agence france-presse
Published: 8 Sep 11:36 EDT (15:36 GMT)
WARSAW - Poland will spend 60 billion zloty (17.3 billion euros, $24.5 billion) to modernize its between 2009 and 2018, Poland's Defense Minister Bogdan Klich said Sept. 8.
"We want to launch several new programs to modernize the armed forces in the long term," Klich told reporters at the opening of an arms exhibition in Kielce. "I particularly want to launch a program of Polish surface-to-air missiles, to equip our forces with missile systems able to counteract short- and medium-range missiles."
The planned missile system is set to complement a U.S. missile shield that Washington plans to install in Poland by 2012.
Warsaw agreed Aug. 20 to the controversial shield comprising 10 interceptor missiles intended to destroy airborne long-range ballistic missiles.
Washington maintains the project is designed to counteract the threat of possible attacks by so-called "rogue states," notably Iran. But Russia, which regards the project as a grave threat to its national security, is vehemently opposed to the U.S. plan.
As part of the missile shield agreement with Warsaw, Washington has agreed to install a battery of Patriot surface-to-air missiles on Polish soil.
"The Patriots that will be installed in Poland from next year will serve as a basis for the construction of a national air defense system," Klich said.
The minister also intends to launch a program to equip the army with modern helicopters and another to build new naval ships.
Several other modernization programs are currently being worked on.
The Polish air force is due to receive the last of 48 U.S. F-16 fighter jets, while the army will receive Finnish-made armored personnel carriers and Israeli-made Spike anti-tank missiles.
In August, Poland announced it would switch from a conscript to fully professional military numbering 120,000 personnel from 2010.
Having shed communism and broken out of the Soviet sphere of influence in 1989, Poland joined NATO in 1999.
Noticias Sistemas Terrestres
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POLONIA PLANEA AUMENTAR SU INVERSION EN DEFENSA
POLONIA PLANEA AUMENTAR SU INVERSION EN DEFENSA
Albert Einstein
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COREA DEL NORTE TRABAJA EN SUS MISILES E INSTALACIONES
COREA DEL NORTE TRABAJA EN SUS MISILES E INSTALACIONES
By wendell minnick
Published: 11 Sep 09:51 EDT (13:51 GMT)
Taipei - North Korea is completing a major new missile and space launch facility near Tongch'ang-dong village along the northwest coast, said Joseph Bermudez, an independent specialist on North Korean missile programs.
Bermudez said the facility would be able to launch both the Taepodong 2 ballistic missile and the Taepodong 2 Space Launch Vehicle. The facility also has a rocket engine test stand, he said.
The facility consists of a movable launch pad and 10-story "umbilical tower."
Bermudez said the rocket engine test stand is similar to the Iranian Shahid Hemmat test facility outside Tehran. Both countries have a history of collaboration on ballistic missile programs.
The revelation comes at a sensitive time as there are reports North Korean leader Kim Jong Il had a stroke, and the U.S. is attempting to persuade North Korea to abide by agreements to discontinue its nuclear weapon program.
North Korean officials threatened to abandon previous denuclearization agreements and renew its nuclear weapon program if Washington did not take Pyongyang off the terrorism watch list and lift financial sanctions imposed under the U.S. Trading With the Enemy Act.
U.S. officials claim North Korea has not come clean on its nuclear declaration list and has provided no means to verify what has been declared. Missing on the list are items the U.S. believes to be central to North Korea's nuclear ambitions.
Pyongyang provided the list in June, but Washington claims the list is devoid of clues regarding North Korea's program to enrich uranium and its work with countries like Syria to develop nuclear weapons. There is also disagreement on how much plutonium North Korea has produced.
Pyongyang is seeking to minimize the intrusiveness of any inspection requirements, as it did in the 1994 Agreed Framework, said Bruce Klingner of the Heritage Foundation.
However, North Korean negotiation antics are legendary and the cause for much of the angst the U.S. has faced since the end of the Korean War.
