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27 septembre 2013 5 27 /09 /septembre /2013 11:30
US, Russia Finalize Syria Resolution – Lavrov

UNITED NATIONS, September 26 (RIA Novosti)

 

Russia and the United States have agreed on a UN Security Council resolution that will not allow military action to enforce Syria’s compliance with a US-Russian plan to eliminate Syria’s chemical weapons, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday.

 

The draft resolution to be submitted to other Security Council members “does not envision any actions based on Chapter 7 of the UN Charter,” which allows for military action to restore peace and security, Lavrov said following a meeting with US Secretary of State John Kerry.

 

Washington has insisted that the threat of military force is crucial to ensuring that the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad abides by the terms of the US-Russia plan to secure and destroy Syria’s chemical stockpiles, while Russia has said military intervention is unacceptable.

 

Lavrov added that the resolution finalized by Russia and the United States is in “strict” compliance with the US-Russian plan, which was hammered out between the two sides in Geneva earlier this month.

 

Kerry confirmed later on Thursday that an agreement with Russia has been reached, saying the international community “can now move forward and give life hopefully to the removal and destruction of chemical weapons from Syria."

 

A full meeting of the 15-member council was called for 08.00 pm in New York Thursday (04:00 Moscow time on Friday) to discuss the draft resolution, according to the UN press service.

 

Washington and Moscow have also finalized a draft resolution on placing Syria’s chemical weapons stockpile under international control for eventual destruction, Lavrov said. That resolution is being submitted to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) in the Hague for consideration, he said.

 

The administration of US President Barack Obama has accused Assad’s government of responsibility for an Aug. 21 chemical weapons attack outside Damascus that Washington claims left more than 1,400 dead.

 

Russian officials, including President Vladimir Putin, have repeatedly suggested in recent weeks that they have evidence showing the attack was likely carried out by Syrian rebels seeking to frame Assad in order to secure outside military intervention against government forces.

 

Updates with US confirmation and time of the UNSC meeting to discuss the draft resolution.

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27 septembre 2013 5 27 /09 /septembre /2013 11:20
Projet de loi pour "limiter" mais "préserver" les programmes de la NSA

27.09.2013 Le Monde.fr (AFP)

 

La commission du renseignement du Sénat américain prépare un projet de loi visant à mettre des "limites" à la surveillance des données téléphoniques mais à "préserver" ce programme de la NSA critiqué depuis l'affaire Snowden, a annoncé jeudi 26 septembre une sénatrice.

 

La sénatrice démocrate Dianne Feinstein, présidente de la commission, et le républicain Saxby Chambliss travaillent à un projet bipartite visant à prendre en compte le besoin accru de transparence sur les programmes de surveillance de la NSA, révélés par son ancien consultant Edward Snowden.

 

La collecte systématique des "métadonnées" téléphoniques aux Etats-Unis est "constitutionnelle" et "légale", a martelé la sénatrice Feinstein tout en reconnaissant que les révélations de Snowden avaient conduit à "un malheureux mais bien réel scepticisme de l'opinion" sur les intrusions de la NSA dans la vie privée des Américains.

 

Lire : "Le patron de la NSA défend la 'mission noble' de son agence"

 

L'élue a évoqué son projet lors d'une nouvelle audition, devant la commission, du directeur national du renseignement (DNI) James Clapper et du patron de l'agence nationale de sécurité (NSA), le général Keith Alexander.

 

ACCÈS AUX DONNÉES TÉLÉPHONIQUES LIMITÉ

 

"Notre projet de loi limite strictement l'accès aux données téléphoniques (...), interdira expressément la collecte du contenu des appels téléphoniques", a-t-elle annoncé. Le projet codifie également l'exigence selon laquelle un analyste doit avoir une "suspicion récente et étayée qu'un numéro téléphonique est associé au terrorisme pour pouvoir utiliser la base de données", a-t-elle détaillé.

Parmi les autres mesures envisagées, la sénatrice a évoqué la réalisation de rapports annuels d'activité concernant la collecte des métadonnées téléphoniques, qui comprendront les numéros, heures et durées de tous les appels passés via les opérateurs américains, mais pas le contenu des conversations.

Le sénateur Chambliss, coauteur du projet, a toutefois précisé qu'il avait de "fortes objections" à ce que le contrôle du programme de métadonnées ne soit plus dans les mains de la NSA.

 

Lire : "Du discours de l'ancien directeur de la CIA et de la NSA sur la surveillance américaine"

 

Au cours de l'audition et dans une déclaration écrite, les responsables du renseignement ainsi que le numéro deux du département de la justice, James Cole, ont réservé bon accueil à ces modifications. "Nous sommes ouverts à un certain nombre d'idées, affirment-ils. Il y a quelques changements dont nous pensons qu'ils peuvent permettre d'accroître le respect de la vie privée, des libertés publiques ainsi que la confiance du public tout en respectant les besoins de la sécurité nationale."

 

 

Lire : "Plongée dans la 'pieuvre' de la cybersurveillance de la NSA"

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 20:35
NSA targets Indian politics, space & n-programmes

September 24, 2013 Shobhan Saxena - thehindu.com

 

Nation's strategic, commercial interests may have been compromised

 

RIO DE JANEIRO - The public assertions made by Indian and American officials that no content was taken from India’s internet and telephone networks by U.S.’s National Security Agency (NSA) and that the American surveillance programs just looked at “patterns of communication” as a counter-terrorism measure are far from the truth, if not outright misleading.

 

According to a top secret document disclosed by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and obtained by The Hindu, the PRISM programme was deployed by the American agency to gather key information from India by tapping directly into the servers of tech giants which provide services such as email, video sharing, voice-over-IPs, online chats, file transfer and social networking services.

 

And, according to the PRISM document seen by The Hindu, much of the communication targeted by the NSA is unrelated to terrorism, contrary to claims of Indian and American officials.

 

Instead, much of the surveillance was focused on India’s domestic politics and the country’s strategic and commercial interests.

 

This is the first time it’s being revealed that PRISM, which facilitates extensive, in-depth surveillance on live communications as well as stored information, was used by the world’s largest surveillance organization to intercept and pick content on at least three issues related to India’s geopolitical and economic interests. They are: Nuclear, Space and Politics.

 

The top-secret NSA document, which carries the seal of “Special Source Operations”, is called “A Week in the Life of PRISM reporting” and it shows “Sampling of Reporting topics from 2-8 Feb 2013”. Marked with a green slug that reads “589 End product Reports’’, the document carries the brand logos of companies like Gmail, Facebook, MSN, Hotmail, Yahoo!, Google, Apple, Skype, YouTube, paltalk.com and AOL on the top of the page.

 

“End products” are official reports that are distillations of the best raw intelligence.

 

In a section titled “India”, the document clearly mentions numerous subjects about which content was picked from various service providers on the worldwide web in just one week early this year.

 

This document is strong evidence of the fact that NSA surveillance in India was not restricted to tracking of phone calls, text messages and email logs by Boundless Informant, an NSA tool that was deployed quite aggressively against India. “As politics, space and nuclear are mentioned as “end products” in this document, it means that emails, texts and phones of important people related to these fields were constantly monitored and intelligence was taken from them, and then the NSA prepared official reports on the basis of raw intelligence. It means, they are listening in real time to what our political leaders, bureaucrats and scientists are communicating with each other,” an official with an India intelligence agency told The Hindu, speaking strictly on condition of anonymity.

 

But, top ministers and officials have continued to live in denial.

 

After it was reported by The Guardian on June 7 that the PRISM program allowed the NSA “to obtain targeted communications without having to request them from the service providers and without having to obtain individual court orders”, both U.S. and Indian officials claimed that no content was being taken from the country’s networks and that the programs were intended to “counter terrorism”.

