: Seawolf nuclear submarine, B-2 bomber, F-22 fighter and Zumwalt DDG-1000 destroyer.

In an era of austere budgets and renewed calls for acquisition reform, one might think that DoD would make a concerted effort to admit to its dysfunctional behaviors and reconsider some of its near-term acquisition decisions. Chief among these is the decision by the U.S. Army to terminate the Medium Extended Air Defense System. MEADS was intended to be the next-generation in ground-mobile air and missile defense replacing a wide range of Western systems. MEADS had many attractive features, it was a multinational program — Germany and Italy were co-developers and provided nearly half the funding, it was highly mobile, and the radar and battle management system provided 360-degree coverage against fast moving aircraft and cruise missiles.

 

Just this week, MEADS demonstrated the unprecedented capability to track, intercept and destroy simultaneously two targets approaching from opposite directions. One target represented an air-breathing threat and the other a short-range ballistic missile. Every element of the system worked flawlessly: the 360-degree MEADS Surveillance Radar, a networked MEADS battle manager, two lightweight launchers firing PAC-3 Missile Segment Enhancement Missiles and a 360-degree MEADS Multifunction Fire Control Radar. This was the third successful test in a row for the MEADS system.

At a time when the Army is trying to become more expeditionary, agile, lighter and responsive to new threats, the decision to cancel MEADS, a system that supports all of these objectives, seems odd. The Army has promised to identify component technologies that could be harvested from MEADS to enhance existing air and missile defense systems. Unfortunately, this means the Army will still be left with a ground-based air and missile defense capability less responsive and mobile than MEADS.

Critics have complained that the multinational character of MEADS increased complexity and cost. But the same could be said about the international F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program which has eight co-development partners. Yet, DoD has stressed international participation as one of the positive features of the JSF program. Germany and Italy would like to keep the MEADS program going, adding new participants. Poland recently expressed strong interest in becoming a MEADS principal. Warsaw would have to put some money to the program for which it would expect to receive significant industrial participation. If other nations can be enticed to participate, perhaps DoD should tell the Army to give MEADS a second look.


* Dr. Goure is a Vice President with the Lexington Institute, a nonprofit public-policy research organization headquartered in Arlington, Virginia. He is involved in a wide range of issues as part of the institute’s national security program.

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12 novembre 2013 2 12 /11 /novembre /2013 17:50
Poland is Interested in Ukraine Anti-Tank Missiles

Corsar, a man portable guided missile weapon system weighing 28 kg can engage moving or stationary targets at ranges of 2,500 meters.

 

November 8, 2013 defense-update.com

 

The Defense Ministry of Poland is considering purchasing anti-tank missiles from the Ukraine as part of the implementation of a weapons modernization program. According to Ukraine news agency Interfax-Ukraine, a Polish executives mission headed by Deputy Defense Minister for Weapons and Arms Modernization Waldemar Skrzypczak, has met last week with representatives of Ukroboronprom State Concern and Ukrspecexport State Enterprise, to discuss bilateral military and technical cooperation. The meeting was held in Bangkok, where the missions attended the Thai defense exhibition Defense & Security 2013. This proposal of the Polish defense ministry will be discussed at a meeting of the Ukrainian-Polish sub-commission for cooperation in the defense industry, which will take place in Kyiv in November.

 

“We are ready to consider the acquisition of Ukrainian-produced advanced 105mm anti-tank guided missiles which were developed by the Promin State Design Bureau. We are also interested in the joint production of high-precision weapons.” Interfax quoted Skrzypczak saying.

 

Since 2003 Poland has fielded over 2,600 Israeli Spike LR missiles, which are likely to remain and even increase the number in service, particularly with the planned fielding of missile-equipped turrets with the new Rosomak wheeled infantry carriers in is planning to buy over the next four years. The Polish interest in these Ukraine missiles could be in in the laser-guided man-portable and tank-gun launched missiles the Ukraine offers. Laser guided missiles are often less costly, compared to EO guided weapons. They are likely to have high immunity to thermal and EO countermeasures.

