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26 avril 2013 5 26 /04 /avril /2013 07:45
An M1 Abrams firing during African Lion 2011

An M1 Abrams firing during African Lion 2011

 

25 April 2013 by defenceWeb

 

The United States and Morocco yesterday resumed their annual African Lion military exercise, but on a much smaller scale following its earlier cancellation due to a spat over the disputed territory of Western Sahara.

 

US embassy spokesman Rodney Ford told Agence France Presse that the Moroccan government had asked the United States to resume African Lion. "Most of our forces had already redeployed. But some elements are still on the ground. So we are conducting modified limited military engagements," he said yesterday.

 

Some of the activities taking place as part of African Lion include aerial refuelling, aerial training and various workshops.

 

African Lion was originally scheduled to begin on April 17 and conclude on April 27, but was cancelled on the 16th because of Moroccan anger with the Obama administration over its support for having the United Nations monitor human rights in a territorial dispute over the territory of Western Sahara.

 

“The Moroccan government has deferred the exercise to a later date,” said Tom Saunders, an Africom spokesman, in a statement last week. “The US and Moroccan militaries remain long-standing partners. We hope to continue to build our partnership through future military engagements with the Royal Moroccan Armed Forces, as directed by US Africa Command and the United States Government.”

 

This week the US dropped its demand that rights monitoring be included in the mandate of the UN mission in the Western Sahara, with the resolution merely to encourage stronger efforts on human rights, AFP said.

 

Morocco occupied the desert region in 1976 unleashing a decades-long guerrilla struggle by the indigenous Polisario Front group, which ended with a UN ceasefire agreement in 1991. Since then talks between the two sides have remained stalemated, with Polisario insisting on an independence referendum and Morocco proposing autonomy for the mineral-rich former Spanish colony.

 

African Lion 2013 was set to involve 1 400 US personnel, 900 Moroccan troops and foreign observers. Earlier this month, the US Military Sealift Command’s USNS Dahl, a cargo transport vessel, pulled into a Moroccan port to deliver more than 250 short tons of equipment for the exercise. Marines disembarked everything from 7-ton trucks, Humvees and howitzers to Meals, Ready to Eat. Much of that equipment was reloaded and redeployed.

 

African Lion usually involves live-fire and manoeuvring exercises, amphibious operations and aerial refuelling and low-level flight training.

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26 avril 2013 5 26 /04 /avril /2013 07:35
Army says no-go on extended tours for Soldiers in Afghanistan

 

April 26th, 2013 By Army News Service - defencetalk.com

 

Last month, the Army’s senior-most officer told lawmakers budget cuts could result in a decrease in training readiness for follow- on forces to Afghanistan that could result in extended tours for Soldiers already there. That is no longer the case.

 

During testimony on Capitol Hill April 23, Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Ray Odierno told members of the Senate Armed Services Committee that “difficult decisions” with regard to the Army budget have eliminated the possibility that Soldiers who are in Afghanistan now might need to stay longer due to the training-related delays of follow-on forces.

 

Chief among those difficult decisions are the 14 days of civilian furloughs the Army will implement later this year to help reduce costs. The savings there will help the Army train, Odierno said.

 

“That’s allowing us to have enough money to invest in the training of the units that will be placed in Afghanistan, so we will not have to increase tour length,” he said. “We’ve had to make some very difficult decisions here in fiscal year 2013 in order to ensure we do not extend those tour lengths. So they were tough, difficult decisions; but we believe tour lengths will remain the same and we will be able to train the forces that follow up those units.”

 

SHRINKING ARMY

 

A primary concern for legislators was the cut in forces the Army will experience between now and the end of fiscal year 2017, coupled with the force cuts that could come with additional sequestration. Right now, the plan for active-duty Army force cuts requires the Army to drop to just 490,000 Soldiers by the end of fiscal year 2017. In 2010, the Army was at 570,000 Soldiers. That’s a cut of 80,000 Soldiers.

 

Additional sequestration could require the Army to cut even more Soldiers, possibly more than 100,000 troops. Though the cuts would come from all three components, Odierno said that about half of that would come from the active force. Were that to happen, the Army might drop to 440,000 Soldiers. That’s a number Odierno said will affect what Americans can expect of the Army.

 

At 490,000 Soldiers, Odierno said the Army “would have enough capability to do one major contingency, maybe something a bit smaller. If we cut another 80-100,000 out, we now put in to question our ability to respond to large-scale major contingencies. And we certainly will not be able to do anything above that.”

 

INDUSTRIAL BASE

 

Coming out of Iraq and Afghanistan, the Army now has “less need to buy things,” Secretary of the Army John M. McHugh told senators. That hurts the ability of America’s industrial base to sustain itself.

 

Concern about the industrial base stems from the Army’s need to have a place to turn, at a moment’s notice, to procure war-fighting materiel.

 

McHugh told lawmakers the Army is working on two fronts to assess the effects of drawdown and sequestration on America’s industrial base. Firstly, he said the Army is working with the Department of Defense to set up the metrics in which to feed “consumption data.” Results from that, he said, will be able to “come up with those kinds of red flags” that can be used to identify problems with the industrial base.

 

The Army is also, on its own, working with a civilian analysis firm to better understand the threats to the industrial base. A report from that effort should be available in June, he said.

 

“The first step is knowing where problems lie; the second is trying to use diminishing resources to protect it,” McHugh said.

 

HOLLOW FORCE

 

Odierno said the Army, post-Vietnam, suffered from lack of training and a lack of discipline. Then, he said, the Army was a hollow force.

 

“For the next 15 years we focused on improving our readiness, improving our modernization, and improving our training programs,” he said. “We revolutionized how the Army did our business. I was fortunate enough to grow up in that environment.”

 

The steepness of cuts from sequestration, he said, “could lead us back to where we were in the late 1970s.”

 

Right now, “the full impact of not having enough money to train has not fully hit yet. It’s just beginning to hit.” If it continues, he said, there will be training shortages and readiness issues. “We’ll have some real challenges on our hands.”

 

Training shortages and readiness issues, the general said, could lead to a lack of faith among Soldiers — causing Soldiers who now have great combat experience to want to leave the Army.

 

“We still have time to ensure we can keep the best in our Army,” he said. Doing that means predictable budgets that allow the Army to remain the best, and to prove to Soldiers the Army is “the right size, and ready and trained to deploy.”

 

BCT REDCUTIONS

 

As part of a mandated drawdown of forces — the one expected to take the Army to 490,000 Soldiers, the Army must also eliminate some of its force structure. That means the service will eliminate eight brigade combat teams. Already, two brigade combat teams, known as BCTs, from Europe have been eliminated. Six more will be eliminated in the future, McHugh told lawmakers.

 

On a path to deciding which BCTs will be eliminated, the Army has already completed assessments at 21 installations to measure the impact.

 

Now the Army will hold public meetings near the installations to hear what civilians have to say.

 

We’re in “the process of holding public listening sessions in over 30 locations throughout the Army to receive input from the communities that surround places like Fort Carson (Colo.) and others, to make sure we have the fullest record possible to make those very important decisions.”

 

The Army will also develop a list of criteria it will use to make determinations about what can be cut. That list, McHugh said, should be available in June.

 

Odierno told lawmakers that while some BCTs might be eliminated, other BCTs could be increased in size.

 

It’s not just “flags or the numbers of units,” Odierno said. “But instead, numbers of people.”

 

Reorganizations of BCTs, he said, could mean “we might make them larger,” Odierno said. “So we might eliminate flags, but it wouldn’t be a total loss of BCT, because we would add a third maneuver battalion to the BCT. Don’t focus on the flags, focus on the numbers.”

 

Both Odierno and McHugh told lawmakers they supported the one percent pay raise for Soldiers, as well as an increase in premiums for Tricare. McHugh and Odierno both agreed the cost of Tricare has gone up, with McHugh saying while everybody wants to maintain the “status quo,” the cost of providing Tricare has “skyrocketed over the last 10 years.”

 

Odierno pointed out that while the benefits associated with Tricare have increased, the cost to beneficiaries has not kept up.

