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14 mars 2014 5 14 /03 /mars /2014 13:20
MQ-8C Fire Scout reaches 100 flight hours

 

 

Mar 13, 2014 ASDNews Source : Naval Air Systems Command

 

An MQ-8C Fire Scout on runway after a test flight at Point Mugu, Calif., March 10. The unmanned helicopter surpassed 100 flight hours during this event and will continue to undergo testing at Point Mugu this year.  In July, the Navy will conduct dynamic interface testing with the MQ-8C aboard USS Jason Dunham (DDG 109) to test the vehicle's take-off and landing procedures. Initial deployment for MQ-8C is planned for 2015.

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14 mars 2014 5 14 /03 /mars /2014 08:35
Tony Abbott to approve Australia’s biggest ever military purchase of stealth fighter jets


14.03.2014 Pacific Sentinel
 

THE Abbott Government is set to give the green light to the nation’s biggest ever military purchase allowing Defence to order up to 86 American made stealth fighter jets for the RAAF.
 
The planes will cost about $90 million each when they roll off the assembly line between 2018 and 2020 and the overall project will cost some $14 billion during the 30-year life of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.
 
It is understood that a submission to buy will be presented to Cabinet’s National Security Committee for approval within weeks.
 
The head of the Pentagon’s largest ever defence project to buy 2400 of the “fifth generation’’ fighters has assured Australia that the controversial project was “back on track’’ and that Australian jets would be delivered on time and on cost.
 
US Air Force Lieutenant General Chris Bogdan told News Corp Australia in Sydney that apart from some “trust and credibility’’ issues with the prime contractor Lockheed Martin and engine maker Pratt and Whitney, the JSF program was hitting all of its milestones.
 
Read the full story at NT News
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14 mars 2014 5 14 /03 /mars /2014 08:35
South Korea to purchase Patriot PAC-3 air defense missile system from United States next year

14.03.2014 Pacific Sentinel
 

South Korea will procure new Patriot missiles PAC-3 capable of intercepting North Korea's ballistic missiles starting in 2016. The Defense Project Promotion Committee chaired by Minister Kim Kwan-jin reached the decision on Wednesday, March 12, 2014. South Korea will upgrade its present PAC-2 air defense system and buy PAC-3 missiles next year to improve its anti-ballistic missile capability against North Korea.
 
South Korea currently operates 48 PAC-2 Patriot missiles imported from Germany, and seeks to adopt the advanced interceptors as part of plans to build the indigenous Korea Missile Defense System. The missiles have an interception rate of less than 40 percent.
 
The project aims to buy "hit-to-kill" PAC-3 missiles with improved accuracy, and upgrade the PAC-2 fire control system to make it able to fire off both PAC-2 and PAC-3 missiles.
 
Read the full story at Army Recognition
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14 mars 2014 5 14 /03 /mars /2014 08:35
Australia committed to Triton UAV buy

 

 

CANBERRA, Australia, March 13 (UPI)

 

The Australian government will acquire Northrop Grumman's MQ-4C Triton unmanned aerial vehicle once its development is completed.

 

The commitment to purchase the aircraft, under development for the U.S. Navy, was made in a statement issued this week from the office of Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott.

 

The MQ-4C Triton is a maritime surveillance platform with a maximum speed of 357 miles per hour, a service ceiling of 60,000 feet and an endurance of 30 hours. It is intended to complement maritime patrol aircraft.

 

"These aircraft will patrol Australia's vast ocean approaches, and work closely with other existing and future Australian Defense Force assets to secure our ocean resources, including energy resources off northern Australia, and help to protect our borders," the Prime Minister's office said.

 

Acquisition of the aircraft and their ground stations will require about $125.5 million of new facilities and infrastructure. About $89.6 million would be invested in the state of South Australia, where the UAVs would be based.

 

The statement said the number of Triton UAVs to be procured would be decided in 2016.

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14 mars 2014 5 14 /03 /mars /2014 08:20
Leidos Awarded Contract By Naval Medical Logistics Command

 

 

Mar 10, 2014 ASDNews Source : Leidos

 

Company to Provide Research and Development Services for the Behavioral Sciences and Epidemiology Department

 

Leidos (NYSE: LDOS), a national security, health and engineering solutions company, was awarded a prime contract, Behavioral Epidemiology Assessment Research (BEAR), by the Naval Medical Logistics Command to provide research services for multiple behavioral health and epidemiology projects that support the Naval Health Research Center's (NHRC) Behavioral Sciences and Epidemiology Department. The single-award cost-plus fixed-fee (CPFF) contract has a one-year base period of performance, four one-year options and a total contract value of approximately $7.3 million, if all options are exercised. Work will be performed primarily in San Diego, Calif.

 

The NHRC's Behavioral Sciences and Epidemiology Department is dedicated to the study of behavioral trends that impact warfighter readiness. The department examines operationally relevant issues affecting personnel such as combat and operational stress, posttraumatic stress, misconduct, substance use, suicide and career-span health and wellness issues. Under this contract, Leidos will conduct behavioral and epidemiological investigations that address these and other deployment-related health issues. Specific examples of these studies may include determining factors related to the onset of mental disorders in military personnel; mental health surveillance of combat-deployed personnel; assessing the effects of adverse lifestyle behaviors on health, performance, and healthcare costs; and investigating the effects of acute stress on military personnel.

 

"Finding ways to improve the health and wellness of our military personnel and their families is important to the Nation, which means it's important to Leidos," said Steve Comber, President of Leidos Health.  "We are pleased to continue our support of NHRC to help ensure our military is prepared to perform every mission."

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14 mars 2014 5 14 /03 /mars /2014 07:20
NSA has ‘industrial scale’ malware for spying: report

 

March 14th, 2014 defencetalk.com (AFP)

 

The National Security Agency has developed malware that allows it to collect data automatically from millions of computers worldwide, a report based on leaked documents showed Wednesday.

 

The report co-authored by former Guardian reporter Glenn Greenwald for the online news site The Intercept said the program has dramatically expanded the US spy agency’s ability to covertly hack into computers on a mass scale.

 

The report is based on classified documents provided by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

 

It said the surveillance technology allows the NSA to infect potentially millions of computers worldwide with malware “implants” which can help the agency extract data from overseas Internet and phone networks.

 

The report by Greenwald and reporter Ryan Gallagher said these implants were once reserved for a few hundred hard-to-reach targets whose communications could not be monitored through traditional wiretaps but that the NSA has expanded this to “industrial scale,” according to the documents.

 

The automated system codenamed TURBINE expands the ability to gather intelligence with less human oversight, according to the report.

 

The report was the first by Greenwald based on leaked documents since he joined First Look Media, an organization backed by tech entrepreneur Pierre Omidyar that includes The Intercept.

 

Greenwald was among the first journalists to publish documents leaked by Snowden describing the vast surveillance programs of the NSA and other intelligence services, sparking a massive outcry.

 

Wednesday’s report said the covert infrastructure that supports TURBINE operates from the NSA headquarters in Maryland, and from eavesdropping bases in Britain and Japan and that the British intelligence agency GCHQ appears to have played an important role in the effort.

