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10 avril 2014 4 10 /04 /avril /2014 19:50
OTAN : des AWACS en mission pour l’Alliance

 

10/04/2014 Sources : EMA

 

Depuis le 1er avril, dans le cadre de la contribution aux missions de surveillance de l’OTAN, des avions radars français de type AWACS sont engagés dans le ciel roumain et polonais, aux côtés des autres aéronefs de l’OTAN.

 

Réalisées sous contrôle tactique de l’OTAN, les missions de ces avions français sont conduites selon des séquences de vols bien précises au-dessus de la Roumanie et de la Pologne, depuis la base aérienne d’Avord. L’Alliance assure le ravitaillement en vol de ces avions avec ses propres ravitailleurs.

 

Ces vols s’intègrent dans le cadre des missions de surveillance de l’OTAN et font l’objet d’une coopération entière avec les organismes et unités de l’OTAN.

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7 avril 2014 1 07 /04 /avril /2014 19:45
Mozambican MiGs stuck in Germany

 

 

07 April 2014 by defenceWeb

 

Three MiG-21 fighter jets destined for Mozambique are stuck in Germany due to a lack of necessary permits. They are part of a batch of eight being shipped from Romania.

 

Romanian company Aerostar is overhauling six MiG-21bis and two MiG-21UM trainer aircraft for the Mozambique Air Force and is also providing training for Mozambican MiG-21 pilots. Three MiG-21s were seen flying at Aerostar’s Bacau facility last year.

 

On Sunday Germany’s Der Spiegel reported that three MiG-21s were transported from the Romanian capital Bucharest by train in six containers and were to have been subsequently shipped to Mozambique from the Germany port of Bremerhaven.

 

However, although the aircraft were declared according to procedure, their transport was done without the necessary permits and they were stopped. Der Spiegel reported that Germany’s public prosecutor will investigate the possible breach of arms control laws. The publication noted that Aerostar was found guilty of a similar incident in 2008.

 

In 2012 German customs officials confiscated MiG-29 engines for Algeria and Tu-142 engines for India over the lack of necessary permits.

 

The Mozambique Air Force is slowly rejuvenating, considering that until recently it was almost entirely inoperable, suffering poor serviceability since independence from Portugal in 1975 and the collapse of the Soviet Union and its financial support in the early 1990s. The arrival of the MiG-21s will give the Air Force a jet capability not had in years, as its existing MiG-21s have fallen into disrepair and are grounded.

 

In addition to the MiG-21s, Mozambique has apparently bought two Aerostar Festival side-by-side light aircraft and will get an overhauled Aero Vodochody L-39ZO jet trainer. Late last year it emerged that Mozambique’s Air Force would also receive two second hand Antonov An-26B transport aircraft after they have been refurbished in the Ukraine.

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

 

Apr. 6, 2014 By DAVID LARTER – Defense News

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

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4 avril 2014 5 04 /04 /avril /2014 07:40
US Sends More Marines to Romania, DDG to Black Sea

April 3, 2014 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: US Department of Defense; issued April 2, 2014)

 

U.S. Sends More Marines to Romania, Navy Vessel to Black Sea

 

WASHINGTON --- The Defense Department is deploying additional Marines to enlarge a rotational crisis response force based in Spain, and is also dispatching a naval vessel to the Black Sea to conduct exercises with U.S. allies in the region, a Pentagon spokesman said today.

 

Army Col. Steve Warren told reporters that 175 Marines from Camp Lejeune, N.C., will augment the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force Crisis Response force based at Moron Air Base, Spain.

 

“We’re increasing the number from 500 to 675,” Warren said, adding that the move had been planned since late last year.

 

The expeditionary force falls under U.S. Africa Command but can be deployed anywhere. It enables the United States to conduct a range of military operations including non-combatant evacuations, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief as well as support for U.S. embassies.

 

While the additional Marines will be part of the Spain-based force, Warren said they are being stationed in Romania to allow greater flexibility. They will join nearly 300 Marines already in the country who are part of the Black Sea rotational force.

