Overblog Tous les blogs Top blogs Entreprises & Marques Tous les blogs Entreprises & Marques
Suivre ce blog Administration + Créer mon blog
MENU
19 février 2014 3 19 /02 /février /2014 08:56
Altran acquiert Foliage et se renforce sur l’aérospatial et la défense

 

18.02.2014 Mariama Diallo - journal-aviation.com

 

Altran a finalisé le rachat à 100 % de l’américain Foliage, spécialisé dans le développement de produits principalement aux États-Unis et en Inde. Cette acquisition permet ainsi au groupe d’ingénierie et de conseil de se renforcer notamment sur l’aérospatial et la défense, un des secteurs couverts par Foliage. L’entreprise emploie 500 personnes et a réalisé près de 50 millions de dollars (37 millions d’euros) de chiffre d’affaires en 2013.

 

Cette croissance externe s’inscrit dans le plan stratégique 2012-2015 d’Altran, qui ambitionne d’accélérer son développement sur le marché américain de la R&D.

Partager cet article
Repost0
19 février 2014 3 19 /02 /février /2014 08:20
Boeing Eyes P-8 Exports

 

February 11, 2014 By Bill Sweetman Source: AWIN First

 

“Four or five nations” are showing strong interest in the Boeing P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol and antisubmarine warfare (ASW) aircraft, according to Chris Raymond, Boeing Defense, Space & Security vice president for business development and strategy.

 

“These are down to a technical level, not a cursory what-is-it level,” Raymond said on the eve of the Singapore air show. “They are doing analysis of range and coverage, how it would fit in their fleets, life-cycle costs.”

 

Two or three of the potential candidates are in the Asia-Pacific area, Raymond says. (One of the others is most likely the United Kingdom.) Not all of them currently operate fixed-wing ASW aircraft. “These are new requirements, not just replacements,” Raymond says.

 

In some cases, Boeing sees its new Maritime Surveillance Aircraft, based on a Bombardier Challenger 605 airframe, as being complementary to the P-8 or other ASW platforms. The company is moving towards the idea of a family of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance systems ranging from the P-8 through the MSA and the King Air-based Ramis (reconfigurable airborne multi-sensor system) to the Insitu ScanEagle and Integrator unmanned air systems.

Partager cet article
Repost0
19 février 2014 3 19 /02 /février /2014 08:20
Marines Test UGVs for Base Security, Defense

The Marines tested two MDARS unmanned vehicles during the exercise, one armed and one unarmed, and participants reported both provided effective security, detecting "enemy" movements around the airfield and deterring them from entering the perimeter. (USMC photo)

 

Feb 18, 2014 defense-unmanned.com (Source: Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center; posted Feb 13, 2014)

 

SPAWAR System Provides Security for Marines

 

TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. --- Marines with Marine Wing Support Squadron 374 conducted Air Base Ground Defense training during their evolution of the Integrated Training Exercise with the help of a new unmanned ground device, the Mobile Detection Assessment Response System, Feb 6, 2014.

 

The MDARS, developed by the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command, or SPAWAR, lends support for the ABGD with either user-operated or autonomous controls. It patrols its environment and constantly surveys the area for possible threats.

 

Though the SPAWAR team only spent a few days at the Combat Center during the ITX, they were able to demonstrate the MDARS’ capabilities for the Marine Aircraft Group 13 and MWSS-374 Marines.

 

“The system works really well in notifying my Marines if activity is detected,” said 1st Lt. Erin Mahonney, platoon commander, MWSS-374. “We had an unknown enemy in the area and I got to see what the system was capable of. I definitely saw what this system could be and how it can help us.”

 

The MDARS sees just as well at night as it does during the day. The system has an assortment of sensors, cameras and radar that can trigger a response on its own to alert the operator.

 

The goal of this new semi-autonomous system is to keep service members safe without sacrificing the security of an area. Although the vehicle is not meant for combat, it can be fitted with a variety of weapon systems to make it more capable of engaging potential combatants if necessary.

 

“MWSS-374 saw the interest in the system and wanted to see it fielded during ITX,” said Pat Culliton, project manager, Force Protection Systems. “We’re fielding the system here and showing what it can do for the ABGD.”

 

The SPAWAR team fielded two MDARS vehicles during ITX, one with weapons and one without. Both units were able to affectively assist in providing security around the airfield. They were able to detect enemy movements and deter advancement onto the airfield.

 

Despite the MDARS system’s limited involvement during the ITX, the SPAWAR team was able to showcase its capabilities and demonstrate how it can be utilized in an Air Base Grand Defense.

Partager cet article
Repost0
19 février 2014 3 19 /02 /février /2014 08:20
Ducommun Receives Contract from Raytheon for TOW Missiles

 

 

Feb 18, 2014 ASDNews Source : Ducommun Incorporated

 

Ducommun Incorporated (NYSE: DCO) (“Ducommun” or the “Company”) has received a follow-on award from Raytheon Company (NYSE: RTN) to continue providing complex wiring harnesses and printed circuit card assemblies for the TOW (tube-launched, optically-tracked, wireless-guided) weapon system. The contract extends the Company’s support of the program through 2014, with production taking place at Ducommun’s facilities in Berryville, Ark. and Tulsa, Okla.

 

"We’re very proud to support this enduring program and provide our troops with the ruggedized electronics behind Raytheon’s next-generation TOW weapon system," said Anthony J. Reardon, chairman and chief executive officer of Ducommun. “We have a longstanding relationship with Raytheon on the TOW program and look forward to serving them for many years to come.”

 

Read more:

Partager cet article
Repost0
18 février 2014 2 18 /02 /février /2014 23:20
Les Etats-Unis veulent échanger leur soldat prisonnier des talibans

 

18 février 2014 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

WASHINGTON - Les Etats-Unis veulent reprendre les discussions avec les talibans sur un échange de leur seul soldat prisonnier contre des détenus de Guantanamo, a rapporté lundi soir le Washington Post.

 

Washington voudrait obtenir la libération du sergent Bowe Bergdahl, capturé par les talibans en juin 2009, avant le départ d'Afghanistan de la plus grande partie des troupes américaines, prévu pour la fin 2014, précisent des responsables américains cités par le journal.

 

Selon le quotidien, Bergdahl serait échangé contre cinq talibans détenus à Guantanamo, qui seraient relâchés et remis au Qatar. Les discussions ne sont pas encore entamées, note toutefois le Washington Post.

 

La porte-parole du département d'Etat, Jennifer Psaki, a déclaré à l'AFP, sans pouvoir donner de précisions: nous travaillons chaque jour, en utilisant toutes les ressources militaires, diplomatiques et de renseignement, pour faire en sorte que le sergent Bergdahl rentre chez lui sain et sauf.

 

De son côté, le porte-parole de la Maison Blanche, Jay Carney, a affirmé mardi que nous ne sommes pas impliqués dans des négociations actives avec les talibans. Si des négociations reprennent à un moment où à un autre, nous voudrons parler avec les talibans au sujet du retour du sergent Bergdahl, sain et sauf.

 

Nous pensons à sa famille. Le sergent Bergdahl est absent depuis bien trop longtemps. Et nous continuons à appeler à sa libération immédiate, a-t-il ajouté.

 

Les Etats-Unis avaient reçu début janvier, pour la première fois depuis trois ans, une preuve de vie du sergent Bowe Bergdahl, capturé le 30 juin 2009 dans la province de Paktika (sud-est).

Partager cet article
Repost0
18 février 2014 2 18 /02 /février /2014 22:20
Sotchi: l'un des deux navires américains envoyés en mer Noire s'est échoué

 

18 février 2014 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

WASHINGTON - La frégate USS Taylor, l'un des deux navires américains dépêchés en mer Noire pendant les jeux Olympiques de Sotchi, s'est échoué et a dû faire relâche dans un port turc pour évaluer les dégâts, a annoncé mardi la Marine américaine.

 

Le Taylor est actuellement amarré dans le port de Samsun, sur la côte nord de la Turquie, où il fait l'objet d'une inspection pour évaluer les dégâts après s'être échoué le 12 février, affirme l'US Navy dans un communiqué.

 

L'incident s'est produit alors que le navire s'apprêtait à entrer dans le port de Samsun pour se ravitailler en carburant, a précisé un porte-parole du commandement de l'US Navy en Europe. Une enquête a été ouverte.

 

L'incident n'a pas fait de blessées parmi les 200 hommes d'équipage mais les hélices du navire ont été endommagées, selon le porte-parole, Philip Rosi.

 

Il est trop tôt pour déterminer quel sera l'impact sur la capacité du Taylor à reprendre rapidement la mer, selon lui.

 

Fin janvier, le Pentagone avait annoncé que deux navires seraient disponibles en cas de demande pour toute situation d'urgence, en soutien et en consultation avec le gouvernement russe pendant la durée des jeux Olympiques.

 

Peu avant l'ouverture des jeux, la Maison Blanche s'était alarmée d'une hausse inquiétante des menaces visant les JO. Aucun incident notable n'a à ce jour été rapporté.

 

Pendant leur séjour en mer Noire, les deux navires américains sont censés notamment conduire des opérations de sécurité maritime, selon la Navy. L'autre navire américain est l'USS Mount Whitney, vaisseau amiral de la flotte américaine de Méditerranée (VIe flotte), qui compte 300 hommes à bord.

Partager cet article
Repost0
18 février 2014 2 18 /02 /février /2014 22:20
Time for a U.S. Cyber force

By Admiral James Stavridis *, U.S. Navy (Retired) and David Weinstein ** - January 2014 Vol. 140/1/1,331 - USNI

 

Instead of each armed service having its own version of a cyber command, why not create a separate entity altogether that would serve all branches?
 