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26 avril 2013 5 26 /04 /avril /2013 07:30
Bachar al-Assad a utilisé des armes chimiques «à petite échelle»

 

25/04/2013 par Gaëtan Barralon – 45eNord

 

«Avec un certain degré de certitude», Washington a assuré, ce jeudi, que le régime de Bachar al-Assad a utilisé des armes chimiques «à petite échelle» face à la rébellion syrienne. Si les autorités américaines prônent, pour l’heure, la prudence, ces nouvelles déclarations confirmeraient le franchissement de la «ligne rouge» érigée par le président Barack Obama.

 

La Maison Blanche a ainsi envoyé une lettre à plusieurs membres du Congrès américain, assurant que «la communauté des renseignements américains a conclu, avec un certain degré de certitude, que le régime syrien a utilisé des armes chimiques à petite échelle», comme l’a évoqué le secrétaire américain à la Défense, Chuck Hagel, présent, ce jeudi, à Abou Dhabi.

Une information également apportée du côté de Londres. «Nous avons des informations limitées mais convaincantes de plusieurs sources montrant l’utilisation d’armes chimiques en Syrie, y compris du gaz sarin», a ainsi déclaré le porte-parole de la diplomatie britannique.

«L’utilisation d’armes chimiques est un crime de guerre. Nous avons rendu compte de cette information à nos alliés, nos partenaires et aux Nations unies et nous travaillons activement pour obtenir davantage et de meilleures informations», a-t-il ajouté.

 

 

Deux jours après avoir déclaré n’être pas parvenu «à la conclusion que [des armes chimiques] ont été utilisées» en Syrie, Washington a donc décidé de faire état de ses informations aux yeux de la communauté internationale. Pour autant, ses certitudes s’avèrent fragiles, comme l’a rappelé la porte-parole du Conseil de sécurité nationale (NSC), Caitlin Hayden.

«Par exemple, la chaîne de transmission [des échantillons] n’est pas claire, donc nous ne pouvons pas confirmer comment l’exposition [au sarin] a eu lieu», a-t-elle déclaré, ajoutant que l’évaluation du renseignement américain est «fondée en partie sur des prélèvements» sur des personnes.

«Étant donné les enjeux, et ce que nous avons appris de notre propre expérience, les évaluations du renseignement ne sont pas suffisantes à elles seules. Seuls des faits dignes de foi et recoupés qui nous apporteront un certain degré de confiance guideront notre processus de prise de décision, et renforceront notre influence à la tête de la communauté internationale», a-t-elle précisé, mettant ainsi en garde contre toutes conclusions hâtives.

«Il est évident qu’une ligne rouge a été franchie» pour John McCain

Mais plusieurs sénateurs américains sont d’ores et déjà montés au créneau pour appeler à un engagement plus important des États-Unis dans le conflit syrien. Rappelant les déclarations du président Obama, le mois dernier, sur le franchissement d’une «ligne rouge» en cas d’utilisation d’armes chimiques par le régime syrien, le républicain John McCain a déclaré «qu’il est évident qu’une ligne rouge a été franchie». «Ces stocks d’armes chimiques, dont certains se trouvent dans des zones de combat, doivent être sécurisées, et nous devons donner à l’opposition la capacité de battre Bachar al-Assad une bonne fois pour toute», a-t-il martelé.

Même son de cloche du côté de la présidente démocrate de la commission du Renseignement du Sénat, Dianne Feinstein. Cette dernière a en effet déclaré que «des actions doivent être engagées pour empêcher une utilisation à plus grande échelle», se disant «très inquiète qu’avec cette admission publique, le président Assad ne calcule qu’il n’a plus rien à perdre».

Assurant que «toutes les options sont sur la table» pour offrir une réaction américaine à ces révélations, un haut responsable américain, cité sous couvert de l’anonymat, a déclaré que l’administration Obama allait «consulter de près [ses] amis et alliés, de façon plus large la communauté internationale ainsi que l’opposition syrienne pour déterminer quelle serait la meilleure façon d’agir».

«Cela pourrait couvrir une large gamme d’activités […] qui comprennent déjà des initiatives diplomatiques, une assistance à l’opposition, mais à la demande du président [Obama], il existe d’autres possibilités pour lesquelles nous nous préparons, et que nous devons prendre en considération au moment où nous déterminons si des armes chimiques ont été utilisées», a-t-il ajouté lors d’une conférence de presse téléphonique.

«Nous avons l’obligation d’enquêter scrupuleusement»

Si Washington exclut, pour l’heure, toute intervention directe en Syrie, la Maison Blanche a rappelé sa volonté de voir une enquête des Nations Unies voir le jour pour évaluer les preuves actuelles. «Précisément parce que le président [Obama] prend cette question très au sérieux, nous avons l’obligation d’enquêter scrupuleusement sur tous les indices de l’utilisation d’armes chimiques en Syrie», a conclu Caitlin Hayden.

Après avoir déposé, le 20 mars dernier, une requête pour obtenir une enquête pour éclaircir les accusations mutuelles d’utilisation d’armes chimiques entre le régime et l’opposition, Damas a, par la suite, refusé l’accès à ses territoires à la mission d’experts, conduite par le Suédois Ake Sellstrom. Un refus qui n’a cessé d’alimenter les craintes et accusations de la communauté internationale à l’égard du régime de Bachar al-Assad.

Pour le porte-parole de la diplomatie britannique, Bachar al-Assad «doit coopérer avec la communauté internationale et prouver que son régime n’a pas commis ce crime horrible, en permettant un accès illimité à l’ONU et à l’OIAC [l'Organisation pour l'interdiction des armes chimiques] pour qu’une enquête soit menée sur le terrain en Syrie».

Tant bien que mal, les dirigeants occidentaux ne semblent donc pas résigner à obtenir l’accès aux territoires syriens. Mais les récentes révélations, si elles s’avèrent vérifiées et vérifiables, pourraient bien bouleverser l’ordre diplomatique actuel du conflit frappant le pays depuis plus de deux ans.

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26 avril 2013 5 26 /04 /avril /2013 07:30
Armes chimiques en Syrie: toutes les options sur la table

 

25 avril 2013 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

WASHINGTON - Un haut responsable américain a affirmé jeudi que toutes les options étaient sur la table dans le dossier syrien, après que la Maison Blanche eut évoqué pour la première fois le probable recours à des armes chimiques par le régime de Bachar al-Assad.

 

Ce responsable, s'exprimant sous couvert de l'anonymat, a toutefois rappelé que l'exécutif américain tenait à être absolument sûr que de telles armes avaient été utilisées avant de conclure que la ligne rouge tracée par le président Barack Obama avait été franchie par Damas.

 

Nous allons consulter de près nos amis et alliés, de façon plus large la communauté internationale ainsi que l'opposition syrienne pour déterminer quelle serait la meilleure façon d'agir, a-t-il expliqué lors d'une conférence de presse téléphonique.

 

Je ne veux pas me lancer dans des hypothèses à l'heure actuelle, mais il est évident que toutes les options sont sur la table en terme de réaction, a ajouté ce responsable.

 

Cela pourrait couvrir une large gamme d'activités (...) qui comprennent déjà des initiatives diplomatiques, une assistance à l'opposition, mais à la demande du président (Obama), il existe d'autres possibilités pour lesquelles nous nous préparons, et que nous devons prendre en considération au moment où nous déterminons si des armes chimiques ont été utilisées, a-t-il remarqué.

 

M. Obama avait mis en garde à de nombreuses reprises le régime Assad contre le recours à ses stocks d'armes chimiques, affirmant notamment le 20 mars en Israël qu'il s'agirait d'une grave et tragique erreur, et qu'un tel développement change(rait) la règle du jeu. Il avait aussi parlé de lignes rouges à ne pas franchir pour Damas.

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26 avril 2013 5 26 /04 /avril /2013 07:20
Afghanistan: des millions partis en fumée pour rien sur une base américaine

 

25 avril 2013 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

WASHINGTON - L'armée américaine a dépensé cinq millions de dollars dans un incinérateur sur une base en Afghanistan en pure perte obligeant les militaires à brûler leurs déchets à ciel ouvert malgré les risques sanitaires, dénonce un rapport.

 

En juin 2010, le corps des Ingénieurs de l'Armée de Terre a passé un contrat de 5,4 millions de dollars avec une société turque pour qu'elle construise deux incinérateurs d'une capacité de huit tonnes chacun sur une base avancée, la FOB Salerno, située dans la province de Khost (est), relate l'Inspection générale spéciale pour la reconstruction de l'Afghanistan (Sigar), chargée de contrôler comment les fonds gouvernementaux sont dépensés.

