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5 juin 2013 3 05 /06 /juin /2013 17:45
U.S. transfers suspected senior al Qaeda member to Mauritania

03 June 2013 defenceWeb (Reuters)

 

U.S. authorities have transferred Younis al-Mauritani, a suspected senior member of al Qaeda previously held in Afghanistan, to Mauritania, officials in the West African nation said.

 

Pakistan said in September 2011 it arrested al-Mauritani, better known in his homeland Mauritania as Youssouf Al Mauritani, during a joint operation with U.S. intelligence services.

 

Witnesses at the airport in Mauritania's capital, Nouakchott, saw a U.S. military plane deliver a prisoner late on Friday, Reuters reports.

 

Mauritanian authorities confirmed al-Mauritani's identity, adding that he had been transferred from the U.S. military base in Bagram, Afghanistan.

 

"It's indeed Youssouf Al Mauritani, real name Abderhamane Ould Mohamed Al-Hussein," a senior security official told Reuters, asking not to be named.

 

"He was in Bagram and was handed over to the Mauritanian authorities by the Americans. He indeed arrived at the Nouakchott airport last night," he said.

 

A Mauritanian judicial official specialized in terrorism cases also confirmed that the prisoner transferred on Friday was al-Mauritani. U.S. embassy officials in Nouakchott declined to comment.

 

Pakistani military authorities said Al Mauritani was planning to attack U.S. economic interests including pipelines, hydro-electric dams and oil tankers when he was captured.

 

They said he had also been tasked by Osama bin Laden with hitting European and Australian targets.

 

Mauritanian authorities issued an international warrant for his arrest, accusing him of participating in a 2005 attack on the Lemgheity army base which killed 17 soldiers and a deadly shoot-out with police in Nouakchott in 2008.

 

Mauritania, with one of West Africa's more effective armies, carried out military strikes against Islamist bases in neighboring Mali in 2010 and 2011 and is seen as one of the West's principal allies against al Qaeda in the region.

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5 juin 2013 3 05 /06 /juin /2013 12:30
F-35B flies with gun pod installed - photo Lockheed Martin

F-35B flies with gun pod installed - photo Lockheed Martin

5 Juin 2013 Dan R. Assayah / Défense - .israelvalley.com

 

C’est décidé. Le géant américain du secteur de la défense Lockheed Martin fait un pas très lourd de sens et qui démontre encore une fois la vitalité technologique d’Israël. Dans quelques mois un superbe centre de Recherche et développement va ouvrir aux portes du désert du negev. Selon le journal économique Globes la formalisation d’un accord a eu lieu avec le Ministère de la défense.

 

Lockheed Martin est la première entreprise américaine et mondiale de défense et de sécurité. Comme ses principaux concurrents, elle conçoit et réalise différents produits dans lesquels l’électronique et la technologie jouent un rôle déterminant.

 

En 2012, 84 % des ventes de l’entreprise ont été faites à l’État américain, et le reste principalement à d’autres États. En 2012, sur les 45,8 milliards de $ de chiffre d’affaires, 17,3 milliards proviennent de contrats signé avec l’administration américaine (10,9 milliards dans la défense, 6,6 milliards dans le civil).

 

Lockheed Martin est né en 1995, par la fusion entre Lockheed et Martin. Les deux entreprises étaient à l’origine des groupes aéronautiques. Aujourd’hui, Lockheed Martin reste entre autres connue pour ses avions de combat, le F-16, le F-22 et le futur F-35. Ils représentent environ 20 % du chiffre d’affaires.

 

IsraelValley Plus : Sources inform ’’Globes’’ that Lockheed Martin Company (NYSE: LMT), the world’s biggest defense company, will establish a development center in Israel. It will collaborate with Bynet Data Communications Ltd. in building the IDF Intelligence Corp’s technology campus in the Negev, known as the 5/9 project.

 

Lockheed Martin knows the Israeli market well – the Air Force is preparing to receive its F-35 stealth fighter – but the company is now changing its approach to the local market. Israel is not just a loyal and enthusiastic customer of its planes and defense systems, but an arena for development activity.

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5 juin 2013 3 05 /06 /juin /2013 11:50
L'Otan assurera la cyberdéfense de tous ses pays membres (secrétaire général)

BRUXELLES, 4 juin - RIA Novosti

 

L'Otan garantira le niveau nécessaire de cyberdéfense à l'ensemble des 28 pays membres, a promis mardi le secrétaire général de l'Alliance Anders Fogh Rasmussen.

 

"Nous pourrions en faire davantage pour aider certains alliés s'ils font l'objet d'attaques informatiques", a déclaré M.Rasmussen devant les journalistes à son arrivée à une rencontre ministérielle de l'Otan à Bruxelles.

 

Les ministres de la Défense des 28 pays de l'Otan sont réunis pour aborder pendant deux jours la coopération en matière de cybersécurité, les armées occidentales étant confrontées à une recrudescence des attaques virtuelles.

 

En novembre dernier, l'Alliance a mené les exercices d'état-major Cyber Coalition pour tester son potentiel technique en matière de cyberdéfense. En vertu du scénario, des hackers ont attaqué l'Otan et les infrastructures nationales des pays alliés.

 

Le nouveau concept stratégique de l'Alliance, approuvé en novembre 2010 lors du sommet de Lisbonne, classe la cyberdéfense parmi ses grandes priorités. En 2008, le Conseil de l'Otan a créé un Centre de cyberdéfense à Tallinn (Estonie), lui attribuant le statut d'organisation militaire internationale. A ce jour, les travaux du centre associent dix pays, notamment les Etats-Unis, l'Estonie, l'Allemagne, la Slovaquie, l'Italie, la Lituanie, la Lettonie, l'Espagne, la Hongrie et la Pologne.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 21:30
Syrie: Washington va déployer des missiles Patriot et des F-16 à Amman

03 juin 2013 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

WASHINGTON - Les Etats-Unis vont déployer des missiles Patriot et des avions de combat F-16 en Jordanie, pays frontalier de la Syrie, pour des manoeuvres militaires, après lesquelles certains de ces équipements pourraient rester sur place, ont annoncé lundi des responsables américains.

 

Les lanceurs de missiles Patriot et les avions F-16 ont été autorisés à être déployés en Jordanie pour l'exercice dénommé Eager Lion, a indiqué le porte-parole du CentCom (commandement central) américain, le lieutenant-colonel T.G. Taylor dans un communiqué.

 

Pour renforcer la capacité et la position défensive de la Jordanie, certains de ces équipements pourraient rester sur place au-delà de l'exercice, à la demande du gouvernement jordanien, a-t-il précisé.

 

Cette décision de maintenir des équipements en Jordanie pourrait alimenter à nouveau les spéculations sur une éventuelle intervention militaire des Etats-Unis en Syrie, ce que la Maison Blanche considère comme la dernière des options possibles.

 

Les responsables américains n'ont pas précisé combien de F-16 participeraient aux manoeuvres ou combien resteraient ensuite dans le royaume.

 

Les Etats-Unis ont déjà soutenu une opération similaire au début de l'année en Turquie, quand l'Otan a déployé des lanceurs de missiles Patriot le long de la frontière turque, mitoyenne de la Syrie.

 

Ce déploiement en Jordanie intervient après plusieurs avertissements de Washington au régime du président syrien Bachar al-Assad à propos de livraisons d'armes au mouvement chiite libanais Hezbollah, soutien de Damas.

 

Israël a mené des raids aériens en Syrie pour tenter d'empêcher ces transferts d'armes.

 

La Jordanie, qui accueille plus de 500.000 réfugiés syriens, elle aussi s'inquiète d'un débordement du conflit syrien.

 

En avril, le secrétaire américain à la Défense, Chuck Hagel, avait révélé que quelque 150 militaires américains avaient été déployés en Jordanie depuis l'an dernier, portant à plus de 200 hommes la présence militaire américaine dans le royaume.

 

Les missiles Patriot peuvent abattre des missiles Scud ou d'autres missiles de courte portée, qui font partie de l'arsenal du régime d'Assad. Ils peuvent aussi être utilisés pour une zone d'exclusion aérienne ou d'autres opérations aériennes.

 

Les combats continuaient de faire rage lundi en Syrie. Un missile sol-sol a tué 26 personnes dans le nord de la Syrie, au moment où l'offensive menée par l'armée syrienne, épaulée par le Hezbollah, contre la localité rebelle de Qousseir (ouest) entrait dans sa troisième semaine.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 21:30
Syrie: Washington va déployer des missiles Patriot et des F-16 en Jordanie

3 juin 2013 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

WASHINGTON - Les Etats-Unis vont déployer des missiles Patriot et des avions de combat F-16 en Jordanie, pays frontalier de la Syrie, pour des manoeuvres militaires, après lesquelles certains de ces équipements pourraient rester sur place, ont annoncé lundi des responsables américains.