In November 1918, U.S. Army Brigadier General Billy Mitchell made the following observation: “The day has passed when armies of the ground or navies of the sea can be the arbiter of a nation’s destiny in war.” General Mitchell’s comments came in the context of a vigorous debate involving a then-new domain of warfare: the skies. Nearly a century later, we are confronted with yet another contested domain. Cyberspace, like airspace, constitutes a vital operational venue for the U.S. military. Accordingly, it warrants what the sea, air, and land each have—an independent branch of the armed services.

Eight months before Mitchell’s clairvoyant statement, President Woodrow Wilson had signed two executive orders to establish the U.S. Army Air Service, replacing the Aviation Section of the U.S. Signal Corps as the military’s aerial warfare unit. This small force served as a temporary branch of the War Department during World War I and looked much like the Pentagon’s joint task forces of today. It was relatively small and consisted of personnel on assignment from the different services. In 1920, the Air Service’s personnel were recommissioned into the Army. The decision was backed by the popular belief that aviation existed exclusively to support ground troops.

A significant debate was under way within the armed services. The minority camp, led by Mitchell, advocated on behalf of establishing an independent service for aerial warfare. He contended that air power would serve a purpose beyond supporting the Army’s ground movements, and that gaining and maintaining preeminence of the skies required an entirely autonomous branch with indigenous manning, personnel, logistics, and acquisition duties. His opponents, on the other hand, favored integrating aviation into the existing services. Budgets were tight, and Army brass were eager to garner additional funding streams.

Ultimately, the politics of the day prevailed, and the Army’s forceful lobby succeeded in preserving the status quo. Mitchell was court-martialed and subsequently demoted for insubordination, and in 1926 the Air Corps Act created the U.S. Army Air Corps. The legislation mandated few substantive reforms, but nonetheless solidified the Army’s control over military aviation, ostensibly ending the debate for two decades. Mitchell’s wisdom prevailed 20 years later when President Harry S. Truman signed the National Security Act of 1947. The postwar legislation created the Department of the Air Force and at 65 years old, that force is the most formidable aerial warfare branch in the world.

 

Deja Vu

Today we find ourselves in an almost identical situation with cyberspace. In 2005, the Pentagon reacted to the emerging virtual domain by establishing a joint task force of sorts, much like the old Signal Corps. Known as the Joint Functional Component Command for Network Warfare, it was tasked with “facilitat[ing] cooperative engagement with other national entities in computer defense and offensive information warfare.” The Fort Meade–based unit sequestered personnel from the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Coast Guard to support its mission.

A year later, the Air Force took a page from the Army’s 1920 playbook and established its own cyber headquarters. The Air Force Cyber Command’s mission statement described it as a “provider of forces that the President, combatant commanders, and the American people can rely on for preserving the freedom of access and commerce in . . . cyberspace.” Unlike the Army of the 1920s, though, the Air Force lost the bureaucratic battle for control of cyberspace. In 2008, the Defense Department denied its permanent activation in favor of a joint organization, and in 2010 the Pentagon officially stood up the U.S. Cyber Command (CYBERCOM) and designated it at initial operational capability status. Most recently, in September 2013, CYBERCOM activated the Cyber Mission Force, which is composed of the National Missions Teams, Combat Mission Teams, and Cyber Protection Teams—all of which have different missions and will be staffed by the five services.

 

Consolidating America’s Cyber Components

Currently, each of the five services possesses a cyber component. For example, the Navy has Fleet Cyber Command, the Air Force has Air Force Cyber Command, and the Marine Corps has Marine Forces Cyber Command. The Army and Coast Guard also have similar units. Each component, although technically subordinate to CYBERCOM, supports service and joint missions. In other words, Fleet Cyber Command answers to both the Chief of Naval Operations and the CYBERCOM commander. When push comes to shove, though, the Navy dictates the criterion by which the 10th Fleet manages its cyber sailors. After all, the Navy, not CYBERCOM, is footing the bill.

Not only does this construct threaten unity of command and foster at times unhealthy competition among the services, but it also inhibits the establishment of universal standards that transcend the DOD’s cyber community. With so many different appropriation vehicles, CYBERCOM lacks sufficient influence over the services’ priorities, and in the event that CYBERCOM and its components do not share mission interests, conflicts inevitably arise. A stand-alone force would eliminate both the unity-of-command problem and the interservice rivalries. It would prevent the inefficiencies associated with disparate personnel standards while allocating resources based on objectively adjudicated priorities.

Some supporters of CYBERCOM’s organizational structure cite U.S. Special Operations Command, or SOCOM, as a replicable model. Like CYBERCOM, SOCOM is a functional (as opposed to geographic) command with representation from all five services. Put simply, if CYBERCOM’s function is cyberspace operations, then SOCOM’s function is special operations. The problem with drawing parallels between the two, however, is that SOCOM’s functions span multiple domains, whereas CYBERCOM’s functions only involve one domain—cyberspace. Therefore, SOCOM indeed requires the core competencies of all the services to carry out its missions in the sea, air, and on land. Cyberspace operations, by contrast, do not require any of the core competencies of the five services; in fact, the cyber domain requires precisely the core competencies that none of the other branches possesses.

Despite their differences, an independent cyber branch could be positively informed by the experience of SOCOM. SOCOM’s official history cites the opposition of Admiral William Crowe, then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to a combatant command specifically dedicated to special operations. Furthermore, special operators have navigated an interagency environment alongside intelligence-community counterparts since their founding. Those who fear redundancy between a distinct cyber branch within the armed services and its closest intelligence-community partner, the National Security Agency (NSA), should look no further than SOCOM’s relationship with the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). While military special operators have established their own organic intelligence-gathering capabilities, and the CIA has recently enhanced its kinetic capabilities, the two organizations enjoy a mutually symbiotic relationship. Further, a dedicated cyber branch would assuage the tension that SOCOM endures between administrative and operational control of its personnel. In this respect, a single branch for cyber warfare would better facilitate manning, training, and equipping forces for the conduct of operations.

 

Modernizing Joint for the Next-Gen Warfighter

Operational art is achieved through the convergence of otherwise opposing worldviews. The joint environment facilitates this healthy ideological clash by mandating the cohabitation of diverse military disciplines for the purpose of tactical, operational, and strategic planning. Wargaming, course-of-action development, center-of-gravity analysis, and strategic design are most effective with a room full of different-colored uniforms. Currently, in the joint world, the Army offers its perspective from land operations, just as the Navy does the sea and the Air Force the air. This forced meshing of domain-related views has proven highly valuable for meeting combatant commanders’ intent for planning in all domains. Anyone who has worked in a joint environment—from the Joint Staff scripting strategic doctrine down to a Joint Operations Center churning out tactical orders—would agree that intellectual diversity is paramount to mission success.

The problem, however, is that no one service specializes in cyberspace operations. Because cyberspace is now an established military domain, combatant commanders are eager to integrate a new institutional perspective into military plans. Today, cyber planners from the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Coast Guard fill the institutional gap. At a time when the doctrine for cyberspace operations is still immature, these personnel are not only ideologically biased by their operational past—be it on land, at sea, or in air—but they are also extremely new to the domain. In this respect, as long as America’s cyber warriors belong to big Army, Navy, or Air Force, they will always be at least partially influenced by their experiences in another domain, thus depriving joint operations of an institutionally untainted warfighter. Further, having cyber assets in each branch produces unnecessary redundancy; in an era of increasing threats amidst austerity, having a branch dedicated to cyber with streamlined financial accountability makes economic sense. Cyber warriors across the military equipped with institutional cohesion amongst one another better serves U.S. national-security objectives than those same cyber warriors maintaining institutional allegiance to an existing branch.

Before we can fully modernize the joint environment, though, it is critical to recruit and train America’s military to operate on the 21st century’s digital battlefield. As with any battlespace, the case for a U.S. Cyber Force starts with people—and America’s cyber warriors demand more than just their own uniforms. Perhaps surprisingly, the vast majority of CYBERCOM’s military personnel are experiencing cyberspace for the first time in their careers. Helicopter pilots, chemical officers, B-2 navigators, tank drivers, infantry soldiers, and acquisition specialists occupy CYBERCOM’s ranks. These personnel enter the cyber trenches at all levels of leadership with little to no related experience, so the command invests heavily in expensive training regimens to mitigate gaping proficiency holes. The long-term return on investment is strikingly minimal, however, as most personnel rotate out after three years to an entirely different discipline. The lucky few who received prior training from their respective branches are typically influenced by their service’s legacy doctrine, thus inducing confusion among the joint ranks. For example, cyber soldiers typically default to information-operations doctrine, whereas cyber sailors often view cyberspace operations through the lens of electronic warfare.

 

‘Civilians Also Occupy the Cyber Trenches’

In addition to military personnel, civilians also occupy the cyber trenches. While the Air Force failed to take ownership of the cyber domain in 2008, it did gain the majority stake of civilian personnel management. Through no fault of its own, though, the Air Force lacks the requisite human-resources capacity to acquire and retain the nation’s best technical talent. Doing so necessitates an effective advertising effort to build and market a brand that attracts an entirely different civilian than the Air Force is accustomed to targeting. To compete with the private sector in an increasingly lucrative field, the DOD must offer attractive incentives. In this respect, the Pentagon’s uptight and hierarchical culture is hardly preferable to the free-spirited and flat cultures that characterize the sunny offices of Palo Alto’s technology start-ups. Today, the Air Force does not even offer Senior Executive Service (the civilian equivalent to generals and admirals) positions at CYBERCOM, so upward mobility is capped.

Recruiting the appropriate military personnel is equally important. “The Few, The Proud, The Marines,” is a great slogan for attracting young infantry candidates seeking to tackle a specific mission and share in a storied heritage of elite warriors, but it hardly appeals to the wily hacker types who must populate the cyber trenches. Therefore, the Corps’ cyber component, Marine Forces Cyber Command, is compelled to choose cyber warriors from among its existing ranks of Devil Dogs—the same Marines who were enticed to enlist by flashy television commercials of men in dapper uniforms donning shiny swords. As a general proposition,

Marines are of course much more accustomed to navigating amphibious terrain than global highways of fiber-optic cables or the Washington Beltway’s network of bureaucrats. Imagine, though, if the U.S. Cyber Force landed a commercial spot during the Super Bowl—or better yet, an advertising deal with World of Warcraft? How about 30-second ads on YouTube videos from the Black Hat hacker convention? Even Don Draper of Mad Men fame could not resist the creative potential of such a brand. Today, CYBERCOM does not even have a public-facing website, let alone a Twitter or Facebook account to target the 20-somethings who never knew a world without computers. Only a new service is capable of generating enough brand appeal to recruit and retain America’s next-generation warfighter.