 

The weapon Skrzypczak has mentioned is likely to be the Corsar, built by the kiev based LUCH Design Bureau. The Corsar weapon system is designed as a semi-active laser guided man-portable weapon (18 kg total system weight), capable of engaging stationary and moving targets at a range of 2,500 m’, its tandem warhead is designed to penetrate 550mm of armor (RHA) behind reactive tiles. The Corsar homes in on laser light reflected from the target. It was designed as an affordable, lightweight anti-tank weapon offering superior range, compared to light ATGW, while maintaining relatively low cost (a system is offered at a cost of $130,000).

 

The Polish Army also operates laser guided missiles with 30 Mi-24 HIND and is interested in arming the W-3/W-3W Sokol light helicopters used for recce, scout and utility missions. For that mission, the Polish military is likely to consider EO and laser guided weapons, to modernize or augment existing systems.

 

Corsar guided missile and container. Photo: LUCH

Corsar guided missile and container. Photo: LUCH

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12 novembre 2013 2 12 /11 /novembre /2013 13:35
How A2/AD Can Defeat China

 

November 12, 2013 By  J. Michael Cole - thediplomat.com

 

Most of the debate that has surrounded the emergence of China as a major military player in the Asia-Pacific has focused on the People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) development of an anti-access/area-denial (A2AD) strategy and its potential impact on a U.S.-led regional security architecture that remains anchored to old concepts.

As China expands its military capabilities and, alongside those, its claims to various territories within the region, the PLA has developed and fielded a variety of platforms that are intended to deter and delay external intervention by U.S. forces in, say, an armed conflict in the Taiwan Strait. The much-discussed Dong Feng 21D (DF-21D) anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM), which could theoretically threaten a U.S. carrier battle group on its way to the region, is at the core of such a strategy.

Far less discussed, however, is the fact that China’s A2/AD strategy, or the likelihood that it will directly affect the course of a conflict, is contingent on a U.S. or allied response along conventional lines. In other words, China’s deterrence/denial efforts assume two things: first, that outside forces would seek to deploy closer to China in order to conduct operations; and second, that such deployments would involve traditional warships, aircraft carriers, fighter aircraft and bombers — in other words, everything that the ill-defined Air-Sea Battle strategy promises to include.

This “asymmetrical” approach provides China with a relatively inexpensive way to counter an opponent’s superior platforms: the PLA can afford to build and deploy several DF-21D launchers, while the U.S. would be loath to risk losing modern surface combatants, let alone a multi-billion-dollar aircraft carrier.

Now a new report by the RAND Corporation proposes turning the tables on China by creating a regional A2/AD alliance, relying principally on anti-ship missiles (ASM), to impose a “far blockade” on China should the latter threaten regional security. Under the plan explored in Employing Land-Based Anti-Ship Missiles in the Western Pacific, U.S. forces and partner countries would respond to Chinese aggression by deploying land-based anti-ship cruise missiles with operational ranges of between 100 km and 200 km at various chokepoints — among them the Strait of Malacca, the Straits of Sunda and Lombok and the Java Sea Routes, waters between Japan, Taiwan and the Philippines, as well as sea areas between Japan and South Korea — to keep the PLA Navy (PLAN) vessels (and presumably merchant ships) bottled inside the first island chain.

The presence of such missiles, the report argues, would undermine the ability of PLAN warships, transport vessels, and amphibious craft to safely carry out sea operations in those areas while denying them access into the West Pacific. In addition, the size of the aggregate territory involved in the proposed alliance (optimally Indonesia, Malaysia, Japan, Taiwan, Philippines, South Korea, Thailand and perhaps Australia) as well as the number of islets on which ASM launchers could be dispersed, would severely challenge the PLA’s ability to locate such systems and render them inoperable using ballistic missiles, air strikes or sabotage.