 

Kerry’s dissembling

 

During his visit to New Delhi on June 24 to take part in the India-U.S. Strategic Dialogue, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry denied that the American agency programmes were accessing online content. “It does not look at individual emails. It does not listen to people’s telephone conversation. It is a random survey by computers of anybody’s telephone, of just the numbers and not even the names…It takes those random numbers and looks whether those random numbers are connected to other numbers, that they know, by virtue of other intelligence, linked to terrorists in places where those terrorists operate,” Mr. Kerry had said, stressing that only when an “adequate linkage” is formed, the authorities go to a special court to get permission to obtain further data.

 

Even Indian officials have been repeating these lines since the NSA activities in India were disclosed. Replying to a question in Rajya Sabha on August 26, Communications and Information Technology Minister Kapil Sibal said the U.S. agencies only “trace origin and destination of the data, but never try to get access to the content, which requires a court approval”. “It would be a matter of concern for government if intrusive data capture has been deployed against Indian citizens or government infrastructure. Government has clearly conveyed these concerns to the U.S. government,” the minister had said, adding that the violation of any Indian law relating to privacy of information of ordinary Indian citizens by surveillance programs was “unacceptable”.

 

This “unacceptable” line might have been crossed by the NSA millions of times through the PRISM program as, according to the documents disclosed by Mr. Snowden, it is able to reach directly into the servers of the tech companies that are part of the programme and obtain data as well as perform real-time collection on targeted users. “The National Security Agency has obtained direct access to the systems of Google, Facebook, Apple and other U.S. internet giants,” The Guardian had said in its June 7 report, quoting from a 41-slide PowerPoint presentation which was apparently used to train intelligence operatives on the capabilities of the program.

 

Foreigners are fair game

 

Tech firms have denied that they allow unfettered access to the NSA. In strongly worded denials of participation in any government surveillance program, they have claimed they allow access to any data to the agency only when required by law.

 

Here lies the catch. Contrary to denials by tech firms and claims by India’s communication minister that the U.S. agency “requires a court approval” to look into any online content, the NSA used the changes in U.S. surveillance law that allows for the targeting of any customers of participating firms “who live outside the US, or those Americans whose communications include people outside the US”. This law, known as FISA Amendment Act or FAA, was introduced by President George W Bush and renewed under President Barack Obama in December 2012, allows for electronic surveillance on anyone who is “reasonably believed” to be outside the U.S.

 

No Indian citizen, government department or organisation has any legal protection from NSA surveillance. In a Joint Statement from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and the National Security Agency on August 21, 2013, it was stated that “FISA is designed to allow the U.S. Government to acquire foreign intelligence while protecting the civil liberties and privacy of Americans.”

 

So the NSA had no obstacle — technical or legal — in deploying the PRISM tool against India and Indian citizens. Armed with the FAA and with the active cooperation of the world’s biggest internet brands, the NSA was able to tap specific intelligence from India about the issues which have huge implications for its strategic interests in India. While India’s “nuclear” and “space” programmes have clearly significant commercial value for American firms, the surveillance of “politics” has huge implications for its foreign policy objectives in the region.

 

“If Americans are listening to our politicians and tapping the phones or reading mails of individuals who handle nuclear and space programmes, they have huge advantage over us in all business and diplomatic negotiations. Even before we go to the table, they know what we are going to put on it. It’s not just violation of our sovereignty, it’s a complete intrusion into our decision-making process,” said a senior official of the Ministry of Home Affairs, who admitted in private that the reports about the scale of NSA surveillance have “rattled” the government.

 

The NSA document also has names of several Asian, African and Latin American countries from where the American agency picked data about subjects ranging from oil to WTO to government policies, making it clear that the NSA spying was focused on commercial and business areas, and not on its stated objective of national security. “If the American intelligence agencies and business corporations are hunting in pairs, we are bound to lose,” added the Indian official.

 

More than anything, the targeting of India’s politics and space programme by the NSA busts the myth of close strategic partnership between India and US. The document seen by The Hindu is populated with the countries that are generally seen as adversarial by America. When the PRISM program was disclosed first time in June, a U.S. official had said that information “collected under this program is among the most important and valuable intelligence information we collect, and is used to protect our nation from a wide variety of threats.”

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 16:55
1914-2014

26 septembre 2013 par Henri Weill - Ainsi va le monde !

Les temps forts marquant le centenaire de la "grande guerre" seront annoncés par le président de la République, début novembre. Après un cycle de manifestations culturelles "Sarajevo, cœur de l'Europe" du 21 au 28 juin 2014 en Bosnie-Herzégovine, les célébrations devraient débuter en France, le14 juillet suivant. Suivront une commémoration de la mobilisation début août, celle de la bataille de la Marne un mois plus tard et un hommage national qui sera rendu le 11 novembre 2014.


La mission du centenaire a crée un label afin d'accompagner des projets locaux qui pourront figurer sur le programme national officiel des commémorations (centenaire.org). Au 1er août 2013, il a été accordé à 1265 projets ; il permet en outre d'être éligible à un financement par la mission. Pour cela un fonds a été doté de 7 millions € ( 2 millions provenant de l'Etat, 5 millions du mécénat).

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 16:30
Lockheed Martin Supports US Department of Commerce Cyber Security Trade Mission to Saudi Arabia and Kuwait

Sep 26, 2013 ASDNews Source : Lockheed Martin Corporation

 

Lockheed Martin [NYSE: LMT] joined a cyber security and critical infrastructure protection trade mission to Saudi Arabia and Kuwait led by the Department of Commerce. Headed by Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade Francisco Sánchez, the goal of this trade mission is to introduce U.S. firms to high-level government officials and potential partners in the Middle Eastern market.

 

“I’m proud to have Lockheed Martin join me for this important trade mission focused on cyber security and critical infrastructure protection,” said Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade Francisco Sánchez. “Lockheed Martin offers the high-quality technology, products, and expertise that help public and private sector entities in these two critical trading partners achieve their specific cyber security and infrastructure protection goals.”

 

Read more

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 12:30
Syrie: une intervention militaire US reste possible, selon Assad

MOSCOU, 26 septembre – RIA Novosti

 

Une intervention militaire des Etats-Unis en Syrie n'est pas exclue, malgré l'engagement de Damas de détruire ses stocks d'armes chimiques, a annoncé le président syrien Bachar el-Assad dans une interview à la chaîne de télévision Telesur. 

 

M.Assad a en outre avoué craindre que les commandos menant des combats dans son pays n'empêchent les inspecteurs de l'Onu d'accéder à des entrepôts d'armes chimiques syriens. 

 

Le dirigeant syrien a de nouveau pointé l'ingérence étrangère dans le conflit que traverse son pays. Il a notamment précisé que certains Etats, dont l'Arabie saoudite, fournissaient des armements aux rebelles. M.Assad a toutefois avoué ne pas posséder de preuve attestant la livraison d'armes chimiques aux insurgés par des pays tiers. 

 

Le 14 septembre, les chefs de la diplomatie russe et américaine, Sergueï Lavrov et John Kerry, se sont mis d'accord à Genève sur les modalités de mise sous contrôle international des armes chimiques syriennes et de leur destruction d'ici le milieu de 2014. 

 

L'initiative de placer sous contrôle international les arsenaux non conventionnels appartenant au régime d'Assad a été avancée le 9 septembre par Moscou dans le but de prévenir une intervention militaire étrangère en Syrie. Damas a immédiatement donné son feu vert. 