 

La seule chose que ces incinérateurs ont brûlé, c'est l'argent du contribuable, dénoncé le patron du Sigar, John Sopko, dans un communiqué. Pire, brûler à la place les déchets dans une décharge à ciel ouvert met en danger la santé de nos troupes, regrette-t-il.

 

L'armée a pris réception de cet incinérateur bien que sa construction ne soit pas totalement terminée et si sa capacité était suffisante à condition qu'il fonctionne 24 heures sur 24, il était irréaliste de l'utiliser plus de 12 heures par jour en raison des menaces talibanes contre la base.

 

Quelque 4.000 soldats ont été stationnés sur la FOB Salerno au plus fort de l'engagement américain.

 

Par manque d'entretien, l'installation s'est délabrée, pointe encore le Sigar. Outre les frais de réparation, son utilisation coûterait un million de dollars par an, alors que la FOB Salerno doit fermer à la fin de l'année 2013 dans le cadre du retrait progressif des troupes américaines.

 

Pour se débarrasser des 16 tonnes de déchets produits par jour sur cette base, l'armée les brûle bien qu'on sache qu'il y a des risques potentiels pour la santé du le personnel de la base en raison des fumées toxiques, dénonce-t-il.

 

De nombreux vétérans ont déjà intenté des poursuites contre l'armée, soutenant avoir été intoxiqués par ces fumées. Sur son site un internet, un avocat, David Huffman, recense 69 bases américains en Irak et Afghanistan où les déchets ont été incinérés à ciel ouvert.

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26 avril 2013 5 26 /04 /avril /2013 07:20
AMRDEC conceptual renderings of potential future JMR configurations

AMRDEC conceptual renderings of potential future JMR configurations

 

April 25th, 2013 by Kris Osborn - defensetech.org

 

U.S. Army officials plan to award up to four design contracts by the end of fiscal year 2013 for vendors to build the Joint Multi-Role (JMR) demonstrator aircraft, a next generation helicopter fleet, Army leaders said Thursday.

 

Current plans call for two JMR technology demonstrator aircraft to be designed and built for a first flight by sometime in 2017, said Todd Turner, director for the Army’s Research and Technology Air Portfolio.

 

“This is an S&T [Science and Technology] effort for the development of a new, medium-class platform. The goals are to design, fabricate and demonstrate an advanced vertical lift vehicle with a combat radius of 424 kilometers, that’s an 848 kilometer range, un-refueled, at speeds of up to 230 knots,” Turner said at the National Defense Industrial Association’s 14th Annual Science & Engineering Technology Conference/Defense Tech Exposition, National Harbor, Md.

 

A key goal for the program is to be affordable, and develop an aircraft that can reach much greater speeds and extend mission possibilities without compromising an ability to hover, Turner said.

 

Army officials said the S&T effort is designed to lower risk, reduce costs and inform requirements for what will be a Future Vertical Lift formal program of record designed to deliver new aircraft by 2030.

 

“We’re currently completing what we call configuration trades and analysis portions of this effort which will finish this year. The trades we considered were cost, weight and power requirements, mission equipment packages and life-cycle costs.  All configurations were considered,” Turner said.

 

The configurations currently being examined include a tilt-rotor possibility, like today’s Marine Corps and Air Force V-22 Osprey as well as various compound configurations such as air vehicles with a rear-thrusting mechanism and co-axial rotorblades, Army officials explained.

 

The service is evaluating responses to an Army solicitation to industry to build designs. Service officials plan to down select to two design teams by the fourth quarter of fiscal year ’14, Turner said.

 

The JMR effort also plans to include next-generation mission equipment and avionics along with integrated sensors and weapons systems.

 

Turner said Army S&T is working on advanced rotor designs, autonomy algorithms and concept analyses wherein they assess air-vehicle design methods.

 

“We currently have a good handle on how to build systems when we have a database. What we are trying to do is move towards where we can design new systems at a more rapid pace. Get that design closer to what the air vehicle will look like, he said.

 

The FVL aircraft is slated to be powered by an Improved Turbine Engine Program (ITEP), a more powerful, 3,000-horsepower, more fuel-efficient engine also being informed by an ongoing S&T Program, Advanced Affordable Turbine Engine effort.

 

“It’s transitioning out of S&T this year to the ITEP program. It’s showing benefits of 25-percent reduced burn rate and a 35-percent reduction in production and maintenance costs,” Turner said.

 

Army S&T is also in the early phases of developing the Future Affordable Turbine Engine, a 7,000-horsepower heavy class engine for larger rotary platforms such as the CH-47 Chinook.

 

“We’re developing material and component technologies for the compressor and turbine sub-systems,” he added.

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26 avril 2013 5 26 /04 /avril /2013 07:20
Stinger Launch

 

April 24, 2013: Strategy Page

 

MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP LEJEUNE, North Carolina - Flames blow out of the launcher as Cpl. Nicholas Zeien, a gunner with 2nd Low Altitude Air Defense Battalion, fires a PL-87 Stinger missile at a drone flying off of Onslow Beach on Camp Lejeune during the second day of the battalionÂ’s live-fire exercise April 17. The Stinger has a range of more than 6 kilometers and weighs more than 34 pounds. The missile can be fired from the shoulder firing system, a vehicle-mounted firing system or an aircraft. Photo By: Lance Cpl. Cory D. Polom

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 17:35
U.S. Ready for North Korea Conflict: Dempsey

 

Apr. 25, 2013 – Defense News (AFP)

 

TOKYO — The United States’ top military officer said Thursday that his troops were ready to act if North Korea turned its increasingly bellicose rhetoric into action.

 

“We are seeking to deter North Korea from provocation,” Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told soldiers at the Yokota Air Base, about an hour's drive west of the Japanese capital.

 

“I can assure you that we are postured with our Japanese allies in order to protect our citizens, their citizens, our facilities, their facilities.”

 

Dempsey's remarks follow a visit to South Korea and China, North Korea's chief ally, as regional tensions rise over fears about Pyonyang's recent threats to attack its southern neighbour and wage nuclear war on the United States.

 

The Korean peninsula was already engulfed in a cycle of escalating tensions — triggered by the North's nuclear test in February — when Pyongyang decided on April 3 to block all South Korean access to the Kaesong industrial zone, a rare joint project between the two countries.

 

Dempsey, who has also met with Chinese military officials and President Xi Jinping, said the U.S. wanted closer ties with Beijing.

 

But he reiterated earlier official remarks that the U.S. would defend Japan if it came under attack -- as Beijing and Tokyo remain embroiled in an increasingly bitter territorial dispute.

 

“The theme [of talks with Chinese officials] was that we both aspired to a new, different and better relationship,” Dempsey said. "But that relationship has to be approached in the context of our other responsibilities, and alliances in the region.

 

“Will we trade off our relationship with Japan in order to have stronger relationship with China? The answer is no. That's not going to change.

 

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe vowed Tuesday to “expel by force” any Chinese landing on a chain of islands in the East China Sea, which are administered by Japan as the Senkakus but also claimed by Beijing as the Diaoyus.

 

His statement came after a flotilla of eight Chinese government vessels sailed into the disputed waters, the biggest number to do so in one day since Tokyo's nationalization of some of the islands in September.

 

The U.S. is engaged in a “pivot” to Asia after years of conflict in Iraq and Afghanistan.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 16:35
US and Australia sign space situational awareness data sharing agreement

25 April 2013 aerospace-technology.com

 

The US Department of Defense (DoD) has entered into a space situational awareness (SSA) international sharing agreement with the Department of Defence of Australia, making it the first government-to-government memorandum to permit an advanced exchange of SSA data.

 

The US Strategic Command (STRATCOM) commander air force general Robert Kehler signed the agreement on behalf of the US.

 

The agreement will simplify the process for the Australian Government to request data through Stratcom's SSA sharing agreement programme.

 

SSA data exchanges will help partners with activities such as launch support, manoeuvre planning, support for on-orbit anomaly resolution and electromagnetic interference reporting and investigation.

 

US Strategic Command general Robert Kehler said: "Many nations share the space domain, and it is in our best interest to create an environment where the sharing of SSA data facilitates transparency and improves flight safety."