 

Thinking Ahead

The U.S. Cyber Force would be a drastic but timely innovation for America’s military. A dedicated branch would be smaller in size than the Marine Corps with comparatively low physical-fitness standards and noticeably relaxed grooming standards. Make no mistake about it, America’s cyber warriors would not bear the likeness of G.I. Joe. The uniform of the day might resemble that of a conservatively dressed Googler—the branch’s motto artfully inscribed across the chest in MD5 hash.

With the other services looking to downsize, technically apt military personnel would get first dibs on populating the new ranks. In addition to absorbing existing people, raising the new cyber branch’s profile would attract a diverse pool of patriotic technologists, ranging from high school hackers to Silicon Valley’s computer scientists. The cyber trenches must include pure geeks, with an unparalleled command of coding, and emotionally intelligent social scientists who are equally comfortable with technology and policy. Operating in cyberspace necessitates deft maneuvering to navigate the dizzying ambiguities of a virtual domain while overcoming the stifling stovepipes of Washington’s bureaucratic behemoths. Shunning divergent personalities from the military apparatus is a parasitic posture; by engendering commonality in wearing the cloth of our nation, all military branches will be better suited to integrate cyberspace capabilities. Accordingly, the U.S. Cyber Force’s non-techies are critical to facilitating the convergence of intellectually divergent disciplines, each of which is collectively indispensable to advancing the America’s interests in cyberspace.

As with any major organizational revision, the skeptics will inevitably voice concerns. Antiwar activists will warn of provoking the militarization of cyberspace, and privacy advocates will object on the basis of recent accusations of domestic surveillance. Other opponents will tacitly acknowledge the sound logic but will be intimidated by the daunting prospect of change. In reality, the path to a new service would be gradual. The next logical step is dividing the bureaucratic relationship between CYBERCOM and NSA, principally by appointing exclusive leaders for each organization and then cementing the command’s autonomy by granting it unified combatant command status, thereby releasing it from the oversight of the Omaha-based U.S. Strategic Command. A fully empowered and independent functional combatant command is a halfway house on the way to an independent service branch.

Of course, the U.S. Cyber Force’s mission would be strictly governed by the longstanding tenets of the Posse Comitatus Act, just like any other branch of the armed services. In fact, establishing a distinct cyber service with less institutional ties to the NSA would go a long way toward allaying the concerns of civil libertarians by bringing greater transparency to the cyber domain and subjecting the service to a whole host of oversight mechanisms, as well as more clearly delineated funding streams. As far as domestic cyberspace is concerned, the U.S. Cyber Force would have no jurisdiction whatsoever in the United States; in fact, perhaps it’s time to learn from aviation again and consider modeling a domestic cyber-security agency on the Federal Aviation Administration.

Military institutions do not dictate the degree to which a domain constitutes a venue for warfare; rather, militaries merely react logically to changes in state and non-state behavior. In the case of both airspace and cyberspace, technological innovation was the primary driver of behavioral change. With the advent of the Internet and the proliferation of hyper-connected technologies, we are once again on the beach at Kitty Hawk. The Wright Brothers spent three years there experimenting with flight and now, more than three years after then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates commissioned the U.S. Cyber Command, it is time to think ahead. Thankfully, Brigadier General Billy Mitchell’s wisdom extends beyond just airspace; it pertains to all domains of warfare. Let’s not wait 20 years to realize it.


* Admiral Stavridis completed four years as Supreme Allied Commander at NATO in mid-2013, and is today the Dean of the Fletcher School at Tufts University.
 
** Mr. Weinstein just completed three years as a Strategic Planner at U.S. Cyber Command.
Partager cet article
Repost0
18 février 2014 2 18 /02 /février /2014 19:20
Striking Back: Germany Considers Counterespionage Against US

 

February 18, 2014 By SPIEGEL Staff

 

Unsatisfied with the lack of answers provided by Washington in the NSA spying scandal, officials in Berlin are considering a new approach. Germany might begin counterespionage measures aimed at allies.

 

The question seemed out of place, especially when asked three times. A female journalist from a satire magazine wanted to know if Thomas de Maizière liked cheese snacks. "Questions like that are more appropriate for breakfast television than here," the minister snipped back. It was de Maizière's first visit as interior minister to the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, Germany's domestic intelligence agency. And he was in no mood for jokes.

Instead, the minister preferred to focus on the basics during the appearance two weeks ago, with counterespionage at the top of his list. The issue, he warned, shouldn't be underestimated, adding that the question as to who was doing the spying was but of secondary importance.

In other words: Germany intends to defend itself against all spying efforts in the future, even if they are perpetrated by supposed friends.

While the minister's words may have sounded innocuous, they marked nothing less than the start of a political about-face. Away from the public eye, the German government is moving toward implementing plans to turn its own spies against partner countries like the United States, putting allies on the same level as the Chinese, Russians and North Koreans.

 

Humiliating Revelations

The stubbornness of the Americans, who have answered few relevant questions from Germany during the National Security Agency spying scandal, has angered the new government, comprised of Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives and the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD). Now, pressure is growing for Germany to find its own answers to the questions Washington has been ignoring. "They're like cowboys who only understand the language of the Wild West," sources in Merkel's party say, referring to the Americans' intractability. Two government agencies are at the center of the strategy to restore respect that has been lost over months of humiliating revelations that the US has been spying on Germany: the Office for the Protection of the Constitution and the Federal Prosecutor's Office.

De Maizière's new assertiveness first became clear at the Munich Security Conference earlier this month. During a panel discussion, he raised the issue with Mike Rogers, chairman of the US House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and called the NSA's relentless collection of data "boundless". He said he couldn't even say how bad the political damage was because he was still lacking vital information.

Indeed, on many key issues, the German government is still flying just as blindly as it was last June when whistleblower Edward Snowden first went public with his revelations about the NSA's efforts to spy on Europe and other parts of the world. In response to the allegations surrounding the documents he leaked, both the Interior Ministry and the Justice Ministry sent extensive lists of questions to the US. At the end of October, they sent a pleasant reminder as well. But even still, after months of waiting, no satisfactory answers have been provided.

 

Diplomats Leave Washington Empty-Handed

A number of high-level German delegations have traveled to Washington on fact-finding missions, but they have also returned empty-handed for the most part. The Americans did provide around 1,000 pages of documents that were declassified this autumn, but they are essentially endless paragraphs about procedures and regulations. The rest is either blacked out or irrelevant.

A so-called Germany package that was to contain all the data copied by Snowden relating to Germany was promised but not delivered. And no progress whatsoever has been made on a "no-spy agreement," despite months of back and forth on the issue. A version of the paper, which is intended to lay out rules for cooperation between German and US intelligence agencies, has been shelved by Washington. It is likely to remain there as well.

Last week, US President Barack Obama himself rejected any form of a "no-spy agreement". "There's no country where we have a no-spy agreement," Obama said in a press conference during a visit by French President François Hollande. The French leader, who had expressed similar wishes to those of the Germany, was forced to travel back to Paris empty-handed.

 

US Wants to 'Turn Page'

Between the White House and the Capitol Building, people seem to be rolling their eyes at the Germans. They say they've had enough of the moaning. Sources close to Secretary of State John Kerry, especially, are pushing to move forward from the spying scandal. "Let's turn the page," Kerry reportedly said during private meetings with Merkel and Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

A new chapter is coming, but it won't be quite as Kerry envisioned it. The Social Democrats are increasingly irritated by the Americans' apparent ignorance over just how sensitive Germany is regarding the NSA affair. "The Iraq war was tiddlywinks compared to the blow to our relations suffered through the NSA affair," says Dietmar Nietan, a member of the German parliament who has been active on the issue of German-American relations for years now.

Members of Merkel's conservatives share similar opinions. They also fear the chancellor will suffer a massive blow to her image if she simply accepts the fact that her cell phone was spied on.

Against that backdrop, it would actually suit both the conservatives and the SPD if Federal Public Prosecutor Harald Range were to move ahead and open an official investigation into espionage activities in Germany. Germany's attorney general hasn't made a decision on taking the case yet, but pressure is mounting in Berlin. In informal talks, the government's SPD ministers -- Heiko Maas at the Justice Ministry, Steinmeier at the Foreign Ministry and Sigmar Gabriel in the Economics Ministry-- have reached an agreement with their CDU colleagues Peter Altmeier in the Chancellery and de Maizière to not stand in the way of an investigation. On the contrary. Range, who has long felt there were good reasons for an investigation, is now being explicitly encouraged to take action.

 

Letting Spies Off the Hook

Recently, officials at Maas' Justice Ministry signaled to the Federal Prosecutor's Office that it would be incomprehensible to forego investigations just because few expect it to produce any results. "It cannot be that we go hunting for common handbag thieves but do not even attempt to investigate when the chancellor's cell phone has been tapped," Maas is reported to have said during an internal discussion.

Still, as much as the new government wants to show its toughness, it is unlikely that an investigation would bear much fruit. Thus, Berlin is also seriously considering breaking a taboo by spying on its own friends. Its vehicle of choice would be Section 4 at the Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), which is responsible for Germany's counterespionage efforts.

The BfV, based in Cologne, has long divided the spying world into good and bad. The Russians, Chinese, Iranians and North Koreans have always been assigned to the bad side, and the office has specifically dealt with these threats. But the Americans, the British and the French have essentially considered to be off limits.