 

Le 14 septembre, le secrétaire général de l'Onu, Ban Ki-moon, a reçu l'engagement du gouvernement syrien de rejoindre la Convention internationale sur l'interdiction des armes chimiques. Le 14 octobre prochain, la Syrie deviendra le 190e membre de l'Organisation pour l'interdiction des armes chimiques.  

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 11:45
Les drones US de Djibouti délocalisés à Chabelley Airfield?

26.09.2013 par P. CHAPLEAU Lignes de Défense
 

Le Washington Post la semaine dernière puis le site OpenSource IMINT mardi ont publié des articles sur la supension des vols de drones à partir de Djibouti (le Washington Post parle de 16 mouvements de drones quotidiens sur l'aéroport de Djibouti). Une suspension pour cause de crashes et d'accidents qui ont mis en péril la vie des populations civiles.

 

OpenSource précise que les/des drones opéreraient désormais à partir de l'aérodrome de Chabelley (flèche verte sur la photo ci-dessous) à une dizaine de kilomètres au sud-ouest de l'aéroport principal (flèche noire) où sont basées les forces US:

PrtScr capture.jpg

 

Un porte-parole américain a reconnu que des drones étaient désormais basés à Chabelley, aérodrome qui est déjà utilisé par les Américains et les Français comme piste de dégagement. A noter cet avis de juillet dernier: "CHABELLEY AIRFIELD (HDCH) IS FULLY OPERATIONAL AT THIS TIME. ALL US AIRCRAFT MUST REQUEST A SLOT TIME FOR ARRIVALS INTO AND DEPARTURES OUT OF CHABELLEY THROUGH THE HOAAC SCHEDULING OFFICE DSN: 311-824-5615. CHABELLEY TOWER IS ALSO OPERATIONAL AT THIS TIME. CONTACT "CHABELLEY TOWER" ON VHF 126.8. CONTACT "CHABELLEY GROUND" ON VHF 120.425. SFC - FL020, 30 JUL 11:00 2013 UNTIL 28 OCT 11:00 2013. CREATED: 30 JUL 08:01 2013".

 

On lira en cliquant ici un article sur les travaux réalisés par les marines à Chabelley Airfield en 2011.

 

111027-a-uf490-085th.jpg

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 11:35
Les Etats-Unis promettent de fournir des technologies militaires de pointe à l'Inde

2013-09-20 xinhua

 

Les Etats-Unis ont promis à l'Inde de lui fournir des technologies militaires de pointe, en amont de la visite prévue du Premier ministre indien Manmohan Singh à Washington la semaine prochaine, a rapporté jeudi la presse locale.

 

Le secrétaire adjoint américain à la Défense Ashton B. Carter, actuellement en visite en Inde, s'est entretenu avec le Conseiller indien pour la sécurité nationale Shiv Shankar Menon, la ministre des Affaires étrangères Sujatha Singh et le ministre de la Défense RK Mathur dans la capitale du pays, où il a souligné la nécessité de mener plusieurs projets militaires de co-développement et de co-production pour raviver les relations stratégiques bilatérales, a rapporté le journal Times of India.

 

A l'heure actuelle, la Russie est le premier fournisseur de l'Inde en matière de défense.

 

M. Carter a déclaré que les Etats-Unis cherchent à s'associer avec l'Inde via "l'ensemble du spectre" des capacités de défense et "sans frontière" préétablie, en proposant des installations de fabrication communes pour la prochaine génération de missiles antichar guidés Javelin, précise le Times of India.

 

L'Inde a prévu de dépenser plus de 100 milliards de dollars dans les acquisitions d'armes au cours de la prochaine décennie.

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 11:20
USMC Unmanned Lift Competition Taking Shape

The K-MAX unmanned cargo helicopter is used to deliver supplies to troops in the war zone. (US Marine Corps)

 

Sep. 25, 2013 - By PAUL McLEARY – Defense News

 

QUANTICO, VA. — Two of the companies competing for the Marine Corps’ unmanned lift/ISR capability are facing off on opposite sides of the display tent this week here, offering unmanned helicopter variants of traditionally manned birds.

 

Working as a subcontractor to Aurora Flight Services to compete for the Autonomous Aerial Cargo Utility System (AACUS) program, Boeing has been flying its H-6U Little Bird helicopter unmanned, preparing for a Marine Corps evaluation in February at Quantico.

 

The companies are flying the Little Bird near Manassas with a pilot on board, but not controlling the aircraft, because having the pilot option helps them comply with FAA regulations, said the company’s Michael Sahag, business development for unmanned airborne systems.

 

Boeing has actually been flying the helicopter unmanned since 2004, including take-offs and landings on ships at sea, including on a commercial ship in July, and a test with the French Navy in October 2012.

 

The Little Bird has an endurance of about 12 hours with a limited payload, and can carry up to 25,000 pounds, including weapons such as Hellfire rockets and other ISR mission packages.

 

Just across the exhibition hall, Lockheed Martin is eager to talk about its K-MAX unmanned helicopter, which the Marines have been flying in Afghanistan since late 2011.

 

The company initially sent two helicopters to Afghanistan, but one crashed on a supply run near Camp Leatherneck in June, so for the moment, only one is based at Camp Bastion in Helmand Province, ferrying food and supplies to Marines at far-flung outposts.

 

The K-MAX is capable of carrying up to about 6,000 pounds of cargo, and once flew 30,000 pounds of cargo over the course of six missions.

 

Terry Fogarty, general manager of the Kaman UAS product group, confirmed that the Marines plan on keeping at least one K-MAX in theater until at least 2014, when the last Marines are expected to leave Afghanistan.

 

He added that since Lockheed is working to win the program of record work for the unmanned AACUS effort, the K-MAX — in a manned capacity — had flown off of ships at sea back in the 1990s during operations in the Arabian Gulf.

 

“Shipboard landing is key,” he said. “Even the Army wants to do shipboard landings” with manned and unmanned aircraft in the future, he added.

 

While the Army is moving much slower than the Corps in developing an unmanned lift capability, it did conduct two flight tests of an unmanned Black Hawk in November and May at the Diablo Range in California.

 

And back in January 2012, the Army released a request for information for a cargo-carrying unmanned aircraft system that would be able to carry cargo up to 300 nautical miles at 250 knots while carrying 5,000 to 8,000 pounds — but they’ve been quiet about the whole idea since.

 

But that doesn’t means Congress isn’t paying attention.

 

In its markup of the fiscal 2014 defense bill, the House Armed Services Committee said its members are “concerned that the Army, despite having very similar logistical challenges [as the Marine Corps], does not have a cargo UAS program.”

 

Therefore, the committee wants the Army secretary to deliver a report to Congress by February about what the Army’s plans are for developing such a system.

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 11:20
First QF-16 target drone flies without pilot (video)

25 sept. 2013 multimedianewsvideo

 

The first Boeing QF-16 has flown at Tyndall without a pilot. Up next, live fire trials at Holloman AFB, New Mexico--where probably some F-22s or possibly even some operational F-16 will have a field day blowing them out of the sky. The format is jacked-up as usual, but still better to have a video than to have no video.

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 07:45
Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti - source washingtonpost

Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti - source washingtonpost

25.09.2013 par P. CHAPLEAU Lignes de Défense


L'armée américaine a annoncé, mardi soir, l'attribution de trois contrats de construction sur le camp Lemonnier, à Djibouti.

 

Montant total: 202 millions de dollars dont 150 pour B.L. Harbert (lire l'avis n°1 ci-dessous) qui va se charger de la construction de hangars, soutes à munitions, centres opérationnels, parking etc. Caddell Construction se chargera de la construction d'un PC (36 millions) et ITSI Gilbane des approvisionnements en énergie électrique (8 nouveaux modules qui s'ajoutent aux 4 existants).