 

The agreement builds on agreement signed in November 2010 agreement, when the two countries agreed to cooperate on space situational awareness activities.

 

It allows the Australians to make specific requests about space data accumulated by Stratcom's Joint Operations Center at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, US.

 

The space data includes locations of about 23,000 man-made objects in space and is critical in planning launches into the space domain.

 

The agreement also paves the way for similar ones between the US and its closest allies and partners, and is designed on commercial agreements Stratcom has forged with commercial firms over the past three years.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 16:30
U.S., UAE Plan to Wrap Up Major Arms Deal

 

Apr. 25, 2013 – Defense News (AFP)

 

ABU DHABI — U.S. Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel will meet United Arab Emirates leaders on Thursday to wrap up a major arms deal that both nations see as a way to thwart Iran's military power.

 

Hagel arrived in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday on the last leg of a six-nation tour of the Middle East in which he has sought to renew ties with American allies who share Washington's concerns over Iran's nuclear project and Syria's civil war.

 

Before his departure, the Pentagon announced plans for an elaborate weapons sale to Israel, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, including more than two dozen F-16 fighter jets to the UAE at a value of nearly $5 billion.

 

The preliminary arms deal “really cements a long term and enduring partnership with the Emirates,” a senior defence official told reporters traveling with Hagel.

 

By endorsing the deal, the UAE has demonstrated "its trust in the United States" as a reliable partner, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

 

The arms sale, which involves a long-term commitment to train UAE pilots and provide spare parts, shows "that the US isn't going anywhere, that the United States is firmly committed to the security of all our regional partners," the official said.

 

The F-16 deal -- and the perceived threat posed by Iran -- will be high on the agenda Thursday night when Hagel meets Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahayan, Abu Dhabi crown prince and deputy head of the UAE's armed forces, officials said.

 

Located only 35 miles (56 kilometers) from Iran across the Strait of Hormuz, the United Arab Emirates is anxious about the prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran as well as the consequences of a possible Israeli pre-emptive strike to prevent Tehran from attaining an atomic arsenal.

 

As Iran's uranium enrichment has progressed along with its missile programme, the UAE has spent billions beefing up its air power and missile defences.

 

The UAE also has backed tough sanctions against Iran despite extensive trade and commercial ties with its northern neighbour.

 

Dubai, the second-largest emirate after Abu Dhabi, hosts a large Iranian diaspora and much of Iran's imports and exports flow through Dubai's bustling ports.

 

Hagel flew to Abu Dhabi from Cairo in a trip that has included stops in Israel, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

 

U.S. defense officials said grave worries about Syria's conflict came up in all of Hagel's meetings, amid renewed fears the Damascus regime may have used chemical weapons.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 16:20
Une puce qui géolocalise sans utiliser de satellites de positionnement

 

le 25/04/13 Gilbert Kallenborn  - 01net (AFP)

 

L’armée américaine cherche à réduire sa dépendance du système GPS, qui peut être brouillé par l’ennemi. Elle vient de présenter une solution alternative, totalement autonome et déjà très miniaturisée.

 

Le système GPS, c’est bien pratique. Mais que faire quand il y a des interférences, quand le signal est brouillé, ou quand les satellites de positionnement sont en panne ? L’hypothèse est très probable : en mai 2012, la Corée du Nord a perturbé la réception de signaux GPS en Corée du Sud, en utilisant un système de brouillage russe. Evidemment, ce problème de réception peut être particulièrement fatal pour des soldats en opération. C’est pourquoi l’armée américaine cherche de nouvelles solutions technologiques permettant de limiter la dépendance au GPS.

 

Il y a quelques jours, l’agence de recherche du Pentagone (Darpa) vient de présenter une puce électronique qui permet de se géolocaliser sans avoir besoin d’utiliser des satellites ou d’autres systèmes externes. D’une taille de 8 millimètres cube, elle contient trois gyroscopes, trois accéléromètres et une horloge atomique. Autant d'instruments qui, combinés, forment un système de navigation autonome. En effet, supposons qu’un véhicule veuille naviguer d’un point A vers un point B, dont les positions sont connues de manière précise. Pour pouvoir calculer en temps réel sa position, tout ce qu’il faut avoir est une bonne carte, l’orientation et l’accélération du véhicule, ainsi que le temps écoulé. Et le tour est joué.

 

Une alternative, mais pour une durée limitée

 

Le stade de mise au point de cette puce ne permet d'envisager, pour l'instant, de remplacer le GPS que pour une durée limitée. Pour la Darpa, cette technologie convient entre autres pour le suivi de personnes, les petites plateformes aéroportées ou les munitions de petit calibre. Au-delà, la Darpa travaille sur toute une série de programmes, lancés début 2010, sur les questions de positionnement et de navigation. L'un d'eux prévoit, pour remplacer temporairement le GPS, d'utiliser les signaux existants comme ceux dégagés par « les tours de télévision, de radio, les bornes téléphoniques et même les éclairs », explique, lors d’une conférence de presse, Dr Arati Prabhakar, qui préside la Darpa. Avant d’ajouter : « Il n'y aura pas de solution unique, ce sera une série de technologies. »

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:55
L'amiral Greenhert et l'amiral Rogel

L'amiral Greenhert et l'amiral Rogel

24/04/2013 Actu Marine

 

Du 17 au 19 avril dernier, le chef d’état-major de la Marine, l’amiral Bernard Rogel, a reçu son homologue américain, l’amiral Jonathan W. Greenert, à Paris, puis en région brestoise.

 

Cette rencontre de haut niveau a permis d’évoquer les coopérations récentes et futures dans l’ensemble des domaines capacitaires. Elle a permis de souligner la réalité et l’importance du maintien de l’interopérabilité entre nos deux marines. L’excellente intégration de la frégate Chevalier Paul au sein du groupe constitué autour du porte-avions John C. Stennis début 2013 en a constitué l’une des meilleures illustrations.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:45
Marines from Task Force African Lion 13 and servicemembers from Joint Task Force-Port Opening, U.S. Transportation Command, begin the offload of vehicles and equipment to support Exercise African Lion 13 in the Port of Agadir, Morocco, on April 6. (Sgt. Tatum Vayavananda / Marine Corps)

Marines from Task Force African Lion 13 and servicemembers from Joint Task Force-Port Opening, U.S. Transportation Command, begin the offload of vehicles and equipment to support Exercise African Lion 13 in the Port of Agadir, Morocco, on April 6. (Sgt. Tatum Vayavananda / Marine Corps)

Apr. 24, 2013 – Defense News (AFP)

 

RABAT — US-Morocco war games, cancelled by Rabat over a Washington-backed plan for the UN's Western Sahara mission, have resumed on a smaller scale after a compromise was reached, the US embassy said Wednesday.

 

"The Moroccan government did ask us (in the past 48 hours) if we could resume African Lion," embassy spokesman Rodney Ford told AFP.

 

"Most of our forces had already redeployed. But some elements are still on the ground. So we are conducting modified limited military engagements," he said.

 

Aerial training, refuelling and workshops were among the resumed activities, he added.

 

The US army was to conduct the "African Lion 2013" joint military exercises with Morocco from April 7-27, involving 1,400 personnel from US Africa Command (AFRICOM) and 900 members of the Moroccan armed forces.

 

But it began withdrawing troops and equipment last week amid disagreement over a plan to broaden the Western Sahara peacekeeping force's mandate to include rights monitoring in the disputed territory and in Sahrawi refugee camps in Algeria.

 

The US proposal triggered a furious lobbying campaign by Morocco, which called off the war games in a clear sign of Rabat's displeasure.

 

Washington this week dropped its demand that rights monitoring be included in the mandate of the UN mission in the Western Sahara, diplomats said, with the resolution merely to encourage stronger efforts on human rights.

 

The Security Council resolution on the UN peacekeeping force is to be voted on Thursday.

 

Giving the force a rights monitoring role is something human rights groups and the pro-independence Polisario Front have been advocating for years in the face of repeated allegations of torture of Sahrawi activists by Moroccan forces.

 

Morocco annexed the former Spanish colony in the 1970s in a move never recognised by the international community, and proposes broad autonomy for the phosphate-rich region under its sovereignty.