 

The report said that in some cases the NSA has used a decoy Facebook server to infect a target’s computer and exfiltrate files.

 

It said the malware can also covertly record audio from a computer’s microphone and take snapshots with its webcam.

 

The Intercept said the malware has been in existence since 2004 but that the automated program expanding its use appears to have begun in 2010.

 

The malware can be installed in as little as eight seconds, according to the documents.

 

Because people have become suspicious of email attachments, the report said the NSA has had to resort to new tools to install the malware such as “man-in-the-middle” and “man-on-the-side” attacks through Internet browsers.

 

The NSA, queried by AFP, did not directly respond to the report. But an NSA official reiterated policy that its operations are conducted “exclusively where there is a foreign intelligence or counterintelligence purpose to support national and departmental missions, and not for any other purposes.”

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14 mars 2014 5 14 /03 /mars /2014 06:20
Russia can’t derail US exit from Afghanistan: general

 

March 14th, 2014 defencetalk.com (AFP)

 

Russia would be unable to disrupt the US military’s withdrawal from Afghanistan even if it cut off access to supply routes across its territory, a top US commander said Wednesday.

 

Amid rising tensions between Washington and Moscow over the crisis in Ukraine, the head of NATO-led forces in Afghanistan reassured lawmakers that Russia could not hold up a planned troop drawdown there.

 

“I’m absolutely confident we’ll be able to” remove all US equipment on schedule, General Joseph Dunford told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

 

“Even if the Russians cut off one of the avenues?” Senator John McCain asked.

 

“Yes, senator,” Dunford said.

 

The general said that “we’ve got resilience in the system and I’m not concerned at all about a loss of the Russian northern distribution network, the Russian piece of that.”

 

Dunford was referring to a network of road and rail routes that pass through Central Asia, the Caucasus and, in some cases, Russia.

 

The primary supply routes for US forces in Afghanistan still run through Pakistan but the Pentagon set up the alternative channels through Central Asia after friction with Islamabad triggered border closures.

 

With the bulk of US and NATO forces due to withdraw by the end of the year, a major drawdown is under way and vast amounts of military hardware are being ferried out across the Pakistan border.

 

‘Begin to deteriorate’

Roughly 40 percent of supplies are moving through the Pakistan roads at the moment, defense officials said.

 

President Barack Obama and lawmakers in Congress are threatening sanctions against Russia over its military intervention in Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula, and European Union governments are also weighing possible punitive measures.

 

Moscow in turn has warned that any sanctions will have a “boomerang” effect on Washington.

 

Dunford told the same hearing that US forces in Afghanistan will need to have a security accord with Kabul in place by September, otherwise the NATO mission will have to launch a full withdrawal.

 

The security pact would lay out a legal framework for foreign forces to remain beyond December.

 

But President Hamid Karzai has refused to sign the bilateral security agreement, casting uncertainty over plans to keep a small US-led force in the country beyond the end of this year.

 

Dunford said the absence of a deal has not yet created logistical problems for the NATO-led force, which includes more than 33,000 US troops.

 

Military planning would become complicated but “manageable” if the delay continued through July and August, he said.

 

The White House has said it is prepared to have no troops left in Afghanistan if Kabul’s leaders fail to sign the security pact. But Dunford warned that a total pull-out would weaken Afghan forces, endanger Afghan women and invite a potential revival of Al-Qaeda militants.

 

“If we leave at the end of 2014, the Afghan security forces will begin to deteriorate,” Dunford said. “The security environment will begin to deteriorate, and I think the only debate is the pace of that deterioration.”

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 20:40
L'Ukraine renforce sa défense face à la Russie qui manoeuvre à ses portes

 

13 mars 2014 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

KIEV - L'Ukraine s'est dotée jeudi d'une Garde nationale, mobilisant les volontaires des barricades de Kiev pour renforcer sa défense face à la Russie qui mène des manoeuvres militaires à ses portes, à trois jours du référendum qui doit entériner la perte de la Crimée.

 

Selon l'agence russe Itar-Tass, 4.000 hommes d'unités de parachutistes, 36 avions et environ 500 véhicules participent notamment à des manoeuvres lancées dans la région de Rostov-sur-le-Don, près de la frontière ukrainienne.

 

Sur la scène internationale, les Occidentaux jettent leurs dernières forces pour tenter d'infléchir la position du maître du Kremlin, Vladimir Poutine, qui refuse de retirer les milliers d'hommes déployés dans la péninsule ukrainienne de Crimée depuis fin février. Mais le président russe, qui affirme agir dans l'intérêt des russophones d'Ukraine, n'a pas donné le moindre signe qu'il accepterait les demandes des Occidentaux.

 

La chancelière allemande, Angela Merkel, dirigeante européenne la plus écoutée au Kremlin, a mis en garde Vladimir Poutine contre les graves conséquences économiques et politiques à long terme qu'aurait pour Moscou la poursuite de son action en Ukraine.

 

En Crimée, les autorités séparatistes pro-russes achèvent dans les 48 heures les préparatifs du référendum où 1,5 million d'Ukrainiens doivent se prononcer sur le rattachement de la région à la Russie. L'issue du scrutin ne fait pas beaucoup de doutes.

 

- 60.000 hommes -

 

Les députés ukrainiens ont adopté la création d'une Garde nationale qui viendrait prêter main forte à l'armée ukrainienne et ses 130.000 hommes, dont une moitié de conscrits, alors que la Russie dispose au total d'une armée de 845.000 soldats.

 

Cette Garde nationale, placée sous l'autorité du ministère de l'Intérieur et qui pourrait compter jusqu'à 60.000 hommes, sera notamment composée des groupes d'autodéfense qui étaient en première ligne à Kiev pendant les trois mois de contestation.

 

Le secrétaire du Conseil de sécurité nationale et de défense, Andriï Paroubiï, avait indiqué avant le vote qu'il s'agissait d'une réponse aux défis auxquels est confrontée l'Ukraine, dans une allusion à l'entrée de forces russes en Crimée, la péninsule du sud du pays sur le point d'être absorbée par la Russie.

 

Quelques 40.000 volontaires se sont déjà présentés aux centres de recrutement de l'armée.

 

Cette nouvelle force se forme dans l'urgence alors que les Ukrainiens s'inquiètent d'un déploiement des Russes dans l'est du pays. Dans une interview à l'AFP, le président ukrainien par intérim, Olexandre Tourtchinov, a déclaré mardi qu'il voulait avant tout empêcher une intrusion des forces russes dans l'est du pays, région où vivent aussi de nombreux Ukrainiens d'origine russe.

 

Il avait affirmé que d'importantes unités de blindés russes étaient concentrées côté russe.

 

L'annonce jeudi par Moscou du lancement de manoeuvres militaires dans plusieurs régions situées à la frontière avec l'Ukraine n'est pas de nature à calmer les esprits.

 

Le but principal de ces mesures est de vérifier l'aptitude des troupes à mener des exercices de combat, a affirmé le ministère russe de la Défense, précisant que les exercices militaires auraient lieu jusqu'à la fin du mois dans les régions de Rostov, Belgorod, Tambov et Koursk.