B.L. Harbert International LLC, Birmingham, Ala., is being awarded a $150,703,040 firm-fixed-price contract for construction of a forward operating site at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti. The site will be comprised of 11 buildings, site work and supporting facilities required to support current and emerging operational missions. The following buildings will be constructed on a site that is approximately 20 acres in size: aircraft hangar, air operations center, armory, joint operations center/tactical operation center/communication center, berthing/fitness/morale, welfare and recreation facility, logistics warehouse, maritime/riggers facility, training facility, engineering facility, vehicle maintenance shop, tactical support facility, and an aircraft parking apron. The contract also contains three unexercised options, which if exercised would increase cumulative contract value to $156,809,541. Work will be performed in Djibouti, Africa, and is expected to be completed by August 2016. Fiscal 2011 military construction overseas contingency operations supplemental appropriations, Army contract funds in the amount of $150,703,040 are obligated on this award and will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was competitively procured via the Navy Electronic Commerce Online website with 10 proposals received. The Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Atlantic, Norfolk, Va., is the contracting activity (N62470-13-C-3001).

Caddell Construction Co., Inc., Montgomery, Ala., is being awarded a $36,169,500 firm-fixed-price contract for the design and construction of a combined headquarters building and joint operations center facility at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti. The work to be performed provides for the design and construction of a multi-story building consisting of administrative space, open and private offices, and multi-purpose conference rooms. There will be open storage secure areas with compartmented areas within. The contract also contains two unexercised options, which if exercised would increase cumulative contract value to $39,484,500. Work will be performed in Djibouti, Africa, and is expected to be completed by December 2015. Fiscal 2013 military construction overseas contingency operations supplemental appropriations, Navy contract funds in the amount of $36,169,500 are obligated on this award and will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was competitively procured via the Navy Electronic Commerce Online website, with 13 proposals received. The Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Atlantic, Norfolk, Va., is the contracting activity (N62470-13-C-3000).

ITSI Gilbane Co., Walnut Creek, Calif., is being awarded a $16,635,737 firm-fixed-price contract for power plant upgrades at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti. The work to be performed provides for electrical and mechanical renovations to Power Plant 2, Power Plant 3, and a modular building, Power Plant 2A. The contractor will provide and install eight new power modules to supplement the four existing power modules, as well as an overflow fuel tank and a fuel line connecting Power Plant 2 and Power Plant 3. Work will be performed in Djibouti, Africa, and is expected to be completed by October 2014. Fiscal 2012 research development test and evaluation, Navy; fiscal 2012 operations and maintenance, Navy; and fiscal 2011 military construction overseas contingency operations supplemental appropriations, Army contract funds in the amount of $16,635,737 are being obligated on this award and will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was competitively procured via the Navy Electronic Commerce Online website, with 10 proposals received. The Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Atlantic, Norfolk, Va., is the contracting activity (N62470-13-C-3006).

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 07:45
US Relocates Drones Airfield After Djibouti Crashes

Sep. 25, 2013 – Defense News (AFP)

 

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon is shifting its drone operations from a US base in Djibouti to a more remote airfield after local officials voiced concern about possible collisions with commercial aircraft, officials said Wednesday.

 

“There was a concern over what would happen if a MQ-1 (Predator drone) obstructed a runway, and that it would have a significant impact on commercial air operations,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

 

After the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Camp Lemonnier — located next to the Djibouti international airport — took on crucial strategic importance for Washington as a site for stationing special operations forces and drones for assaults on al-Qaida militants in Yemen and Islamist Shabab forces in Somalia.

 

But after five accidents involving MQ-1 Predators since January 2011, the government of Djibouti demanded the Americans halt the drone flights out of Camp Lemonnier, where about 3,000 US troops are deployed, said the defense official, confirming a report in the Washington Post.

 

Under an agreement with Djibouti, the US military will move its drone fleet from Camp Lemonnier to Chabelley Airfield, about 10 kilometers southwest of the capital, according to a document from Congress authorizing defense spending for 2014.

 

Lawmakers are “aware that the government of Djibouti mandated that operations of remotely piloted aircraft (RPA) cease from Camp Lemonnier, while allowing such operations to relocate to Chabelley Airfield, Djibouti,” it said.

 

The decision to shift flights to Chabelley raised questions about Pentagon plans to spend $880 million to improve the infrastructure at Camp Lemonnier.

 

The US government plans to invest $13 million for infrastructure at Chabelley airfield to support the drone flights, according to the document. But lawmakers wrote that they remained concerned about how operations at the new location would be sustained over the long-term and at what cost.

 

The move from Camp Lemonnier to Chabelley has been under discussion for more than six months, the defense official said.

 

“We have a really strong relationship with Djibouti ... and this was a way to accommodate Djibouti in a mutually beneficial way,” the official said.

 

The official said the move might have some temporary, minor effect on current military operations in the region, but there would “no significant operational impact.”

 

Other US military aircraft, including cargo planes and fighter jets, would continue to fly out of Lemonnier, he said.

 

The French military also uses the airfield at Lemonnier for about a dozen aircraft based there.

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 07:20
Trident II D5 Missile Logs 148th Successful Test-Flight

Sept. 25, 2013 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: Lockheed Martin; issued September 24, 2013)

 

Lockheed Martin-Built Trident II D5 Missile Achieves A Total of 148 Successful Test Flights Since 1989

 

SUNNYVALE, Calif. --- The U.S. Navy has conducted four successful test flights of the Trident II D5 Fleet Ballistic Missiles built by Lockheed Martin. The U.S. Navy launched the unarmed missiles Sept. 10 and 12 in the Atlantic Ocean from a submerged Ohio-class submarine home-ported at Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay, Georgia.

 

This event marked the 145th, 146th, 147th and 148th successful test flights of the D5 missile since design completion in 1989 – a reliability record unmatched by any other large ballistic missile.

 

"This ultra-capable system serves a critical role in deterring aggression," said Doug White, vice president of Fleet Ballistic Missile programs, Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company, the Navy's Trident missile prime contractor. "We are dedicated to supporting Navy Strategic Systems Programs in assuring the system's continued readiness, reliability, performance and affordability."

 

The Navy launched the missiles as part of Follow-on Commander's Evaluation Tests. The missiles had been converted into test configurations using kits produced by Lockheed Martin that contain range safety devices and flight telemetry instrumentation. As required by the Department of Defense's National Command Authority, the U.S. Navy conducts a continuing series of operational system evaluation tests of the Trident Strategic Weapon System under the testing guidelines of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

 

First deployed in 1990, the D5 missile is currently aboard U.S. Navy Ohio-class and U.K. Royal Navy Vanguard-class submarines. The three-stage, solid-propellant, inertial-guided ballistic missile can travel a nominal range of 4,000 nautical miles and carries multiple independently targeted reentry bodies. The Fleet Ballistic Missile team has produced six generations, each more capable than its predecessor: the Polaris A1, Polaris A2, Polaris A3, Poseidon C3, Trident I C4 and Trident II D5 missiles.

 

Lockheed Martin has been the Navy's strategic missile prime contractor since the program's inception in 1955. The United States and the United Kingdom signed the Polaris Sales Agreement in 1963, which was modified in 1982 to provide for the Trident II D5 missile system. Since 1968, Lockheed Martin has provided program management and engineering services to the Royal Navy under the terms of the agreement.

 

Lockheed Martin employees, principally in California, Georgia, Florida, Washington, Utah, Virginia, Scotland and England, support the design, development, production, test, operation and sustainment of the Trident Strategic Weapon System.

 

Lockheed Martin leads the industry in performance and domain expertise in strategic missile and missile defense systems, designing and producing ballistic missiles, interceptors, target missiles and reentry systems with unmatched reliability and a focus on affordable high-quality systems and services.