By resorting to such a plan, small regional powers would be in a position to wage their own A2/AD strategy against China and to threaten, at a relative low cost, more formidable and far more expensive Chinese naval platforms such as warships, landing helicopter docks, and carriers.

However, creating a multinational ASM strategy would not be without its challenges, nor can its formation be taken for granted. Although a number of ASM systems are currently available and their acquisition within the financial means of even the weakest of the partners involved, their effectiveness would depend on the ability of member states to also receive cueing and targeting data from U.S. sensors, which creates challenges (by no means insurmountable) in terms of ensuring that all the platforms involved can communicate.

Moreover, to avoid fostering the impression in Beijing that the U.S. and regional countries are seeking to keep it bottled in, ASM units probably could not be deployed permanently, and instead should be pre-positioned (presumably on U.S. territory) for rapid deployment amid rising tensions resulting from Chinese aggression or threat thereof. Access to heavy lift capabilities and operational airfields in partner countries would therefore be crucial elements for the success of this strategy.

For obvious reasons, proposing such an alliance would be controversial. Nor can it be assumed, as the report notes, that countries in China’s periphery would be willing to risk Beijing’s ire by joining the effort, unless conditions in the region deteriorate dramatically and the PLA’s posture becomes more aggressive than it is currently.

Moreover, an ASM component alone would be insufficient to ensure the ability of a member country to counter a Chinese attack. While “far blockade” would make the operations of the PLAN more difficult by denying its surface combatants the ability to expand beyond the first island chain or to approach enemy waters, it would have little value against other branches of the Chinese military, such as its air force and the Second Artillery Corps.

That said, as an instrument of deterrence, a flexible multinational ASM partnership could achieve much more, and at a much lower cost, than the longstanding approach of sales by the U.S. of highly expensive (and oftentimes vulnerable) conventional platforms like fighter aircraft and warships to regional allies

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12 novembre 2013 2 12 /11 /novembre /2013 12:35
ABM: Moscou contre l'instrumentalisation du dossier coréen

 

NEW DELHI, 11 novembre - RIA Novosti

 

La Russie juge inadmissible d'utiliser les tensions dans la péninsule coréenne comme prétexte pour y déployer des éléments du système de défense antimissile (ABM) américain, a souligné lundi à New Delhi le ministre russe des Affaires étrangères Sergueï Lavrov.

 

"Nous jugeons inadmissible d'utiliser la situation actuelle comme prétexte pour accumuler des armements modernes en Asie du Nord-est, notamment pour y déployer des éléments supplémentaires du bouclier antimissile", a déclaré M.Lavrov, intervenant lors de la 11e réunion ministérielle du Dialogue Asie-Europe (ASEM).

 

Et d'ajouter que les conditions étaient à présent réunies pour une reprise rapide des négociations à Six sur la dénucléarisation de la péninsule coréenne.

 

"Ces négociations n'ont pas d'alternative", a indiqué le chef de la diplomatie russe.

 

Les négociations à six réunissant la Russie, la Chine, le Japon, les Etats-Unis et les deux Corées ont été lancées en 2003 en vue d'amener Pyongyang à abandonner ses programmes nucléaire et balistique. Elles ont été suspendues en 2009 sur fond de détérioration des relations entre les deux Etats coréens.

 

La 11e réunion des ministres des Affaires étrangères du Dialogue Asie-Europe (Asia-Europe Meeting) se déroule dans la capitale indienne les 11 et 12 novembre.

 

La Russie a adhéré à l'ASEM lors du 8e sommet de cette organisation qui s'est tenu en octobre 2010 à Bruxelles. Lancé en 1996 à Bangkok, le Dialogue Asie-Europe réunit actuellement 52 membres, dont les 28 pays de l'UE et la Commission européenne, 16 Etats de la région Asie-Pacifique et le secrétariat de l'ASEAN, ainsi que d'autres pays d'Europe et d'Asie.