 

'One Can't Ignore Allied Countries'

Domestic policy experts from all parties would like to change that. "We have to end the unequal approach and put them all on the same level," says CDU politician Clemens Binninger, the new head of the Parliamentary Control Panel, which is responsible for oversight of intelligence agencies in the Bundestag.

"We have to protect ourselves, no matter where the threats come from," agrees SPD domestic affairs expert Michael Hartmann. And even the Christian Social Union, which is traditionally very friendly towards the US, is concerned. "One can't ignore allied countries," says Stephan Mayer, the domestic affairs spokesman for the CSU, which shares power in government and is the Bavarian sister party to Merkel's CDU.

The plans for monitoring allies are already well developed. Section 4 in the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, where just 100 specialists had been employed, is to be significantly expanded. In addition, a form of "observation-light" is planned: Western partners won't be the targets of the full spectrum of intelligence tools available, such as telephone monitoring, source acquisition or direct observation. But German authorities will do all they can to keep an eye on the goings on at embassies and consulates, learn more about who works there and determine the extent of their technical capabilities. In short, they want to know, for example, if German government offices are being monitored by the US Embassy in Berlin.

Hans-Georg Maassen, head of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, has already gotten started. He has requested that the US Embassy supply names and data pertaining to intelligence personnel who are in Germany with diplomatic accreditation. He has also asked for information regarding private companies the US cooperates with in Germany on intelligence issues. According to sources in the Office of the Protection of the Constitution, the agency already has a better overview of what is going on than it did just a few months ago.

Even the smallest of Germany's three intelligence agencies, the Military Counterespionage Service (MAD), which is situated within Germany's military and performs some domestic intelligence operations, finds itself contemplating a new approach. Ulrich Birkenheier, who heads MAD, is currently examining whether his organization should be paying closer attention to allied intelligence agencies.

Teaching the US a Lesson

The changes mean that, nine months after the NSA affair, the German government is steering towards a serious confrontation with the US. It would mark a break with the decades-long practice of allowing Western partners to essentially do as they please in Germany. There are, to be sure, several voices -- most of them in the Chancellery and Interior Ministry -- that have warned that increased monitoring of allies could trigger unforeseen consequences and potentially cause damage to existing intelligence partnerships. Other high-ranking government officials, however, say that without such a change in focus, the US wouldn't completely understand the full ramifications of the NSA affair.

A definitive decision has not yet been made. The Foreign Ministry, the Interior Ministry and the Chancellery are still in the process of arriving at a common position. That too is one reason for the delay in Merkel's visit to Washington. Originally, March was considered, but now it is only said that the chancellor will make the trip "in the spring."

It could be later. Government sources say that Merkel will only make the trip once Berlin has reached a common position on intelligence. And when it is clear before she gets on the plane that she will be able to return with a clear success. Merkel needs a scalp. It remains unclear exactly what it will look like.

 

REPORTED BY HUBERT GUDE, HORAND KNAUP, JÖRG SCHINDLER, FIDELIUS SCHMID AND HOLGER STARK

 

Translated from the German by Charles Hawley and Daryl Lindsey

Partager cet article
Repost0
18 février 2014 2 18 /02 /février /2014 17:20
Eagles At Sunset

 

 

2/17/2014 Strategy page

 

Two F-15E Strike Eagles are parked on the flightline Feb.10, 2014, as the sun sets over Nellis Air Force Base, Nev. More than 3,200 service members and 125 aircraft from joint U.S. and allied combat forces from around the world participate in Red Flag 14-1, hosted by the 414th Combat Training Squadron. The main objective of the exercise is to increase capabilities to defend against future threats.The F-15Es are assigned to the 391st Fighter Squadron, Mountain Home AFB, Idaho. (U.S. Air Force photo/Lorenz Crespo)

Partager cet article
Repost0
18 février 2014 2 18 /02 /février /2014 17:20
Electronic Weapons: Thermals Baffled By The Nemesis

 

 

February 18, 2014: Strategy Page

 

There’s a new camouflage suit available (the “Nemesis”) for snipers or troops up against an opponent using thermal imaging. Nemesis breaks up the viewable (via a thermal imager) heat the wearer gives off and presents, to the thermal imager, a blob more than an easily identifiable image of a person. This limits the range at which the thermal imaging user can be sure it’s a person out there and not some animal. In most cases the observer cannot just fire off a few shots to make sure, since that would give away his position. So most troops just wait until the suspected hostile gets close enough for confirmation (and some well-placed bullets) or moves away and is forgotten.

 

While U.S. troops have long enjoyed an edge at night because they had night vision equipment, increasingly the enemy is getting this stuff as well. While troops can negate the use of the older light enhancement (it intensifies available moon or starlight) night vision, the newer thermal (heat sensing) imaging night vision is more difficult to evade. The light enhancement devices can be avoided by assuming you cannot hide in the darkness and must simply stay out of sight as you approach, or try to move past, the enemy.

 

Since thermal imaging detects differences in heat and creates images of the warmer objects, a user of thermal imaging devices will be able to detect the outline of a person, or a vehicle (especially the engine and exhaust). But these images are not easy to confirm until they get fairly close. Thus troops equipped with a typical wearable thermal imager (like the U.S. ENVG) have a 50 percent probability of confirming the presence of individuals, even those hidden in the bush, at about 300 meters and an 80 percent probability at 150 meters. Troops wearing a Nemesis suit would have to be a lot closer before a thermal imager user could be sure. That means someone wearing a Nemesis suit could move a lot closer to users with thermal imaging gear and pass by undetected.

 

Electronic Weapons: Thermals Baffled By The Nemesis

The downside of the Nemesis is that the enemy could get suits like this, or access to the technology that makes Nemesis effective. Currently the Nemesis suits cost $2,900 each, which is another impediment to widespread use.

Partager cet article
Repost0
18 février 2014 2 18 /02 /février /2014 13:20
AGM-176 Griffin missiles - photo Raytheon

AGM-176 Griffin missiles - photo Raytheon

 

February 18, 2014: Strategy Page

 

It was recently announced that 2,000 of the AGM-176 Griffin missiles had been produced so far. Since entering service in 2010 the Griffin has been pitched as a replacement for Hellfire. But only SOCOM (Special Operations Command) and the CIA have bought many, and in much smaller quantities than Hellfire, which weighs three times as much as Griffin. The U.S. Army remains the main user of Hellfire but because of frequent use on helicopter gunships. Because of the growing use of larger UAVs (like Predator and Reaper), the air force and CIA have become heavy users as well.

 

It was believed that smaller missiles would become popular because more could be carried and these (like 70mm guided rockets and Griffin) weapons contain even less explosives (limiting casualties to nearby civilians). But Hellfire remains the missile with the track record that you can always depend on and the smaller missiles just never caught on.

 

In service since 1984, the American AGM-114 Hellfire missile has not only proved enormously useful in the war on terror, it has also defeated numerous efforts to replace it with something better. It didn’t help that an improved Hellfire, Hellfire II, appeared in 1994 and over 30,000 have been produced so far. These have been the most frequently used American missiles for over a decade, with over 16,000 fired in training or (mostly) combat since 2001. A growing number of these Hellfires are for foreign customers. Hellfire missiles cost about $100,000 each depending on warhead and guidance system options. Britain produces a Hellfire variant, called Brimstone which is unique mainly in that it can be fire from jets. This version has become very popular as well.

 

Hellfire was originally designed for use by helicopter gunships against masses of Cold War era Russian tanks. That never happened, except in Kuwait during the 1991 war against Russian tanks owned by Iraq. Hellfire was quite successful in Kuwait. With the end of the Cold War the Hellfire seemed destined for the history books, as just another missile that worked but never distinguished itself. This all changed in 2002 when the CIA first used a Hellfire fired from a Predator UAV to kill a hard-to-find terrorist. The U.S. Air Force wasn’t really interested in this sort of thing and the CIA used its own money and authority to buy Predator UAVs and arm them with Hellfires. It quickly became apparent that the air force was wrong about UAVs and, well, the Hellfire was an army weapon used on helicopters and the air force never considered such a combination of UAV and missile useful for anything. The army soon found that Hellfire was an excellent weapon for supporting troops in urban areas or when going after terrorists anywhere.

 

The CIA was also the first to use smaller missiles like the Griffin on UAVs. This enabled targets to be destroyed with less risk to nearby civilians. The Griffin was created as an alternative to the Hellfire II, which weighs 48.2 kg (106 pounds) and carries a 9 kg (20 pound) warhead and has a range of 8,000 meters. In contrast, the Griffin weighs only 16 kg (35 pounds), with a 5.9 kg (13 pound) warhead which is larger, in proportion to its size, than the one carried by the larger Hellfire missile. Griffin has a pop-out wings, allowing it to glide, and thus has a longer range (15 kilometers) than Hellfire but takes much longer to reach the target. UAVs can carry more of the smaller missiles, typically two of them in place of one Hellfire.

 

Even before Griffin hit the market there were several firms offering 70mm rockets reconfigured as guided missiles. The result was basically a 13.6 kg (30 pound) missile with a laser seeker, a 2.7 kg (six pound) warhead and a range of about six kilometers. The U.S. Marines have adopted these for use on their helicopters and the results have been satisfactory. What won the marines over was price, as the marines are always short of cash. Several European and Israeli manufacturers came up with similar smaller missiles, but none really proved all that superior to old reliable; the Hellfire.

 

All these weapons use laser designators on an aircraft, or with troops on the ground for guidance. The laser is pointed at the target and the laser seeker in the front of the missile homes on the reflected laser light. This system enables the missile to hit within a meter or so (2-10 feet) of the aiming point. On the downside fog and clouds distorts the laser and makes it unreliable.