 

- Obama met Poutine en garde -

 

A Washington, le président Barack Obama a affiché mercredi son soutien à l'Ukraine en recevant son Premier ministre, Arseni Iatseniouk, à la Maison Blanche et en mettant une nouvelle fois en garde Vladimir Poutine.

 

Nous continuerons à dire au gouvernement russe que s'il poursuit sur le chemin actuel (...) nous serons obligés d'imposer un coût aux violations du droit international par la Russie en Ukraine, a déclaré M. Obama.

 

M. Iatseniouk a repris les éléments d'un célèbre discours prononcé jadis par le président Ronald Reagan à Berlin et a exhorté Vladimir Poutine à abattre ce mur d'intimidation et d'agression militaire.

 

Mais, à trois jours de la consultation sur l'avenir de la péninsule où vivent deux millions de personnes, dont des minorités tatare et ukrainophone, rien ne semblait en mesure d'enrayer son glissement dans le giron russe.

 

La Crimée est désormais quasiment coupée du reste du pays, les forces russes en contrôlant les points stratégiques. Tout est en place pour une sécession rapide: le Premier ministre, Serguiï Axionov, s'est autoproclamé chef des armées et les habitants n'ont désormais plus accès qu'aux chaînes de télévision russes. Des hommes en treillis fouillent tout voyageur arrivant à Simféropol et seuls les vols en provenance de Moscou peuvent y atterrir.

 

Entre Russes et Occidentaux, l'incompréhension reste totale, malgré plusieurs échanges ces dix derniers jours entre les chefs des diplomaties américaine, John Kerry, et russe, Sergueï Lavrov. Les deux hommes vont se rencontrer une nouvelle fois vendredi à Londres.

 

Les Européens accélèrent le rapprochement avec l'Ukraine. Le volet politique de l'accord d'association avec l'Union européenne pourrait être signé au cours du prochain sommet de l'UE, prévu à Bruxelles les 20 et 21 mars.

 

Et l'organisation de coopération et de développement économiques (OCDE) a suspendu pour le moment le processus d'adhésion de la Russie et va plutôt renforcer sa coopération avec l'Ukraine.

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 20:30
United States and Israel Sign Agreement on Iron Dome Weapon System

 

 

Mar 8, 2014 ASDNews Source : Missile Defense Agency (MDA)

 

The United States and the State of Israel concluded an agreement on March 5 to continue support of the production of the Iron Dome weapon system.

 

The Iron Dome system is capable of intercepting and destroying short-range rockets, and mortar and artillery shells, and is an invaluable component of Israeli missile defense. During Operation Pillar of Defense in 2012, Iron Dome was credited with saving countless Israeli lives, and was called a "game-changer" by many Israeli policy-makers. Yesterday's agreement ensures continued U.S. funding for procurement of Iron Dome systems and interceptors, and provides for significant co-production opportunities for U.S. industry. Under the terms of the agreement, $429 million will be transferred immediately to Israel to support Iron Dome procurement.

 

The agreement represents strategic value for both nations. Israel will obtain valuable resources to contribute to its defense and U.S. industry will receive meaningful co-production opportunities for Iron Dome components.

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 20:20
Cybersécurité: rôle de plus en plus mineur pour les militaires canadiens

 

 

13 mars 2014 par Jacques N. Godbout – 45eNord.ca

 

Des couriels de conseillers militaires travaillant sur le dossier de la cybersécurité ont mis en garde il y a un an que, si la tendance se maintient, les Forces canadiennes n’auraient bientôt plus qu’un rôle mineur à jouer en la matière, rapporte cette semaine le journaliste Jordan Press du Ottawa Citizen.

 

Dans échange de courriels datant du 5 mars 2013, révèle le quotidien de la capitale fédérale, un officier des Forces canadiennes soutient que, non seulement les Forces armées et la Défense n’avaient pas « poussé assez fort » pour être l’organisme responsable de la cybersécurité au Canada, mais prévient que, si elles ne « poussent pas plus fort » , elles pourraient même se retrouver totalement exclues de ce dossier.

Cette question du rôle les Forces canadiennes devraient jouer dans la protection du pays dans le cyberespace a été débattue pendant des années et ces courriels donnent un aperçu sur la façon dont les militaires canadiens sont toujours aux prises avec cette question de leur place dans la stratégie de cybersécurité du Canada .

Au Canada, c’est le ministère de la Sécurité publique Canada qui est le premier responsable de la politique de cybersécurité et qui collabore en la matière avec les provinces , les territoires , les municipalités et le secteur privé pour les aider à protéger leurs réseaux . Le Centre de la sécurité des télécommunications Canada (CSTC), qui compte parmi les ressources informatiques les plus puissants du pays, est chargé pour sa part de défendre les systèmes du gouvernement fédéral et de la collecte de renseignements étrangers sur les cybermenaces potentielles .

Le Canada, note Jordan Press dans le « Ottawa Citizen« , fait d’ailleurs face à un nombre toujours croissant de cyber-attaques sur une base quotidienne venant de « hackers » (pirates) indépendants et de pays étrangers qui tentent d’accéder à des réseaux gouvernementaux. L’attaque réussie la plus connue a eu lieu en 2011 lorsque des pirates, à partir d’ordinateurs en Chine, ont pénétré les réseaux du Conseil du Trésor et du ministère des Finances .

Lorsque la stratégie fédérale en matière de cybersécurité a été publié en 2010,les décideurs prévoyaient certain niveau d’intégration entre le militaire et le CSTC: l’expertise technique serait du ressort du CSTC et l’expertise opérationnelle de celle des Forces armées.

Mais il n’en pas été ainsi: certains experts ont affirmé alors que ça n’avait pas de sens d’un point de vue financier d’avoir deux organismes – la Défense et le CSTC- pour jouer le même rôle. Actuellement, les Forces Armées n’ont pas le mandat législatif, le budget, ou les ressources pour faire le travail que CSTC est en mesure d’effectuer, déclaré Christian Leuprecht, un expert de la défense du Collège militaire royal, cité par le quotidien d’Ottawa.

« Tout comme le pays n’utilise pas l’armée pour vérifier les passeports et faire la sécurité dans les aéroports, la responsabilité des questions de cybersécurité intérieure devrait rester au ministère de la Sécurité publique », dit Chistian Leuprecht.

« Nous ne voulons pas de militariser la cybersécurité plus que nécessaire », déclare l’expert du Collège militaire royal. « Gardons cela comme un problème de sécurité plutôt que d’en faire un problème de défense , mais soyons prêts à en faire un problème de défense « .

Ce n’est toutefois pas pas la façon dont la question est traitée dans d’autres pays . Les États-Unis ont combiné les capacités offensives de l’armée avec les responsabilités défensives de la National Security Agency (NSA) sous l’égide de Cyber commandement américain, dirigé par le général Keith Alexander qui sera bientôt remplacé par un autre militaire, le vice-amiral Michael Rogers, qui dirigera à la fois le Cyber Command et et la NSA.