 

Les lanceurs de missiles Patriot et les avions F-16 ont été autorisés à être déployés en Jordanie pour l'exercice dénommé Eager Lion, a indiqué le porte-parole du CentCom (commandement central) américain, le lieutenant-colonel T.G. Taylor dans un communiqué.

 

Pour renforcer la capacité et la position défensive de la Jordanie, certains de ces équipements pourraient rester sur place au-delà de l'exercice, à la demande du gouvernement jordanien, a-t-il précisé.

 

Cette décision de maintenir des équipements en Jordanie pourrait alimenter à nouveau les spéculations sur une éventuelle intervention militaire des Etats-Unis en Syrie, ce que la Maison Blanche considère comme la dernière des options possibles.

 

Les responsables américains n'ont pas précisé combien de F-16 participeraient aux manoeuvres ou combien resteraient ensuite dans le royaume.

 

Les Etats-Unis ont déjà soutenu une opération similaire au début de l'année en Turquie, quand l'Otan a déployé des lanceurs de missiles Patriot le long de la frontière turque, mitoyenne de la Syrie.

 

Ce déploiement en Jordanie intervient après plusieurs avertissements de Washington au régime du président syrien Bachar al-Assad à propos de livraisons d'armes au mouvement chiite libanais Hezbollah, soutien de Damas.

 

Israël a mené des raids aériens en Syrie pour tenter d'empêcher ces transferts d'armes.

 

La Jordanie, qui accueille plus de 500.000 réfugiés syriens, elle aussi s'inquiète d'un débordement du conflit syrien.

 

En avril, le secrétaire américain à la Défense, Chuck Hagel, avait révélé que quelque 150 militaires américains avaient été déployés en Jordanie depuis l'an dernier, portant à plus de 200 hommes la présence militaire américaine dans le royaume.

 

Les missiles Patriot peuvent abattre des missiles Scud ou d'autres missiles de courte portée, qui font partie de l'arsenal du régime d'Assad. Ils peuvent aussi être utilisés pour une zone d'exclusion aérienne ou d'autres opérations aériennes.

 

Les combats continuaient de faire rage lundi en Syrie. Un missile sol-sol a tué 26 personnes dans le nord de la Syrie, au moment où l'offensive menée par l'armée syrienne, épaulée par le Hezbollah, contre la localité rebelle de Qousseir (ouest) entrait dans sa troisième semaine.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 19:40
Bouclier: pas de concessions américaines envers la Russie (Kerry)

WASHINGTON, 3 juin - RIA Novosti

 

La décision des Etats-Unis de renoncer à la quatrième étape de déploiement du système de défense antimissile en Europe ne constitue pas une concession faite à Moscou, a déclaré lundi le secrétaire d'Etat américain John Kerry  à l'issue d'une rencontre avec le ministre polonais Radoslaw Sikorski à Washington.

 

"En ce qui concerne la défense antimissile, les Etats-Unis ont consenti zéro de concessions à la Russie. Aucune discussion n'a été engagée avec Moscou concernant la décision que nous avons prise relativement à la quatrième étape. Ceci a été fait spécialement pour éviter les accusations d'arrangements ou de concessions", a répondu M. Kerry interrogé par un journaliste polonais.

 

Les Etats-Unis avaient auparavant notifié à la Russie leur décision de ne pas réaliser la quatrième étape de déploiement du bouclier antimissile en Europe, tout en indiquant qu'ils pouvaient accélérer la mise en place de la troisième étape.

 

Moscou estime que le projet américain de défense antimissile constitue une menace pour la sécurité nationale de la Russie, car il peut avoir pour but de neutraliser le potentiel stratégique russe et non de contrer le programme balistique iranien.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 12:30
L’armement des rebelles syriens dépendra des négociations, indique Hague

3 juin 2013 Guysen News International

 

La décision de Londres de fournir des armes aux rebelles syriens dépendra de l’évolution des négociations de paix, a déclaré lundi le chef de la diplomatie britannique William Hague, cité lundi par le journal allemand Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Le secrétaire au Foreign Office a assuré que la Grande-Bretagne considérait comme prioritaires les efforts des Etats-Unis et de la Russie pour organiser une conférence de paix à Genève, même s’il n’est « pas excessivement optimiste ».

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 12:20
US Marine Corps to receive HDT ArctiX shelter

3 June 2013 naval-technology.com

 

The US Marine Corps Systems Command (MCSC) has awarded a contract to HDT Global's (HDT) Expeditionary Systems Group division to deliver its HDT ArctiX shelter systems.

 

Under the contract, the company will supply HDT Base-X expeditionary shelter family, the HDT ArctiX shelter to allow the US MCSC to operate in austere cold weather locations.

 

HDT Expeditionary Systems Group USMC/Joint Programs business development vice-president Mike Stolarz said: "The HDT ArctiX shelter system gives the USMC the capability to perform their mission, particularly when facing extremely harsh, cold environments."

 

"The HDT ArctiX shelter system gives the USMC the capability to perform their mission, particularly when facing extremely harsh, cold environments."

 

HDT Expeditionary Systems Group president Andy Hove said that the HDT ArctiX shelter was a part of a broad shelter system product offering to the military.

 

The ultra-lightweight, rapidly deployed shelter has been designed to provide necessary infrastructure to operate in severe cold weather regions for US military and allied forces.

 

Capable of accommodating up to 15 marines, the shelter can be integrated with the HDT Global-built Marine Corps SHC thermoelectric heater to offer comprehensive protection from harsh environmental conditions for military personnel.

 

The SHC is a self-powered, liquid-fuel burning and ducted convective heater and features a thermoelectric generator for combustion and air handling.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 12:20
US Army engineers push the T-72 tank target for systems check at Condron Army Airfield on White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, US. Photo: courtesy of John Andrew Hamilton, ATEC.

US Army engineers push the T-72 tank target for systems check at Condron Army Airfield on White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, US. Photo: courtesy of John Andrew Hamilton, ATEC.

3 June 2013 army-technology.com

 

US Army engineers have developed a new mobile, remotely operated tank target to serve as foreign surrogate for cost-effective testing or training of a wide range of military equipment, including advanced sensors or weapon systems.

 

Designed to represent the Russian T-72 main battle tank (MBT), the target has been jointly manufactured by the Army Program Executive Office for Simulation, Training, and Instrumentation - Program Manager Instrumentation, Targets and Threat Simulators-Targets Management Office, as well as the Army Test and Evaluation Command's Systems Engineering Directorate.

 

Developed from a set of simple plastic targets generally used for acquisition and gunnery exercises, the target also features heating units to support heat sensing equipment testing, as well as metal stripping, foil and plating for visibility on radars.

 

The remotely operated system is mounted on a light utility vehicle chassis similar to those used by golf course and park maintenance personnel for enhanced realism.

 

Targets Management Office programme manager Eric Hoffman said the system currently represents a T-72 tank, and will closely resemble an actual T-72 radar cross section and infrared (IR) signature, following completion of development programme.

 

Originally produced at the White Sands Missile Range, the target can also be used to represent other armoured vehicles, including the Russian BMP infantry combat vehicle, or the BTR amphibious armoured personnel carrier, by replacement of the outer shell.

 

 

The target is now being shipped to the Edwards Air Force Base (AFB) in California, US, for planned evaluation that will confirm it is an appropriately accurate representation of the intended vehicles, prior to deployment for validation of a new system.

 

However, the new systems will not be restricted to the forthcoming testing at the Edwards AFB.

 

"The nice thing about this is that this is going to give WSMR and the Target Management Office the ability to do this here on site at White Sands," Hoffman said.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 11:35
Afghanistan: une rallonge de 150 millions de dollars pour la location d'avions

03.06.2013 par P. CHAPLEAU Lignes de Défense

 

Trois sociétés US se sont vu accorder une rallonge totale de près de 150 millions de dollars pour un an (du 1er juin 2013 au 31 mai 2014) dans le cadre de la fourniture d'avions (et des personnels et de toutes les prestations périphériques) pour le compte de l'US Transportation Command. Les avis en anglais figurent en fin de ce post.

 

Pour l'année à venir, la part d'AAR Airlift Group s'élève à 98 millions de dollars, celle de Berry Aviation à 30 et celle d'Evergreen à 24,5. Cette extension porte la valeur cumulée de ce contrat à 493,3 millions de dollars (respectivement 307,6, 106,8 et 78,9 millions de dollars).