Hellfire II missile

Hellfire II missile

Partager cet article
Repost0
17 février 2014 1 17 /02 /février /2014 18:50
photos ECPAD

photos ECPAD

 

17/02/2014 Sources : EMA

 

La 25eédition de la conférence des aumôniers en chefs des pays de l’OTAN a eu lieu à Paris, du 3 au 7 février 2014. A cette occasion, quatre-vingt-quatre aumôniers en chef se sont réunis au sein d’un cercle de réflexion élargi. Ils provenaient de 28 pays européens, des Etats-Unis, du Canada, mais aussi d’Afrique du Sud, de Nouvelle-Zélande et de Corée du Sud.

 

Depuis 1990, ce congrès annuel rassemble les aumôniers en chef des pays de l’OTAN dans un pays hôte différent. Cette année, le congrès a été placé sous la double autorité du chef d’état-major des armées (CEMA) et du Supreme Allied Commander Europe(SACEUR).

 

L‘objectif de cette conférence est de faciliter les échanges à partir d’une réflexion sur un thème volontairement général. Le thème, choisi à cette occasion par les aumôniers en chefs français, était : “Souffrance et Espérance”. Dans ce cadre, chacun des quatre aumôniers en chefs français (catholique, protestant, musulman et israélite) a animé une conférence débat d’une demi-journée.

 

L’aumônier en chef protestant, le pasteur Stéphane Rémy, le général de division Jean-Fred Berger du commandement des forces alliées de l’OTAN à Naples, et monsieur Eric Germain, de la Délégation aux affaires stratégiques du ministère de la Défense, ont animé le premier débat autour de la question : apport des aumôniers aux opérations extérieurs (OPEX).

 

Pour le culte musulman, le thème abordé fut le “soutien de l’aumônier comme facteur de résilience du soldat”. L’intervention a été assurée par monsieur Abdelkader Arbi, aumônier militaire en chef musulman.

 

Pour l’aumônerie catholique, monseigneur Luc Ravel, l’historien Xavier Boniface, le père Griffon et le père Fresson ont choisi d’aborder le thème au travers d’une réflexion sur « le centenaire de la guerre de 1914-1918 ».

 

La dernière conférence débat fut animé par le grand rabbin Haïm Korsia, le professeur Didier Sicard, président de la commission de réflexion sur la fin de vie, Véronique Dubois, aumônier israélite française au Val de Grâce, deux aumôniers protestants allemands et deux aumôniers protestants britanniques sur le thème « blessures invisibles ».

 

La journée du 4 février a été marquée par l’intervention du Général (US) Breedlove, SACEUR. Elle s’est achevée par la concélébration d’une messe présidée par monseigneur Luc Ravel dans la chapelle de l’Ecole militaire, tandis qu’un culte présidé par le pasteur François Clavairoly, président de la Fédération Protestante de France, s’est déroulé au temple protestant de Passy-Annonciation, rue Cortambert, et qu’une visite de la Grande Mosquée de Paris réunissait aumôniers militaires musulmans et israélites.

 

C’est sous le signe des commémorations de la Grande guerre que le colonel (US) David Beauchamp, Chaplain-in-chiefde l’US EUCOM et le Colonel Chavanat de l’état-major des armées ont ravivé la flamme sous l’Arc de Triomphe.

 

L’ensemble des aumôniers participant au congrès ont par ailleurs visité le musée de la Grande guerre, à Meaux, le 6 février, avant de se rendre à la chancellerie de la Légion d’Honneur où le général d’armée Geogelin les a accueilli et leur a présenté les collections abritées dans ce lieu prestigieux.

 

Le congrès s’est achevé par une réception des aumôniers dans les salons du gouverneur militaire de Paris (GMP) présidé par l’amiral Xavier Magne, inspecteur général des armées marine, représentant le CEMA, en présence du général (US) Owens, European Command Plans and Operations Center (EPOC).

 

En 2015, ce sont les Pays-Bas qui accueilleront la 26econférence des aumôniers en chefs des pays de l’OTAN.

Aumôneries : les aumôniers en chefs des pays de l’OTAN réunis à Paris.
Partager cet article
Repost0
17 février 2014 1 17 /02 /février /2014 12:20
Textron AirLand's Scorpion Completes Additional Test Flights

 

 

Feb 14, 2014 ASDNews Source : Textron Inc

 

Textron AirLand, LLC, a joint venture between Textron Inc. (NYSE: TXT) and AirLand Enterprises, LLC, today announced that the Scorpion Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR)/Strike aircraft completed additional test flights in January and February. The most recent test flight occurred on February 13.

 

The Scorpion team is planning to conduct several hundred hours of additional flight tests in 2014, each flight targeting specific objectives pushing the aircraft’s airspeed, altitude, and performance envelope. “Overall, we’ve had very positive results through the initial test flights. In these early flights, we have evaluated the aircraft performance and tested a wide range of mechanical and electronic systems. The Scorpion is a very agile platform and I’m confident in the airframe as we continue through the test and evaluation phase,” commented Dan Hinson, chief test pilot for the Scorpion team and 23-year veteran Navy pilot.

 

Read more

Partager cet article
Repost0
10 février 2014 1 10 /02 /février /2014 19:45
U.S. urges removal of foreign fighters from South Sudan

 

 

10 February 2014 defenceweb (Reuters)

 

The United States on Saturday expressed concern over reported violations of a shaky ceasefire agreement between South Sudan's government and rebel forces and urged the removal of foreign fighters engaged in the conflict.

 

Thousands of people have been killed and more than half a million have fled their homes since fighting erupted in December in a conflict that has brought oil-producing South Sudan to the brink of civil war.

 

State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the United States is "deeply concerned by reports of violations by both the government of South Sudan and anti-government forces" of the ceasefire deal.

 

"We urge the redeployment or phased withdrawal of foreign forces invited by either side, and warn of the serious consequences which could result from any regionalization of this conflict," Psaki said in a statement.

 

President Salva Kiir's government and rebels loyal to his fired deputy, Riek Machar, agreed to the ceasefire on January 23, but both sides have since accused each other of violations.

 

Regional and world powers worry about the potential for a spillover of violence in an already volatile part of Africa. South Sudan declared independence from Sudan in 2011.

 

The rebels have accused government SPLA forces and fighters from the Sudanese Justice and Equality Movement - a rebel group from north of the border - of razing Machar's hometown, massacring women and children as they fled. The government also accuses the rebels of flouting the ceasefire.

 

An advance team sent by east African nations to monitor the ceasefire arrived in South Sudan last Sunday. Violence erupted in the capital, Juba, in December before spreading across the world's newest nation.

 

Psaki said the United States welcomed the arrival in Juba of the first component of the monitoring team, adding that "we strongly urge the government of South Sudan to facilitate (the team's) important work, which will provide both sides with a mechanism to report any breaches of the agreement."

 

Psaki reiterated a U.S. request for the government's release of the last four of a group of 11 detainees held on suspicion of trying to stage a coup.

 

"The expeditious release and transfer of all of the detainees would reduce tension and build confidence in an inclusive reconciliation process," Psaki added.

Partager cet article
Repost0
10 février 2014 1 10 /02 /février /2014 18:45
USARAF training helping African nations

 

 

06 February 2014 defenceweb

 

The training US Army Africa (USARAF) is providing to different African nations is helping them secure their own borders as well as own regions, in line with the US policy of helping Africans solve their own problems.

 

This is according to Major Albert Conley III, USARAF's Counter Terrorism Desk Officer for International Military Engagements. He said that this means the US doesn't need to get involved and whatever American interests are in that region or country will, as a secondary effect, be secure because USARAF is helping them with internal and external security.

 

“If Africans are solving African problems the US government won't need to use the United States Army to solve African problems. For example, by having a conglomerate of nations in the African Union going into Somalia to help fix that nation's problems means American servicemen don't have to go into Somalia to help fix that problem,” he said.

 

USARAF is currently partnering with the French government to train and equip in Guinea and will be in Chad and Malawi this month to train more than 4 000 African troops for peace enforcement missions in Mali and the DRC.

 

“We are ready to begin training in Chad for about 1 300 soldiers - an 850 man battalion plus another 450 man battalion. While we are not partnering with the government of France, we are partnering with a private French security firm the government of Chad has contracted. They are providing some training and we are also providing some,” said Colonel John Ruffing, USARAF Security Co-operation Director.

 

USARAF is planning more training and equipping iterations -- probably a total of about 15 between now and the end of the fiscal year, with various countries on the African continent.

 

“We are looking at partnering with some of our non-traditional partners as well and would like to partner with an African nation to train other countries. We'd also like to work with an international, non-traditional partner to train a third-party African nation in a particular skill set, as well as provide us with training because we don't know how to operate in that environment very well, and are learning each and every time we put people on the continent," he said.

 

USARAF only started training and equipping African nations about 18 months ago.

 

“A lot of this is coming on-line now with the Regionally Aligned Forces. An example would be how the US Army Africa worked during Shared Accord 13 (SA13).

 

“It was a sophisticated exercise where we did air field seizure, forcible entry operations, an amphibious assault and the environment was difficult with high sea states, low visibility, high winds and we were able to conduct this operation through mission command in a C-130 where you had a South African general officer and a US colonel sitting side-by-side with the South African general making decisions to conduct this operation. There were two forces --the US and South Africa, conducting this event. Not only conventional forces were involved, but there were Special Forces from both countries involved in this exercise,” he said.

 

Because of lessons learned from that Shared Accord 13 the impact was seen almost immediately.

 

“I believe the training received during SA 13 helped 1/18th Infantry when they were sent to South Sudan to reinforce the US Embassy there as part of the East Africa Response Force operations. Had that force just been sitting at a location doing training and not understanding the environment or working with a foreign military, it might have been a little more difficult. But because they were able to work in the environment with South Africa during Shared Accord, I think that helped them and prepared them for that operation in South Sudan.”

 

Conley offered additional examples.

 

“We trained in Niger and then Niger went into Mali. We are now working with the French to actually get the assessment of that since we're not working with them in Mali. So, now the French get to see this unit we trained and equipped to go in and fight in Mali and secure the area. The French are actually giving us the assessment and evaluation of that unit and then whatever lessons are learned, we will implement them in the next training mission,” he said.