"There is a growing sense that Pyongyang's obstructionist antics are not merely negotiating ploys but are instead designed to achieve international recognition of, or acquiescence to, North Korea as a nuclear power," said Klingner, who served as an analyst on North Korea for both the U.S. CIA and Defense Intelligence Agency.
Klingner said there is "no magical combination of inducements" that will force Pyongyang to put the nuclear genie back in the bottle.
North Korea and the U.S. have raised the bar in recent weeks, with a North Korean soldier shooting a South Korean tourist and a joint South Korean-U.S. military exercise.
Given Kim's possible illness and revelations of a new missile base, the issue of denuclearization will most likely be addressed by the next U.S. administration.
Albert Einstein
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RUSIA PRUEBA MISIL TOCHKA-U
RUSIA PRUEBA MISIL TOCHKA-U
CHEBARKUL RANGE, Chelyabinsk Region, September 13 (Itar-Tass) -- A tactical missile Tochka-U was fired at an "enemy" command post at a range of about 40 kilometres at the second stage of tactical exercises with firing practice of Motorised Infantry Division 34 of the Volga-Ural Military District.
The target was hit in a minute and a half.
The tactical missile system was placed in service for ground troops in 1989. It is in the arsenal of missile brigades of the Ground Troops.
The range is 120 kilometres, the launch weight is two tonnes, and the weight of the warhead is about 500 kilogrammes. It has one stage. The warhead does not separate during the flight. The missile is controlled during the entire flight, thus it ensures high accuracy of target hitting. The tactical missile system is operated by a crew of three people.
Albert Einstein
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
- Carlos Martín
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CHINA AYUDA A BANGLADESH
CHINA AYUDA A BANGLADESH
IANS 12 Sep 2008 07:12:00 PM ISTNEW DELHI: A missile arsenal Bangladesh has begun building with Chinese help is part of Beijing's considered strategy to encircle India, says an Indian expert who wondered "against whom are the Bangladeshis arming themselves?"
Bangladesh is acquiring the European OTOMAT MK-II surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) that are defensive in nature and function. But their range of less than 200 km makes them a defence only against India, said Brig. (retd.) Gurmeet Kanwal, Director of New Delhi-based think tank Centre for Land Warfare Studies (CLAWS).
Over the years, he pointed out, China has armed each of the South Asian nations surrounding India with missile systems and Dhaka is the latest in line.
Bangladesh depends almost entirely on China for its military hardware and hence, it is not surprising that it has chosen not to inform India of its latest acquisition, Kanwal told IANS, adding that Sri Lanka too has been in the same league.
Dhaka's missile systems are all outright purchases and there is no technbology transfer or development involved as in, say, Pakistan's case.
The present military-backed caretaker government in Dhaka has taken special care to keep the armed forces happy with purchase of military hardware, perks, promotions and postings. Many retired and serving military officers have been given diplomatic assignments.
The latest in the line is Lt. Gen. Mashududdin Chowdhury, a serving officer who has been made part of the military caucus that has been indirectly ruling Bangladesh for some time now.
According to Indian intelligence sources, Bangladesh is in the process of clinching a deal with an integrated European company MBDA for buying five OTOMAT launch systems. The missiles carry a payload of 210 kg and can hit targets 180 km away.
The Bangladesh Air Force is also negotiating with Turkish arms dealer ASELSAN for the Shorad (Short Range Air Defence) system and 3D air defence radars.
Bangladesh has already established a missile launch pad near Chittagong Port with assistance from China, according to these sources. Its missile programme is a recent one, with the maiden missile test conducted on May 12 with active participation of a group of Chinese experts.
It successfully test-fired the anti-ship cruise missile C-802A with a strike range of 120 km from the frigate BNS Osman near Kutubdia Island in the Bay of Bengal.