 

Warren emphasized the decision to send the additional Marines to Romania is not related to developments in Ukraine. However, he also announced that a U.S. Navy vessel is heading to the Black Sea for exercises to reassure American allies of the U.S. commitment to the region. That move, he said, is a direct result of the current situation in Ukraine. Warren did not rule out a role for the vessel in exercises with the Ukrainian military.

 

The announcement came a day after Warren said senior U.S defense officials were in Kiev for discussions with Ukrainian officials on defense cooperation and regional security.

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2 avril 2014 3 02 /04 /avril /2014 07:20
MV-22B Ospreys Photo by Capt. Lauren Schulz

MV-22B Ospreys Photo by Capt. Lauren Schulz

 

April 01, 2014 Spacewar.com (AFP)

 

Bucharest - Romania has approved an increase in American troops at its military airbase on the Black Sea as Washington continues to shift its main transit base for Afghanistan away from Kyrgyzstan, a report said Tuesday.

 

Romanian President Traian Basescu sent a letter to parliament approving the US request for 600 more troops at the Mihail Kogalniceanu airport in the southeast of the country, the Agerpres news agency said.

 

"The request... refers to the deployment of a unit of Marines called the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force Crisis Response, with up to 600 soldiers and a number of military aircraft needed to fulfil specific missions," the letter said.

 

The US is due to abandon by July the Manas airbase in Kyrgyzstan that has been the main transit point for its military personnel and cargo in and out of Afghanistan, after the Kyrgyz government refused to extend the lease last year.

 

The Mihail Kogalniceanu base, where around 1,000 troops are currently stationed, is due to become the main transit point as the US prepares for a major withdrawal of forces and equipment from Afghanistan later this year.

 

The US inaugurated the new transit centre in February.

 

Between 20,000 and 30,000 troops are expected to transfer through the base on their way back from Afghanistan this year.

US increases troops at Afghan transit base in Romania
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1 avril 2014 2 01 /04 /avril /2014 11:50
Dutch Air Force Media/EATC MSCN

Dutch Air Force Media/EATC MSCN

 

 

01.04.2014 Ballinger/Thomas - EATC

 

Under the operational control of the EATC, two Dutch KDC-10 are used to refuel the NATO E3-A executing surveillance at the Eastern NATO borders. Operating solely from its main operating base at Geilenkirchen (Germany), the NATO E-3A Component will fly a line of tasking every day to Romania as well as a second one every other day above Poland. These surveillance missions will be shared with the E-3D Component, who will fly out of Waddington, United Kingdom.
The employment will enhance situational awareness and reassure NATO Allies in the region. All AWACS surveillance flights will take place solely over Alliance territory and no flights will take place over Ukraine. It was the North Atlantic Council (NAC) to decide on March 10, 2014 to employ NATO AWACS (Airborne Early Warning and Control Aircraft) surveillance aircraft over Poland and Romania.


The EATC concept of Pooling & Sharing constitutes an excellent means to support that kind of operations, moreover for the fact that the KDC-10 Tanker Transport aircraft can also execute a further mission to enhance efficiency. As an example the Dutch aircraft returned last week after its tanker mission also with personnel coming back from Adana, Turkey, where the Dutch missile contingent is stationed to protect Turkey from potential Syrian air threads – not to forget the ten tons of freight on board which also belonged to the Dutch contingent.

 

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 13:40
US, Romanian and Bulgarian navies start drills near Russian border

 

 

13 March 2014 naval-technology.com

 

The US Navy has reportedly begun military manoeuvres along with Romanian and Bulgarian navies near Russia's borders, fuelling tensions in the region.

 

The joint military training exercises are said to represent the US's resolve to protect its NATO allies, Reuters reports.

 

USS Truxtun, the US Navy's Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer with a crew of about 300 will take part in the drills, as well as Bulgarian naval frigate Drazki and three Romanian naval vessels, Bulgaria's defence ministry said in a statement.

 

The training exercise will not involve any live-firing and will be held off the Black Sea, across the water from the Crimean Peninsula, where Russian military groups have seized control from Ukrainian authorities.