 

Il s'agit de fournir des appareils pour le transport des personnels et du fret sur le théâtre afghan. Ce contrat peut encore être reconduit une année (2014-2015).

 

Les avis:

AAR Airlift Group Inc., Palm Bay, Fla., is being awarded a $97,946,397 option year modification (0001/0002) on an indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity contract (HTC711-10-D-R016 ) for fixed wing aircraft, personnel, equipment, tools, material, maintenance and supervision necessary to perform passenger and cargo air transportation services. Total cumulative face value of the contract is $307,603,230. This modification adds the third option of the basic contract with four option periods. Work will be performed in Afghanistan, and the option will start June 1, 2013, to be completed by May 31, 2014. Type of appropriation is fiscal 2013 Army Operations and Maintenance funds, and will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. There were seven proposals received. The contracting activity in U.S. Transportation Command, Directorate of Acquisition, Scott Air Force Base, Ill.

Berry Aviation Inc., San Marcos, Texas, is being awarded a $29,933,251 option year modification (0002) on an indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity contract (HTC711-10-D-R018) for fixed wing aircraft, personnel, equipment, tools, material, maintenance and supervision necessary to perform passenger and cargo air transportation services. Total cumulative face value of the contract is $106,882,869. This modification adds the third option of the basic contract with four option periods. Work will be performed in Afghanistan, and the option will start June 1, 2013, to be completed by May 31, 2014. Type of appropriation is fiscal 2013 Army Operations and Maintenance funds, and will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. There were seven proposals received. The contracting activity is U. S. Transportation Command, Directorate of Acquisition, Scott Air Force Base, Ill.

Evergreen Helicopters of Alaska, Anchorage, Alaska, is being awarded a $24,482,759 option-year modification (0001/0002) on an indefinite-delivery/indefinite quantity contract (HTC711-10-D-R017) for fixed wing aircraft, personnel, equipment, tools, material, maintenance and supervision necessary to perform passenger and cargo air transportation services. The total cumulative face value of the contract is $78,904,939. This modification adds the third option of the basic contract with four option periods, and the option will start June 1, 2013, to be completed by May 31, 2014. Work will be performed in Afghanistan. Type of appropriation is fiscal 2013 Army Operations and Maintenance funds, and will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. There were seven proposals received. The contracting activity is U.S. Transportation Command, Directorate of Acquisition, Scott Air Force Base, Ill.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 07:45
Des drones US au Sahel source LdDef

Des drones US au Sahel source LdDef

June 3rd, 2013 By Jody Ray Bennett  / International Relations and Security Network - defencetalk.com

 

In January 2013, US military officials finalized a Status of Forces (SOFA) agreement with the government of Niger to increase military involvement throughout the country. While the move clearly reflected developments in neighboring Mali, it had long been an operational goal of the Pentagon to establish a drone base in the region. Before the Northern Mali conflict escalated last year, the Pentagon had been flying drones in the Horn of Africa to survey Somali piracy and other armed non-state actors like Al-Shabaab. But despite complaints by West African governments and regional business interests, few resources were being devoted to the perceived threat from the nomadic Tuareg minority that was allegedly transporting weapons and other illicit goods across the Sahel.

 

While the connection between what some have dubbed Mali’s “Tuareg Problem” and Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb remains unproven, the possibility that these groups might be working together (or perhaps the simple fact that they existed) was enough for the Pentagon to establish its first drone base in West Africa. After the Benghazi attack, in which it is believed that a lack of air support to Libya resulted in the deaths of four American diplomatic officials and multiple other injuries, some form of established US military presence in a neighboring country was perhaps inevitable. Indeed, the former commander of AFRICOM, which oversees military operations on the African continent, said about Benghazi in a New York Times interview, “Instead of responding in a day, [the new base in Niger] could respond within some number of hours.”

 

A logical choice

 

According to initial reports, the drone base sits behind a barbed-wire wall in Niamey, Niger’s capital. The US Air Force has begun flying Predator drones from the base through scorching heat and daily sandstorms. Though unarmed, these Predator drones can cover the country to conduct surveillance and other reconnaissance missions. These missions primarily look for security threats such as Al-Qaeda fighters, “guerillas from other groups hiding in the country’s mountains and hills”, and other Islamist non-state actors that threaten border security or neighboring African states.

 

While contractors and military officials from Chad, France, and the United States conduct unarmed drone missions from Niger to gather intelligence on the insurgency in Mali, US officials have told media outlets that they have not yet ruled out arming drones from this base for targeted killings. Indeed, US forces had long been in Mali before a permanent presence was considered, primarily to oversee the base and undertake intelligence assessments.

 

According to a report in The Guardian, “The White House announced in February [2013] that Obama had deployed about 100 military personnel to Niger on an ‘intelligence collection’ mission, but it did not make any explicit reference to drones.” Since the establishment of the hangars and airstrip, the presence of drone flights is hardly a secret. The Guardian further reported that the President of Niger, Issoufou Mahamadou, told the publication that “his government invited Washington to send surveillance drones because he was worried that the country might not be able to defend its borders from Islamist fighters based in Mali, Libya or Nigeria.” While US drone operations are a part of a constellation of bases across North Africa and the Middle East, the new Nigerien base now joins continental missions that occur from Djibouti, Ethiopia, and until most recently, the Seychelles.

 

“Niger is, of course, a natural choice, not only because of its central geographic position, but because its democratically-elected government has weathered the regional upheaval quite well and has proven a reliable ally in efforts to contain and defeat violent extremism,” said Dr. J. Peter Pham, director of the Africa Center at the Atlantic Council and specialist on African security issues.

 

But uncertainties remain

 

“Of course,” Pham continued, “while the deployment of surveillance drones to Niger makes sense, regional security (and the strategic interests of the United States and its allies) would be better served over the long term if the deployment were accompanied by a more comprehensive engagement of the country, including greater support for its continued political, economic, and social development.”

 

Relations between the United States and Niger have been positive since the West African country became independent in 1962. Nevertheless, in a recent interview, Niger’s president is quoted as saying “The U.S. should do more in the area of training, equipment, land and air, and intelligence capability”, while fearlessly launching complaints about the “feeble” attempts of West African governments and militaries alike to quell insurgencies and other security threats.

 

While Niger may have been seen as a natural choice to establish a US military presence, officials were not sure how well a drone base would be received in a majority Muslim country. According to the Guardian article:

 

“US and Nigerien officials had worried that the drones might spur a popular backlash in Niger, where about 90 % of the population is Muslim. Extra security barriers were raised outside the US and French embassies as a precaution. So far, however, reaction has been muted, and many people seem to favour anything that the US and French militaries can do to prevent a spillover of violence from Mali.”

 

And this is precisely why the US established an operational role in the country. With an established base, the United States gains a foothold in the country at minimal cost; a new, physical military presence in the region that it can cite upon criticism of the Benghazi attack; an intelligence stake in the ongoing conflict in Mali; additional information from operations occurring in remote areas of the region; and, in addition to all of this, the ability to wield soft power abroad during a time when American taxpayers are growing increasingly frustrated with military strain in Iraq and Afghanistan.

 

The entire operation, however, is being carried out by AFRICOM, a military command for an entire continent with a budget of $300 million and roughly 2,000 employees. Those figures should be compared to the US Central Command that manages Afghanistan and the Middle East with a budget of approximately $800 million and 5,000 employees. A year ago, AFRICOM operations in Niger involved spending money on t-shirts, campaign signs, and other efforts to persuade citizens to vote. Now AFRICOM maintains it can “carry out both combat operations and its original ‘soft power’ missions, taking cues from envoys in the region like Bisa Williams, the United States ambassador in Niamey.”

 

Nevertheless, much of the Nigerien population is skeptical of outsiders, especially foreign powers that can be reminiscent of Niger’s colonial past. If drones here are weaponized, there could easily be much more blowback compared to a country like Yemen or Pakistan where armed drones regularly conduct aerial strikes.

 

“It is important to emphasize that the current deployment is only for unarmed intelligence-gathering aerial vehicles. It is unlikely that there will be attacks by armed drones in this area for the simple reason that there is a very limited number of such aircraft and the paucity of high-value terrorists in the Sahel – to say nothing about a lack of intelligence about such potential targets in the region – to justify yanking the aircraft from other fronts. And, even if a strike or two were carried out, such attacks are not a sustainable strategy. They simply would buy time for a political process that alone can hope to resolve the deep-seated issues in this region,” Dr. J. Peter Pham explained.