Un ancien chef du CSTC a déclaré que le modèle américain pourrait être envisagé ici.
« C’est un modèle qui a du sens » a déclaré John Adams maintenant chercheur à l’Université Queen, cité par le journaliste du Citizen:  » La défense des systèmes … continuera d’être du ressort du CSTC, mais il est clair qu’il y aurait de la place pour intégrer plus de militaires au CSTC, comme l’ont fait les Américains ».

Les e-mails internes dont parle le quotidien d’Ottawa révèlent que les Forces armées ont recommandé un rôle plus important pour les militaires alors que le gouvernement était en train de finaliser sa stratégie de cybersécurité, il y a environ cinq ans .

Mais des années d’ « approche conciliante » avec la Direction nationale de la cybersecurité intérieure au ministère de la Sécurité publique « nous arrivés à la situation actuelle », écrit le major PJ Kendall dans un courriel adressé à ses collègues.

« Quatre années de coexistence pacifique et de déferrence à la Direction nationale de la cybersécurité « nous a conduit ;a perdre du terrain et à ce que que notre partenaire stratégique soit désormais le seul chef de file reconnu pour faire face à des cyberattaques contre le pays », écrit le major. « Mon expérience me dit que si vous continuez dans cette voie, les Forces armées canadiennes et le ministère de la Défense n’auront bientôt plus aucun rôle à jouer dans les opérations de cybersécurité ».

La réponse de son collègue, le colonel André A. Boucher, à ce courriel indique cependant que la décision il y a cinq ans de ne pas confier aux Forces canadiennes la responsabilité de la cyber-sécurité n’était pas une « intention délibérée de marginaliser » les militaires, mais plutôt le résultat d’un «manque de maturité et de compréhension » du dossier de la part des fonctionnaires du gouvernement.

«Je n’ai pas de boule de cristal, mais je suis convaincu que si le cyberespace est universellement reconnu comme un -environnement- à l’avenir, le rôle et les responsabilités de la Défense et des Forces Armées suivront selon un modèle similaire au traitement d’autres environnements».

Quoiqu’il en soit, le rôle des Forces armés et de la Défense dans la stratégie de cybersécurité se limite pour l’instant à « défendre ses propres réseaux, travailler avec d’autres ministères pour identifier les menaces et les réponses possibles , et continuer à échanger des informations sur les meilleures cyberpratiques avec les forces alliées «

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 19:20
US Navy Issues $698.9 M Contract Modification to LM for FY14 LCSs

 

 

Mar 11, 2014 ASDNews Source : Lockheed Martin Corporation

 

The U.S. Navy has issued a Lockheed Martin-led industry team a $698.9 million contract modification to add funding for construction of two Littoral Combat Ships (LCS) – the seventh and eighth in a 10-ship contract awarded in December 2010.

 

The contract modification is for construction of Indianapolis (LCS 17) and LCS 19, yet to be named. The first ship on this 2010 contract, the USS Milwaukee (LCS 5), was christened and launched in 2013, and is undergoing trials before delivery to the Navy in 2015. The future USS Detroit (LCS 7) will be christened and launched later this year. Little Rock (LCS 9), Sioux City (LCS 11) and Wichita (LCS 13) are all in various stages of construction, and Billings (LCS 15) will begin construction this year.

 

“Our industry team appreciates the U.S. Navy’s confidence in the LCS program as we continue down the learning curve to make these ships more capable and more affordable,” said Joe North, vice president of Littoral Ship Systems at Lockheed Martin’s Mission Systems and Training business. “We’ll continue to build best-in-class, cost effective ships for the Navy, supporting its need to defeat littoral threats and provide maritime access in critical waterways.”

 

Marinette Marine Corporation, a Fincantieri company, is building the ships in Marinette, Wis., with naval architect Gibbs & Cox of Arlington, Va., providing engineering support. Fincantieri has invested more than $74 million in the Marinette facility on upgrades that have increased efficiency and minimized energy consumption, an expansion that will allow for construction of more than two ships at a time, and process improvements that will speed up production.

 

Nearly 900 suppliers across 43 states are contributing to the Freedom-class LCS program.

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 19:20
photo Austal

photo Austal

 

 

Mar 11, 2014 ASDNews Source : US Navy

 

A ceremony celebrating the laying and authentication of the keel of the future USNS Trenton (JHSV 5) was held at the Austal USA shipyard, today.

 

The keel was authenticated by the ship's sponsor, Virginia Kamsky, who confirmed that it was truly and fairly laid. Although the laying of the keel has historically signified the start of ship fabrication, modern technologies make it possible for the shipbuilding process to commence months before the keel has been laid.

 

"I want to thank our shipbuilders who are working so hard, from each keel laying to each delivery, to ensure the Navy receives the strongest, most flexible and capable ships possible," said Capt. Henry Stevens, Strategic and Theater Sealift Program Manager, Program Executive Office (PEO), Ships. "Trenton's keel laying marks the first significant milestone in her journey to delivery and eventual support of a variety of missions around the world."

 

JHSV 5 benefits from program maturity, building on the lessons learned from the earlier ships in the class. The ship leverages commercial design and technologies to ensure design stability and lower development costs.

 

Upon completion, USNS Trenton will be used for the rapid transport of troops, equipment, and supplies over operational distances, in support of a variety of missions including maneuver and sustainment, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief. JHSV 5 is capable of transporting 600 short tons of military cargo 1,200 nautical miles at an average speed of 35 knots.

 

The JHSV is capable of interface with roll-on/roll-off discharge facilities, features an off-load ramp and a flight deck, and has a shallow draft of less than 15 feet. Its speed and ability to access austere port environments, as well as the size and versatility of its cargo capabilities, makes the JHSV an extremely flexible asset for support of a wide range of operations.

 

The fourth ship to be named after New Jersey's capital city, JHSV 5 honors the values and the men and women of the city as well as the state of New Jersey. USNS Trenton will be owned and operated by Military Sealift Command (MSC), operating within MSC's Sealift program. She will be manned by a crew of 22 civil service mariners with military mission personnel embarking as required.

 

As one of the Department of Defense's largest acquisition organizations, PEO Ships is responsible for executing the development and procurement of all destroyers, amphibious ships, special mission and support ships and special warfare craft. Delivering high-quality warfighting assets - while balancing affordability and capability - is key to supporting the Navy's Maritime Strategy.

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 17:45
With training and partnerships, U.S. military treads lightly in Africa

A Boeing Osprey used by the US Marine Corps

 

13 March 2014 defenceWeb (Reuters)

 

On a dusty training ground in Niger, U.S. Special Forces teach local troops to deal with suspects who resist arrest. "Speed, aggression, surprise!" an instructor barks as two Nigeriens wrestle a U.S. adviser out of a car.

 

The drill in the border town of Diffa is part of Operation Flintlock, a counter-terrorism exercise for nations on the Sahara's southern flanks that the United States organizes each year. Washington's aim is to tackle Islamist militants in the Sahel region while keeping its military presence in Africa light.

 

A growing number of European nations taking part shows their increasing concern about security in West Africa. Central to the international effort is a blossoming relationship between the United States and France, the former colonial power and traditional "policeman" of the turbulent region.