 

But this is rejected by the Polisario, which insists on the right of Sahrawis to decide in a UN-monitored referendum whether or not they want independence.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:35
Game Changer: The F-35 and the Pacific

 

April 25, 2013 By Robbin F. Laird - thediplomat.com

 

To understand the real value of the F-35 one must consider its operation as a fleet, not simply as an individual aircraft.

 

It is difficult to discuss the F-35 without actually knowing what the aircraft is and how F-35 fleets will reshape combat. But this is precisely what the budding negative commentary on the F-35 is built on – a lack of knowledge. 

Even worse, the existing 5th generation aircraft is not well known either, because of its limited numbers and its condemnation by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and President Barack Obama as a “Cold War” weapon. One could note that when the latest Korean crisis flared up, those “Cold War” mainstays, the F-22 and the B-2 (which has been flying now for more than 20 years) were called upon very quickly. And the U.S. Air Force (USAF) began to do sortie surge exercises in Hawaii and Arctic exercises in Alaska to increase the quantities of F-22s available for immediate Pacific operations. 

I have had the opportunity over the years to interview many F-22 and F-35 pilots, maintainers and builders as well as the subsystem suppliers of the F-35. Much of the capability of the aircraft, including its multiple integrated combat systems are evolutionary steps forward, and low risk systems, such as the active electronically scanned array (AESA) built by Northrop Grumman for the F-35. 

What is radically new about the F-35 is the fusion of data in the cockpit and the shaping of a new decision making capability within the aircraft and the fleet.  The aircraft permits situational decision-making, not just situational awareness.  It is a C5ISR (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Combat Systems, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance) aircraft, which allows the U.S. Marine Corps (USMC) alone to replace three aircraft, including an Electronic Warfare Aircraft with the F-35B. This is also why Singapore has referred to the F-35B as a “cost effective” aircraft.

But understanding the real value of the F-35 one must consider its operation as a fleet, not simply as an individual aircraft. The F-22 was built as an aircraft, which flies in 2, and 4 ship formations, but unlike the F-15, the “wingman” is miles away and not anywhere to be found in visual range. As one pilot put it to me: “When we take off together that is the last time we see each other until we land.”

The F-35 also has the capability to operate miles away from one another, but with a major difference.  The individual airplanes are interconnected, operate in 360-degree operational space, and the machines pass the data throughout the network.  Each individual plane can see around itself for significant distances in 360 degree space, which has already underscored the need for a new generation of weapons, for existing systems such as Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missiles (AMRAAMs) operate in half or less of the space which each F-35 can see beyond itself.

It is the interconnected C5ISR delivered by the fleet, coupled with the ability to work with the off-boarding of weapons, which shapes a new way forward.  Target acquisition does not have to be limited to weapons carried on board. This means that classic distinctions between tactical fighters doing close air support, air superiority missions or air defense missions become blurred. The fleet as a whole identifies targets for the various mission sets and can guide weapons from any of its elements to a diversity of targets. The reach of the fleet is the key to the operation of the fleet, not the range of individual aircraft.

As General Hostage, the Air Combat Commander, put it during an interview Lt. General (Retired) Deptula and I conducted with him last December:

"The ability of the planes to work with each other over a secure distributed battlespace is the essential foundation from which the air combat cloud can be built.

And the advantage of the F-35 is the nature of the global fleet. Allied and American F-35s, whether USAF, USN, or USMC, can talk with one another and set up the distributed operational system. Such a development can allow for significant innovation in shaping the air combat cloud for distributed operations in support of the Joint Force Commander."

With many Pacific allies already committed to the F-35, and with the USAF and USMC planning to deploy their new aircraft to the regionin the next couple of years, a fleet of F-35s will clearly emerge in the Pacific and shape combat capabilities the next decade out.

The movement of data among the elements of the fleet will be the beginning of the 21st century equivalent to what the U.S. Navy called the “big blue blanket” over the Pacific in World War II.  Clearly, the U.S. will not have the assets to do this by itself, but with the emergence of interconnected fleets this aspiration can come closer to reality.

And with it will be the ability to build the kind of attack-defense enterprise essential to deal with the evolving threats in the Pacific, and the efforts of China to undercut the significant lynchpin role that the United States plays in the Pacific. 

An inherent characteristic of many new systems is that they are really about presence and putting a grid over an operational area, and therefore they can be used to support strike or defense within an integrated approach. In the 20th Century, surge was built upon the notion of signaling. One would deploy a particular combat capability – whether it be a Carrier Battle Group, Amphibious Ready Group, or Air Expeditionary Wing – as a marker to signal its presence and intentions to an adversary. Depending on the adversary’s response, additional forces would be sent in to escalate the threat capability.

With the new multi-mission systems – 5th generation aircraft and Aegis for example – the key is presence and integration able to support strike or defense in a single operational presence capability. Now the adversary can not be certain that you are simply putting down a marker.

This is what former Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne calls the attack and defense enterprise. The strategic thrust of integrating modern systems is to create a grid that can operate in an area as a seamless whole, able to strike or defend simultaneously. This is enabled by the evolution of C5ISR, and it is why Wynne has underscored for more than a decade that 5th generation aircraft are not merely replacements for existing tactical systems, but a whole new approach to integrating defense and offense.

When one can add the strike and defensive systems of other players, notably missiles and sensors aboard surface ships like Aegis, then one can create the reality of what Ed Timperlake, a former fighter pilot, has described as the F-35 being able to consider Aegis as his wingman.

In fact, the ability for forward deployed F-35s to identify targets for surface ships can lead to a renaissance of the strike role of surface ships as well.  Or it can lead to what I referred to early last year as enhancing “the long reach of Aegis.” The F-35 is a global program tapping into the industrial and technological capabilities  of global allies of the United States in a unique way.  Earlier, the Aegis program built a foundation for such an approach, with nearly 25 percent of the deployed Aegis fleet now being non-American.  This led me to coin the term many years ago of the “Aegis global enterprise.”  Combing these two efforts into an integrated attack and defense capability will be game changing. 

As I have written in Proceedings Magazine:

These F-35-Aegis offense and defense bubbles can be networked throughout the Pacific to enhance the capacity of individual nations. They represent a prime example of how one country’s assets can contribute to the reach others, together establishing a scalable capability for a honeycombed force.

Overall, the enterprise lays a foundation for a global capability in sea-based missile defenses and for protecting deployed forces as well as projecting force. Power such as this is increasingly central to the freedom of action necessary for the worldwide operation of the U.S. military and our coalition partners.

In other words, the roll out of the Pacific fleet of F-35s is part of the re-shaping of the U.S, and allied military capabilities for a 21st century strategy.  And such a strategy must be able to deal with the impact of China, Korea, the Arctic opening and the challenge of securing the conveyer belt of goods and services by sea or sea lines of communication (SLOC) defense.

But this does not end the story of the impact of the F-35 on the future. Another key aspect is how the F-35 as a global enterprise can affect global investments in airpower and the growth of capabilities over time. This is a subject broader than a short article can discuss with full justice, so I will emphasize only three key points.

First, what is not often realized is that Lockheed Martin is a 30 percent “prime contractor” standing on the top of a global supply chain. And this supply chain includes many of the world’s best suppliers and subsystem providers. And foreign manufacturers produce more than 20 percent of the aircraft even at this stage as part of the global supply chain. 

This system allows the taping of capabilities, which have been, available in specific nations and unleashing their potential to support global coalitions.  The case of Japan is instructive whereby the participation of the Japanese in building parts for the F-35 means they are building for the global coalition not just for Japan.

Second, the F-35 is built around a global sustainment model. This means that the Singapore F-35Bs will be supported by Singapore who could do the same for the USMC F-35Bs.  The opportunity and ability to build hubs and training ranges in the Pacific with hubs and ranges in Canada and Australia and hubs in Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Alaska, Hawaii and Guam provides an opportunity to re-shape how sustainment can be done in around the world.

Third, Japan, like Italy, is building a final check out or assembly facility for the F-35, which can function, as well as a matience, repair, and operartions (MRO) facility for allies. Although intended to serve their own needs the Italians and Japanese are in effect putting in place maintenance facilities or MRO facilities which the U.S. Air Force, USN and USMC are able to use in two key regions, central to American interests.