 

Another and perhaps better example, Conley said, is from training in East Africa.

 

“The US government has been training in Uganda, Kenya, Djibouti and Burundi to conduct peacekeeping missions in Somalia. For the longest time they were restricted to the city of Mogadishu. Because of all the training we've been doing with them, building up different units with reconnaissance capabilities so they can push out of Mogadishu and into the countryside while pushing the terrorist group El Shabaab out speaks of success. I don't need to be on the ground to see the success of that - it's evident."

Partager cet article
Repost0
10 février 2014 1 10 /02 /février /2014 18:35
Corée du Sud/Etats-Unis: les exercices militaires conjoints auront lieu du 24 février au 18 avril

 

 

10-02-2014 French.china.org.cn

 

Le ministère sud-coréen de la Défense a déclaré lundi que les exercices militaires annuels conjoints entre la Corée du Sud et les Etats-Unis se dérouleraient entre le 24 février et le 18 avril, en dépit des protestations de la République populaire démocratique de Corée (RPDC).

 

Le commandement des forces sud-coréennes et américaines mèneront du 24 février au 6 mars l'exercice de simulation assistée par ordinateur baptisé "Key Resolve", a annoncé le porte-parole du ministère sud-coréen de la Défense Kim Min-seok lors d'un point de presse.

 

M. Kim a expliqué que la manoeuvre militaire organisée chaque année par les deux alliés est de nature défensive et vise à vérifier les capacités de défenses des forces combinées sud-coréennes et américaines, avant d'ajouter qu'environ 5.200 militaires américains seront impliqués dans l'exercice cette année, un effectif supérieur à celui de l'exercice précédent qui a impliqué 3.500 soldats.

 

Par ailleurs, le second exercice militaire, un entraînement militaire conjoint sur le terrain intitulé Foal Eagle, se déroulera du 24 février au 18 avril, selon M. Kim, qui ajoute que quelque 7.500 militaires américains prendront part à l'exercice annuel, un effectif inférieur aux 10.000 soldats déployés l'année dernière.

 

M. Kim a fait savoir que la RPDC a été informée dimanche matin du calendrier des prochaines manoeuvres par le commandement des Nations Unies, l'institution chargée de veiller au respect de l'Accord d'armistice militaire qui a mis fin à la guerre de Corée (1950-1953). Il a ajouté que son ministère informerait lundi les autres pays voisins du calendrier des exercices.

Partager cet article
Repost0
10 février 2014 1 10 /02 /février /2014 17:35
US Official Promoting Business at Singapore Airshow

 

Feb. 10, 2014 - by WENDELL MINNICK  - Defense News

 

SINGAPORE AIRSHOW – The US deputy secretary of state for political-military affairs is at this year’s Singapore Airshow to promote US defense companies in the regional market.

 

Kenneth Handelman said he believes buying American helps promote regional stability, build military-to-military relationships, and is part of the U.S. “rebalance” to Asia policy, often referred to as the “Asia pivot.”

 

The US foreign military sales program provides for all the follow-on training and support a company needs to build a solid relationship with the buyer, he said during an interview with Defense News.

 

“We are here to promote the ‘American brand’ in a region that has become increasingly important on all fronts: economic, diplomatic, and strategic,” he said.

 

Handelman is part of a larger Washington delegation attending the Singapore Airshow. They include Frank Kendall, the US undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics; Kenneth Hyatt, acting undersecretary of commerce for international trade; and Michael Huerta, administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration. The team also includes military leadership from the US Pacific Command, including Air Force Gen. Herbert Carlisle, commander of U.S. Pacific Air Forces. Carlisle also participated as a speaker at the Asia Pacific Security Conference being held alongside the airshow.

 

The delegation will hold consultations on defense trade issues and promote more than 163 US companies exhibiting at the airshow. The delegation will advocate for the overseas marketing efforts of US companies bidding on commercial and defense contracts, engage with senior government officials to promote defense sales of particular importance to the US, discuss how progress toward export control reform is supporting our partners and allies, and consult governments on broader strategic cooperation issues, such as advancements in aviation safety and efficiency.

 

Export control reform is moving forward quickly, Handelman said, with the possibility of completion in the “autumn of this year,” he said, adding that past bureaucratic inertia held up many sales. “You don’t really need an export license for a bayonet, do you?” he said.

 

In his current position, Handelman manages the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls and provides overall policy guidance regarding the transfer of defense technologies to other countries through commercial defense trade, and serves as a key link between the State Department and the Defense Department.

 

The Singapore Airshow is being held Feb. 11-16 and will include both defense and commercial aviation companies exhibiting their wares. It is considered the biggest aviation show in Asia.

Partager cet article
Repost0
10 février 2014 1 10 /02 /février /2014 16:45
photos BA 188 - 5e RIAOM

photos BA 188 - 5e RIAOM

 

 

07/02/2014 Sources : EMA

 

Du 26 au 31 janvier 2014, le général de division Dominique-Marie Pinel, adjoint à l’inspecteur des armées (IDA), a contrôlé les forces françaises stationnées à Djibouti (FFDj).

 

Le général de division Pinel s’est fait présenter l’ensemble des composantes des FFDj afin de mieux apprécier la diversité et la complémentarité du dispositif stationné à Djibouti. Ces présentations ont fait l’objet de rencontres et de déplacements sur le terrain. Elles ont permis de mettre en avant les possibilités qu’offre le territoire en matière de préparation opérationnelle interarmées, et de soutien aux opérations (Atalante)

 

Le général de division Pinel était accompagné de représentants techniques de l’infrastructure de la défense (ITID), d’une délégation du service du commissariat des armées (SCA) et d’un officier traitant de l’état-major des Armées (EMA) en charge de la piraterie.

 

Par ailleurs, plusieurs tables rondes ont été organisées avec les militaires du rang, les officiers, les sous-officiers et les civils de la Défense. Ces rencontres ont permis d’échanger sur la condition du personnel et les réformes en cours. Considérées comme des observateurs privilégiés par les fonctions qu’elles occupent au sein de la force, certaines entités, comme l’aumônerie, l’échelon social, le poste de protection et de sécurité de la défense et la prévôté, ont été reçues en entretien par la délégation. L’inspecteur des armées a également visité différentes composantes de la Force Atalante et a pu apprécier la qualité des relations interalliées à Djibouti.

 

Les forces françaises stationnées à Djibouti (FFD,) constituent depuis 2011 la base opérationnelle avancée française sur la côte Est de l’Afrique. Les FFDj participent au dispositif militaire français pré positionné permettant de disposer d’un réservoir de forces pouvant être projetées rapidement en cas de crise. Dans le cadre des accords de partenariat de défense entre la République de Djibouti et la France, les FFDj constituent l’un des cinq pôles de coopération de la France en Afrique. A ce titre, elles assurent des missions de coopération militaire avec les forces armées djiboutiennes, mais aussi avec les instances de la force africaine en attente en Afrique de l’Est. Parmi leurs missions, les FFDj apportent par ailleurs un soutien logistique et opérationnel aux moyens aériens et navals français et étrangers engagés dans le cadre de la force européenne de lutte contre la piraterie.

photos BA 188 - 5e RIAOM
photos BA 188 - 5e RIAOM
photos BA 188 - 5e RIAOM
photos BA 188 - 5e RIAOM
photos BA 188 - 5e RIAOM
photos BA 188 - 5e RIAOM

photos BA 188 - 5e RIAOM

Partager cet article
Repost0
7 février 2014 5 07 /02 /février /2014 13:45
Le Niger appelle Paris et Washington à intervenir en Libye

 

6 février 2014  par France 24

 

Le ministre nigérien de l’Intérieur, Massoudou Hassoumi, a appelé sur RFI la France et les États-Unis à intervenir militairement sans le sud de la Libye, considéré comme le nouveau bastion des djihadistes chassés du Mali.

 

Pour les Occidentaux et certains pays africains, le sud libyen est indéniablement devenu le nouveau repaire des djihadistes du Sahel. Et ce, depuis que l’intervention française les a chassés du Nord-Mali. Cette situation inquiète particulièrement le Niger voisin, et Niamey estime désormais qu’une intervention militaire s’impose. "Il faut intervenir militairement en Libye, plus précisément dans le sud du pays", a déclaré sans ambages le ministre nigérien de l’Intérieur, Massoudou Hassoumi, mercredi 5 février, sur les ondes de RFI. Et de poursuivre : "Il est tout à fait légitime que la France et les États-Unis interviennent pour éradiquer la menace terroriste", et ce, afin d’y assurer "le service après-vente de l’intervention contre Kadhafi".

Depuis la chute du régime du colonel Kadhafi en octobre 2011, après huit mois d’un soulèvement armé appuyé par des frappes aériennes menées par une force multinationale, Tripoli ne parvient toujours pas à rétablir la sécurité dans un pays en proie à l’anarchie et aux violences meurtrières.

 

"Un incubateur des groupes terroristes"

Une situation qui, selon le ministre nigérien, a fait du "sud de la Libye, un incubateur des groupes terroristes". Des termes qui ne sont pas sans rappeler ceux du directeur du renseignement américain (DNI), James Clapper, qui avait déclaré fin janvier, que l’Afrique subsaharienne était devenue un "incubateur" pour les groupes extrémistes. Il a estimé que la porosité des frontières libyennes et les "quantités massives d’armes en circulation déstabilisent davantage le pays, le Maghreb et la région sahélienne".

"Les gouvernements de la région du Sahel - particulièrement le Tchad, le Niger, le Mali et la Mauritanie - courent le risque d’attaques terroristes, essentiellement en représailles à la suite de leur soutien à l’intervention militaire française au Mali en janvier 2013", a-t-il ajouté.