 

"The goal of the exercise is to increase the operational compatibility within NATO members' navy vessels, to improve the mutual understanding and to increase the crews' preparedness at sea," the ministry said.

 

Meanwhile, US military fighter jets are scheduled to take part in joint air defence exercises in north Poland, with Poland's president set to review the manoeuvres.

 

The US said that the drills were planned before the Ukraine crisis, although both exercises are alleged support gestures for NATO members after Russia's intervention in Ukraine.

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 08:50
Des avions de l'Otan patrouillent en Pologne et en Roumanie

 

 

MOSCOU, 12 mars - RIA Novosti

 

Deux avions radars AWACS de l'Otan se sont mis mercredi à patrouiller dans l'espace aérien de la Pologne et de la Roumanie, rapportent les médias internationaux, se référant au lieutenant-colonel Jay Janzen, porte-parole de l'Alliance.

 

Selon M.Janzen, les avions qui ont quitté mercredi matin leurs bases aériennes de Geilenkirchen, en Allemagne, et de Waddington, en Grande-Bretagne, ne sortiront pas de l'espace aérien des pays membres de l'Alliance et ne franchiront pas les frontières de l'Ukraine et de la Russie.

 

Mardi, un avion de l'Otan a déjà effectué un vol de reconnaissance, en survolant la Roumanie.

 

Lundi, le Conseil de l'Otan a donné son feu vert pour des vols de reconnaissance au-dessus de la Pologne et de la Roumanie. Le système de détection et de commandement aéroporté AWACS est un système de stations radar montées sur des avions de guet permettant de surveiller un vaste espace aérien.

 

Un changement de pouvoir s'est opéré le 22 février à Kiev. La Rada suprême (parlement ukrainien) a démis le président Viktor Ianoukovitch de ses fonctions et réformé la Constitution. Ianoukovitch a qualifié ces événements de "coup d'Etat". Moscou conteste également la légitimité des décisions de la Rada.

 

La Crimée a décidé de tenir le 16 mars un référendum sur son futur statut politique. Le parlement de la république autonome s'est prononcé pour le rattachement à la Russie.

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12 mars 2014 3 12 /03 /mars /2014 11:50
Mer Noire: début des manœuvres Bulgarie-Roumanie-USA

 

MOSCOU, 12 mars - RIA Novosti

 

Le commandement des forces navales bulgares a annoncé le début d'un exercice conjoint avec la Roumanie et les Etats-Unis en mer Noire.

Prévu pour mardi dernier, le lancement de cet exercice a été ajourné de 24 heures en raison de mauvaises conditions météorologiques.

Conçues pour assurer la sécurité en mer Noire, les manœuvres se dérouleront dans les eaux territoriales de la Roumanie, réunissant une frégate bulgare, trois bâtiments de guerre roumains et le destroyer américain USS Bush faisant partie d'un groupe aéronaval d'attaque formé autour du porte-avions USS George H.W.

L'USS Bush, qui opère dans la zone de responsabilité de la 6e Flotte américaine, possède un système d'alerte et défense Aegis doté d'antimissiles et de missiles de croisière Tomahawk.

Le commandement de l'US Navy a auparavant souligné que les manœuvres en mer Noire avaient été programmées avant les événements en Crimée, dont les autorités envisagent de tenir le 16 mars un référendum sur le statut politique de cette péninsule à majorité russophone.

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11 mars 2014 2 11 /03 /mars /2014 16:50
USS George H.W. Bush in Greece - photo US Navy

USS George H.W. Bush in Greece - photo US Navy

 

MOSCOU, 11 mars - RIA Novosti

 

L'exercice naval qui devait débuter mardi en mer Noir, réunissant la Bulgarie, la Roumanie et les Etats-Unis, a été différé d'un jour en raison des mauvaises conditions météorologiques, indique un communiqué mis en ligne sur le site du ministère bulgare de la Défense.