 

While one can question the role that these developments play in the larger US grand strategy, they have opened up West Africa to the first ongoing American military presence under the management of AFRICOM. At least for now, however, the establishment of a drone base by the United States is primarily for the use of unarmed aerial reconnaissance vehicles, and is not especially surprising in light of the growing influence of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), and its allies in northern Mali, within an area larger than metropolitan France.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 07:30
FCS  Non-Line-of-Sight Cannon (NLOS-C) prototype

FCS Non-Line-of-Sight Cannon (NLOS-C) prototype

June 3rd, 2013 By Lexington institute - defencetalk.com

 

Remember the Future Combat System (FCS)? This was a complex “system-of-systems” which involved manned and unmanned ground and aerial vehicles, advanced weapons systems and sensors, some of them remotely operated and an all-encompassing command, control and communications network to hold it all together. After nearly a decade of development and the expenditure of tens of billions of dollars with virtually nothing to show for it, then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates cancelled the program.

 

So how is it that the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), operating on a tight budget and timeline, seems to have been able to do what the U.S. Army with all the technological and financial resources available to it couldn’t? Take the network, what was to be the heart of the FCS. The network was supposed to connect vehicles, aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), robots, autonomous sensors, remote weapons and dismounted soldiers, transmitting voice, data and video effortlessly, thereby enabling commanders and headquarters to maintain a common operating picture. The Army could never get the network to work properly.

 

The IDF is now deploying, albeit in pieces, the essential elements of such a network. Part of this system is the Digital Ground Army (DGA), a real-time system that provides a common operating picture for all echelons. DGA generates a map, updated in real time, of all forces – friendly and hostile – in a battle arena. Various units, including aircraft and ships, can share the coordinates of the enemy – and their own location – in the course of a battle. DGA is linked to the computers of tanks and cannons, and combat vehicles. The system will work at all echelons, from the individual soldier or vehicle, up to battalion, brigade and even division commanders. Another piece of the network is called See-Shoot, which operates along Israel’s borders. See-Shoot rapidly processes and transmits data from multiple sensors to remote firing stations as well as mobile platforms such as tanks, artillery and the Tammuz precision weapon. A third element is a frequency switching radio capable of transmitting voice, data and video with encryption. Sounds pretty much like the FCS network to me.

Has Israel Created A System the US Army Couldn’t Build?

The Tammuz is another example of a capability that FCS was supposed to produce. One focus of the FCS was an autonomous missile system, called the Non-Line-of-Sight (NLOS) Launch System, essentially a clutch of tactical missiles in a box that could be deployed anywhere on the battlefield and launched remotely. Tammuz is just such a capability: an NLOS version of the Spike anti-tank missile with a 25 km range, deployed in a canister, able to be launched remotely based on data from distributed sensors. Tammuz is now deployed along Israel’s borders with Syria and Lebanon. The IDF also has the mini-Spike electro-optic guided missile, the world’s smallest personal missile, 70 cm long, 75 mm in diameter, weighing just 4 kg and with a range of 1.5 km.

 

FCS planned on employing an array of advanced unmanned ground and aerial sensors and vehicles. The unattended ground sensor was one of the last bits of FCS to be cancelled. The IDF has a host of such systems, including the EyeBall, an advanced audio-visual surveillance device a little bigger than a tennis ball, the Skylark, man-portable mini UAV, the Guardium Autonomous Unmanned Ground Vehicle and the SnakeCam for investigating tunnels and caves.

 

Filling out the array of FCS-like systems in the IDF’s inventory is the Trophy Active Protection System for military vehicles, an extensive family of medium and large UAVs, the Iron Dome tactical missile defense system, long-range guided mortars and advanced armored fighting vehicles such as the Namer – which had been considered a possible competitor for the role of the U.S. Army’s Ground Combat Vehicle. If you go down the list of the dozen or more elements of the FCS system-of-systems, the IDF has deployed virtually all of them

Merkava 4 main battle tank fitted with the Trophy anti-missile protection

Merkava 4 main battle tank fitted with the Trophy anti-missile protection

 

Together with traditional systems such as the Merkava main battle tank, Apache attack helicopter and self-propelled artillery and rocket systems, the IDF has in the field a capability for advanced mobile, combined arms warfare that the U.S. Army can only dream about.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 07:20
Major Firms Concerned Over Health of Small Suppliers

Jun. 2, 2013 By PAUL McLEARY – Defense News

 

WASHINGTON — Everyone from the US defense secretary to the service chiefs to industry executives at major companies are concerned about the health of the smaller, specialized parts suppliers that keep planes flying, ships steaming and trucks on the road.

 

But what to do about them as the defense sector constricts and commercial markets rebound is a problem that no one has managed to solve.

 

Over the past few years of belt tightening at the Pentagon — with fewer new start programs coming on line — “certainly you’ve seen some consolidation in the supply base and I think that is a significant concern to everyone in the business,” said Rick Edwards, executive vice president for Lockheed Martin’s Missiles and Fire Control business.

 

During a May 15 interview at the Special Operations Forces Industry Conference in Tampa, Fla., Edwards offered a candid assessment of how surging markets like domestic oil and natural gas production may be luring some second- and third-tier suppliers from the defense industry, and the difficulties the industry is facing recruiting and retaining qualified engineers in a tightening, and highly competitive, market.

 

“Being in the defense business requires a level of rigor and discipline that doesn’t come free,” he said, particularly when you see the current upswing in some commercial markets that could encourage smaller companies to abandon the defense sector where the volume of work is going down.

 

Precision machining, in particular, is an industry that is taking advantage of the booming domestic energy and drilling market, where companies can make more money machining parts for the oil business than they can making parts for programs such as the Hellfire missile.

 

Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno echoed the concern over retaining smaller suppliers in a May 29 speech when he fretted over “the smaller [companies] who do so much for us in terms of developing some niche technologies. How do we keep them going as we reduce budgets?”

 

One of Lockheed’s answers involves stepping in and helping them, regardless of whether they want the assistance.

 

“Supporting and helping our suppliers is not something that’s optional,” Edwards said. “You are dependent on them for success and we view them as an integral part of our team because if the product fails or doesn’t deliver, that’s a reflection on Lockheed Martin. So we are not reluctant to go help them, even if they don’t want the help, quite honestly.”

 

He said that this level of interdiction with suppliers “has probably doubled in the last couple years” as the volume of work has gone down. And there doesn’t look to be a lot of help on the horizon. In a rather downcast assessment of what’s to come, the Pentagon’s chief for industrial base and manufacturing policy, Brett Lambert, told a Washington industry crowd on April 25 that while he is working to identify the most critical aspects of the industrial base that must be sustained, “there’s going to be a lot of bad news that’s given out to companies” over the next several years.

 

“We should make no illusions,” Lambert said. “We will identify critical key suppliers that will go under because we will have made the assumption, based on our strategy moving forward, that that is no longer a critical capability to our future force.”

 

As the Pentagon looks to spend less on new start programs and attempts to incorporate more mature technologies on the few new programs in development, a large burden is being shifted to industry to bring new solutions to the table, and sooner.

 

With this in mind, Edwards said that in his business segment, the biggest employer of his engineers is in internal research and development (IRAD).

 

Spending on IRAD generates products quickly and keeps engineers sharp. It also keeps them working.

 

“I want to be able to keep my technical base — my design engineers — engaged so they don’t look at this thing and say, ‘We’re in a defense downturn, there aren’t a lot of development programs, I think I’ll go take that job designing Madden 2020’ or something. That’s an issue,” he said.

 

Adding to the problem is the fact that the demographics of engineering schools don’t always work in favor of the defense industry. In most years, about 30 to 35 percent of engineering graduates are US citizens who can get clearances, which means that the pool for qualified talent is small, and there are many opportunities for graduates across a variety of industries.

 

But Edwards said the people who do work for him are going to remain busy, anticipating the next requirement from a customer who, while reducing its buys, will continue to invest what it can in new solutions.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 07:20
Special Forces fast-rope from the rear ramps of CV-22 Ospreys during a demonstration. photo by Senior Airman Sheila DeVera, U.S. Air Force

Special Forces fast-rope from the rear ramps of CV-22 Ospreys during a demonstration. photo by Senior Airman Sheila DeVera, U.S. Air Force

June 3rd, 2013 By Air Force News Agency - defencetalk.com

 

Senior commanders recently called on the defense industry to provide technologies that give special operations forces more situational awareness, better networking and communications and more precise location and targeting capabilities.

 

Officials from across U.S. Special Operations Command, including commanders of its service components and the theater special operations commands, laid out their wish lists earlier this month at the annual Special Operations Forces Industry Conference here.

 

All noted the unprecedented capabilities the defense industry has delivered to help special operations forces succeed during the past 12 years of conflict. But looking to the future — the drawdown in Afghanistan, budget constraints and a refocus on the Asia-Pacific region and other parts of the globe beyond the Middle East and Southwest Asia — they said they will need more.