 

When Paris deployed 4,000 troops to fight Islamist militants in neighboring Mali last year, the U.S. military lent a hand by airlifting French soldiers and equipment, providing intelligence and training African forces to join the operation.

 

French troops are stretched by hunting the militants in Mali and tackling religious violence in Central African Republic, so only a handful participated in Flintlock. Nevertheless, they welcomed their new partnership with Washington.

 

"The Americans want to get involved in Africa. That's good for us. We know that with the Americans it will be more efficient," said a French Special Forces officer, who asked not to be named. "We use American logistics - that's what we are missing. On the other hand, we provide the local knowledge."

 

The United States fast-tracked the sale of 12 Reaper drones to France last year, the first two of which started operating in Niger in January alongside U.S. drones already there.

 

In a reminder of the partnership, a drone quietly taxied past troops and dignitaries at Flintlock's closing ceremony in the capital of Niamey before taking off to scour the Sahara.

 

U.S. FACING BUDGET CUTS

 

Military experts say direct U.S. military action in Africa is limited to short raids on "high-value" targets in places such as Somalia and Libya, while French troops take on longer, bigger operations.

 

J. Peter Pham, director of the Africa Center at the U.S.-based Atlantic Council, said this arrangement suited U.S. military planners who face budget cuts and a diminished American appetite for combat after conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.

 

However, he warned that the French military was at the limit of its ability to strike militants hard. "If the French are not able to provide that blunt instrument, is the U.S. willing to do so?"

 

Nine years after the Flintlock exercises began, the enemy has evolved from a group of Algerian-dominated fighters focused on northern Mali and now threatens nations across the Sahara and the arid Sahel belt to the south.

 

For most of 2012, militants occupied northern Mali, a desert zone the size of France. Scattered by a French offensive last year, many are believed to be regrouping in southern Libya.

 

Hundreds of people are being killed every month in clashes with Boko Haram militants in northern Nigeria. Many in Niger fear this conflict could spill over the border and the government in Niamey has appealed for more military support.

 

"Instability in neighboring states has given everybody a new incentive," General James Linder, commander of U.S. Special Operations Command Africa, told Reuters while visiting Niger

 

This year's three-week Flintlock exercise - involving over 1,000 troops from 18 nations - was the biggest yet and runs alongside more permanent training by U.S. Special Forces in Niger, Mauritania, Senegal and Chad.

 

Training in Diffa, only a few kilometers from where Boko Haram militants are fighting the Nigerian army across the border, ranged from basic patrolling skills and setting up checkpoints to sharing intelligence and providing medical care.

 

In a region where armies often lack basics such as ammunition for target practice and fuel for vehicles, the quality and tempo of the U.S.-sponsored exercise eclipses the training most soldiers in the region receive in a year.

 

Colonel Mounkaila Sofiani, the local Niger commander, said Flintlock and other U.S. initiatives helped his country to tackle threats from the west, north and south better. "Little by little people are being trained," he said. "Once there are enough, they'll form the spine of a reliable force."

 

Training is meant to build up coordination between armies but Sofiani said just finding radio equipment compatible between nations is difficult. In the field, officers exchange mobile phone numbers to bypass blockages in official channels.

 

A lack of trust between governments also hinders responses. At a recent meeting of intelligence chiefs, the Nigerien and Libyan representatives argued over the risk of instability spreading from Libya's lawless south, a diplomat told Reuters.

 

Coups in Mauritania, Niger and Mali since the Flintlock exercises began also halted cooperation until civilian rule was restored. Mali's 2012 coup, led by a captain with U.S. training, opened the door to the Islamist takeover of the north, prompting questions about what the years of exercises had achieved.

 

Pham said better military capabilities had not been matched by improvements in governance, citing a failure by Mali to tackle corruption. Chad's military, however, has won praise for leading the charge alongside French troops in flushing out the militants from Mali's desolate northern mountains.

 

U.S. officials stress the exercise is African-led and are wary about people reading too much into U.S. troops being on the ground near African conflicts. But the show of foreign support is popular in Diffa.

 

"It sends a message to Boko Haram and others," said Inoussa Saouna, the central government's representative in Diffa. "Before Mali, we thought terrorism was a problem for whites but now we've experienced it ourselves."

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 17:45
With training and partnerships, U.S. military treads lightly in Africa

A Boeing Osprey used by the US Marine Corps

 

13 March 2014 defenceWeb (Reuters)

 

On a dusty training ground in Niger, U.S. Special Forces teach local troops to deal with suspects who resist arrest. "Speed, aggression, surprise!" an instructor barks as two Nigeriens wrestle a U.S. adviser out of a car.

 

The drill in the border town of Diffa is part of Operation Flintlock, a counter-terrorism exercise for nations on the Sahara's southern flanks that the United States organizes each year. Washington's aim is to tackle Islamist militants in the Sahel region while keeping its military presence in Africa light.

 

A growing number of European nations taking part shows their increasing concern about security in West Africa. Central to the international effort is a blossoming relationship between the United States and France, the former colonial power and traditional "policeman" of the turbulent region.

 

When Paris deployed 4,000 troops to fight Islamist militants in neighboring Mali last year, the U.S. military lent a hand by airlifting French soldiers and equipment, providing intelligence and training African forces to join the operation.

 

French troops are stretched by hunting the militants in Mali and tackling religious violence in Central African Republic, so only a handful participated in Flintlock. Nevertheless, they welcomed their new partnership with Washington.

 

"The Americans want to get involved in Africa. That's good for us. We know that with the Americans it will be more efficient," said a French Special Forces officer, who asked not to be named. "We use American logistics - that's what we are missing. On the other hand, we provide the local knowledge."

 

The United States fast-tracked the sale of 12 Reaper drones to France last year, the first two of which started operating in Niger in January alongside U.S. drones already there.

 

In a reminder of the partnership, a drone quietly taxied past troops and dignitaries at Flintlock's closing ceremony in the capital of Niamey before taking off to scour the Sahara.

 

U.S. FACING BUDGET CUTS

 

Military experts say direct U.S. military action in Africa is limited to short raids on "high-value" targets in places such as Somalia and Libya, while French troops take on longer, bigger operations.

 

J. Peter Pham, director of the Africa Center at the U.S.-based Atlantic Council, said this arrangement suited U.S. military planners who face budget cuts and a diminished American appetite for combat after conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.

 

However, he warned that the French military was at the limit of its ability to strike militants hard. "If the French are not able to provide that blunt instrument, is the U.S. willing to do so?"

 

Nine years after the Flintlock exercises began, the enemy has evolved from a group of Algerian-dominated fighters focused on northern Mali and now threatens nations across the Sahara and the arid Sahel belt to the south.

 

For most of 2012, militants occupied northern Mali, a desert zone the size of France. Scattered by a French offensive last year, many are believed to be regrouping in southern Libya.

 

Hundreds of people are being killed every month in clashes with Boko Haram militants in northern Nigeria. Many in Niger fear this conflict could spill over the border and the government in Niamey has appealed for more military support.

 

"Instability in neighboring states has given everybody a new incentive," General James Linder, commander of U.S. Special Operations Command Africa, told Reuters while visiting Niger

 

This year's three-week Flintlock exercise - involving over 1,000 troops from 18 nations - was the biggest yet and runs alongside more permanent training by U.S. Special Forces in Niger, Mauritania, Senegal and Chad.