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10 novembre 2013 7 10 /11 /novembre /2013 12:30
L'Iran a ouvert une usine pour la production d'un nouveau système de défense aérienne

 

09.11.2013 Par La Voix de la Russie

 

L'Iran a ouvert une usine pour la production des systèmes anti-aériens Sayyad-2.

 

Le Sayyad-2 est une version modernisée de système de défense aérienne de la précédente génération Sayyad-1, a déclaré le ministre de la Défense iranien Hossein Dehghan lors de la cérémonie d'ouverture.

 

Le ministre a indiqué que « le nouveau système anti-aérien est conçu en utilisant les dernières technologies et est capable de frapper des hélicoptères, des véhicules aériens sans pilote et d'autres cibles aéroportées ».

 

Dehghan a également annoncé l'achèvement de la mise au point du système anti-missiles Talash, l’objectif duquel est d’« affronter les chasseurs et les bombardiers ennemis ».

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4 novembre 2013 1 04 /11 /novembre /2013 12:30
FD-2000 export variant of the HQ-9

FD-2000 export variant of the HQ-9

 

 

Nov. 3, 2013 - By BURAK EGE BEKDIL -Defense News

 

NATO's Consent Needed for Interoperability

 

ANKARA — NATO member Turkey’s stunning decision to select a Chinese contender to build the country’s first long-range air and missile-defense system does not mean that the game is over for US and European companies that bid for the prize, government officials said.

 

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters Oct. 25 that Ankara would be open to new offers if talks with China Precision Machinery Import Export Corp. (CPMIEC) fail. “Currently, I don’t know if there are different proposals from the other parties. If there are, they could be considered,” Erdogan said.

 

A senior procurement official said the decision to select CPMIEC may not be the end but rather the beginning of a fresh round of competition. “The game is certainly not over yet. We would enthusiastically assess rival bids if they make sense in terms of costs and the level of technology transfer we require,” he said.

 

Turkey announced Sept. 26 that it selected CPMIEC to build the country’s first long-range air defense architecture, sparking a major dispute over whether the Chinese-built system could be integrated with the NATO air defense assets stationed in Turkey.

 

The Chinese contender defeated a US partnership of Raytheon and Lockheed Martin, offering the Patriot air defense system; Russia’s Rosoboronexport, marketing the S-300; and the Italian-French consortium Eurosam, maker of the Aster 30. Turkey has said Eurosam came second in the competition, Raytheon third and the Russian solution was eliminated.

 

Murad Bayar, Turkey’s top procurement official, said the Chinese offer was priced at US $3.44 billion. CPMIEC is under US sanctions for violations of the Iran, North Korea and Syria Nonproliferation Act.

 

Despite warnings from US and NATO officials over interoperability problems, Bayar said the Chinese system would be operable with the NATO assets stationed in Turkey.

 

According to Bayar, Turkey selected the Chinese solution because it was better than rival bids in terms of “price, technology, local work share, technology transfer and credit-financing terms. The Chinese bid is perfectly in compliance with our terms and conditions.”

 

But US Ambassador to Ankara Francis Ricciardone told reporters Oct. 24 that the United States was very concerned about the China missile defense deal. He said he understands the deal was a commercial decision and was within Turkey’s sovereign right, but that the United States shared NATO’s concerns, including what it means for allied air defense.

 

A US administration official in Washington said in a telephone interview that “the United States was much more concerned over the deal than it expressed.”

 

But Turkey’s Army chief remained defiant. “We have not been notified of any concern from the United States,” Chief of General Staff Army Gen. Necdet Ozel told reporters Oct. 29.

 

Reuters quoted sources as saying that Turkey had asked the US to extend the pricing on Raytheon’s proposal, a sign that Ankara is keeping its options open in case talks with CPMIEC fall through. Raytheon said Oct. 24 that it was still ready to sell its Patriot system to Turkey if Ankara changed its mind.

 

An official from Eurosam said Oct. 28 that the company was working hard to improve its offer, “especially in view of Turkish sensitivities about technology transfer.”