The frigate, commissioned by the Bangladesh Navy in 1989, is a 1,500-ton Chinese built Jianghu class warship, and the C-802A missile, according to experts, is a modified version of Chinese Ying Ji-802 (western version SACCADE) with its weight reduced from 815 kg to 715 kg to increase its strike range from 42 km to 120 km.
The radar-equipped missile can carry a 165-kg warhead. Since its guidance equipment has strong anti-jamming capability, the ships it targets have a very low success rate in intercepting the missile. The hit probability of the Ying Ji-802 is rated as 98 percent. It can be launched from aircraft, ships, submarines and even land-based vehicles and is considered to be on par with the US Harpoon, arguably the best anti-ship missile among present day system.
The Pentagon has notified the US Congress of the "possible" sale of the Harpoon to India in a deal valued at $170 million.
Albert Einstein
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INDIA AUMENTARÁ CONSIDERABLEMENTE SU GASTO EN DEFENSA
INDIA AUMENTARÁ CONSIDERABLEMENTE SU GASTO EN DEFENSA
By David Blair in New Delhi and Thomas Harding, Defence Correspondent
Last Updated: 12:52PM BST 13 Sep 2008
This rivalry between the world's largest rising powers lies behind an inexorable shift in global military power away from Europe and towards Asia.
India's defence spending has risen by an average of 18 per cent in each of the past three years. British military expenditure, by contrast, is planned to rise by an annual 1.4 per cent, after inflation.
If this continues, India's present defence spending of £15 billion will more than double to £35 billion in 2013. Britain's current military budget is £34 billion.
"As China and India's economies grow they will want to see their military strength improve," said Liam Fox, the shadow defence secretary. "For us in the West, India could be a very useful ally in the war against terror, but you look at countries like China and Russia and you are seeing them increasing their military hardware. It shows you all the more starkly how complacent some of our Nato allies are in failing to maintain adequate defence spending."
A Ministry of Defence spokesman said: "We are in the longest period of sustained real growth in the defence budget for over 20 years. What matters is the excellent capabilities we are delivering in terms of vehicles, body armour and weaponry, rather than any comparison of levels of defence expenditure."
Even taking into account future increases in Britain's defence budget, India is likely to spend more on its armed forces within less than 10 years.
Its rapid growth in spending is spurred by growing tension with its northern neighbour, China. The two nations share a bitterly disputed, 2,100 mile border and are rivals for influence in Asia.
India is buying 126 new jet fighters for around £5 billion. While the winner of this contract has not been announced, the contenders include the Eurofighter-Typhoon used by the RAF and the US F-18.
The Indian navy is seeking to become a "blue water" force, capable of operating worldwide. One aircraft carrier is under construction and another is being purchased from Russia. India is building one nuclear attack submarine and leasing another from Russia.
Cruise missiles which could be launched from submarines are also being developed. This would match a capability presently deployed only by the Royal Navy and the US Navy.
Albert Einstein
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ALGERIA PLANEA AUMENTAR SU PRESUPUESTO DE DEFENSA
ALGERIA PLANEA AUMENTAR SU PRESUPUESTO DE DEFENSA
ALGERS (AFP) - Oil and gas-rich Algeria, which has faced an increased in attacks by Islamic radicals, is to increase its defence budget by more than 10 percent to 3.82 billion euros (5.45 billion dollars), the state APS news agency said.
According to a draft of a budget law to be debated in coming weeks, and reported by the agency, total government spending in 2009 will come to 2,593 billion dinars (29.93 billion euros/36 billion dollars).
Hundreds have been killed in militant attacks in Algeria this year and the proposed defence and security budget of 383.6 billion dinars is up more than 10 percent on 2008.
Defence will be by far the biggest state spending sector, ahead of education on 374 billion dinars (3.74 billion euros).
The finance bill predicts oil revenues of 16.2 billion euros (23.1 billion dollars) in 2009, compared to 17.1 billion euros (24.4 billion dollars) in 2008.