 

So despite budget constraints and uncertainties, efforts must continue to ensure that special operations forces have the tools they will need to succeed in missions ranging from building partner capacity to irregular warfare and counterterrorism, the commanders emphasized.

 

At the top of their list are improved intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets and better processes for sifting through the mountains of data streams to paint a more complete operational picture.

 

SOCOM’s current acquisition efforts are focused on equipping both manned and unmanned fixed-wing assets with intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities suitable for diverse global requirements, Navy Adm. Michael McRaven, the SOCOM commander, reported to Congress earlier this year.

 

“We will need to have an ability to continue to search large data bases to identify enemies and information that helps us understand and gives us clues into what (violent extremist) networks are doing out there,” Army Lt. Gen. Joseph L. Votel, the commander of Joint Special Operations Command, told the Tampa assembly.

 

And in support of Navy Adm. William H. McRaven’s vision of a global special operations forces network, Votel underscored the need for knowledge management and information storage and sharing technologies to support it.

 

“We want every advantage before we lock horns with an adversary, and that is knowing what they have available to them and then countering it with decisive action,” Navy Rear Adm. Sean A. Pybus, commander of Naval Special Warfare Command, told the assembly.

 

What’s needed, the commanders agreed, are more universal systems to replace those that work only on specific platforms.

 

“We have to have plug-and-play ISR packages that allow us to select the right tool for the right environment, and be able to work in a standardized fashion in the aircraft that we are operating across the enterprise,” Votel said.

 

Marine Col. Michael Sweeney, deputy commander of Marine Corps Forces Special Operations Command, echoed the need for a single, multitiered network to consolidate what five and sometimes six sets of equipment now do. “We are increasing the burden on the force from a load perspective,” he said.

 

“We are system agnostic,” said Army Maj. Gen. Michael S. Repass, the commander of Special Operations Command Europe. “We don’t care what it is, as long … as the communications are compatible with whatever the distribution network is.”

 

Army Lt. Gen. Charles T. Cleveland, the commander of U.S. Army Special Operations Command, said the systems that have proven themselves in Afghanistan will remain critical throughout the rest of that mission and into the future.

 

But looking ahead, he also recognized the fine line between becoming overly dependent on technology and ensuring enough redundancy “to make sure we are not crippled if we lose something as a capability.”

 

Lt. Gen. Eric Fiel, the commander of Air Force Special Operations Command, said he sees little decrease in future demand not only for ISR, but also for mobility and strike capability. As wartime requirements decrease, the command is evaluating its portfolio to ensure it is postured to provide what future missions will demand, he said.

 

The first of up to 10 CV-22 Osprey slated to be based in Mildenhall, England, are expected to arrive next month to extend the reach of U.S. special operations forces supporting both U.S. European Command and U.S. Africa Command, Fiel said.

 

The MC-130J Commando II also is slated for the European theater, with 12 to be fielded to provide “a very much-needed capability to both Special Operations Command Africa and Special Operations Command Europe,” he added.

 

Naval Special Warfare Command is undergoing a similar assessment of its inventory, as its SEALs and special boat teams transition back to their traditional maritime environment, Pybus said.

 

A new Maritime Mobility Roadmap, approved by McRaven, calls for a family of vessels – ranging from high-end, stealth, long-range penetrating craft to a multimission craft that can launch from a variety of ships for operations in littoral waters.

 

But Pybus also noted the need for other hardware suited to the maritime domain: refreshed rebreathers, propulsion devices, sleds and weapons that can work both underwater and across the beach.

 

“There is equipment that our partners have, quite frankly, that is better than ours, because we spent the past decade fighting ashore,” he said “It is time to move forward so that our troops have the best that there is out there so they can be successful.”

 

While laying out their immediate and future requirements, the commanders made clear they understand the economic realities facing the entire military.

 

“We are going to have to do things smartly and efficiently, because we just won’t have all the things that have been available to us in the past,” Pybus said. That, he acknowledged, will mean using legacy systems to the very end of their life cycles.

 

“But you can accessorize them and make improvements to them to make them better,” he told the industry representatives. “And that is what we are going to be looking for from a lot of you.”

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 07:20
PLA Navy's Newest Type 054A frigate -- FFG-575 "Yueyang"

PLA Navy's Newest Type 054A frigate -- FFG-575 "Yueyang"

2013-05-31 — china-defense-mashup.com

 

 This spring, China’s navy accepted the Pentagon’s invitation to participate in the 2014 Rim of the Pacific — RIMPAC — naval exercise to be held off Hawaii. This will be the first time China takes part in the biennial event.

 

Our allies should signal their intent to withdraw from the exercise if China participates. Failing that, the invitation should be withdrawn. RIMPAC is for allies and friends, not nations planning to eventually wage war on the United States. Russia sent ships in 2012, but while its senior officers may occasionally utter unfriendly words, they are not actively planning to fight the United States. Analyst Robert Sutter was surely correct when he wrote in 2005 that “China is the only large power in the world preparing to shoot Americans.”

 

 

That assessment, unfortunately, remains true today. Beijing is configuring its forces — especially its navy — to fight ours. For instance, China has deployed along its southern coast its DF-21D, a two-stage solid-fuel missile that can be guided by satellite signals. The missile is dubbed the “carrier killer” because it can be configured to explode in midair, raining down sharp metal on a deck crowded with planes, ordinance, fuel and sailors. Its apparent intent is to drive U.S. forces out of East Asia.

 

A pattern of aggressive Chinese tactics also points in that direction. Especially troubling is the harassment in international waters of unarmed U.S. Navy reconnaissance vessels for more than a decade, most notably the blocking of the Impeccable in the South China Sea in 2009. And there was the 2001 downing of a Navy EP-3 and the surfacing of a Song-class attack submarine in the middle of the Kitty Hawk strike group near Okinawa in 2006.

 

Since then, we have been hearing bold war talk in the Chinese capital, from new leader Xi Jinping to senior officers and colonels who say they relish combat — a “hand-to-hand fight with the U.S.,” as one of them put it in 2010.

 

Why do China’s officers want to go to war? There is an unfortunate confluence of factors. First, there is a new Chinese confidence bordering on arrogance. Beijing leaders, especially since 2008, have been riding high. They saw economic turmoil around the world and thought the century was theirs to dominate. The U.S. and the rest of the West, they believed, were in terminal decline.

 

The Chinese military also has gained substantial influence in the last year, perhaps becoming the most powerful faction in the Communist Party. Beginning as early as 2003, senior officers of the People’s Liberation Army were drawn into civilian power struggles as Hu Jintao, then the new leader, sought their support in his effort to shove aside Jiang Zemin, his wily predecessor who sought to linger in the limelight. Last year, the civilian infighting intensified as the so-called Fifth Generation leadership, under the command of Xi, took over from Hu’s Fourth. Like a decade ago, feuding civilians sought the support of the generals and admirals, making them arbiters in the party’s increasingly rough game of politics.

 

The result of discord among civilian leaders has been a partial remilitarization of politics and policy. Senior officers are now acting independently of civilian officials, are openly criticizing them and are making pronouncements in areas once considered the exclusive province of diplomats.

 

The remilitarization has had consequences. As Huang Jing of Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy said: “China’s military spending is growing so fast that it has overtaken strategy. The young officers are taking control of strategy, and it is like young officers in Japan in the 1930s. They are thinking what they can do, not what they should do.”

 

What do China’s admirals want? They are supporting their nation’s territorial ambitions to close off the South China Sea to others. This brings them into conflict with nations surrounding that critical body of water and pits them against the U.S. If there has been any consistent U.S. foreign policy over the course of two centuries, it has been the defense of freedom of navigation.

 

According to a white paper it issued in April, China is building a navy capable of operating in the ocean’s deep water, and has 235,000 officers and sailors. Its navy last year commissioned its first aircraft carrier, and it is reportedly building two more. China has about a dozen fewer submarines than the U.S., but the U.S. has global responsibilities. The Chinese, therefore, can concentrate their boats in waters close to their shores, giving them tactical and operating advantages.

 

While the Chinese plan to dominate their waters and eventually ours, we are helping them increase their effectiveness with invitations to RIMPAC and other exercises and by including them in joint operations like the one directed against Somali piracy. The U.S. Navy at the same time is continuing to reduce its fleet, currently at 283 deployable ships. As Beijing’s behavior has become more troubling, the Pentagon has clung to the hope that military-to-military relations will somehow relieve tensions with the Chinese.