 

The Turkish program consists of radar, launcher and intercept missiles. It has been designed to counter both enemy aircraft and missiles. Turkey has no long-range air defense systems.

 

About half of Turkey’s network-based air defense radar picture has been paid for by NATO. They are part of the NATO Air Defense Ground Environment. Without NATO’s consent it will be impossible for Turkey to make the planned Chinese system interoperable with these assets, some analysts say.

 

To defend against missile threats, Turkey needs satellite and dedicated ballistic-missile detection and tracking radar, such as the NATO radar deployed last year in Kurecik, in southeastern Turkey.

 

For the anti-aircraft component, Turkey needs an overall picture for data fusion. The Patriot system, for instance, can detect threats with its own radar. So does the Chinese system. But without integrating into a full air picture, the Chinese system could not work efficiently, analysts said.

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4 novembre 2013 1 04 /11 /novembre /2013 08:40
Russia Fires Two Missiles From Its Subs In An Unannounced Test

 

November 2, 2013. David Pugliese Defence Watch

 

Radio Free Europe has an item about the Russian military reportedly holding unannounced missile drills on Wednesday, which included the test-firing of missiles from the Delta IV-class ballistic missile submarine Bryansk in the northern Barents Sea, and the Delta III-class boat Svyatoy Georgiy Pobedonosets from the Sea of Okhotsk, in the country’s Far East.

 

Both missiles are said to have hit their targets in Northern Russia and on the Kamchatka Peninsula, respectively, according to the report.

 

The missiles were fired while the submarines were submerged, though reports did not indicate which type of missiles were fired.

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4 novembre 2013 1 04 /11 /novembre /2013 07:20
F-35A Conducts 1st Live Fire With AMRAAM

 

 

Oct 31, 2013 ASDNews Source : US Air Force

 

The F-35 Lightning II executed its first live-fire launch of a guided air-to-air missile over a military test range off the California coast on Oct. 30.

 

The AIM-120 advanced medium range air-to-air missile (AMRAAM) was fired from an F-35A (AF-6) conventional take-off and landing (CTOL) variant fighter operating from the F-35 Integrated Test Facility at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.

 

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4 novembre 2013 1 04 /11 /novembre /2013 07:20
Standard Missile-3 IIA completes Critical Design Review

 

Oct 31, 2013 ASDNews Source : Raytheon Corporation

 

    US-Japan co-development program on track for 2015 flight testing

 

Raytheon Company and its Japanese partner, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, have completed the Standard Missile-3 (SM-3) Block IIA guided missile Critical Design Review (CDR). The CDR verified that the missile's design will meet the stringent, specific operational performance requirements necessary to defeat the projected threats. The SM-3 Block IIA will defeat incoming ballistic missile threats by colliding with them in space, and the program is on track to begin flight testing in 2015.

 

In a precedent-setting co-development effort between allies, the U.S. and Japan have determined an equitable workshare agreement that defines by missile section the development responsibility between each country.

 

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1 novembre 2013 5 01 /11 /novembre /2013 12:35
Bouclier antimissile US: rencontre Russie-Japon le 2 novembre

 

MOSCOU, 30 octobre - RIA Novosti

 

Moscou évoquera le déploiement au Japon du bouclier antimissile (ABM) américain lors d'une rencontre à Tokyo le 2 novembre entre les ministres russes et japonais des Affaires étrangères et de la Défense, a annoncé mercredi le vice-ministre russe des Affaires étrangères Igor Morgoulov.

 

"Nous avons pas mal de questions sur les projets de déploiement au Japon d'éléments de l'ABM américain. Nous exposerons nos idées sur ce point et écouterons attentivement celles de nos partenaires nippons", a déclaré le diplomate dans une interview accordée à RIA Novosti.

 

Et d'ajouter que les ministres comptaient également échanger leurs évaluations de la situation au niveau de la sécurité en Asie-Pacifique.

 

"Ce sera l'occasion pour les parties d'exposer leur vision des risques et des défis liés à la stabilité dans la région", a indiqué le vice-ministre.