Despite the fall, oil revenues will still make up 58.4 percent of the government's total income.
Albert Einstein
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
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- Carlos Martín
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VENEZUELA REALIZA MANIOBRAS CON SIMULACION DE INVASION
VENEZUELA REALIZA MANIOBRAS CON SIMULACION DE INVASION
Sep 13, 6:09 PM EDT
Venezuelan military holds anti-invasion exercises
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -- Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has observed military exercises with planes dropping bombs and commandos resisting a mock invasion.
Saturday's maneuvers in southern Bolivar state featured Russian-made Sukhoi fighter jets, ground troops, patrol boats and helicopters that fired rockets at targets.
Chavez often warns the U.S. could attack Venezuela and says his military must be prepared. He has spent billions of dollars on arms in recent years.
The president wore fatigues and a red beret as he observed the exercises from the shore of a lake. An announcer on state TV said troops from a fictional "red country" were fighting a mock "war of resistance" against the invading force of a "blue country."
Albert Einstein
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REUNIÓN ENTRE INDIA Y RUSIA PARA CONCRETAR PROYECTOS
REUNIÓN ENTRE INDIA Y RUSIA PARA CONCRETAR PROYECTOS
NEW DELHI: India and Russia will strive to resolve problems dogging ongoing mega military projects for Sukhoi-30MKI fighters, T-90S main-battle tanks, stealth frigates and missile destroyers as well as futuristic ones like fifth-generation fighter aircraft (FGFA) and multi-role transport aircraft (MRTA) in a high-level meeting later this month.
The 8th meeting of the Indo-Russian inter-governmental commission on military-technical cooperation, chaired by defence minister A K Antony and his counterpart Anatoly Serdyukov, will be held here from September 28 to 30.
The meeting will also set the stage for the inking of the new pact for the refit of aircraft carrier Admiral Gorshkov. As was first reported by TOI , India is now likely to pay as much as $2 billion more to get the 44,570-tonne carrier by end-2012, over and above the original $1.5 billion package deal of January 2004 for a fully-refurbished Gorshkov and 16 MiG-29Ks.
Despite the ongoing wrangling, Russia will of course continue to remain India's largest defence partner for many years to come, with ongoing projects worth well over $15 billion. The relationship is set for a further upward trajectory, with the FGFA and MRTA projects in the pipeline.
Albert Einstein
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BALANCE DE VENTAS DE ARMAMENTO DE EE.UU. AL EXTERIOR
BALANCE DE VENTAS DE ARMAMENTO DE EE.UU. AL EXTERIOR
U.S. Arms Sales Climbing Rapidly
By ERIC LIPTON
Published: September 13, 2008
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration is pushing through a broad array of foreign weapons deals as it seeks to rearm Iraq and Afghanistan, contain North Korea and Iran, and solidify ties with onetime Russian allies.
U.S. Weapons Abroad From tanks, helicopters and fighter jets to missiles,remotely piloted aircraft and even warships, the Department of Defense has agreed so far this fiscal year to sell or transfer more than $32 billion in weapons and other military equipment to foreign governments, compared with $12 billion in 2005.
The trend, which started in 2006, is most pronounced in the Middle East, but it reaches into northern Africa, Asia, Latin America, Europe and even Canada, through dozens of deals that senior Bush administration officials say they are confident will both tighten military alliances and combat terrorism.
“This is not about being gunrunners,” said Bruce S. Lemkin, the Air Force deputy under secretary who is helping to coordinate many of the biggest sales. “This is about building a more secure world.”
The surging American arms sales reflect the foreign policy tides, including the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the broader campaign against international terrorism, that have dominated the Bush administration. Deliveries on orders now being placed will continue for several years, perhaps as one of President Bush’s most lasting legacies.
The United States is far from the only country pushing sophisticated weapons systems: it is facing intense competition from Russia and elsewhere in Europe, including continuing contests for multibillion-dollar deals to sell fighter jets to India and Brazil.