 

Training in Diffa, only a few kilometers from where Boko Haram militants are fighting the Nigerian army across the border, ranged from basic patrolling skills and setting up checkpoints to sharing intelligence and providing medical care.

 

In a region where armies often lack basics such as ammunition for target practice and fuel for vehicles, the quality and tempo of the U.S.-sponsored exercise eclipses the training most soldiers in the region receive in a year.

 

Colonel Mounkaila Sofiani, the local Niger commander, said Flintlock and other U.S. initiatives helped his country to tackle threats from the west, north and south better. "Little by little people are being trained," he said. "Once there are enough, they'll form the spine of a reliable force."

 

Training is meant to build up coordination between armies but Sofiani said just finding radio equipment compatible between nations is difficult. In the field, officers exchange mobile phone numbers to bypass blockages in official channels.

 

A lack of trust between governments also hinders responses. At a recent meeting of intelligence chiefs, the Nigerien and Libyan representatives argued over the risk of instability spreading from Libya's lawless south, a diplomat told Reuters.

 

Coups in Mauritania, Niger and Mali since the Flintlock exercises began also halted cooperation until civilian rule was restored. Mali's 2012 coup, led by a captain with U.S. training, opened the door to the Islamist takeover of the north, prompting questions about what the years of exercises had achieved.

 

Pham said better military capabilities had not been matched by improvements in governance, citing a failure by Mali to tackle corruption. Chad's military, however, has won praise for leading the charge alongside French troops in flushing out the militants from Mali's desolate northern mountains.

 

U.S. officials stress the exercise is African-led and are wary about people reading too much into U.S. troops being on the ground near African conflicts. But the show of foreign support is popular in Diffa.

 

"It sends a message to Boko Haram and others," said Inoussa Saouna, the central government's representative in Diffa. "Before Mali, we thought terrorism was a problem for whites but now we've experienced it ourselves."

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

 

 

13 March 2014 naval-technology.com

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 13:35
Afghanistan: le pessimisme du patron de l'Isaf

 

13-03-2014 par RFI

 

Le général américain Joseph Dunford, qui dirige la force internationale de l’Otan en Afghanistan (Isaf) était auditionné hier, mercredi 12 mars, par le Congrès américain.

 

Le but était de faire un point sur l’action des forces étrangères en Afghanistan et d’envisager l’avenir. Le président Karzaï n’a toujours pas signé l’accord qui permettrait aux forces américaines de rester. Donc, soit le gouvernement issu des élections d’avril signe cet accord, soit c’est un retrait total qui se dessine.

 

D’après le général Dunford, qui ne s’exprime que très rarement, le dernier délai est la fin du mois de septembre 2014. Le général est par ailleurs très pessimiste sur l’avenir de l’Afghanistan si les forces de l’Otan devaient abandonner complètement le terrain afghan.

 

« Nous sommes aujourd’hui concentrés, dit-il, sur la mise en œuvre d’un modus operandi, afin d’aider les unités de l’armée de terre afghane pour qu’elles soient en mesure de se suffire à elles-mêmes. Donc ce qui arrivera immédiatement si nous partons en 2015, c’est une perte d’efficacité des forces afghanes ».

 

Une «grande victoire» pour al-Qaïda

 

«De la même manière, poursuit le général Dunford, nous ne serions pas en mesure de finir notre travail avec l’armée de l’air afghane, nous avons besoin d’encore deux ou trois ans. Et, dans le cas d’al-Qaïda, je répète que la pression que nous leur avons infligé chaque jour, grâce à nos forces spéciales, en coopération avec l’armée afghane, les a empêchés de se reconstituer ; nous savons par les services de renseignements qu’ils essaient de continuer d’opérer à partir d’Afghanistan et du Pakistan; ils verraient cela comme une grande victoire ».

 

« Si nous nous retirons, ils auront la latitude de conduire leurs opérations à nouveau.

Ce ne serait pas seulement une reconstitution physique, mais un important signal moral pour le mouvement terroriste si jamais nous nous retirions de la région en 2015 », conclut-il.

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 12:35
Information Warfare: Major Cyber War Powers

 

 

March 13, 2014: Andrew Lisa  - Strategy Page

 

The head of Israel's military intelligence recently called cyber warfare the biggest revolution in warfare, more than gunpowder and the utilization of air power in the past century. The most formidable nations on Earth currently have militaries - as well as power grids, nuclear arsenals, commercial flight systems and countless other vital entities - that are wholly dependent on computers. Defending them - and attacking those of other countries - is major business, a major part of national security strategies and a major fear of anyone who understands the vulnerabilities of their own country's machines. The best-equipped nations have enormous cyber defense - and offense - departments.

 

Here are the top dogs of global cyber warfare.

 

#4: United States of America. The U.S. has an enormous cyber-intelligence apparatus that is widely considered to be tied for the fourth most powerful in the world. America's greatest strength lies in its ability to collect and retain colossal amounts of digital data regarding the abilities of other countries - often gleaned in a fashion that has come under recent global scrutiny.

 

#3: Russia. Russia is widely believed to have a massive state-sponsored cyber warfare program that infiltrates the official apparatuses of foreign countries as well as domestic "enemies." Russian cyber attacks target economic, military and commercial entities of nations across the world, including the United States. Several Russian defectors outlined Russian misinformation campaigns, as well as infiltrations into private companies that service the U.S. government and military.

 

#2: Israel. Outspoken in its assertion that the country is the target of constant cyber attacks, Israel has established its own "cyber gym" to train hackers in defending the Jewish state's digital networks. But Israel doesn't only play defense. It is widely believed to have sabotaged the heart of Iran's controversial nuclear program, its uranium enrichment center, with the notorious Stuxnet virus in 2010.

 

#1: China. Although it is next to impossible to determine how much is the work of private companies or individuals, and how much is state sponsored, experts point to China as the undisputed leader in global cyber warfare. China is believed to have hacked the Australian intelligence apparatus, Indian government networks and departments within the Canadian government. The U.S. suspects China of both sabotage and espionage of American defense networks, private corporations, industrial organizations, research facilities and industrial assets. Congressional panels have called China the greatest existing threat to America's digital security.

 

Defending against cyber attacks is a top priority for the most sophisticated nations. Whether it's espionage, sabotage, investigative strikes, menacing or simply creating a culture that allows their best private hackers to target sovereign nations, the most powerful countries in the world all realize the power of cyber warfare. With water supplies, air traffic, power grids and countless other vital infrastructure relying on computers, cyber warriors spare no expense building their capabilities to both attack and defend.

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 12:20
General Dynamics delivers second mobile landing platform to US Navy

US Navy's second mobile landing platform, USNS John Glenn (MLP 2), underway off the California coast. Photo: courtesy of US Navy.

 

13 March 2014 naval-technology.com

 

General Dynamics NASSCO has successfully delivered the second mobile landing platform (MLP) ship, USNS John Glenn (MLP 2), to the US Navy.