 

Niamey, plateforme logistique pour lutter contre les djihadistes

Si Niamey a essuyé ces derniers mois plusieurs attaques de groupes armés, le nord du pays a également été visé. Des bâtiments d’Areva, présent depuis 40 ans au Niger, ont été pris pour cible. L’appel du ministre nigérien à Paris n’est donc pas anodin.

La France, qui a entrepris de réorganiser son dispositif militaire au Sahel, est très présente au Niger. Les deux drones Reaper acquis récemment aux États-Unis sont notamment déployés dans l’ancienne colonie française. Niamey est censée à terme servir de plateforme logistique et de pôle de renseignement dans le cadre de la lutte contre les groupes djihadistes.

Partager cet article
Repost0
5 février 2014 3 05 /02 /février /2014 19:20
Le scandale des bonus de l'armée américaine

04.02.2014 JDD

Plus de 800 soldats sont sous le coup d'une enquête pour avoir détourné plusieurs millions de dollars, en profitant d'un programme d'aide au recrutement, révèle USA Today. Des bonus auraient été octroyés pour les soldats qui persuaderaient des amis de s'engager en Irak ou en Afghanistan. L'un des soldats auraient touché près de 275.000 dollars. Au moins quatre autres auraient reçu près de 100.000 dollars chacun, selon des documents consultés par le quotidien américain.

Cette affaire est "décourageante et déprimante", a réagi la sénatrice Claire McCaskill. "De toute évidence, nous parlons de l’une des plus grandes enquêtes de l’histoire de l’armée", a-t-elle affirmé. Au total, près de 1.200 recruteurs et 2.000 assistants recruteurs seraient impliqués dans ce scandale.

 

Le programme arrêté en 2012. L'armée avait lancé des programmes de recrutement en 2005 afin de renforcer ses rangs qui avaient été largement mis à contribution lors des récents théâtres d'opérations. Ce programme avait été étendu à la réserve et aux soldats actifs. Ceux-ci auraient perçu de l'argent dès lors qu'ils parrainaient une recrue. "Personne n'est plus scandalisé que la direction de l'armée des Etats-Unis", a assuré de son côté le porte-parole de l'armée George Wright. "Après des enquêtes internes de l'armée qui ont identifié des cas de fraudes dans les programmes d'aide au recrutement, le secrétaire de l'armée y a mis fin immédiatement", a-t-il ajouté. Ce programme a effectivement été arrêté en 2012.

Plus de 106.000 personnes auraient touchées des primes, précise USA Today. Il faudra attendre 2016 pour que l'enquête aboutisse.

Partager cet article
Repost0
5 février 2014 3 05 /02 /février /2014 18:45
Seven national pavilions so far for AAD

 

 

05 February 2014 defenceWeb

 

Switzerland is the latest addition to the list of countries that will be using national pavilions to showcase defence and security equipment at this year’s Africa Aerospace and Defence (AAD) exhibition.

 

The landlocked European country joins the defence industries of Argentina, China, Germany, Italy, Russia and the United States as national exhibitors for AAD which returns to its 2012 venue of AFB Waterkloof from September 17 to 21.

 

Of the national pavilions confirmed to date only Italy has indicated which companies will be exhibiting. Ficantieri, Finmeccanica and ICE are listed as being part of the Italian pavilion.

 

As of today the exhibition website shows a total of 67 exhibitors, including the seven national pavilions. Twelve chalets on the flight line have also been reserved by, among others, the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, Armscor, the Civil Aviation Association of SA, Rheinmetall Denel Munition, Aerosud, Exeujet, National Airways Corporation (NAC) and the SA Aerospace, Maritime and Defence Industries Association (AMD), which is the AAD 2014 host.

 

Six hangars at Waterkloof, the SA Air Force’s (SAAF) Transport Centre of Excellence, have been set aside for exhibitors with space both in and outside the hangars.

 

State-owned Denel and Ivor Ichikowitz’ Paramount Group, the two major players in the South African defence industry, have reserved the bulk of space in Hangar Four. The CSIR and Airbus Defence and Space group company Cassidian are also taking sizeable sections of exhibition space in this hangar.

 

Other confirmed exhibitors include DCD Protected Mobility, Reutec, Turbomeca, Tellumat, MTU South Africa, Wagtail Military, Imperial Armour, Osprey Logistics, BAE Systems, OTT and Rippel Effect.

Partager cet article
Repost0
5 février 2014 3 05 /02 /février /2014 18:35
Signature de l’accord d’acquisition des chasseurs F-35 au T3

 

SEOUL, 27 jan. (Yonhap)

 

Le gouvernement signera l’accord d’acquisition de 40 chasseurs F-35 du constructeur américain Lockheed Martin au troisième trimestre, a fait savoir ce lundi l’Administration du programme d’acquisition de défense (DAPA).

 

La DAPA a approuvé l’acquisition de 40 F-35 à partir de 2018, se réservant la possibilité d’acquérir 20 autres chasseurs par la suite selon le budget et la situation sécuritaire. «Une fois que la DAPA aura approuvé la révision du plan d’acquisition entre février et mars, nous nous efforcerons à conclure un accord au troisième trimestre après les négociations et les tests aériens», a déclaré le brigadier-général de l’armée de l’air et directeur du département aéronautique de la DAPA Jung Kwang-sun lors d’un point de presse.

 

La DAPA a estimé à 7.400 milliards de wons le budget nécessaire pour acquérir les 40 F-35, qui comprend armes et équipements. L’Institut coréen pour les analyses de défense va mener de son côté sa propre évaluation budgétaire. Le budget sera confirmé en coopération avec le ministère des Finances, chargé des allocations budgétaires.

 

La DAPA devrait acquérir les avions via une transaction de gouvernement à gouvernement, sans appel d’offres, car le F-35 est vendu uniquement à travers le programme américain de ventes militaires à l’étranger (FMS). Le FMS dicte qu’un gouvernement étranger paie le montant voulu par le gouvernement américain pour les F-35 au moment de l'achat effectif des avions.

 

Lockheed Martin a indiqué le mois dernier qu’il offrira son soutien au projet de développement du chasseur sud-coréen de nouvelle génération et au lancement d’un satellite de communication militaire malgré l’achat réduit de 40 avions, contre 60 prévus initialement.

Partager cet article
Repost0
5 février 2014 3 05 /02 /février /2014 18:20
Lockheed Martin prépare des convois robotisés pour l'armée

 

 

03 Février 2014 par Mathieu M.  - generation-nt.com

 

Si les véhicules sans chauffeurs ne devaient pas être autorisés dans la circulation avant quelques années, il est un domaine dans lequel cette technologie pourrait rapidement s'inviter : l'armée.

 

L'armée américaine et son sous traitant Lockheed Martin viennent ainsi d'annoncer avoir testé avec succès un convoi entièrement constitué de véhicules robotisés qui agit comme un convoi conduit par des humains tant au niveau de la sécurité que de la rapidité.

 

Lockheed a mené ses tests a Fort Hood dans le Texas au début du mois dernier et indique que son convoi automatisé aura navigué avec succès dans " toute sorte de dangers et obstacles" dont des piétons, d'autres véhicules et des changements dans la topographie de la route.

Le test fait partie du programme AMAS ( Autonomous Mobility Appliqué System), un projet qui vise à la conception de véhicules autonomes. Les véhicules misent sur un ensemble de capteurs et un système de braquage, d'accélération et de freins assisté par ordinateur.

Globalement, les technologies déployées sont les mêmes que celles actuellement étudiées pour proposer des véhicules sans chauffeurs au grand public. Et l'armée vise des objectifs relativement similaires : proposer des déplacements plus surs, et plus rapides. Mais à cela, l'armée ajoute un équipement supplémentaire permettant de mieux détecter les dangers et menaces, comme la proximité d'engins explosifs improvisés ou d'éventuels barrages.

Lockheed Martin a précisé que son système de robotisation de la conduite était actuellement monté sur des camions de l'armée de type M915, mais que la technologie était théoriquement transposable à n'importe quel autre véhicule militaire.

De nombreuses sociétés comme Google, Tesla, Audi, BMW, Toyota, Volvo ou encore Lexus travaillent actuellement à développer leur propre véhicule autonome. Des véhicules qui pourraient limiter le nombre d'accidents et réduire de 15 % la consommation d'essence.

Pour Lockheed Martin, l'objectif principal reste toutefois la possibilité de se dédouaner de tout besoin d'un conducteur humain, et l'optimisation des déplacements permettant la réduction des temps de trajet à l'aide d'ordinateurs et de données satellites. Ces convois pourraient ainsi se spécialiser non pas dans le transport de VIP, mais dans l'acheminement logistique ou l'appui de la progression de troupes au sol.

Partager cet article
Repost0
5 février 2014 3 05 /02 /février /2014 17:20
Les Etats-Unis et l'Italie signent un accord sur la formation conjointe pour les opérations de maintien de la paix

 

2014-02-04 xinhua

 

Le département de la Défense américain et la gendarmerie nationale italienne, les carabiniers, ont signé lundi un protocole d'accord pour promouvoir l'entraînement et la formation conjointes de leurs troupes pour les opérations de maintien de la paix.

 

Il s'agirait du premier accord de ce type signé entre la Défense américain et les carabiniers, a commenté Frank DiGiovanni, chargé des ressources humaines et de la formation des troupes au Département de la Défense des Etats-Unis.

 

"Ce nouveau protocole (...) a un objectif très productif pour promouvoir la paix et la stabilité dans les régions du monde qui sont en proie aux tensions", a indiqué Frederick Vollrath, secrétaire adjoint du bureau des ressources humaines et de la formation du Département de la Défense.

 

Ilio Ciceri, chef d'état-major des carabiniers, a affirmé que le soutien et la position des Etats-Unis étaient une source de "grande fierté" pour son pays.

 

"L'utilisation de nos techniques de formation et de déploiement sur le terrain a toujours joui d'un soutien et d'une appréciation extraordinaires de la part des commandants américains", a-t-il rappelé.

 

L'accord, qui est entré en vigueur immédiatement après sa signature, a une validité de cinq ans.