In that booming market, American military contractors are working closely with the Pentagon, which acts as a broker and procures arms for foreign customers through its Foreign Military Sales program.
Less sophisticated weapons, and services to maintain these weapons systems, are often bought directly by foreign governments. That category of direct commercial sales has seen an enormous surge as well, as measured by export licenses issued this fiscal year covering an estimated $96 billion, up from $58 billion in 2005, according to the State Department, which must approve the licenses.
About 60 countries get annual military aid from the United States, $4.5 billion a year, to help them buy American weapons. Israel and Egypt receive more than 80 percent of that aid. The United States has also recently given Iraq and Afghanistan large amounts of weapons and other equipment and has begun to train fledgling military units at no charge; this assistance is included in the tally of foreign sales. But most arms exports are paid for by the purchasers without United States financing.
The growing tally of international weapon deals, which started to surge in 2006, is now provoking questions among some advocates of arms control and some members of Congress.
“Sure, this is a quick and easy way to cement alliances,” said William D. Hartung, an arms control specialist at the New America Foundation, a public policy institute. “But this is getting out of hand.”
Congress is notified before major arms sales deals are completed between foreign governments and the Pentagon. While lawmakers have the power to object formally and block any individual sale, they rarely use it.
Representative Howard L. Berman of California, chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, said he supported many of the individual weapons sales, like helping Iraq build the capacity to defend itself, but he worried that the sales blitz could have some negative effects. “This could turn into a spiraling arms race that in the end could decrease stability,” he said.
The United States has long been the top arms supplier to the world. In the past several years, however, the list of nations that rely on the United States as a primary source of major weapons systems has greatly expanded. Among the recent additions are Argentina, Azerbaijan, Brazil, Georgia, India, Iraq, Morocco and Pakistan, according to sales data through the end of last month provided by the Department of Defense. Cumulatively, these countries signed $870 million worth of arms deals with the United States from 2001 to 2004. For the past four fiscal years, that total has been $13.8 billion.
In many cases, these sales represent a cultural shift, as nations like Romania, Poland and Morocco, which have long relied on Russian-made MIG-17 fighter jets, are now buying new F-16s, built by Lockheed Martin.
At Lockheed Martin, one of the largest American military contractors, international sales last year brought in about $6.3 billion, or 15 percent of the company’s total sales, up from $4.8 billion in 2001. The foreign sales by Lockheed and other American military contractors are credited with helping keep alive some production lines, like those of the F-16 fighter jet and Boeing’s C-17 transport plane.
U.S. Weapons Abroad Fighter jets made in America will now be flying in other countries for years to come, meaning continued profits for American contractors that maintain them, and in many cases regular interaction between the United States military and foreign air forces, Mr. Lemkin, the Air Force official, said.
Sales are also being driven by the push by many foreign nations to join the once-exclusive club of countries whose arsenals include precise, laser-guided missiles, high-priced American technology that the United States displayed during its invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan.
In the Persian Gulf region, much of the rearmament is driven by fears of Iran.
The United Arab Emirates, for example, are considering spending as much as $16 billion on American-made missile defense systems, according to recent notifications sent to Congress by the Department of Defense.
The Emirates also have announced an intention to order offensive weapons, including up to 26 Black Hawk helicopters and 900 Longbow Hellfire II missiles, which can knock out enemy tanks.
Saudi Arabia, this fiscal year alone, has signed at least $6 billion worth of agreements to buy weapons from the United States government — the highest figure for that country since 1993, which was another peak year in American weapons sales, after the first Persian Gulf war.
Israel, long a major buyer of United States military equipment, is also increasing its orders, including planned purchases of perhaps as many as four American-made coastal warships, worth $1.9 billion.
In Asia, as North Korea has conducted tests of a long-range missile, American allies have been buying more United States equipment. One ally, South Korea, has signed sales agreements with the Pentagon this year worth $1.1 billion.