 

Yet as Ronald Reagan taught us, the nature of regimes matter. We are now helping an incurably aggressive state develop its military — to our peril. There is something very wrong at the core of the Obama administration’s and the Pentagon’s China policies.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 06:35
Time to Admit China Is a Military Competitor

2013-05-27 — china-defense-mashup.com

 

The early-May release by the Defense Department of its annual report to Congress on China’s military developments is a prime opportunity to reevaluate how the United States frames the future of its security relationship with Beijing. For too long, politicians and pundits of both parties have refused to clearly state the obvious: The U.S. and China are engaged in a long-term peacetime competition with economic, diplomatic and, yes, military components. The sooner Washington begins speaking honestly about our relationship with China, the sooner we’ll have policies that adequately address the challenges facing our two countries.

 

As China’s economic development continues and its regional aspirations expand, its military modernization has continued apace. This reality, and the necessity of the United States’ remaining a force in Asia-Pacific for the sake of regional stability, makes many in Washington uncomfortable. Indeed, the pressure to refrain from speaking openly about the issue has led some U.S. officials to begin referring to China as a national “Voldermort.”

 

It’s immensely counterproductive to avoid speaking openly and truthfully about the Sino-American rivalry and its future trajectory. By failing to acknowledge China’s military ambitions and their potential consequences for U.S. interests in the region, American policymakers are choosing timidity when resolute leadership is required.

 

The reality is this: Over the past decade, China has been developing military capabilities designed to deny the United States access to the waters and airspace of the western Pacific. Through the acquisition of anti-ship ballistic missiles designed to target American aircraft carriers, advanced aircraft capable of hitting U.S. and allied bases around the region, and large numbers of modern submarines, Beijing has clearly signaled its intention to subvert the balance of power that has anchored peace in Asia for six decades, and to do so in ways inimical to American interests.

 

This is not simply the case of a rising power seeking a military befitting its economic might; rather, China has specifically geared its military development to areas of perceived American weakness with the objective of restricting U.S. action in East Asia.

 

Speaking clearly about Beijing’s actions and intentions is not a fatalistic acceptance that Sino-American conflict is inevitable, or even likely. Instead, by realistically appraising Chinese intentions, the United States will be better prepared to assess our interests in Asia and act accordingly.

 

With 80 percent of global trade traveling by sea, a substantial amount of that through the waters of East Asia, allowing the United States to be pushed out of the region is simply unacceptable. American military power, particularly our navy, has ensured the peaceful, liberal order that currently predominates in East Asia. As our fleet has slowly atrophied from the nearly 600 ships of the Reagan era to 283 today, the ability of the United States to uphold its obligations and interests around the world has become sorely tested. Even as the Chinese are developing sophisticated systems to target our perceived vulnerabilities, the U.S. is expected to experience major shortfalls in areas from attack submarines and surface combatants to Air Force long-range bombers. Understanding, and speaking clearly about, our interests in Asia and the challenges we face is critical to fixing the military gaps we have incurred over the last decade.

 

The Pentagon’s latest report on Chinese military modernization is an excellent opportunity for leaders in both parties to begin the process of speaking honestly about the China challenge. Our future relations with China are not preordained. Sound policy based on American strength and rooted in longstanding American interests is achievable only through recognition that China is a long-term competitor of the United States across a range of areas, including the military. The sooner we are comfortable admitting this fact, the better our chances of marshalling the resources to maintain a free and prosperous Asia.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 06:20
Le premier vol du futur avion ravitailleur de l'US Air Force est programmé pour début 2015, les livraisons l\'année suivante. - Photo Boeing

Le premier vol du futur avion ravitailleur de l'US Air Force est programmé pour début 2015, les livraisons l\'année suivante. - Photo Boeing

03/06 Par Alain Ruello - LesEchos.fr

 

L'assemblage du premier dérivé militaire du 767 démarrera le 26 juin.

 

Février 2011. Après une bataille politico-commerciale épique, Boeing arrache - de manière définitive - le mégacontrat des avions ravitailleurs du Pentagone à EADS. Le montant estimé donne le vertige : plus de 30 milliards de dollars. Vingt-sept mois plus tard, le groupe s'apprête à enclencher une phase clef du programme, baptisé KC46. Le 26 juin, dans la foulée du salon du Bourget, l'avionneur américain va démarrer l'assemblage du premier des 179 exemplaires, le premier vol restant programmé pour début 2015 et le début des livraisons, l'année suivante.

 

Un calendrier très serré

 

« A ce stade nous sommes en phase avec le planning », assurait il y a quelques jours Jake Howitt, le responsable adjoint du programme, à Seattle, d'où sortiront ces dérivés militaires du Boeing 767. L'enjeu est de taille car Boeing a pris le risque de signer un contrat à prix fixe pour la conception, les tests et la livraison de 4 premiers ravitailleurs d'ici à 2017. Si le constructeur respecte ses échéances, le Pentagone transformera en commande ferme les options à prix fixe prévues pour les 175 autres appareils. La dernière livraison est prévue en 2027 au plus tard.

 

L'attention des ingénieurs est tout entière accaparée par la fin de la phase de développement, prévue au troisième trimestre. Le calendrier étant très serré, les responsables de Boeing veulent prendre le moins de risques possible. D'autant que le contrat passé avec l'Italie a laissé des traces, du fait des problèmes rencontrés avec la perche de ravitaillement. Le KC46 ne sera pas un bijou d'innovation, la plupart des équipements existent déjà. « Pour la grande majorité de l'appareil, nous n'inventons rien », résume Jake Howitt.

 

Si Boeing assure être en phase avec son planning, qu'en est-il du budget ? Tout en reconnaissant sa défaite, EADS avait affirmé à l'époque que jamais Boeing ne pourrait dégager de profit sur ce contrat. Interrogé à ce sujet, Jake Howitt confesse sobrement : « Nous n'anticipons pas un grand retour sur investissement » sur la tranche ferme du contrat signée, dit-il. Avant de se montrer plus explicite : Boeing perdra de l'argent sur cette phase (déjà 700 millions selon des estimations qui couraient mi-2011, chiffre non confirmé officiellement), mais prévoit toujours d'en gagner sur l'ensemble du programme. En clair, une fois les 179 exemplaires prévus livrés à l'armée de l'air américaine.

 

D'ici là, le KC46 pourra améliorer ses marges grâce aux ventes à l'international, où il se mesure à l'A330 MRTT d'Airbus. Au total, Boeing évalue le marché potentiel entre 25 à 50 appareils. Ce chiffre, qui porte sur les dix prochaines années, peut paraître faible, mais il est vrai que de nombreux pays sont déjà équipés en avions ravitailleurs.

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2 juin 2013 7 02 /06 /juin /2013 17:35
Electronics Technician 1st Class Rachel Preston, left, assigned to USS Freedom (LCS 1) talks with Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel on June 2 during his trip to Singapore for the 2013 Shangri-La Dialogue. Freedom is in Singapore as part of a deployment to Southeast Asia. (MCS 1st Class Cassandra Thompson/Navy)

Electronics Technician 1st Class Rachel Preston, left, assigned to USS Freedom (LCS 1) talks with Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel on June 2 during his trip to Singapore for the 2013 Shangri-La Dialogue. Freedom is in Singapore as part of a deployment to Southeast Asia. (MCS 1st Class Cassandra Thompson/Navy)

Jun. 2, 2013 - By MATHIEU RABECHAULT – Defense News (AFP)

 

ABOARD USS FREEDOM, SINGAPORE — US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel Sunday visited the US Navy’s Littoral Combat Ship deployed in Singapore, a symbol of Washington’s strategic “pivot” towards Asia.

 

The LCS is designed as the Navy’s ultimate multitasking vessel despite significant development problems.

 

The USS Freedom, the first of 52 LCS vessels which the Navy plans to build at a total cost of $37 billion, arrived in mid-April in Singapore for its first deployment.

 

Four LCS, which are designed to operate close to shore, will eventually be forward-deployed at the city-state’s Changi naval base as part of Washington’s military “rebalancing” towards the Asia-Pacific.

 

The aim is to increase the US military presence in the region by avoiding a two-week voyage from the US West Coast before deployment.

 

Hagel gave the deployment his strong backing in remarks to the crew from the Freedom’s bridge.

 

“You’re making history out here,” he told them. “What you represent to our partnerships in the Asia-Pacific can’t be overstated.”

 

The 120-meter (396-foot) USS Freedom is a whole new type of ship. Like a Lego model, it can be adapted for specific missions through a system of interchangeable modules and crew.

 

“We see it as like a truck, you can put different things inside,” said its captain, Lt. Cmdr. Clayton Doss.