Fourth, the weapons revolution necessary to catch up with 5th generation aircraft can be the focus of global, not just American investments. Even though the U.S. has been the core architect for the aircraft, the implementation of the fleet will not be solely and perhaps primarily American. The diversity of global weapon suppliers – European, Israeli, and Asian – will seek to integrate their products onto the F-35 and integration on one set of F-35s makes them available to the fleet.

A totally ignored aspect of the aircraft as a weapon system is weapons integration. The software integration of a weapon on one set of aircraft will be available to the fleet.

This means that the weapons to be integrated on Block 4 software F-35s, which includes the MBDA’s new Meteor Missiles, the Kongsberg Joint Strike Missile or the new Turkish missiles, can be purchased directly by Asian governments for their aircraft as well. This is providing for a global investment in the strike capabilities of the F-35 fleet.

In short, the F-35 will be an important fixture of allied and American defense in the Pacific and will bring Europe and the Pacific together inside the aircraft and arming the aircraft in the years ahead.  It will be a key part of shaping new concepts of operations, which will be essential to the safety, and security of America and its allies in a troubled world. 

Dr. Robbin F. Laird is a Military and Security Analyst, the co-founder of Second Line of Defense, and a Member of the Editorial Board of Contributors, AOL Defense.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:35
Top US General Reminds China of US Commitment to Japan

Apr. 24, 2013 – Defense News (AFP)

 

As tensions rise over island dispute

 

BEIJING — The top US military officer told China’s leaders on Wednesday that Washington is committed to defending Japan, as Beijing and Tokyo engage in intensified rhetoric over a territorial row.

 

Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is visiting China just as the dispute between Beijing and Tokyo over uninhabited islands in the East China Sea is again heating up.

 

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe vowed Tuesday to “expel by force” any Chinese landing on the islands, which are administered by Japan as the Senkakus but also claimed by China as the Diaoyus.

 

His statement came after a flotilla of eight Chinese government vessels sailed into the disputed waters, the biggest number to do so in one day since Tokyo’s nationalization of some of the islands in September.

 

“In the case of Japan, I was careful to remind them (China’s senior leaders) that the US has certain treaty obligations with Japan, that we would honor,” Dempsey told reporters in Beijing.

 

US officials have said that while Washington takes no side in the dispute itself, the islands are under Japan’s control and thus protected under the US security treaty with Tokyo.

 

Dempsey also expressed concern that rhetoric between China and Japan over the rival claims is increasing the risk that the situation could spin out of control and lead to clashes.

 

“I think the heightened risk is a function of heightened rhetoric that could produce emotional outcomes at the tactical level, that could frankly get away from the control of the central level,” he said.

 

A group of Japanese nationalists said Tuesday it had sent nine ships to the area around the islands, which are also claimed by Taiwan.

 

Dempsey said at a joint press conference Monday with Fang Fenghui, the chief of the People’s Liberation Army general staff, that Washington’s aim was “to be a stabilizing influence in the region.”

 

China appeared to single out the US in a military white paper last week, saying “certain efforts” to enhance military deployment in Asia “are not conducive to the upholding of peace and stability in the region.”

 

The US is engaged in a “pivot” to Asia after years of conflict in Iraq and Afghanistan.

 

“A fair share of the questions that were discussed in my meetings with senior leaders had to do with our rebalance to the Pacific, and seeking greater clarity on what we mean by it,” Dempsey said.

 

“It is a strategic imperative for us over time to rebalance to the Pacific, because that’s where future trends are taking us,” he said.

 

Dempsey met new Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday, with the state Xinhua news agency reporting that Xi called for the two countries as well as their militaries to foster deeper trust.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:30
Hagel Urges Caution On Syria Chemical Weapons Claims

 

Apr. 24, 2013 Defense News (AFP)

 

CAIRO — US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel urged caution Wednesday over an Israeli claim Syria’s regime used chemical weapons, saying it was “serious business” and any evidence had to be weighed carefully.

 

Warning against a possible rush to judgment, Hagel indicated he had been caught off guard by allegations from an Israeli general this week that Syria had fired chemical agents against rebels in recent months.

 

“When I was in Israel they did not give me that assessment. I guess it wasn’t complete,” Hagel told reporters in Cairo on a tour of the Middle East hat included a three-day visit to Israel.

 

The United States has warned any use or transfer of chemical weapons would cross a “red line” and possibly trigger military action.

 

Britain and France also suspect Syria has used chemical weapons but Hagel said US intelligence agencies were still evaluating information and were not yet convinced.

 

“Suspicions are one thing, evidence is another,” he said.

 

The Pentagon chief added that “this is serious business and you want to be as sure as you can be on these kind of things”.

 

Asked if US credibility could be at risk as it has repeatedly referred to a “red line,” Hagel said: “I don’t think there’s any danger.”

 

The United States cooperates with other spy services but ultimately had to rely “on its own intelligence,” he said before departing for Abu Dhabi.

 

Hagel’s comments marked his first public reaction since the Israeli military’s assessment came to light.

 

While Hagel was wrapping up his visit to Israel on Tuesday morning, Israeli Brig. Gen. Itai Brun, head of the research and analysis division of military intelligence, grabbed headlines when he alleged Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime had used chemical agents — mostly likely sarin gas— more than once.

 

“To the best of our professional understanding, the (Assad) regime has made use of deadly chemical weapons against the rebels in a number of incidents in the last few months,” Brun told a security conference in Tel Aviv.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:30
IAI to produce F-35 wings

 

TEL AVIV, Israel, April 24 (UPI)

 

Wings for Lockheed Martin's F-35 joint strike fighter are to be supplied by Israel Aerospace Industries under a contract with a potential value of $2.5 billion.

 

IAI said the length of the contract is 10-15 years. Initial deliveries of wings will begin in 2015.

 

"This agreement represents an important milestone for IAI and ensures its involvement in the world's most advanced fighter aircraft," said Joseph Weiss, president and chief executive officer of IAI. "I welcome the strengthening relationship with Lockheed Martin, a leading manufacturer of aircraft."

 

Lockheed Martin and IAI recently started construction of a production line for F-35 JSF Lightning II wings following IAI's investment in required technologies and systems. The company produces wings for Lockheed's F-16s and T-38s used by the U.S. Air Force.

 

IAI is Israel's largest aerospace and defense company. It has headquarters at Tel Aviv's David Ben Gurion International Airport.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:30
Hagel: Defense Partnership Anchors US-Saudi Relationship

 

April 25th, 2013 By US Department of Defense - defencetalk.com

 

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia: On his inaugural trip to the Middle East since taking office, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel met here today with Saudi Crown Prince and Defense Minister Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Pentagon Press Secretary George Little said in a statement.

 

During their talks, Hagel and his Saudi counterpart reiterated the longstanding, steadfast relationship between the United States and Saudi Arabia, and emphasized the strong defense partnership that anchors the two nations, Little added.

 

They also discussed the release of standoff weapons to Saudi Arabia that will provide strategic precision defensive capabilities to the Saudi F-15 fleet, Little said. Such smart weapons can navigate to their targets and are more precise and can be fired at further distances.

 

“Both agreed the release reflected the close bilateral partnership and would enable long-term cooperation in the pursuit of common security policy aims of a peaceful and stable region,” Little said. The two defense leaders also consulted on regional issues, including the need for Iran to abide to international commitments on its nuclear program, the situation in Syria, and the political transition in Yemen, he added.

 

Hagel’s trip to the Middle East, which began April 20 and will end April 26, began in Israel and Jordan and tomorrow will take the secretary to Egypt and the United Arab Emirates to discuss common threats and interests in the region.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:30
photo UK MoD

photo UK MoD

 

24/04/2013 by Paul Fiddian - Armed Forces International's Lead Reporter

 

United States defence officials have made clear their intention to offer the Bell Boeing V-22 Osprey to Israel. Should the deal go ahead, Israel would therefore be this unique tiltrotor design's first export customer.

 

Confirmation of the proposed Israeli V-22 Osprey sale was supplied by Chuck Hagel - US Defence Secretary - at a media event staged on 22 April in Tel Aviv. Alongside the Ospreys, Israel is also in line to be supplied with other advanced US-origin military technologies including radars and weapons.