So far, the value of foreign arms deliveries completed by the United States has increased only modestly, reaching $13 billion last year compared with an average of $12 billion over the previous three years. Because complex weapons systems take a long time to produce, it is expected that the increase in sales agreements will result in much greater arms deliveries in the coming years. (All dollar amounts for previous years cited in this article have been adjusted to reflect the impact of inflation.)
The flood of sophisticated American military equipment pouring into the Middle East has evoked concern among some members of Congress, who fear that the Bush administration may be compromising the military edge Israel has long maintained in the region.
Not surprisingly, two of the biggest new American arms customers are Iraq and Afghanistan.
Just in the past two years, Iraq has signed more than $3 billion of sales agreements — and announced plans to buy perhaps as much as $7 billion more in American equipment, financed by its rising oil revenues.
Lt. Col. Almarah Belk, a Pentagon spokeswoman, said that making these sales served the interests of both Iraq and the United States because “it reduces the risk of corruption and assists the Iraqis in getting around bottlenecks in their acquisition processes.”
Over the past three years, the United States government, separately, has agreed to buy more than $10 billion in military equipment and weapons on behalf of Afghanistan, according to Defense Department records, including M-16 rifles and C-27 military transport aircraft.
Even tiny countries like Estonia and Latvia are getting into the mix, playing a part in a collaborative effort by 15 countries, mostly in Europe, to buy two C-17 Boeing transport planes, which are used in moving military supplies as well as conducting relief missions.
Boeing has delivered 176 of these $200 million planes to the United States. But until 2006, Britain was the only foreign country that flew them. Now, in addition to the European consortium, Canada, Australia and Qatar have put in orders, and Boeing is competing to sell the plane to six other countries, said Tommy Dunehew, Boeing’s C-17 international sales manager.
In the last year, foreign sales have made up nearly half of the production at the California plant where C-17s are made. “It has been filling up the factory in the last couple of years,” Mr. Dunehew said.
Even before this new round of sales got under way, the United States’ share of the world arms trade was rising, from 40 percent of arms deliveries in 2000 to nearly 52 percent in 2006, the latest year for which the Congressional Research Service has compiled data. The next-largest seller was Russia, which in 2006 accounted for 21 percent of global deliveries.
Representative Berman, who sponsored a bill passed in May to overhaul the arms export process, said American military sales, while often well intended, were sometimes misguided. He cited military sales to Pakistan, which he said he feared were doing more to stoke tensions with India than combat terrorism in the region.
Travis Sharp, a military policy analyst at the Center for Arms Control and Nonproliferation, a Washington research group, said one of his biggest worries was that if alliances shifted, the United States might eventually be in combat against an enemy equipped with American-made weapons. Arms sales have had unintended consequences before, as when the United States armed militants fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan, only to eventually confront hostile Taliban fighters armed with the same weapons there.
“Once you sell arms to another country, you lose control over how they are used,” Mr. Sharp said. “And the weapons, unfortunately, don’t have an expiration date.”
But Mr. Lemkin, of the Pentagon, said that with so many nations now willing to sell advanced weapons systems, the United States could not afford to be too restrictive in its own sales.
“Would you rather they bought the weapons and aircraft from other countries?” he said. “Because they will.”
Albert Einstein
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
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BIGDOG, NUEVO JUGUETE DEL US ARMY
BIGDOG, NUEVO JUGUETE DEL US ARMY
Aqui teneis un video del bicho. (se puede ver con el windows player)
http://mfile.akamai.com/11297/wmv/anm1.download.akamai.com/11297/video/2008/sep08/bigdog.asx
Un saludo.
US army unveil latest weapon - the robodog of war
By James Tapper
Last updated at 11:09 PM on 13th September 2008
The US army is poised to unleash the dogs of war – four-legged, petrol-powered robots to help its troops in battle.