 

The ship currently has a “surface combat” module including a helicopter, two 30 mm cannon and two powerful Zodiac speedboats for its Southeast Asian role.

 

The deployment of the USS Freedom came at a time of heightened tensions on the Korean Peninsula and as China publicly flexed its naval muscle in the South China Sea, where it has competing territorial claims with some Southeast Asian states.

 

There are also still cases of piracy in the Strait of Malacca.

 

Out of the hundred-strong crew, 38 of them are dedicated to the surface combat module. They will be replaced by others if the ship is reconfigured for an anti-submarine or anti-mine role, said Doss. Replacing one module with another takes no longer than 96 hours, he said.

 

The aim of the design is to keep the ship light and speedy — the LCS can sail at more than 40 knots — and avoid having to carry equipment and crew to perform different tasks.

 

“The other reason that modularity is so helpful is that it’s very hard to know what types of combat systems you need to deal with the challenges in the future,” Doss said.

 

“We have three mission packages now, it doesn’t mean those are the only three, we’ll continue to create new ones.”

 

The US Navy believes so strongly in the concept that the LCS ships, of two different classes, will eventually make up almost 20 percent of its entire fleet.

 

Apart from the four to be berthed in Singapore, eight others are expected to be based in Bahrain.

 

But the programme has suffered some troubling teething problems.

 

“The LCS program has become controversial due to cost inflation, design and construction issues with the lead ships built to each design, concerns over the ships’ ability to withstand battle damage, and concerns over whether the ships are sufficiently armed,” said a Congressional Research Service report in April.

 

After about 30 months of operations, the Navy discovered cracks in the superstructure and hull of one ship along with corrosion.

 

Doss said the problems were being solved.

 

“We will come across problems and we will make discoveries before it (LCS) enters the fleet in full operational capability,” Vice Adm. Allen Myers, deputy Chief of Naval Operations, said last month.

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2 juin 2013 7 02 /06 /juin /2013 17:35
Cybersécurité: des rencontres régulières Chine-USA instituées dès juillet

02 juin 2013 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

NEW YORK - Les Etats-Unis et la Chine se sont mis d'accord pour instituer dès juillet des rencontres régulières de haut niveau sur la cybersécurité et l'espionnage commercial, et pour mettre en place des règles de conduites communes, a confirmé la Maison Blanche dimanche.

 

Les discussions porteront non seulement sur les questions de piratage mais aussi plus largement sur les règles à établir pour encadrer certains espaces d'internet, a souligné un responsable de la Maison Blanche, après que le New York Times eut fait état de ces rencontres prochaines.

 

Le secrétaire d'Etat américain John Kerry, en visite à Pékin en avril, avait alors annoncé que la Chine et les Etats-Unis allait créer un groupe de travail sur la sécurité informatique, en réponse à la recrudescence des cyberattaques par des hackers chinois.

 

Ces futures rencontres représentent le premier effort diplomatique pour désamorcer les tensions (entre les deux pays) alors que les Etats-Unis déplorent des attaques quotidiennes sous forme d'intrusions informatiques et de vols de secrets industriels et gouvernementaux, écrit le New York Times.

 

Nous avons besoin de normes et de règles, avait déclaré anonymement vendredi au quotidien un haut responsable américain impliqué dans les négociations pour la tenue de ces rencontres.

 

Les premiers entretiens ont été programmés pour juillet.

 

Ces informations interviennent avant le sommet informel vendredi prochain en Californie, entre le président américain Barack Obama et le président chinois Xi Jinping.

 

Les responsables américains disent qu'ils ne s'attendent pas à ce que ce processus apporte immédiatement une réduction significative des intrusions quotidiennes venant de Chine, selon le Times.

 

Mais c'est une question importante qui ne peut pas être juste expédiée lors de simples conversations, a déclaré un responsable américain anonyme, précisant que les rencontres se concentreraient tout d'abord sur les violations de la propriété intellectuelle des firmes américaines.

 

Samedi, le chef du Pentagone Chuck Hagel a profité d'un forum sur la sécurité en Asie en présence d'une délégation militaire chinoise pour accuser Pékin de se livrer à l'espionnage informatique.

 

Cette nouvelle mise en cause, exprimée devant les principaux responsables militaires asiatiques, met la pression sur Pékin une semaine avant un sommet entre le président Barack Obama et son homologue chinois Xi Jinping.

 

Début mai, un rapport du Pentagone au Congrès a dénoncé une vaste campagne d'espionnage informatique menée par Pékin pour tenter de collecter des renseignements sur les programmes de défense américains.

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2 juin 2013 7 02 /06 /juin /2013 16:35
Japan's ruling party guidance calls for boosting the amphibious capabilities of the Army's Western Infantry Regiment, here training alongside US Marines in California in February. (Capt. Esteban Vickers/US Marine Corps)

Japan's ruling party guidance calls for boosting the amphibious capabilities of the Army's Western Infantry Regiment, here training alongside US Marines in California in February. (Capt. Esteban Vickers/US Marine Corps)

May. 26, 2013 - By PAUL KALLENDER-UMEZU – Defense News

 

TOKYO — After almost seven decades of maintaining a limited defense posture, Japan should develop its amphibious and pre-emptive strike capability while bolstering sea- and ground-based ballistic-missile defenses, according to policy proposals by the country’s ruling party.

 

The proposals, obtained by Defense News and released to a select group last week ahead of widespread distribution, were drawn up by the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). They also call for Japan to beef up its space-based early warning systems and invest in cyber defense.

 

The proposals were generated by several internal LDP committees led by former LDP Defense Ministers Shigeru Ishiba and Gen Nakatani, and therefore carry considerable weight, according to Narushige Michishita, director of the Security and International Studies Program at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies here.

 

“They’re important,” he said.

 

The recommendations will feed into policy, spending and acquisition priorities for Japan’s next five-year Mid-Term Defense Plan, which is being crafted by the Defense Ministry and will be published by December.

 

They also come as the LDP administration of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe seeks to revise Article 9 of Japan’s constitution to delete provisions that prohibit Japan from using “war as a sovereign right of the nation” and maintaining “war potential,” and replace them with the right to hold a “National Defense Force” under the prime minister as commander in chief.

 

The LDP’s policy proposals do not name weapon systems or suggest budgets, and are deliberately more vague than similar proposals drawn up by the LDP in 2009, just before the party suffered a disastrous electoral defeat to the opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ).

 

“The LDP was not in power then [in 2009],” and so could be more direct, Michishita said.

 

The 2009 proposals openly discussed Japan acquiring, for example, the Boeing KC-46 tanker refueling plane as a step toward developing pre-emptive strike capability, such as knocking out fueled North Korean missiles. They also suggested adding the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system to Japan’s ship-based Aegis and ground-based Patriot systems.

 

Fast forward four years, and the proposals come from a resurrected LDP that delivered an even bigger electoral defeat to the DPJ last December. This time around, the language is more cautious because each word has more value.

 

While they carefully avoid all reference to Japan’s major sources of concern — China and North Korea — the proposals open intriguing possibilities over the extent to which Japan will strengthen its defense posture. In this context, Japanese defense planners are considering a number of options for each of the force enhancements, according to analysts and people familiar with the LDP’s discussions.

 

Most interesting and controversial is the proposed discussion of pre-emptive strike capability, which would require Japan to acquire Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs), long-range refueling capability for its nascent F-35 Joint Strike Fighters and/or a naval platform for the F-35B jump jet, should Japan opt to purchase that variant.

 

The proposals make no mention of the KC-46 this time around. The Air Self-Defense Force, meanwhile, has steadily equipped its fleet of Mitsubishi F-2 multirole fighters with JDAMS. It is thought that the two 19,500-ton 22DDH-class helicopter destroyers planned for the Maritime Self-Defense Force can be converted to carry the F-35B.

 

In 2003, before Japan had deployed its Aegis SM-3 and Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) ballistic-missile defense (BMD) systems, then-Defense Minister Ishiba made it clear that Japan could launch a strike against a missile base in North Korea in specific sets of circumstances.

 

For example, a strike could take place if there was evidence the missiles were fueled and aimed at Japan, and Japan had no other credible means of defense, Michishita said.

 

But now Japan is steadily building out its BMD systems to intercept North Korea’s longer-range Unha and Musudan mobile intermediate-range ballistic missiles, so such a strike would be potentially unconstitutional, he said.

 

Brad Glosserman, executive director of the Pacific Forum, Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), said he found recent talk of Japan bolstering its pre-emptive strike capability worrying.

 

“CSIS has been conducting discussions on the issue of pre-emptive strike for six years, and in recent months, we have seen resumption of calls to develop this capability resurface. I am concerned about the proliferation of these capabilities because of the potentially destabilizing consequences,” he said.