Conçu pour assurer la sécurité en mer Noire, cet exercice devait se tenir dans les eaux territoriales de la Roumanie. Il réunira une frégate bulgare, trois bâtiments de guerre roumains et le destroyer américain USS Truxtun équipé de missiles télécommandés. Ce dernier navire fait partie du groupe aéronaval d'attaque formé autour du porte-avions USS George H.W.

L'USS Truxtun, qui opère dans la zone de responsabilité de la 6e Flotte américaine, est un destroyer de classe Arleigh Burke. Il possède un système d'alerte et défense Aegis doté d'antimissiles et de missiles de croisière Tomahawk.

Le commandement de l'US Navy a auparavant souligné que les manœuvres en mer Noire avaient été programmées avant les événements en Crimée.

Cette péninsule peuplée principalement de Russes n'a pas reconnu la légitimité des nouvelles autorités installées à Kiev et a décidé d'organiser le 16 mars un référendum sur son futur statut politique.

Ce référendum a été qualifié d'illégitime par le nouveau gouvernement ukrainien, ainsi que par Londres et Washington.

Parallèlement à la présence navale bulgare, roumaine et américaine en mer Noire, l'armée de terre ukrainienne s'est massée à Kherson, aux abords de la Crimée.

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18 décembre 2013 3 18 /12 /décembre /2013 12:50
L'armée roumaine enverra un tiers de troupes de moins à l'étranger en 2014

 

2013-12-18 xinhua

 

Le Conseil suprême de défense nationale roumain (CSDN) a décidé mardi de réduire d'un tiers ses troupes en mission à l'étranger en 2014.

 

Selon le plan approuvé par le CSDN concernant le déploiement de troupes à l'étranger en 2014, l'armée roumaine enverra en mission et opération à l'étranger un total de 1 311 militaires, soit 725 de moins que cette année.

 

Pour ce qui est du ministère de l'Intérieur, les forces participant en 2014 aux diverses missions sous l'égide de l'Organisation du traité de l'Atlantique Nord (OTAN), de l'Union européenne, de l'Organisation pour la sécurité et la coopération en Europe (OSCE) et des Nations Unies (ONU) seont constitués de 791 soldats et policiers, soit 301 de plus qu'en 2013, a indiqué la présidence roumaine dans un communiqué.

 

"L'effort principal continue d'être la participation au sein de l'opération de la Force internationale d'assistance à la sécurité (FIAS) en Afghanistan et le maintien de l'engagement de la Roumanie dans le théâtre des opérations des Balkans," précise le communiqué de la présidence.

 

Le CSDN, qui inclut le président, le Premier ministre, les ministres de la Défense et des Affaires étrangères, ainsi que les directeurs des services de renseignement, est l'organe exécutif suprême en Roumanie, qui décide des questions de sécurité et de défense.

 

La Roumanie a commencé à envoyer des troupes en Afghanistan en juillet 2002. Cela constituait la première mission militaire du pays à l'étranger depuis la Seconde Guerre mondiale.

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28 novembre 2013 4 28 /11 /novembre /2013 08:50
Building the Shield

Is there a project manaEuropean Protection: The Medium Extended Air Defense System is one candidate for Poland's proposed new air defense system. (MEADS International)

 

Nov. 26, 2013 - By JAROSLAW ADAMOWSKI and TOM KINGTON – Defense News

 

European Nations Cooperate With US, NATO Allies On Missile Defense

 

WARSAW AND ROME — As NATO intensifies its efforts to shield Europe from airborne threats, numerous countries are aiming to bolster their missile defense capabilities at the national level and as part of collective allied efforts. Those plans are centered on NATO’s missile defense shield and the Medium Extended Air Defense System (MEADS).

 

Poland plans to modernize its anti-aircraft and anti-missile system by 2022 by adding short- and middle-range missiles. The program is estimated to be worth as much as 26.4 billion zloty (US $8.4 billion), according to figures obtained by local daily Gazeta Wyborcza, which makes it the country’s largest armament program.

 

With multibillion-dollar procurements in the pipeline, Defense Min­ister Tomasz Siemoniak announced that US Secretary of State John Kerry’s Nov. 4-6 visit to Poland was related to Poland’s military modernization prog­ram and potential arms acquisitions.