 

Les Etats-Unis comptent déployer leur système de défense antimissile en dehors de l'Europe, y compris en Asie-Pacifique.

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31 octobre 2013 4 31 /10 /octobre /2013 18:40
Le bouclier anti-missile américain en Roumanie dès 2015

 

MOSCOU, 30 octobre - RIA Novosti

 

L'Otan se rapproche de plus en plus des frontières russes, écrit mercredi le quotidien Rossiïskaïa gazeta.

Les travaux pour le déploiement d’une partie du bouclier antimissile (ABM) européen des USA et de l'Otan ont commencé lundi dernier sur la base de Deveselu, au sud de la Roumanie, en présence du sous-secrétaire à la Défense américaine James Miller, des autorités roumaines et de plusieurs représentants haut placés des pays de l'Otan.

Le déploiement de l'ABM en Europe est une pierre d'achoppement dans les relations de l’Alliance avec la Russie. Le ministre roumain de la Défense Mircea Dusa a pourtant déclaré que la construction d'une base à Deveselu avait commencé "malgré l'absence d'entente avec la Russie". Selon le ministre, les constructeurs roumains réaménageront bientôt une ancienne base de l'armée de l'air avant qu’une compagnie américaine commence à installer le système de défense antimissile.

Selon les informations préliminaires, le coût du système d'interception des missiles de courte et moyenne portée s'élève à 134 millions de dollars. C'est une somme conséquente, notamment au vu des problèmes financiers de la Maison blanche ainsi que des divergences au sein de l'Otan sur la perte de confiance envers les USA, dont les renseignements espionnaient activement leurs alliés. Le déploiement de l'ABM et sa mise en service est prévu d'ici 2015.

Selon les experts, ce passage à l’acte des USA et de l'Otan pourrait faire grimper la température dans les relations entre Moscou et Washington. Ce sujet est central en effet dans les relations bilatérales mais s’était limité jusqu'à présent à de simples débats. Aujourd’hui un pas est franchi - et les USA comme l'Otan continuent d’affirmer que l'ABM européen n'est pas dirigé contre la Russie sans pour autant fournir d'arguments tangibles.

Pour l'Otan, la construction de l'ABM en Roumanie est une partie de son approche adaptative phasée en Europe (European Phased Adaptative Approach). Ce plan implique la mise en place de l'ABM en quatre étapes : en Turquie, en Roumanie, en Pologne, puis par un rééquipement de tous les systèmes avec des antimissiles plus modernes d'ici 2020.

En 2012, le lancement de la première phase de l'EuroABM avait été annoncé au sommet de l'Otan à Chicago. Cependant au printemps 2013 les USA avaient renoncé à la quatrième étape du déploiement de l'ABM en Europe. Washington avait tout de même confirmé que les plans de déploiement des éléments de l'ABM en Pologne et en Roumanie n'avaient pas changé. La Russie avait considéré ces plans corrigés comme une menace pour ses forces nucléaires stratégiques et s'était exprimée contre le déploiement du système, même avec l'abandon de la quatrième étape.

Le système de défense antimissile nationale des USA est un complexe de radars d'alerte haute fréquence et de missiles intercepteurs au sol et en mer. Le système de défense vise avant tout à protéger l'Amérique, mais aussi tous ses alliés et bases militaires, contre des frappes de puissance limitée, notamment des attaques balistiques depuis les Etats-voyous - la Syrie, l'Iran et la Corée du Nord. La Libye et l'Irak ont également fait partie de cette liste par le passé.

Selon les experts internationaux, le fait de déployer des éléments de l'ABM américain en Europe de l'Est est curieux car on a du mal à voir le lien entre le déploiement de l'ABM en Roumanie et le danger émanant d'Iran et de Corée du Nord.

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30 octobre 2013 3 30 /10 /octobre /2013 12:55
Dissuasion : le Vigilant opérationnel fin 2013 ?