 

"The new radar and anti-radiation missiles, along with Israel's participation in the Joint Strike Fighter programme, ensures that Israel will maintain air superiority for the next generation", explained Hagel. "The introduction of the V-22 into the Israeli Air Force will give the Israeli Air Force long-range, high-speed, maritime search-and-rescue capabilities to deal with a number of threats and contingencies."

 

Israeli Osprey Sale

 

Since it's not yet been formally agreed, no value's so far been place on the potential Israeli Osprey sale. However, Israeli Air Force pilots have already experienced the V-22 Osprey's flight characteristics. In December 2011, two of them got the chance to fly it and, subsequently, the Israeli Air Force's official website published their thoughts.

 

"We realised that the plane will absolutely change the name of the game", one reportedly said. "It will be able to carry out operations that we never imagined that one of our planes could execute. If we purchase the plane, our ranges of activity will dramatically change and we'll be able to reach points we've never even dreamed of."

 

V-22 Osprey Tiltrotor

 

The Bell Boeing V-22 Osprey tiltrotor is unique in modern military service as a design combining the vertical takeoff and landing qualities of a helicopter with the forward flight characteristics of a conventional transport aircraft.

 

It can accommodate a maximum of 32 troops or up to 20,000 pounds of cargo and cruises at 277 miles per hour, with a maximum speed of 316 miles per hour. Maximum range is 1,011 miles, while the Osprey climbs at up to 4,000 feet a minute and its armament includes an M240 machine gun.

 

The V-22 Osprey's operational debut occurred in 2007, when ten USMC MV-22B versions were sent to Iraq.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:20
A US Air National Guard's F-16C aircraft carrying MALD under its wings

A US Air National Guard's F-16C aircraft carrying MALD under its wings

 

24 April 2013 airforce-technology.com

 

Raytheon has been awarded a contract to produce and deliver additional Miniature Air Launched Decoy-J (MALD-J) jammers to the US Air Force (USAF).

 

Valued at $81.7m, the firm-fixed-price option covers Lot 6 on the Lot 5 contract for supply of an additional 200 MALD-J jammers and containers, along with a ten-year warranty to the air force.

 

Raytheon Missile Systems Air Warfare Systems vice president Harry Schulte said: "MALD-J adds a jamming capability to the current decoy function of the MALD that disrupts enemy integrated air defence systems using jamming and radar signature technology.

 

He added: "This weapon will provide unprecedented capability and flexibility to the US Air Force and improve the survivability of our Airmen and their aircraft."

 

Weighing less than 300lb, the MALD-J is an expendable, close-in jammer designed to degrade and prevent an early warning or acquisition radar from establishing a track on a strike aircraft, while also maintaining the ability to fulfil the basic decoy mission.

 

Employed from the F-16 C/D Fighting Falcon and B-52 bomber, the unmanned MALD-J is capable of navigating and operating closer to hostile radars compared to the conventional electronic warfare (EW) systems, thus keeping aviators and aircraft away from enemy's path.

 

Designed to work with and use other EW platforms, the device can function either as a stand-alone system or in pairs, and is also able to loiter in the target area for an extended period of time, ensuring mission completion.

 

The ADM-160 MALD is an advanced, air-launched and programmable flight vehicle designed to confuse enemy integrated air defence systems, by accurately duplicating all combat flight profiles and radar signatures of the US and allied aircraft in the battlefield.

 

Manufacturing work will be primarily carried out at the company's facility in Tucson, Arizona, US, however the delivery schedule has remained undisclosed.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:20
US Army Releases 2013 Posture Statement

April 24, 2013 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: US Army; issued April 22, 2013)

 

2013 Army Posture Statement

 

The 2013 Army Posture Statement is the written expression of the Secretary of the Army and the Chief of Staff of the Army to Congress for the annual posture hearings. The Army Posture Statement informs Congress on the state of the Army and outlines the Army's accomplishments, initiatives and priorities for Congress to consider when reviewing the President's budget for the upcoming fiscal year.

What has the Army done?

The 2013 Army Posture Statement describes the Army's vision to continue to provide the nation with strategic landpower in a challenging fiscal environment. The Fiscal Year 2014 Budget is designed to meet the Army's mission requirements and enable the Army to balance force structure, readiness and modernization as it builds the Army for the future.

What continued efforts does the Army have planned for the future?

The print version of the 2013 Army Posture Statement will be provided to each member of Congress prior to senior Army leader testimony related to the Fiscal Year 2014 budget. These posture hearings begin today, with Secretary of the Army and Chief of Staff of the Army testimony before the U.S. Senate Committee on Armed Services.

The on-line version of the 2013 Army Posture Statement will be available tomorrow and will remain available throughout the year on the Secretary of the Army and the Chief of Staff of the Army webpages as well as on the U.S. Army website.

Why is this important to the Army?

The Army Posture Statement provides Congress, as well as internal and external audiences, an overview of the Army's plan to build a force for the future while contending with fiscal uncertainty. The Army Posture Statement is an authoritative document that highlights the Army's enduring and vital contribution to the defense of the nation as a member of the Joint Force, its global commitments and vision for the future.


Click here for the posture statement (21 PDF pages) on the US Army website.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:20
U.S. Army Special Forces soldiers of the 3rd Special Forces Group patrol through the Afghanistan countryside in a ground mobility vehicle (GMV-S). Note the M136 AT4 84mm anti-tank rocket strapped to the GMV above its right door - U.S. Army Photo by Sgt. Horace Murray

U.S. Army Special Forces soldiers of the 3rd Special Forces Group patrol through the Afghanistan countryside in a ground mobility vehicle (GMV-S). Note the M136 AT4 84mm anti-tank rocket strapped to the GMV above its right door - U.S. Army Photo by Sgt. Horace Murray

 

Apr. 24, 2013 - By PAUL McLEARY – Defense News

 

WASHINGTON — Next month, U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) is scheduled to award a contract to one company for at least 1,300 ground mobility vehicles (GMVs) to replace its current fleet of aging GMVs.

 

SOCOM commander Adm. William McRaven confirmed the planned award while warning about his command’s spending on research and development during a hearing of the House Armed Services’ intelligence, emerging threats and capabilities subcommittee on April 17.

 

The GMV program is the planned replacement for the heavier Humvee variant being used by SOCOM, and according to budget documents released in April, they would start being fielded next year.

 

SOCOM’s fiscal 2014 budget request submitted April 10 calls for $24.7 million to purchase 101 vehicles in the coming year at $245,000 per vehicle. The three companies competing for the work, which is expected to produce about 200 vehicles a year for seven years, are General Dynamics, current GMV-maker AM General and Navistar International.

 

Requirements documents released last year call for a vehicle that weighs less than 7,000 pounds, has the ability to carry up to seven passengers and can be transportable in an M/CH-47 Chinook helicopter.

 

On April 5, SOCOM also released a request for proposal for what it is calling an internally transportable vehicle (ITV), which will be designed to fit in the back of a V-22 Osprey. While the specifications are classified, a draft solicitation released in June revealed that any submission must include two “critical flight mission payloads,” one at 1,000 pounds and another at 2,000 pounds, with a field-installable weapon station mount capable of fitting the M2 .50-caliber machine gun, the M240, the M249 squad automatic weapon, the MK-19 and the MK-47 Grenade Launcher.

 

SOCOM also requires the ITV to fit two passengers in addition to a driver, feature a removable gunner’s seat, be able to carry three to six casualty litters and have a crush-resistant roll cage.

 

SOCOM wants designs capable of traveling 350 to 450 miles “at 45 mph on level paved roads using organic fuel tank(s), without refuel, and exclusive of onboard fuel storage cans,” while reaching top speeds of 65 to 75 mph.

 

Given the advanced electronic jamming and communication technologies that modern spec ops forces employ in austere environments, SOCOM requires that any submission be able to produce continuous electrical power — even with the engine off — to operate a manpack radio for four to 12 hours.

 

Even with these initiatives and several other big-ticket developmental items outlined in the 2014 budget, such as the $20 million requested to kick off a Precision Strike Package Large Caliber Gun program, which would build an upgraded version of the Precision Strike Package on AC-130J gunships, McRaven told lawmakers that his command’s research-and-development budget “is a little out of balance.” After 12 years of focus on readiness as a combat force, “our research ... has waned a little bit.”