 

The second MLP ship has been named to honour the former US Marine Corps pilot and US senator John Herschel Glenn, who is also the first American astronaut to orbit the Earth.

 

General Dynamics NASSCO president Fred Harris said: "We are delivering this ship with the quality, innovation and capability needed to support the future missions of the nation's fleet and uniformed men and women around the world."

 

The 785ft-long MLP is a new class of auxiliary vessel being designed for the US Navy to serve as a floating base for amphibious operations and a transfer point between large ships and small landing craft.

 

Powered by a twin-screw diesel electric propulsion system integrating four MAN/B&W medium-speed diesel engines, the new MLP ships will enter service with three maritime prepositioning force (MPF) squadrons to support a wide range of missions including humanitarian assistance, disaster relief, amphibious and other combat missions.

 

The third ship of the class, MLP 3, is currently under construction by NASSCO and will be configured as an afloat forward staging base (AFSB).

 

MLP 3 is expected to be delivered to the US Navy in the second quarter of 2015.

"MLP 3 is expected to be delivered to the US Navy in the second quarter of 2015."

 

Separately, the US Navy has placed orders with General Dynamics for maintenance and modernisation of the Virginia-class attack submarine, USS Minnesota (SSN-783).

 

Under the $57m contract, the company will perform a post-shakedown availability, which consists of maintenance work, repairs, alternations and testing to ensure the submarine is operating at full technical capacity.

 

Scheduled to be completed in February 2015, work under the contract will be conducted at the Electric Boat shipyard in Groton, US.

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 08:35
US Hits 'Provocative' China Move On Philippine Ships

 

Mar. 12, 2014 – Defense News (AFP)

 

WASHINGTON — The United States on Wednesday accused China of raising tensions by blocking two Philippines vessels as it urged freedom of navigation in the tense South China Sea.

 

The United States, a treaty-bound ally of Manila, said it was “troubled” by Sunday’s incident in which China prevented movement of two ships contracted by the Philippine navy to deliver supplies and troops to the disputed Second Thomas Shoal.

 

“This is a provocative move that raises tensions. Pending resolution of competing claims in the South China Sea, there should be no interference with the efforts of claimants to maintain the status quo,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.

 

The Philippines on Tuesday summoned China’s charge d’affaires, accusing Beijing of a “clear and urgent threat” to Manila’s interests. Beijing countered that the ships “infringed China’s territorial sovereignty” and violated a 2002 declaration of conduct in the South China Sea.

 

The United States rejected China’s stance, saying that countries had the right to “regular resupply and rotation of personnel” to locations before the 2002 declaration.

 

The Second Thomas Shoal, which sits around 200 kilometers (125 miles) from the western Philippine island of Palawan, is claimed by the Philippines, China and Taiwan. Beijing calls it Ren’ai Reef.

 

Malaysia, Brunei and Vietnam claim other parts of the Spratly Islands, which lie near vital sea lanes and rich fishing grounds and are also believe to sit on vast mineral resources.

 

The United States, while saying it takes no position on the sovereignty of disputed territories, has been increasingly robust in its criticism of China. Last month, the United States challenged the legal basis for China’s claims over a vast area across the South China Sea.

 

The United States has been seeking to prevent China from taking more drastic action in the South China Sea. In November, China declared an Air Defense Identification Zone — requiring planes to report to Beijing — over a vast area in the East China Sea where it has a separate but intense feud over Japanese-administered islands.

 

Japan and the Philippines have accused China of making growing incursions to challenge their control over territories. US President Barack Obama will visit both Japan and the Philippines next month

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 08:20
Boeing Maritime Surveillance Aircraft's First Flight

 

 

06/03/2014 by Paul Fiddian - Armed Forces International's Lead Reporter

 

US aerospace/defence firm Boeing's MSA (Maritime Surveillance Aircraft) demonstrator has made its first flight, with highly successful results. According to Boeing officials, all mission requirements were met and the aircrews' experience was positive throughout the flight, which lasted four hours.

 

The first MSA flight preceded further planned sorties, aimed at establishing the aircraft as the stepping stone toward a future effective, low-cost maritime surveillance platform capable of engaging in border security, anti-piracy, search and rescue and more.

 

The MSA resulted from a tie-up between Boeing and Field Aviation. The demonstrator aircraft is essentially an adapted Bombadier CL-604 Challenger business jet, with systems enhancements integrated to modify it for the naval arena.

 

First MSA Flight

 

"We accomplished everything we set out to achieve", Field Aviation's Craig Tylski explained in Boeing's first MSA flight press release. "The aerodynamic performance was right on the money and even with the additional aerodynamic shapes, such as the radome, the demonstrator performed like a normal aircraft. The control and handling were excellent."

 

Off the back of this flight and future test sorties, Boeing will now move forward to the final MSA design, which will be based on the CL-605 aircraft. Included will be an AESA (Active Electronically Scanned Array) multi-mode radar, Electronic Support Measures and various sensors. The same technologies also feature in the Boeing P-8A Poseidon maritime surveillance platform, which made its first flight in April 2009.

 

Boeing Maritime Surveillance Aircraft

 

In essence, the whole Boeing Maritime Surveillance Aircraft concept involves a type that's smaller and cheaper than the Poseidon but possesses many of its capabilities.

 

The CL-604 Challenger is a variant of the civilian Challenger 600 series originally developed by Canadair. Several nations' air arms operate it as a multirole transport aircraft including those of Denmark, Canada and Germany. First flown in 1978, the Challenger has a top speed of 529 miles per hour and a maximum range of 3,959 miles.

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13 mars 2014 4 13 /03 /mars /2014 08:20
K-MAX And SMSS In Unmanned Air/Ground Trials

 

 

24/02/2014 by Paul Fiddian - Armed Forces International's Lead Reporter

 

Unmanned air and ground technologies will be paired in combined autonomous trials involving Lockheed Martin and the US Army.

 

In these, the US aerospace/defence firm's K-MAX unmanned helicopter and SMSS (Squad Mission Support System) will work together in the RSTA (reconnaissance, surveillance and target acquisition) role. According to officials, it's a first-time pairing that could expand the future battlefield roles of unmanned systems.

 

Two years ago, a Squad Mission Support System fitted with a multi-camera Gyrocam network carried out remotely-operated reconnaissance over a 200+ mile control radius. The new trials will build on this work, integrating the unmanned helicopter.

 

K-MAX And SMSS Trials

 

"This level of mission cooperation between unmanned air and ground vehicles of this size, controlled beyond line-of-sight, is an industry first", said Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control's Joe Zinecker, in the firm's K-MAX UAS /SMSS UGV trials press release. "This demonstration could lead to expanded missions, such as remote sensing and monitoring of suspected chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear and explosive threats or events."

 

The K-MAX UAS was developed by Lockheed Martin and Kaman Aerospace Corporation. Tasked with resupplying deployed US warfighters with battlefield cargo, it can transport payloads weighing up to 6,000 pounds. The Squad Mission Support System previously achieved another unmanned systems first, working alongside deployed US forces in Afghanistan.