 

 

Headquartered in Bethesda, Md., Lockheed Martin is a global security and aerospace company that employs about 116,000 people worldwide and is principally engaged in the research, design, development, manufacture, integration and sustainment of advanced technology systems, products, and services. The corporation's net sales for 2012 were $47.2 billion.

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 07:20
Commentary: US Needs a Minerals Policy

Rare earth oxides. Clockwise from top center praseodymium, cerium, lanthanum, neodymium, samarium, and gadolinium - Photoh by Peggy Greb, US Department of Agriculture

 

Sep. 25, 2013 - by HAL QUINN – Defense News              

 

Reliance on Foreign Sources Risks Readiness

 

In June, the US House Armed Services Committee released a draft of the fiscal 2014 Defense Authorization Act, which included several proposals dealing with critical minerals often used in Defense Department weapon systems.

 

For years, the Pentagon has raised concerns about access to minerals, and yet the government still lacks a modern, coherent minerals procurement strategy and useful mineral resources remain locked beneath US soil. As a result, US military and defense contractors find themselves at the mercy of foreign countries for the minerals they need.

 

Minerals are critical components of the advanced technologies on which modern militaries rely. Each year, DoD must acquire roughly 750,000 tons of minerals for an array of systems to ensure America’s fighting force remains at the cutting-edge. Beryllium, for example, is used in the airborne forward-looking infrared system, missile guidance systems and surveillance satellites, while molybdenum is an effective smoke suppressant and fire retardant — especially useful in the confined spaces on aircraft.

 

Despite the importance of these resources, the military and its suppliers are unable to readily access many of the minerals they need. As revealed by the DoD’s 2013 Strategic and Critical Materials Report, the US faces shortfalls of 23 minerals crucial to national security. This year, the US Geological Survey warned that we remain 100 percent dependent on imports for 18 minerals — many of which were flagged in the DoD’s report.

 

As the world’s population surges and millions join the middle class in fast-rising economies, demand and competition for these vital ores will continue to rise. According to a recent report by retired Army Brig. Gen. John Adams for the Alliance for American Manufacturing, “The increased demand for minerals has encouraged resource nationalism, where countries seek to exert greater control over the extraction and processing of key elements. Many minerals are mined in only a few countries, exposing the United States to potential supply disruptions and other risks.”

 

Night-vision devices (NVDs) offer a prime example of how supply disruptions threaten our military. NVDs are integral to countless defense operations and were key to mission success in capturing Osama Bin Laden. Despite ranking in the top four globally for rare earth reserves, the US imports nearly 80 percent of the rare earth elements needed to manufacture NVDs — among other defense technologies — from China. In recent years, China has imposed export restrictions on rare earths, forcing prices for the minerals to increase by nearly 300 percent and tightening the supplies available to American manufacturers.

 

Simply put, the United States cannot remain at the mercy of foreign governments for key security minerals and continue to jeopardize its strategic autonomy.

 

There is a solution to these escalating supply concerns, one that would both boost America’s security outlook and the economy: the $6.2 trillion worth of key minerals within US borders. Minerals such as copper, zinc and nickel could be extracted in greater abundance domestically with improved regulatory certainty. The extraction of these minerals would also generate a number of other crucial minerals for which we’re facing tight supplies. Copper ore, for example, contains rhenium, selenium and tellurium, along with small amounts of rare-earth elements. Zinc ore contains indium, germanium and cadmium.

 

But under the current minerals mining permitting process — which is marked by unnecessary delays and redundancies at the local, state and federal levels — it can take up to 10 years to secure approval to mine for these and countless other minerals in the United States. This is five times longer than it takes in countries with comparably stringent environmental standards, such as Australia and Canada. This policy pitfall has driven investment overseas, leading to a 13 percent drop in our nation’s share of global investments in metals mining over the past decade and an increased reliance on mineral imports.

 

Encouraging domestic mineral production and establishing secure mineral supply chains for manufacturers and the US military would put our national security back into our own hands. The bipartisan National Strategic and Critical Minerals Production Act of 2013, introduced by US Rep. Mark Amodei, R-Nev., would address this national challenge. The bill would ensure a predictable and streamlined permitting process that maintains strict environmental protections, making the US more attractive to investment in mining and facilitating the development of minerals needed across our security spectrum.

 

For the US, a stable and robust mineral supply is, and will continue to be, a strong pillar supporting the nation’s global competitiveness, a key driver of its technological prowess and the foundation of countless national defenses. Allies and competitors alike have enacted policies to address minerals security, and it’s time for the United States to do the same. A reformed permitting process for minerals mines is a long-overdue first step.

 

Hal Quinn, president and CEO of the National Mining Association, which advocates on behalf of the US mining industry.

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 07:20
GD Wins $152M for Virginia-class SSNs

Sept. 25, 2013 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: US Department of Defense; issued Sept. 24, 2013)

 

Pentagon Contract Announcement

 

Electric Boat Corp., Groton, Conn., is being awarded a $152,448,187 modification to previously awarded contract (N00024-10-C-2118) to exercise options for continued lead-yard services and development studies and design efforts related to Virginia-class submarines.

 

Work will be performed in Groton, Conn. (91.1 percent), Newport News, Va. (4 percent), Quonset, R.I. (3.5 percent), and Newport, R.I. (1.4 percent), and is expected to be completed by September 2014. Fiscal 2012 and 2013 shipbuilding and conversion, Navy, fiscal 2013 research, development, test and evaluation funding in the amount of $13,097,000 will be obligated at time of award and will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year.

 

The Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, D.C., is the contracting activity.

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 07:20
Drone Warfare Version 2.0: Great Power Edition

September 26, 2013 By  Zachary Keck - thediplomat.com

 

The first decade of drone and unmanned warfare has been the exclusive domain of nation states like the U.S. and Israel using armed drones to target leaders of non-state actors like al-Qaeda, the Taliban and Hamas.

 

This type of drone warfare will almost certainly continue into the future, albeit at a reduced pace in the case of the U.S. targeting al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders. Other nation states may decide to make similar use of drones, if reports that China considered using drones to target an international drug trader are any indication.

 

Meanwhile, a second generation of drone warfare is taking shape: one in which countries employ unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) against other nation states.

 

As the world's military superpower, it should come as no surprise that the U.S. is taking the lead in this endeavor. In May of this year, the U.S. garnered some headlines when it launched the X-47B drone from the nuclear aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush off the coast of Virginia. Many more heads were turned in July, when the X-47B drone became the first unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) to make a landing on the same aircraft carrier.

 

Last week a X-47B drone marked the 100th flight in the U.S. Navy’s Unmanned Combat Air System Demonstration (UCAS-D) program, which is geared toward maturing the capability to operate combat UAVs from aircraft carriers.

 

A press release announcing the 100th flight stated: “The Navy UCAS program successfully completed all objectives for the carrier demonstration phase with the X-47B.” It went on to note: “The program is currently planning for continued carrier integration demonstrations and has also begun surrogate Learjet testing of the autonomous aerial refueling (AAR) capability.” Earlier this month, the Navy announced key successes in this latter, refueling objective.

 

This followed the Navy’s announcement in August that the two prototype X-47Bs would not be retired to museums as planned, but instead would continue to be utilized for the purpose of, among other things, “developing unmanned aircraft carrier fleet concept of operations.”

 

Also in August, the U.S. Naval Air System Command (NAVAIR), which is overseeing the efforts to develop a carrier-based UAV fleet, announced that it had awarded US$15 million Preliminary Design Review (PDR) contracts to four defense companies for the Unmanned Carrier Launched Airborne Surveillance and Strike (UCLASS) program, which is designed to provide the U.S. Navy with its first deployed carrier-based unmanned air system.