 

McRaven said even though SOCOM takes up only 1.7 percent of the total Defense Department budget, “my expectation is that we will take some cuts” in coming years.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:20
GA-ASI, OMX Team for Canadian RPA Program

 

April 23, 2013 defense-unmanned.com

(Source: General Atomics Aeronautical; issued April 23, 2013)

 

GA-ASI and OMX Partner to Identify Suppliers for Canada's JUSTAS Program

 

SAN DIEGO and TORONTO, CANADA --- General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. and OMX today announced that the companies have signed a two-year agreement to support GA-ASI’s Industrial Regional Benefit (IRB) efforts to identify and work with Canadian suppliers.

 

The partnership will strengthen GA-ASI’s and its teammate CAE’s commitment to offer the Predator B and/or Predator C Avenger RPA to meet the Canadian Government’s Joint Unmanned Surveillance and Target Acquisition System (JUSTAS) requirements. GA-ASI and CAE, the Montreal-based leader in simulation/modeling technologies and in-service support solutions, formalized their teaming arrangement in May 2011 to meet Canada’s Intelligence, Surveillance, Target Acquisition, and Reconnaissance (ISTAR) needs.

 

“GA-ASI is committed to integrating Canadian suppliers of all sizes into its long-term global supply chain, ensuring real, long-term, high-value, economic benefit to Canada,” said Frank Pace, president, Aircraft Systems Group, GA-ASI.

 

Over the past year, OMX has developed the largest, amalgamated structured database in the Canadian defence, aerospace, and security industry. OMX’s database system uses information that is actively gathered, collected, and managed from existing information available on the Internet by a series of proprietary algorithms. The searchable database has been live since December 2012, with nearly 50,000 companies indexed.

 

The effort to identify, review, validate, and track potential suppliers across Canada, particularly Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), is substantial to GA-ASI as entering large acquisition programs can be confusing and expensive for many Canadian suppliers.

 

“We want every Canadian supplier to have the opportunity to determine its own fate,” added Pace. “Suppliers should be able to manage their own data and its availability to our company and other primes without the need to rely on others.”

 

Not only does the database allow suppliers to manage their own data, but it also actively searches the Web to bring forward new opportunities for GA-ASI to partner with Canadian suppliers that otherwise might be missed through traditional channels.

 

“There is a constant “push/pull” relationship between suppliers and GA-ASI,” said Nicole Verkindt, founder of OMX. “The best way for Canadian companies to be noticed, particularly SMEs, is to claim their company profile, update their information, including CCVs, and message GA-ASI directly on the site.”

 

The database will provide GA-ASI with a centralized location for managing data regarding potential suppliers from anyplace in the world. As a result, data regarding potential Canadian suppliers will no longer be lost within stovepiped organizations. GA-ASI will be able to sort and manage data for potential suppliers by type, size (e.g. can view “SMEs only”), location, services provided, certifications/standards, experience, capacity, CCV percentage, and many other factors.

 

GA-ASI and OMX are working together to develop a back-end to the supplier-managed database that will enable GA-ASI to have a single location to submit and annotate its own data fields, including contact histories, validation comments, and internal reviews, for companies that are coupled with it. In addition, the future OMX IRB tracking platform will be used to monitor GA-ASI’s successful efforts to create jobs and opportunities in Canada.

 

 

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc., an affiliate of General Atomics, delivers situational awareness by providing remotely piloted aircraft, radar, and electro-optic solutions for military and commercial applications worldwide. The company’s Aircraft Systems Group is a leading designer and manufacturer of proven, reliable remotely piloted aircraft systems, including Predator A, Predator B, Gray Eagle, and the new Predator C Avenger and Predator XP.

 

OMX is a secure software application for government contractors to manage their offset obligations in the defence, aerospace and security industries. The OMX marketplace provides access to tens of thousands of potential Canadian recipients—including suppliers, investment opportunities and R&D projects—by region, classification and capability.

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:20
DARPA Pleads Agency's Case in Lean Times

Apr. 24, 2013 By ZACHARY FRYER-BIGGS – Defense News

 

WASHINGTON — Seeing a defense budget that is facing increasing pressure, the head of the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) spoke to reporters Wednesday about the need to protect research spending.

 

The briefing, which coincided with DARPA’s release of a new “framework” outlining the agency’s mission and recent successes, focused on DARPA’s role in national security.

 

Neither the briefing nor the framework provided significant new details about DARPA programs. The framework’s first page was a photocopy of a citation the agency received in 2012 from then Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta.

 

“We believe we may be at the beginning of a fundamental shift in how our society allocates resources to the business of national security, I’m not talking today about the immediate issues around sequestration,” said DARPA director Arati Prabhakar.

 

With a combination of increasing reliance on technology and fiscal pressures facing the US national security apparatus, Prabhakar spoke of DARPA’s importance.

 

“I actually think in the complex world that we’re living in today we need what DARPA does more than ever,” she said.

 

In a letter accompanying the framework, Prabhakar addressed those who control the agency’s funding.

 

“We wrote this document to share our current framework with all these partners, Congress, and our senior leadership in the Pentagon and in the Administration,” she wrote. “Your support of DARPA’s mission is vital to our success.”

 

The agency is already seeing the effects of sequestration, the automatic budget cuts to defense spending that became official last month, Prabhakar said. The cuts amount to roughly an 8 percent drop in DARPA’s budget, delaying some programs, including the offensive cyber weapons initiative known as Plan X, and likely furloughs for employees.

 

“It’s not a death blow when you take a one-time cut like that, but it is quite corrosive,” Prabhakar said. “It’s certainly something that over time could corrode our ability to do our mission.”

 

DARPA’s efforts to stay on the leading technological edge can create projects that sound more like science fiction than reality, leading to cyclical criticism about the advisability of specific projects from lawmakers. But it’s that approach which differentiates the agency, the framework said.

 

“Reaching for outsized impact means taking on risk, and high risk in pursuit of high payoff is a hallmark of DARPA’s programs,” it read.

 

Asked if she was concerned that DARPA could face disproportionate cuts in the future because some of the agency’s projects are difficult to explain to lawmakers, Prabhakar said that the agency continues to receive strong support.

 

“I think if you look historically, you will find that part of the reason for our success has been extended periods, many many decades during which there has been strong support for DARPA, in Republican administrations, in Democratic administrations, in times when budgets were tight and in times when budgets weren’t so tight,” she said. “My job as agency leader is always to try to demonstrate our value.”

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25 avril 2013 4 25 /04 /avril /2013 07:20
MH-60L helicopter

MH-60L helicopter

 

24 April 2013 army-technology.com

 

Alliant Techsystems (ATK) has been awarded a contract for the supply of a low-cost, lightweight, precision-guided missile for evaluations by the US Special Operations Command (USSOCOM), as part of the Defense Acquisition Challenge (DAC) programme.

 

Under the terms of the $3.2m contract, ATK will deliver its guided advanced tactical rocket (GATR) and precision-guided rocket launcher (PGRL) for both environmental and operational evaluation on the USSOCOM's MH-60L/M rotary-wing platforms.

 

ATK Armament Systems vice-president and general manager Dan Olson said: "Our ongoing investment and expertise in precision strike weapons, including the GATR system, provide a mature capability that fulfils the requirements of our military customers using innovative approaches that minimise integration costs."

 

Manufactured in collaboration with Elbit Systems, the GATR is a 70mm precision system designed for air-to-ground and ground-to-ground missions against soft, lightly armoured, stationary, moving and manoeuvring targets, and for military operations in urban terrain.

 

Incorporating a semi-active laser seeker similar to the one used in combat-proven joint direct attack munition (JDAM), the system enables pilots to lock-on targets before launch to ensure engagement of only the target of interest, with minimum collateral damage and at reduced operational costs.

 

Compatible with the existing 2.75in rocket-launcher hardware, the system features a digitally fused M282 multi-purpose warhead that is programmed from cockpits to provide super quick, point detonating fusing to defeat soft targets or delayed fusing for hardened targets penetration.

 

Available in three, seven and 19-tube versions, GATR is launched from PGRL digital launcher, and supports seamless integration into all fixed and rotary-wing platforms using existing digital and analogue fire control systems to offer digital stores management for all loaded weapons.

 

The DAC programme seeks validation of GATR and PGRL's desired operational and ballistic performance, while deployed from USSOCOM's airborne platforms.

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