 

Unmanned Air And Ground Systems

 

The unmanned air and ground systems trial will be carried out in coming months. As it unfolds, the K-MAX will carry an SMSS as an underslung load and position it in a simulated frontline environment. With the SMSS surveying the area, the K-MAX will fly back to its base.

 

'In this new scenario, the reconnaissance, surveillance, target acquisition sensor onboard the SMSS will be used to locate, observe and obtain coordinates of targets and other objects of interest', Lockheed Martin explains. 'The coordinates and sensor imagery will be passed back through a satellite communications system to a remote operations center hundreds of miles away for analysis.'

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12 mars 2014 3 12 /03 /mars /2014 20:20
Espionnage : la NSA utilise des logiciels malveillants à une « échelle industrielle »

 

12.03.2014 Le Monde.fr (AFP)


 

Selon des documents transmis Edward Snowden, ancien consultant de l'Agence nationale de renseignement américaine (National Security Agency, NSA), l'agence a développé des logiciels malveillants qu'elle utilise massivement.

D'après ces documents, publiés mercredi sur le site du magazine en ligne Intercept par l'ancien journaliste du Guardian Glenn Greenwald, l'agence a implanté dans des millions d'ordinateurs des logiciels malveillants qui lui permettent d'extraire des données de réseaux téléphoniques et Internet à l'étranger.

L'utilisation de ces logiciels, qui concernait à l'origine quelques centaines de cibles dont les communications ne pouvaient pas être surveillées par des moyens traditionnels, a été étendue à une « échelle industrielle », selon les documents publiés par M. Greenwald – les premiers depuis qu'il travaille au sein du groupe de médias First Look Media, lancé par Pierre Omidyar, le fondateur d'eBay.

 

Lire aussi (édition abonnés) : Comment échapper à l'œil de la NSA ?

 

ENREGISTREMENTS PAR MICRO ET WEBCAM

Cette collecte automatique de données – en passant par un système nommé Turbine – permet à la NSA de moins utiliser le renseignement humain. Elle est effectuée au siège de l'agence, dans le Maryland, mais aussi au Royaume-Uni et au Japon. Les services de surveillance britanniques (Government Communications Headquarters, GCHQ) semblent avoir joué un rôle important dans ces opérations.

Dans certains cas, la NSA utilise un leurre Facebook pour infecter l'ordinateur de la cible et exfiltrer les dossiers. Le logiciel, qui peut être installé en seulement huit secondes, peut aussi enregistrer des conversations depuis le micro de l'ordinateur ou prendre des photos avec la webcam de la machine. Ce logiciel existe depuis 2004, mais son utilisation à grande échelle semble avoir commencé en 2010.

Un responsable de la NSA interrogé par l'AFP a rappelé que ces opérations étaient conduites « exclusivement à des fins de contre-espionnage ou d'espionnage à l'étranger pour des missions nationales ou ministérielles, et rien d'autre ».

 

Lire également l'entretien avec Tim Berners-Lee, l'inventeur du World Wide Web :  « Le Web fait de plus en plus partie des droits de l'homme »

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12 mars 2014 3 12 /03 /mars /2014 19:20
Feu vert de Madrid à davantage de Marines américains sur une base d'Andalousie

 

10/03/2014 quebec.huffingtonpost.ca

 

L'Espagne a donné son feu vert à l'augmentation du contingent de Marines américains présents sur la base de Moron, en Andalousie, dont la vocation est de rapidement se déployer en Afrique et porter secours aux diplomates américains en difficulté, a indiqué le Pentagone lundi.

 

Cette force d'intervention américaine basée dans le sud de l'Espagne a été créée dans la foulée de l'attaque le 11 septembre 2012 du consulat américain à Benghazi qui avait coûté la vie à l'ambassadeur américain en Libye.

 

Aux termes de l'accord passé avec Madrid, le nombre de Marines déployés sur la base de Moron passera de 500 à 850 et davantage d'aéronefs doivent y être envoyés, selon le colonel Steven Warren, un porte-parole du Pentagone.

 

"L'Espagne a autorisé la force d'intervention à rester pendant une année supplémentaire (à Moron) et accepté que le nombre de Marines passe de 500 à 850", a expliqué le colonel Warren.

 

La force d'intervention de Moron a déjà été activée à plusieurs reprises depuis sa création, notamment lors de l'évacuation d'une bonne partie du personnel de l'ambassade américaine au Soudan du Sud lors des récents troubles qui s'y sont produits.

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12 mars 2014 3 12 /03 /mars /2014 18:20
LM Receives $14 M for Upgrades to The Apache's Targeting and Pilotage System

 

Mar 11, 2014 ASDNews Source : Lockheed Martin Corporation

 

Lockheed Martin [NYSE: LMT] received a $14 million contract in 2013 from the U.S. Army to design, integrate and qualify a High Reliability Turret for the Modernized Target Acquisition Designation Sight/Pilot Night Vision Sensor (M-TADS/PNVS) on the AH-64 Apache attack helicopter.

 

The High Reliability Turret is the interface between the M-TADS/PNVS and the Apache airframe. It improves target track performance and minimizes the effects of aircraft vibration on the system. The turret also improves M-TADS/PNVS reliability and maintainability, as well as reducing the operations and support costs of the existing turret assembly. It will potentially save the U.S. Army more than $500 million in operation and support costs over the life of the system.

 

Read more

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12 mars 2014 3 12 /03 /mars /2014 18:20
Sea Tests Loom For Gerald R. Ford Super-Carrier

 

11/03/2014 by Paul Fiddian - Armed Forces International's Lead Reporter

 

The very latest United States Navy aircraft carrier is about to start a two-plus year sea trials programmes, ahead of joining the naval power later this decade.

 

Equipped with state-of-the-art radar systems and the capability to launch both manned and unmanned aircraft types, the USS Gerald R. Ford spearheads a new class of aircraft carriers.

 

The Ford-class ships are the first all-new US Navy carriers in almost 50 years. The USS Gerald R. Ford itself was ceremoniously named last November and, all being well, it will be pressed into service in 2016. Prior to that, it faces 26 months at sea while all its systems are put through their paces. "We're kind of in the infancy stage of the test program, and the early returns are good", USN Rear Admiral Thomas Moore explained to the Daily Press, adding: "[but] we have a long way to go."

 

Ford Carrier Test Programme

 

The 26-month Ford carrier test programme is that long on account of the complex systems installed - more so than in any preceding US Navy carrier. They include enhanced propulsion and electromagnetic rails - a more efficient means of launching aircraft off the flight deck.

 

The USS Ford's weight is approaching 100,000 tonnes. Once in service, it will accommodate some 4,600 USN personnel and a maximum of 75 aircraft. It and the other Ford-class carriers will take over from the Nimitz-class carriers, whose days are now becoming numbered.

 

USS Gerald R. Ford

 

Compared to its direct predecessors, the USS Gerald R. Ford has more flight deck space, three elevators for aircraft and electrical power systems in place of the steam-powered systems currently in use

 

"On previous Nimitz-class carriers, you always had a cadre of sailors who had been on previous construction projects, and the systems were very, very familiar for them", added Rear Admiral Moore. "On the Ford, that's not the case, It's a new ship with a lot of new developmental systems."

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