 

As NAVAIR explained in a press release announcing the contracts, the carrier-based drone “will provide persistent, unmanned, semi-autonomous, carrier-based Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance and Targeting (ISR &T) with precision strike capability to support 24/7 carrier operational coverage.”

 

According to Defense News, the carrier-based UAVs will initially have a strike capability of around 2,000 km. This hints at a key purpose of the drones; namely, to allow the U.S. to continue to strike China with sea-based aircraft while keeping America’s aircraft carriers outside the range of the PLA’s DF-21 anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM). In other words, the sea-based drones will be a key component of America’s efforts to counter adversaries’ anti access/area denial (A2/AD) strategies.   

 

The U.S. is also putting together the larger infrastructure to execute this strategy. For example, in July Rear Adm. Thomas J. Moore, the Navy’s Program Executive Officer for Aircraft Carriers, confirmed that the Ford-class aircraft carriers, the next-generation U.S. carriers, are being built with the capabilities to launch large fleets of UAVs off them.

 

As Moore explained of the Ford Class: “The flight deck has been designed to be bigger and have a higher sortie generation rate. The ship itself is built with three-times the electrical generating capacity than the Nimitz {Ford predecessor} class has – so it is not hard to envision that we are going to be flying unmanned aircraft off that ship.”

 

One crucial difference between using drones against terrorists in areas where the air force enjoys air superiority, and in using them against peer-competitors in contested air space, is that the vulnerability of the drones to air defense systems becomes a key concern in the latter environment. Thus, whereas U.S. drones can loiter over Pakistani airspace for days trying to pinpoint the location of al-Qaeda operatives, they will enjoy no such luxury in trying to eliminate China’s land-based missile systems.

 

As such, the carrier-based combat drones that come out of the UCLASS will be unlikely to conduct their own surveillance in many of the missions in which they were operate. For that, the U.S. is developing different UAVs. As Foreign Policy reported last month, the U.S. Navy envisions “swarms of tiny drones infiltrating heavily defended skies at will.”

 

Summarizing a U.S. Air Force official, the report noted that “these bug-like surveillance bots will be particularly useful in the Pacific…. Because that represents the toughest challenge for American spyplanes: snooping on say, a China equipped with increasingly advanced air defenses.” Presumably, these nano-drones will collect intelligence on targets for the UCLASS drones.

 

The U.S. is developing another unmanned system to counter China’s A2/AD strategy. Earlier this month, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) solicited bids from defense companies for its Hydra program, which will “develop and demonstrate an unmanned undersea system, providing a novel delivery mechanism for insertion of unmanned air and underwater vehicles into operational environments.” News reports suggest that submarines will also be launched from the Hydra system. This would give the U.S. the ability to launch carrier-based aircraft from devices that would be impervious to China’s ASBMs.

An X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System demonstrator launches from the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush (CVN_77) May 14, 2013, in the Atlantic Ocean

An X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System demonstrator launches from the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush (CVN_77) May 14, 2013, in the Atlantic Ocean

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 07:20
$18m US Navy LRLAP Artillery Shell Contract

25/09/2013 by Paul Fiddian - Armed Forces International's Lead Reporter

 

The US Navy's next-generation ship-launched artillery shell is moving into production, according to Lockheed Martin's September 2013 statement.

 

Set to equip future US Navy destroyers, the LRLAP (Long-Range Land Attack Projectile) is a 155mm GPS-guided artillery shell with a maximum range of 190 kilometres.

 

The LRLAP programme is being led by Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control and BAE Systems is the prime contractor.

 

According to Lockheed Martin, once it enters service, the LRLAP will deliver a performance capability beyond those of all preceding US Navy artillery shells. Designed to facilitate long-range precision strikes, the shell falls almost vertically - a feature designed to mitigate the risk of collateral damage. Able to strike a variety of targets, the shell also reportedly possess three times the impact capacity of older 5 inch naval ballistic rounds.

 

Long-Range Land Attack Projectile

 

The Long-Range Land Attack Projectile development programme is now in transition, supported by the US National Warheads and Energetics Consortium's (NWEC's) $18 million contract.

 

In times ahead, the LRLAP will be fired from the US Navy's DDG 1000 Zumwalt Class Destroyers. Set to be introduced in 2014, these three stealth-heavy warships will boast state-of-the-art sonar systems and be armed with RIM-162 Evolved Sea Sparrow and Tomahawk missiles, besides the LRLAP-launching 155mm Advanced Gun Systems.

 

LRLAP Shell Production

 

"This contract represents a significant step towards fielding LRLAP to support the Navy's requirement for surface fire support", Lockheed Martin's LRLAP programme manager, Richard Benton, explained in the firm's Long-Range Land Attack Projectile production press release. "Fire support to troops deployed ashore is a critical capabilities gap, which LRLAP fills with precision lethality."

 

It is planned that the LRLAP 155mm artillery shell will be in US Navy service by 2016. By this point, the first DDG 1000 destroyer should have attained IOC (Initial Operational Capability) status.

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 07:20
Le patron de la NSA défend la "mission noble" de son agence

25.09.2013 Le Monde.fr (AFP)

 

Le général Keith Alexander, patron de l'Agence américaine de sécurité nationale (NSA) a estimé, mercredi 25 septembre lors d'une conférence à Washington sur la sécurité informatique, le Billington Cybersecurity Summit, que les révélations sur ses programmes de surveillance par l'ancien consultant Edward Snowden, avaient été "dramatisées et exacerbées dans la plupart des médias".

 

Lire : "Prism, Snowden, surveillance de la NSA : 7 questions pour tout comprendre"

 

"Ce qui a été mis en avant dans la plupart des médias, c'est que nous écoutons vos conversations, que nous lisons vos e-mails. Ce n'est pas vrai. Nous savons que notre travail est de défendre ce pays. C'est une mission noble.

L'avenir de ce pays dépend de notre capacité à nous défendre contre les attaques informatiques et les menaces terroristes, et nous avons besoin d'outils pour le faire".

 

Le général Alexander a assuré qu'il y avait eu très peu d'attentats aux Etats-Unis depuis ceux du 11 septembre 2001, au regard de la croissance des menaces dans le monde. "Ce n'est pas un hasard, c'est dû à un gros travail", a-t-il souligné, en rappelant que plus de 50 menaces terroristes dans le monde avaient été contrecarrées grâce aux renseignements recueillis à l'aide des programmes de surveillance, qui ont été très critiqués par l'Allemagne et le Brésil.

 

Au sujet d'Edward Snowden, qu'il n'a pas nommé, il a affirmé : "Nous lui avons fait confiance et il a trahi notre confiance. Cela n'arrivera plus. Cela n'en fait pas un héros."

 

Lire notre infographie : "Plongée dans la "pieuvre" de la cybersurveillance de la NSA"

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 07:20
GD Inks 2nd SOCOM Ground Vehicle Contract in a Month

General Dynamics' Advanced Light Strike Vehicle, a variant of the Flyer vehicle, was awarded a test and evaluation contract by US Special Operations Command. (General Dynamics)

 

Sep. 25, 2013 - By PAUL MCLEARY  - Defense News

 

QUANTICO, VA. — General Dynamics has scored a perfect two for two this year when gunning for US Special Operations Command ground vehicle contracts. It won the $562 million Ground Mobility Vehicle (GMV) 1.1 bid in August — though the award is stalled by protests from AM General and Navistar — and has now secured a $5.8 million evaluation contract for a lighter, CV-22 Osprey transportable vehicle on Sept 12.

 

On Wednesday, GD spokeswoman Laurie VanBrocklin confirmed that the company’s Advanced Light Strike Vehicle — a variant of the “Flyer” vehicle that won SOCOM’s GMV contract — was awarded the 12-month test and evaluation contract that includes training and parts.