Partager cet article
Repost0
5 février 2014 3 05 /02 /février /2014 17:20
La Belgique doit-elle se défaire des armes nucléaires de Kleine-Brogel ?

 

03 février 2014 Jean-Paul Duchâteau et Charles Van Dievort - lalibre.be



Les opinions de Dirk Van Der Maelen, député fédéral (SP.A) et d'Armand De Decker, ministre d'État (MR).

 

Le débat vient d’être relancé, avec le témoignage d’un expert américain. Pour les uns, cette présence est devenue anachronique avec la fin de la Guerre froide. Pour d’autres, l’arme nucléaire reste garante d’une non-guerre. Interviews croisées.

 

NON

Armand De Decker, ministre d’Etat (MR); vice-président de la commission sénatoriale des Affaires étrangères et de la Défense.

Le monde est plus instable que du temps de l’URSS. Il serait donc insensé que des gouvernements européens décident de renoncer à l’armement nucléaire. Nous pourrions tomber alors sous des tentatives de chantage venant de pays comme le Pakistan et peut-être demain l’Iran. Un monde qui serait dénucléarisé serait beaucoup plus dangereux.

Un expert américain reconnu a confirmé, si besoin en était, la présence d’armes nucléaires américaines sur la base de Kleine-Brogel. Il a ajouté qu’il existe un projet de modernisation de ces armes. Est-ce bien le rôle d’un petit pays comme la Belgique de participer à un tel programme ?

La Belgique accepte, dans le cadre de l’Otan, un certain nombre de missions nucléaires qui lui ont été demandées. Je ne comprendrais pas qu’on entre dans le club de ceux qui se réjouissent de bénéficier d’une sécurité offerte par l’armement nucléaire sans vouloir prendre leur part de responsabilité. Dans les années 80, des armes nucléaires ont été déployées en Europe, face aux SS-20 soviétiques. Il est généralement admis que ces missiles "Cruise" et ces fusées "Pershing" ont été démantelés dans les pays où ils avaient été installés. Ce dont on parle désormais, sans savoir s’il y en a chez nous, ce sont des armes d’un autre type, qui sont transportées par aéronef.

Régulièrement, certains partis redisent souhaiter que la Belgique se défasse de cet arsenal nucléaire. C’est le cas, historiquement, du SP.A, des écologistes, et plus étonnamment des chrétiens-démocrates flamands. Selon vous, ils se trompent tous ?

L’arme nucléaire est indispensable à la sécurité de l’Europe. C’est d’ailleurs l’évidence même : si nous n’avons pas eu de troisième guerre mondiale, c’est parce que l’arme nucléaire l’a rendue impossible. En son absence, je pense qu’on aurait dû faire face à un conflit épouvantable entre les blocs communiste et occidental. L’arme nucléaire est une arme indispensable à la paix, parce qu’elle doit rendre la guerre impossible. Ce qu’elle a d’ailleurs parfaitement rempli comme mission, puisque l’arme nucléaire n’a été utilisée qu’une seule fois, par les Américains sur le Japon, qui voulaient mettre un terme à la guerre 40-45. Cela a tellement impressionné le monde à l’époque que plus personne ne pouvait plus envisager de l’utiliser. Et c’est cela qui a protégé nos populations depuis 70 ans.

Les adversaires du système disent que la configuration du monde a complètement changé depuis la fin de la Guerre froide, et que cela n’a donc plus de sens de maintenir un arsenal nucléaire dirigé contre la Russie.

Effectivement. La Russie est devenue un allié. Il est exclu d’avoir un conflit militaire avec la Russie. Les menaces viennent désormais d’ailleurs. Lorsque le monde occidental s’émeut à ce point de la stratégie nucléaire de l’Iran, on sait pourquoi. Ce pays peut devenir directement menaçant pour le monde occidental. C’est la même chose à l’égard du régime pakistanais, qui est très fragile et donc très instable, qui peut demain tomber entre les mains d’islamistes radicaux. Il est pour moi totalement incontestable que l’armement nucléaire est consubstantiel à la sécurité de l’Europe et c’est la raison pour laquelle il faut maintenir cette capacité de dissuasion.

Votre argument sur la capacité de dissuasion de l’arme nucléaire pèse-t-il autant avec ces pays qui, comme vous le dites, sont incontrôlables et très peu réalistes, du fait même de la nature de leur régime ?

Il est certain que le monde est plus instable que du temps de l’URSS. C’est la raison pour laquelle il serait insensé que des gouvernements européens décident de renoncer à l’armement nucléaire parce que cela signifierait que nous puissions tomber sous des tentatives de chantage venant de pays possédant une capacité nucléaire militaire. C’est une question de garantie de notre liberté. Ceci étant dit, je ne suis pas un farouche partisan du surarmement nucléaire comme on a pu le connaître dans les années 70 et 80. Nous n’avons en effet pas besoin de disposer d’un grand nombre d’armes nucléaires. Mais je rappelle qu’il s’agit d’un armement qui est conçu pour ne jamais être utilisé. Un monde qui serait dénucléarisé serait beaucoup plus dangereux, parce qu’il n’existerait plus cette crainte de la certitude d’être anéanti en cas d’agression. C’est donc l’arme de la non-guerre. Et c’est donc un grand progrès pour l’humanité.

 


OUI

Dirk Van der Maelen, député fédéral (SP.A).

Je ne comprends pas de notre ministre de la Défense qui ne cesse de dire qu’il ne confirme pas et qu’il n’infirme pas la présence d’armes nucléaires sur le territoire belge. La Belgique n’a pas à jouer un rôle dans la politique nucléaire américaine. Un jour la sagesse l’emportera et on se libérera de ces armes.

La présence d’armes nucléaires en Belgique s’est une fois de plus invitée dans le débat politique cette semaine suite aux déclarations d’un expert américain. Le ministre de la Défense Pieter De Crem a éludé la question. Saura-t-on un jour si oui ou non de telles armes sont présentes sur notre territoire ?

C’est un secret de Polichinelle. D’anciens Premiers ministres comme Jean-Luc Dehaene et Mark Eyskens ont déjà reconnu que ces armes sont stockées en Belgique. Cette semaine, Hans Kristensen - qui est pour moi l’homme qui en sait le plus sur la politique nucléaire après le président des Etats-Unis et son ministre de la Défense - a prétendu avoir vu le document signé par le président Bill Clinton en 2000 donnant l’ordre d’installer 20 armes nucléaires tactiques à Kleine-Brogel. Jusqu’à présent, personne n’a jamais pu démentir une information donnée par ce spécialiste américain.

Pourquoi cette question est-elle si délicate ?

Je ne comprends pas. Aux Etats-Unis, les Américains ne font pas un grand mystère de leurs armes nucléaires. Ils disent qu’il n’y a aucune raison que la Belgique nie en avoir sur son territoire. Par contre, ils ne veulent pas le confirmer à notre place. Pour les Américains, c’est à la Belgique de décider si elle veut ou pas révéler l’information au public.

La Belgique a-t-elle un rôle à jouer dans la stratégie nucléaire globale de l’Otan ?

Elle ne devrait pas en jouer et nous pourrions facilement nous en libérer. D’autres pays l’ont fait avant nous tout en restant des partenaires loyaux de l’Otan. C’est le cas du Canada, de la Grèce ou encore du Danemark.

L’arme nucléaire a pourtant joué un rôle important dans l’histoire en tant qu’arme de dissuasion. Ce rôle a-t-il aujourd’hui évolué ?

Il a changé en raison de la fin de la Guerre froide. Fin de l’an dernier, celui qui était encore ambassadeur des Etats-Unis auprès de l’Otan, Ivo Daalder, a déclaré qu’il est certain à 99,99 % que les armes nucléaires ne seraient jamais utilisées. Elles n’ont aucune utilité, ni militaire ni politique. S’il le dit, pourquoi la Belgique devrait-elle continuer à aider la politique nucléaire américaine?

Peut-on imaginer qu’on se passe un jour de l’arme nucléaire sur la planète ?

Je l’espère, mais ça ne se fera pas d’un coup de baguette magique. Le désarmement se fera pas à pas. Un des pas qui peut conduire dans la bonne direction serait de voir la Belgique se libérer de ces armes. Mais aujourd’hui, c’est le contraire qui risque de se produire. Selon Hans Kristensen, moderniser les bombes tactiques qui sont à Kleine-Brogel comme l’ont décidé les Etats-Unis, risque d’être une invitation faite aux Russes pour qu’ils modernisent à leur tour leur arsenal tactique. Cela relancerait la course à l’armement, alors que depuis des années la tendance est au désarmement. Or, le désarmement, c’est la politique officielle de notre gouvernement. L’accord de gouvernement prévoit que la Belgique va se joindre aux efforts de ceux qui veulent diminuer la présence de l’arme nucléaire sur la planète. Accepter la modernisation des bombes stationnées chez nous, c’est contraire à cet accord de gouvernement.

Existe-t-il une volonté politique d’entamer des discussions sur la présence de ces armes chez nous ?

Certains partis et certains hommes politiques, notamment notre ministre de la Défense, sont réticents. Moi, je suis convaincu que le Parlement ne peut être que le reflet de ce que pense la société. Et en Belgique, celle-ci est largement opposée aux armes nucléaires. Nous figurons parmi les quatre ou cinq nations à ne pas être propriétaire de l’arme nucléaire mais à en détenir sur notre territoire ! Le moment est venu qu’on mette fin à ça.

Croyez-vous qu’un jour, en Belgique, il n’y aura plus d’armes nucléaires ?

J’en suis convaincu. C’est le sens de l’histoire et je crois dans la sagesse de notre société et de notre classe politique.

Partager cet article
Repost0

Présentation

  • : RP Defense
  • : Web review defence industry - Revue du web industrie de défense - company information - news in France, Europe and elsewhere ...
  • Contact

Recherche

Articles Récents

Categories