 

Japan probably won’t develop a separate marine corps, but it will more likely reinforce its amphibious capability, largely based on the Western Infantry Regiment of the Ground Self-Defense Forces (GSDF) that trained in amphibious warfare as part of the Iron Fist exercises with the US Marine Corps in California, analysts say.

 

Paul Giarra, president of US-based consulting firm Global Strategies & Transformation, said the language of the policy proposal opens the possibility of the GSDF equipping one or perhaps two regiments with advanced capabilities, including up to four dozen amphibious landing vehicles over the next five years, beyond the four AAV-7A1S vehicles already planned, and a suitable number of Bell-Boeing V-22 tilt-rotor Osprey aircraft.

 

“I read it more as the [Japan Self-Defense Forces] with some improved amphibious capabilities like vehicles and tilt-rotor aircraft. That is potentially a significant development, but the LDP does not look like it wants to go the whole hog on a marine corps,” said Christopher Hughes, professor of international politics and Japanese studies at Britain’s University of Warwick.

 

Japan is considering several options to boost its BMD portfolio, consisting of four Kongo-class destroyers and two larger Atago-class Aegis cruisers, and PAC-3 units. While the 2009 version of the proposals specifically mentions purchasing THAAD and an “advanced” version of the PAC-3, the new version recommends strengthening land-based BMD, leaving Japan a choice between purchasing either THAAD or the Aegis Ashore land-based version of the Aegis system, and the PAC-3 Missile Segment Enhancement (MSE) system for last-ditch interdiction.

 

Giarra said deploying the PAC-3 MSE would complement Aegis Ashore, which Japan has shown an interest in purchasing to the tune of one or two 24-missile interceptor batteries, a number that could increase. In this case, purchasing THAAD systems might be too much of an overlap of similar capabilities, he suggested.

 

Japanese defense planners see cruise missiles in general and China’s DF-21D anti-ship ballistic missile in particular as growing threats. This means that on top of the planned upgrades to employ the SM-3 Block IIA Aegis system when it becomes available, Japan also is considering purchasing the extended-range anti-air warfare RIM-174 missile.

 

“Cruise missile defense is becoming as important to Japan as ballistic-missile defense,” Michishita said.

 

Hughes said the proposals face many roadblocks, including opposition from more dovish LDP members and the MoD’s own panel scheduled to meet in January, which may have its own priorities. Last but not least is the Ministry of Finance, which will be unwilling to raise the defense budget under any circumstances.

 

“[But] if Abe/the LDP can pull all this off, then it will be very radical indeed,” Hughes said.

 

Regional Concerns

 

Japan’s moves will likely be welcomed across a region concerned about China’s aggressive territorial claims.

 

“Japan and the Philippines have a strained history, but the Filipinos are for a stronger Japan because Tokyo is helping train its Coast Guard,” Giarra said. “South Korea is less dependent on Japan and tensions run deeper, so it’s much less willing to go along with it.”

 

Tensions soared last week after Osaka’s mayor said forced prostitution in occupied nations was a military necessity for invading Japanese forces, prompting a South Korean newspaper to write that US atomic attacks on Japan were “divine punishment” for Tokyo’s brutality.

 

Some in Asia and Washington worry Japan’s nationalist leader believes Japanese forces did nothing wrong during World War II.

 

“Passive support for Japan will hold unless Japanese behavior changes,” Giarra added. “The question is whether Japanese officials can resist the temptation to undo what they believe were unnecessary apologies for wartime actions they don’t believe were wrong.

 

“The feeling of being wronged is as powerful in Japan as it is the other way around in Korea, Philippines, Indonesia . . . Germany dealt with its past and continues to do so, but Japan suppressed the issue, creating pent up pressure, and when it vents, it could change how this buildup is seen.”

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2 juin 2013 7 02 /06 /juin /2013 11:35
Chuck Hagel secrétaire américain à la Défense (Photo Glenn Fawcett DoD)

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

1 juin 2013 radio-canada.ca

 

Le secrétaire américain à la Défense, Chuck Hagel, a lancé un message à deux volets à Pékin, dans lequel il a dit espérer une lente amélioration de la relation militaire entre les deux pays tout en émettant un sévère avertissement en ce qui concerne les cyberattaques.

 

S'exprimant samedi lors d'une conférence sur la sécurité à Singapour, M. Hagel a mentionné que Washington avait fait part de ses inquiétudes à propos de la « menace grandissante » des cyber-intrusions, dont certaines semblent liées au gouvernement et à l'armée chinoises.

 

Il ne s'agit pas du premier responsable américain à blâmer publiquement la Chine pour des attaques informatiques permettant de voler des informations aux États-Unis, mais la déclaration a été faite en Chine, alors que des membres du gouvernement de Pékin se trouvaient dans la foule.

 

M. Hagel a par ailleurs stipulé que les États-Unis étaient prêts à travailler étroitement avec la Chine et d'autres nations pour établir des comportements normalisés dans le cyberespace. Washington se tournera également vers la Chine dans le dossier nord-coréen, qui a récemment menacé les États-Unis et leurs alliés de frappes nucléaires.

 

Soulignant la longue relation entre la Chine et les États-Unis, le secrétaire Hagel a affirmé que les deux pays devaient accroître leur confiance mutuelle pour éviter les erreurs militaires.

 

La majeure partie du discours a cependant consisté à réaffirmer le pivot américain vers le Pacifique, et que malgré les compressions budgétaires, le Pentagone continuerait de concentrer ses efforts sur la région Asie-Pacifique.

 

En plus de troupes et de navires de guerre, le plan quinquennal américain prévoit le déploiement de chasseurs F-22 et F35 dans la région, en plus d'un autre sous-marin d'attaque à Guam.

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2 juin 2013 7 02 /06 /juin /2013 11:20
Entering The Well

6/1/2013 Strategy Page

GULF OF ADEN (May 30, 2013) A landing craft air cushion (LCAC) enters the well deck of the amphibious assault ship USS Kearsarge (LHD 3). Kearsarge is the flagship for the Kearsarge Amphibious Ready Group and, with the embarked 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit, is deployed supporting maritime security operations and theater security cooperation efforts in the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Corbin J. Shea)

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2 juin 2013 7 02 /06 /juin /2013 11:20
F35 IOC Dates

June 2, 2013 by WiseApe – Think Defence

 

A Report to Congress posted on AviationWeek gives the IOC dates for the three versions of F35, along with their respective software blocks

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2 juin 2013 7 02 /06 /juin /2013 11:20
USA relaxes satellite export restrictions

29 May 2013 By Zach Rosenberg - FG

 

Washington DC -- The US government will greatly relax export restrictions on satellites and most components, according to a Federal document published on 24 May.

 

The change to what is known as the International Trafficking in Arms Regulations (ITAR) has long been sought by the US satellite industry, which has been largely restricted from selling satellites and components abroad, leading to a near-total loss of market share.

 

The change moves satellites from the US Munitions List (USML), meant to restrict the sale of weapons and dual-use items, to the Commerce Controlled List for economically sensitive but non-militarised goods. Effectively, the move declares that satellites are not necessarily for military use.

 

The regulations were initially put into place after two US commercial satellites were lost during separate launches in China. It became clear to many that China was using the post-accident investigation to gather sensitive data, and the US Congress subsequently passed a law moving satellites to the USML, and removing presidential authority to shift them back.

 

Only after the US share of the commercial satellite market went from near-total dominance to near-total irrelevance did opinion shift back in the other direction. Congress restored presidential authority with language in the 2013 military budget.

 

The satellite industry is "pleased that the Administration has moved quickly to right-size the rules that govern exports of satellites and their parts and components, just a few months after Congress restored their authority to do so," says Patricia Cooper, president of the Washington, DC-based Satellite Industry Association. "We view sensible and effective export controls as a vital tool to enhance our nation's space industrial base and encourage the satellite sector's ongoing leadership in innovation and investment."

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2 juin 2013 7 02 /06 /juin /2013 11:20
U.S. Air Force Agrees To Accept F-35 With Limited Software and Weapons Capability

June 1, 2013. David Pugliese - Defence Watch

 

From Aviation Week:

 

The U.S. Air Force, by far the largest presumed user of the F-35 fighter, has agreed to declare initial operational capability with a much more limited software and weapons capability that initially planned, according to a report sent to Congress May 31.

 

The Air Force now plans to declare initial operational capability (IOC) with 12 F-35As (and trained pilots and maintainers) in December 2016, before the long-awaited 3F software package is fully tested. The service previously planned to wait for the 3F package because it allows for an expanded engagement envelope and more diverse weapons.

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