 

A government website outlines a contract “for a minimum basic quantity of 2 vehicles each with the ability to purchase 8 additional vehicles.”

 

The idea behind the program is to give operators a fast, protected, but lightly armored off-road vehicle that can roll out of the back of an Osprey and begin firing mounted weapons within 60 seconds.

 

In May, Defense News reported on comments made by Marine Lt. Col. Ken Burger, program manager for the Family of Special Operations Vehicles, who told an industry gathering that SOCOM’s plan is to request funding for the program beginning in the fiscal 2015 budget, and that Air Force Special Operations Command will begin doing combat evaluations of prototypes in 2014.

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26 septembre 2013 4 26 /09 /septembre /2013 07:20
Boeing Wins $225M for P-8 Trainers

Sept. 25, 2013 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: US Department of Defense; issued Sept. 24, 2013)

 

Pentagon Contract Announcement

 

The Boeing Co., Seattle, Wash., is being awarded a $225,000,000 modification to a previously awarded fixed-price-incentive-firm contract (N00019-12-C-0112) for the procurement of six operational flight trainers, six weapons tactics trainers, two part task trainers, one training systems support center, three 10-seat electronic classrooms, and one 20-seat electronic classroom in support of the U.S. Navy P-8A Poseidon low rate initial Production IV and full rate Production I aircraft.

 

Work will be performed in St. Louis, Mo. (30.4 percent); Tampa, Fla. (21.3 percent); Whidbey Island, Wash. (15.2 percent); Huntington Beach, Calif. (5.9 percent); San Francisco, Calif. (4.2 percent); Long Island, N.Y. (2 percent); Tulsa, Okla. (1.9 percent); Jacksonville, Fla. (.9 percent); and various locations throughout the United States (18.2 percent).

 

Work is expected to be completed in March 2018. Fiscal 2013 aircraft procurement, Navy contract funds in the amount of $225,000,000 are being obligated on this award, none of which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year.

 

The Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Md., is the contracting activity.

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25 septembre 2013 3 25 /09 /septembre /2013 22:45
Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti - source washingtonpost

Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti - source washingtonpost

Sept. 25, 2013 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: US Department of Defense; issued Sept. 24, 2013)

 

Pentagon Contract Announcement

 

B.L. Harbert International LLC, Birmingham, Ala., is being awarded a $150,703,040 firm-fixed-price contract for construction of a forward operating site at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti.

The site will be comprised of 11 buildings, site work and supporting facilities required to support current and emerging operational missions.

The following buildings will be constructed on a site that is approximately 20 acres in size: aircraft hangar, air operations center, armory, joint operations center/tactical operation center/communication center, berthing/fitness/morale, welfare and recreation facility, logistics warehouse, maritime/riggers facility, training facility, engineering facility, vehicle maintenance shop, tactical support facility, and an aircraft parking apron.

The contract also contains three unexercised options, which if exercised would increase cumulative contract value to $156,809,541.

Work will be performed in Djibouti, Africa, and is expected to be completed by August 2016.

Fiscal 2011 military construction overseas contingency operations supplemental appropriations, Army contract funds in the amount of $150,703,040 are obligated on this award and will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was competitively procured via the Navy Electronic Commerce Online website with 10 proposals received.

The Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Atlantic, Norfolk, Va., is the contracting activity (N62470-13-C-3001).

 

 

-- Caddell Construction Co., Inc., Montgomery, Ala., is being awarded a $36,169,500 firm-fixed-price contract for the design and construction of a combined headquarters building and joint operations center facility at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti.

The work to be performed provides for the design and construction of a multi-story building consisting of administrative space, open and private offices, and multi-purpose conference rooms.

There will be open storage secure areas with compartmented areas within.

The contract also contains two unexercised options, which if exercised would increase cumulative contract value to $39,484,500.

Work will be performed in Djibouti, Africa, and is expected to be completed by December 2015. Fiscal 2013 military construction overseas contingency operations supplemental appropriations, Navy contract funds in the amount of $36,169,500 are obligated on this award and will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was competitively procured via the Navy Electronic Commerce Online website, with 13 proposals received.

The Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Atlantic, Norfolk, Va., is the contracting activity (N62470-13-C-3000).

 

 

-- ITSI Gilbane Co., Walnut Creek, Calif., is being awarded a $16,635,737 firm-fixed-price contract for power plant upgrades at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti.

The work to be performed provides for electrical and mechanical renovations to Power Plant 2, Power Plant 3, and a modular building, Power Plant 2A.

The contractor will provide and install eight new power modules to supplement the four existing power modules, as well as an overflow fuel tank and a fuel line connecting Power Plant 2 and Power Plant 3.

Work will be performed in Djibouti, Africa, and is expected to be completed by October 2014.

Fiscal 2012 research development test and evaluation, Navy; fiscal 2012 operations and maintenance, Navy; and fiscal 2011 military construction overseas contingency operations supplemental appropriations, Army contract funds in the amount of $16,635,737 are being obligated on this award and will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was competitively procured via the Navy Electronic Commerce Online website, with 10 proposals received.

The Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Atlantic, Norfolk, Va., is the contracting activity (N62470-13-C-3006).

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25 septembre 2013 3 25 /09 /septembre /2013 18:20
Earlier, Bigger Debt Ceiling Crisis Threatens US Military Pay

Sep. 25, 2013 By RICK MAZE – Defense News

 

With Congress still wrestling with how to avoid a government shutdown on Tuesday, the US Treasury Department issued another piece of bad fiscal news Wednesday, saying that the debt ceiling crisis will arrive sooner and be worse than previous estimates.

 

By no later than Oct. 17, the nation will have just $30 billion in cash to pay bills, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew says in a letter to congressional leaders. This is about $20 billion less cash on hand than expected, and the financial crisis involving the nation’s $16.7 billion debt limit comes about two weeks earlier than expected.

 

With the $30 billion in cash and whatever revenue the government takes in, there would not be enough money to pay bills, forcing the Treasury to set priorities.

 

“This amount would be far short of net expenditures on certain days, which can be as high as $60 billion,” Lew warned. “If we have insufficient cash on hand, it would be impossible for the United States of America to meet all of its obligations for the first time in our history.”

 

The House of Representatives approved a plan last week that calls for creditors to receive top priority for payment in order to preserve the nation’s credit standing, with the military and federal civilian payroll, veterans’ benefits, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid payments to doctors, food stamps and benefits ranking lower.

 

Lew called this “ill advised.”

 

“Any plan to prioritize some payments over others is simply default by another name,” he said.

 

“The United States should never have to choose, for example, whether to pay Social Security to seniors, pay benefits to our veterans, or make payments to state and local jurisdictions and health care providers under Medicare and Medicaid,” he said. “There is no way of knowing the damage any prioritization plan would have on our economy and financial markets.”

 

One possibility for dealing with limited cash would be to provide partial payments to beneficiaries, but Lew did not discuss the option in his letter.

 

Like the government shutdown threat, service members would continue to accrue pay even if the government is unable to pay them and would receive full payment when money becomes available.

 

Showdown Over a Shutdown

 

If the White House and lawmakers on Capitol Hill fail to agree on a temporary spending deal by Monday, the US government will shut down for the first time since 1996. Click here for complete coverage.

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25 septembre 2013 3 25 /09 /septembre /2013 17:35
Avions de combat : Boeing prend une claque en Corée du Sud

Le F-15 Silent eagle

 

24/09/2013 Michel Cabirol – laTribune.fr

 

Séoul a annoncé reprendre à zéro la procédure d'appel d'offres pour 60 avions de combat, le plus gros contrat de défense jamais passé par le pays. Boeing faisait figure de grand favori avec le F-15 Silent Eagle.