 

The two countries’ missile defense cooperation was also high on the agenda, with SM-3 Block IIA interceptor missiles planned to be deployed at Poland’s air base in Redzikowo.

 

Kerry and Siemoniak visited the Polish military’s 32nd Tactical Air Base in Lask, in central Poland. During his visit, Kerry said the US did not intend to abandon its missile defense plans in Europe, and that in 2018, the Poland-based component of the missile shield would be operational.

 

“Poland and Europe need the United States to be strong and present, leading an [alliance] which is based on collective reliability of its members and the development of real military capacities,” Siemoniak said. “This is why we support the missile defense program by hosting on our soil a base which is to be set up in 2018 in Redzikowo.”

 

For its national missile defense efforts, the Polish Army wants local manufacturers to cooperate on the program with foreign defense players.

 

One of the first of a series of procurements for the Polish missile program will be a midrange anti-aircraft and anti-missile system, dubbed Wisla.

 

With the planned purchase in mind, in June the Defense Ministry invited companies to participate in a dialogue on technical and strategic requirements for the procurement.

 

Fourteen foreign and domestic manufacturers expressed interest in participating in the Wisla project, including Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and Boeing of the US; France’s Thales; Italy’s Selex; Turkey’s Aselsan; Spain’s Indra and Sener; Israel’s SIBAT; and a consortium led by the Polish Defense Holding.

 

Poland Could Join MEADS

 

MBDA submitted two bids, one based on the Aster-30 medium-range air-defense missile and one developed around the MEADS, a partnership of the US, Italy and Germany. With the US Army withdrawing from the project, Poland could become the third European partner should it hand the missile defense contract to MBDA.

 

Acquisition of the MEADS anti-missile system was canceled by the US, but officials with the industrial team behind it, comprising Lockheed Martin and MBDA, said Poland could yet sign up to join Rome and Berlin.

 

Polish officials attended a test firing against two simultaneous targets in the US in November, which marked a climax of the program’s development phase before the US ends its funding.

 

A MEADS team also gave officials in Poland a briefing at the end of August, one of a number of briefings given by competitors that wrapped up on Sept. 30 and could lead to a selection by Poland in January of anti-missile systems, said Marty Coyne, business development director for MEADS International.

 

Although it is unclear whether Italy and Germany will push on with acquisition after the departure of the US from the program, Coyne said the two countries were planning to “transition to European development” work by the end of 2014.

 

“We have offered Polish industry the chance to be a partner in that development, which involves software work and qualification,” he said.

 

The cost of that development work would run 10 to 15 percent of the $4 billion cost of the program., Coyne added.

 

According to the scenario in which Poland, Italy and Germany wrap up development together, Lockheed would remain an “active participant,” and the US government would remain a “signatory” to the program, Coyne said.

 

Aegis Ashore in Romania

 

Romania is another key country in NATO’s missile defense plans. In late October, construction of a facility to host the Aegis Ashore missile defense system was launched in Deveselu, in the country’s south.

 

Aegis Ashore is the land-based component of the Aegis ballistic missile defense (BMD) system. The Romania-based facility will be part of NATO’s missile shield over Europe, with the Aegis BMD and SM-3 Block IB set to provide ballistic missile coverage of southern Europe, according to the Pentagon’s Missile Defense Agency.

 

Under the plan, the missile interceptors in Deveselu are expected to be operational in 2015. The project is worth about $134 million

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22 novembre 2013 5 22 /11 /novembre /2013 08:50
Visite officielle du chef-d’état-major de la Marine en Roumanie



21/11/2013 Marine nationale

 

Les 18 et 19 novembre 2013, le chef d’état-major de la Marine, l’amiral Rogel s’est rendu en Roumanie pour une visite officielle. Cette visite a débuté par un entretien à Bucarest avec le chef d’état-major des armées, le général de corps aérien Danila, puis avec le chef d’état-major de la marine roumaine, le vice-amiral Popa.