29/10/2013 Par Guillaume Steuer – Air & Cosmos

 

C'est la documentation budgétaire associée au projet de loi de finances 2014 qui nous l'apprend: le sous-marin nucléaire lanceur d'engins "Le Vigilant" devrait être prêt à mettre en oeuvre le missile balistique mer-sol M51 en décembre 2013, soit avec un retard d'environ six mois sur le calendrier initial lié à un échec de tir survenu le 5 mai dernier dans la baie d'Audierne, au large du Finistère.

 

La précédente édition du projet annuel de performances pour le budget défense tablait en effet sur la date de mai 2013 pour la livraison du "Vigilant" en version M51. Le tir du 5 mai était justement un préalable à la mise en service opérationnel du submersible, près de trois ans après l'admission en service actif du SNLE "Le Terrible", en septembre 2010.

 

L'échec du tir avait fait l'objet d'une communication a minima de la part des autorités, qui avaient toutefois précisé que le missile avait été détruit pendant la combustion du premier étage propulsif. Le ministère de la Défense avait ajouté que cet échec "ne remettait pas en cause la dissuasion" et que "trois SNLE" restaient théoriquement opérationnels pour assurer la permanence à la mer. Un nouveau tir d'essai pourrait donc avoir lieu dans les semaines ou mois à venir afin de tenir l'objectif d'une "livraison de l'adaptation du Vigilant" en décembre 2013.

 

Le missile M51 fait lui aussi l'objet de travaux de modernisation. L'engin actuellement en service est le M51.1, équipé des têtes nucléaires TN 75 mises en service en 1996 sur le M45. A partir de 2016, la version M51.2 doit permettre l'emport de la nouvelle tête nucléaire océanique (TNO) dont le fonctionnement sera garanti par la simulation. Enfin, une évolution majeure doit être lancée l'an prochain avec le programme M51.3, qui devrait améliorer la "partie haute" du système et augmenter ainsi sa précision globale. Environ 530 millions d'euros de crédits de paiement devraient être affectés l'an prochain aux travaux de modernisation du M51.

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30 octobre 2013 3 30 /10 /octobre /2013 12:50
Romania begins work on NATO missile shield base

Oct 28, 2013 Spacewar.com (AFP)

 

Deveselu, Romania - Romania on Monday began constructing a facility that will host missile interceptors as part of a planned NATO missile shield, a project that has irked Russia.

 

"This is an historic occasion", NATO deputy secretary-general Alexander Vershbow said during the groundbreaking ceremony at the Deveselu military base in southern Romania.

 

The event was attended by US Under Secretary of Defence for Policy James N. Miller, as well as Romanian President Traian Basescu and James Syring, director of the US Missile Defence Agency.

 

"The facility here in Deveselu will be a crucial component in building up NATO's overall ballistic missile defence system," Vershbow said. "By the end of 2015 this base will be operational and integrated into the overall NATO system."

 

Launched in 2010, NATO's missile shield project, based essentially on US technology, will see the progressive deployment of missile interceptors and powerful radars in Eastern Europe and in Turkey.

 

The project -- said to be aimed at countering a potential Iran threat -- has drawn opposition from Russia, which fears it could compromise its security.

 

Washington will invest $134 million (97 million euros) in the Deveselu base, built some 60 years ago with the Soviet Union's help.

 

The airbase, which will remain under Romanian command, will host an average of 200 US troops, up to a maximum of 500.

 

"What we are initiating here today is a powerful and tangible manifestation of our solemn commitment to mutual security in Europe", said Miller.

 

Scheduled to become fully operational in 2018, the missile defence system will be deployed over several years.

 

SM-3 Block 1B interceptor 09-2013

SM-3 Block 1B interceptor 09-2013

Poland and Romania have agreed to host 24 US land-based SM-3 missiles interceptors each in the coming years. US ships equipped with missile interceptors are to be based in a Spanish port.

 

President Basescu on Monday said the shield was aimed at "protecting European and American citizens".

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