 

C'est un gros revers pour Boeing en Corée du Sud. Séoul a annoncé mardi reprendre à zéro la procédure d'appel d'offres pour 60 avions de combat, le plus gros contrat de défense jamais passé par le pays, et pour lequel l'américain Boeing faisait figure de grand favori avec le F-15 Silent Eagle. Et pour cause le groupe américain avait soumis la seule offre correspondant au budget maximal prévu par Séoul. Il était donc à ce titre le seul fournisseur en lice. Les offres des autres candidats Lockheed Martin (F-35 Lightning II) et le consortium européen Eurofighter (BAE Systems, EADS et l'italien Finmeccanica), qui propose le Typhoon, avaient dépassé le budget autorisé.

L'agence gouvernementale sud-coréenne en charge des achats d'armement (DAPA) s'est prononcée  contre l'octroi à Boeing d'un contrat de 8.300 milliards de wons (5,7 milliards d'euros) pour la fourniture de 60 avions de combat, précisant qu'elle allait relancer l'appel d'offres. "Une majorité des membres du comité (de l'Agence) ont décidé de rejeter le F-15 et de recommencer le projet", a confirmé un porte-parole du ministère de la Défense, Kim Min-Seok. Les Silent Eagles ne répondent pas aux critères opérationnels requis, notamment au regard de la menace nucléaire émanant de la Corée du Nord. Le ministère de la Défense a précisé qu'il faudrait environ un an pour mener à terme un nouvel appel d'offres en vue de remplacer une flotte vieillissante de F-4 et de F-5.

 

Des critiques sur le F-15 de Boeing

Le processus d'appel d'offres a été émaillé de nombreuses tensions, en raison de l'inflexibilité du gouvernement à ne pas vouloir dépasser le budget fixé par le parlement. En août, la presse sud-coréenne affirmait qu'EADS avait été éliminé faut d'avoir répondu à certains critères, une information que l'européen avait aussitôt démentie. La presse sud-coréenne ajoutait que Lockheed Martin s'était retiré. Fin août, quinze anciens haut responsables des forces de l'air ont signé une pétition qualifiant d'"irrationnelle" la procédure qui avait éliminé les appareils de Lockheed Martin et d'EADS.

Les critiques reprochent au F-15 Silent Eagle de ne pas être équipé des capacités furtives permettant d'échapper aux radars, contrairement à des avions de combat plus modernes, tels que les F-35. Le gouvernement a donc décidé de reprendre toute la procédure à zéro, "rapidement, en réajustant le budget et d'autres questions, a indiqué un porte-parole de l'Agence. Nous allons accélérer les choses afin de nous assurer que le vide dans notre défense nationale soit limité à un minimum de temps". La DAPA avait pourtant estimé auparavant que tout report de la procédure remettrait en cause le projet de porter à 430 d'ici à 2019 le nombre de chasseurs dont dispose l'armée sud-coréenne. Plusieurs possibilités seront examinées : le nombre d'avions commandés pourrait changer, la période de financement pourrait être prolongée, ou le contrat pourrait porter sur plusieurs types d'avions.

 

Avions de combat : Boeing prend une claque en Corée du Sud

Le Rafale vainqueur des évaluations en 2002 mais le F15 vainqueur... des politiques  

Jusqu'à présent, les fournisseurs dans le secteur de la défense venaient pour la plupart des Etats-Unis, en raison de l'étroitesse des liens entre les deux pays en matière militaire. Washington reste un allié de poids de Séoul face à la Corée du Nord. Mais Séoul a semblé ces derniers mois élargir la liste de ses fournisseurs. En janvier, le pays a ainsi préféré l'anglo-italien AgustaWestland à l'américain Sikorsky pour la livraison de six hélicoptères à la Marine sud-coréenne, un contrat de 567 millions de dollars. Il avait également choisi en 2006 Eurocopter pour son programme d'hélicoptère de transport, le Surion (245 hélicoptères de la classe des 9 tonnes). 

La Corée du Sud a acquis 60 F-15 de Boeing depuis 2002, contre le rafale, pourtant déclaré vainqueur à l'issue des évaluations techniques et opérationnelles. Séoul avait dû changer les règles du jeu sous la pression de Washington en y incluant un paramètre politique. Les Sud-Coréens veulent aujourd'hui acquérir 60 autres avions de combat d'ici à 2021. La décision de relancer l'appel d'offres devrait certainement profiter au F-35 de Lockheed Martin, disqualifié uniquement en raison de son prix dans la procédure initiale. Et en général, ce que veut Washington au pays du Matin calme, c'est souvent parole d'évangile...

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25 septembre 2013 3 25 /09 /septembre /2013 17:35
Taiwan Receives First US Anti-Submarine Aircraft

Sep. 25, 2013 – Defense news (AFP)

 

TAIPEI — Taiwan on Wednesday received the first of 12 anti-submarine aircraft from the United States, as it beefs up its naval defenses against China, the military said.

 

Television footage showed the P-3C Orion patrol aircraft landing at an air base in southern Pingtung county. Water was then splashed on the plane in a brief welcome ceremony.

 

The other 11 planes are scheduled for delivery by 2015, the military said.

 

Washington agreed in 2007 to sell Taiwan the refurbished P-3C Orion patrol aircraft, which reportedly will expand the surveillance range of Taipei's anti-submarine fleet tenfold.

 

The P-3C fleet, which will cost around $1.96 billion, is intended to replace the island's aging S-2T anti-submarine aircraft to carry out maritime patrol and reconnaissance.

 

Ties between Taipei and Beijing have improved markedly since Ma Ying-jeou became Taiwan's president in 2008 on a China-friendly platform.

 

However, Beijing still regards the island as part of its territory and has refused to rule out the use of force against Taiwan. The two sides split in 1949 after a civil war.

 

Taiwan has built up a defense force equipped with weapons acquired mostly from the United States, despite Washington's switching diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing in 1979.

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25 septembre 2013 3 25 /09 /septembre /2013 17:20
Think-Tank Report Targets Benefits, Force Structure To Hold Down Spending

Sep. 24, 2013 - By RICK MAZE  - Defense News

 

A 27-point plan for the Defense Department to live within 2011 budget caps was unveiled Tuesday by a national security think tank.

 

The Stimson Center plan, the result of recommendations from a group of prominent advisers including several retired four-star flag and general officers, shaves about $21 billion from force structure, $22 billion from management reforms and $6 billion from weapons modernization. It achieves about $50 billion in savings, slightly more than the $47.7 billion reduction needed to stay within the 2015 spending limit cap set for the Defense Department set by the 2011 Budget Control Act.

 

The 2011 caps allow for $476.1 billion of spending on defense in 2015, down from the $527.5 billion budget for fiscal 2013.

 

Management reforms include some dramatic changes in benefits with immediate savings in 2015. These include $5 billion in added out-of-pocket expenses in retiree health care in 2015, $2 billion in reductions in retired pay and $1billion in savings from cutting all taxpayer support for commissaries and exchanges.

 

Also included in management reform is a recommendation for consolidating infrastructure, reducing both federal civilian and contract employees, reducing headquarters staffs and defense agencies, and cutting back on some types of training.

 

The biggest savings recommended in weapons programs is slowing the purchase of F-35 Joint Strike Fighters, which cuts $4 billion in 2015.

 

Also recommended is canceling both the Army ground combat vehicle and joint light tactical vehicle, saving $1 billion.

 

The recommendations come from an advisory committee that includes two former vice chairmen of the joint chiefs, a former chief of naval operations and two retired Army four-star generals.

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