Elle s’est poursuivie par une visite du port militaire de Constanza où le CEMM s’est fait présenter par son homologue différentes unités dont le SSK Delfinul de la classe Kilo et leurs missions.

Les participations à des opérations interalliées communes (Atalanta ou Active Endeavour) et les retours d’expérience respectifs des deux marines ont été évoqués ainsi que des pistes de coopérations futures, par exemple, dans les domaines de l’hydrographie, de la plongée ou de la formation des officiers-élèves.

À l’occasion de cette visite, l’amiral a été décoré de l’emblème d’honneur des forces navales roumaines. Cette distinction est conférée par  le chef d’état-major des forces navales roumaines à un chef militaire étranger à titre exceptionnel lorsqu’il souhaite l’honorer.

 

Visite officielle du chef-d’état-major de la Marine en Roumanie
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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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15 octobre 2013 2 15 /10 /octobre /2013 12:50
Romanian Air Force to acquire 12 used F-16 aircraft from Portugal

An F-16 fighter aircraft of the Portuguese Air Force. Photo Mike Freer - Touchdown-aviation.

 

15 October 2013 airforce-technology.com

 

The Romanian Air Force has signed an agreement with the Portuguese Government for the acquisition of 12 second-hand Lockheed Martin-built F-16 Fighting Falcon mid-life upgrade (MLU) aircraft.

 

The acquisition, which follows comprehensive technical and financial negotiations, has also been approved by the US Congress, according to a Portuguese Ministry of Defence's (MoD) statement.

 

Even though the agreement details remain undisclosed, the estimated €186.2m contract covers nine surplus Portuguese fighters and three former US Air Force (USAF) aircraft, IHS Jane reports.

 

Other responsibilities include modifications and upgrades to the aircraft for the next four years, the supply of additional engines, logistics support and the training of nine Romanian pilots and 79 maintenance personnel, to ensure safe operation of the aircraft.

 

The first aircraft delivery is planned for 2016, to enable Romania to achieve initial operational capability (IOC) in 2017, with the assistance and support of both Portuguese and US air forces, the MoD statement notes.

"The first aircraft delivery is planned for 2016, to enable Romania to achieve initial operational capability in 2017."

 

Primarily intended to replace the Romanian Air Force's existing 49 Soviet Era-built MiG-21 Lancer fighter fleet, the aircraft will also increase the country's interoperability with Nato forces, and its contribution to these forces.

 

The Romanian Ministry of National Defence (MND) was reportedly considering the purchase of 15 used F-16s from the Netherlands in early June 2012, but the proposal was cancelled amidst budgetary constraints.

 

Powered by a single Pratt & Whitney F-100-GE-129 turbofan engine, the F-16 was initially designed as an air superiority day fighter, but later evolved into a successful all-weather multirole aircraft for precise delivery of ordnance during non-visual bombing conditions.

 

The aircraft is in service with the air forces of Israel, Egypt, New Zealand, South Korea, Chile, Poland, UAE, Bahrain, Greece, Singapore and the US.

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22 avril 2013 1 22 /04 /avril /2013 16:50
photo RTD

photo RTD

April 16, 2013 romania-insider.com

 

Romanian firm MFA Mizil has signed an agreement with Renault Trucks Defense to cooperate in the production of military vehicles in Romania. The deal brings a joint venture to produce military transport vehicles and armored cars to the MFA factory in Mizil, Prahova County.

 

The vehicles produced will be marketed locally and internationally, according to information released by the companies. No figure for investment was given, but upgrading work will be carried out at the MFA Mizil plant.

 

MFA is a Romanian engineering firm founded over 60 years ago. The company has been the leading contractor for the Romanian Ministry of National Defense (MApN) since 1989 for armored vehicles. The latest project developed by the MFA with MApN was the modernization of 127 infantry vehicles, which received NATO certificates worth over EUR 100 million. MFA Mizil is part of the Carmistin group of companies, belonging to businessman Iustin Paraschiv.

 

Renault Truck Defense has over 1,400 employees in France and is present in over 50 countries with its products.

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