Billed as ‘the most advanced quadruped robot on Earth’, BigDog has been devised to support American troops by carrying up to four packs of equipment on awkward terrain unsuitable for wheeled vehicles.
Standing at over 2ft tall and more than 3ft long, BigDog comes equipped with all manner of high-tech gadgets, including laser gyroscopes, a video camera sensor system and a sophisticated on-board computer – but, sadly, no wagging tail.
The 11 stone machine, created by Boston Dynamics, can trot along at up to 4mph – although researchers are hoping to create a much faster version capable of travelling at 22mph – and will even stay on its legs when it is kicked hard in the side.
Its legs are designed to work in a similar way to a real dog’s, even storing energy in shock absorbers when a foot touches the ground.
The machine looks like some of the robots in the Star Wars movies and has developed a cult following on the internet.
The £14million BigDog project is being tested across a five-mile trail used to train the US Marine Corps, carrying the soldiers’ equipment to prove that it can cope with holes, steep slopes and water hazards.
Project manager Robert Mandelbaum said: ‘Some of the wars we’re engaged in now happen to have that kind of terrain. The idea is to look at the way nature has solved different robotics problems.’
Boston Dynamics hopes that each BigDog will cost about the same as a small car. Ultimately, the firm also aims to use the technology for non-military purposes, such as carrying loads for farmers in areas that are difficult to reach.
Aqui teneis un video del bicho. (se puede ver con el windows player)
http://mfile.akamai.com/11297/wmv/anm1.download.akamai.com/11297/video/2008/sep08/bigdog.asx
Un saludo.
Albert Einstein
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
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SERBIA INTERESADA EN ESTRECHAR LAZOS MILITARES CON CHINA
SERBIA INTERESADA EN ESTRECHAR LAZOS MILITARES CON CHINA
BELGRADE, Sept. 13 (Xinhua) -- Serbia is keen to strengthen traditional friendship with China and enhance bilateral military ties, said Serbian Defense Minister Dragan Sutanovac on Saturday.
Sutanovac made the remarks when meeting with Chen Bingde, chief of the General Staff of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) of China.
Sutanovac spoke highly of the relationship between the armies of Serbia and China, which, he said, is witnessing a good momentum of development.
The two armies enjoy political mutual trust and also engage themselves in mutually beneficial economic cooperation, he added.
Sutanovac said Serbia highly values its relations with China and is ready to make joint efforts with China to strengthen their time-honored friendship and lift the relations between the two armies to a new level.
Chen conveyed to Sutanovac Chinese Defense Minister Liang Guanglie's greetings and good wishes. Chen left Beijing on Wednesday afternoon for an official visit to Serbia and Norway.
He said that bilateral relations between the two countries have grown steadily in recent years and remarkable achievements have been made in the political and economic exchanges and cooperation between the two sides.
China appreciates Serbia's valuable support on many issues such as Taiwan, said Chen.
He added that China respects Serbia's internal and external policies as well as its chosen path of development.
Chen said he hoped the two armies would continue to strengthen their exchanges.
Editor: Jiang Yuxia
Albert Einstein
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
- Carlos Martín
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GRAN BRETAÑA PONE A PRUEBA LOS NUEVOS QUAD MILITARES
GRAN BRETAÑA PONE A PRUEBA LOS NUEVOS QUAD MILITARES EN SU ESCUELA DE TRANSPORTE
Monday 15 September 2008 15:04
Ministry Of Defence (National)
New military quad bikes put through their paces at Defence School of Transport
A new batch of quad bikes which are boosting our Armed Forces' ability to deliver vital supplies to the frontline were put through their paces today by, Defence Minister Baroness Taylor on a visit to the Defence School of Transport (DST), the largest driving school in Europe.
Reaching speeds of up to 75kph the all-terrain quad bikes are being used to deliver food, water and ammunition to troops on the frontline in difficult to access areas or where it is more appropriate to offer a lower profile. With the trailer attached, they can operate through streams and puddles of up to half their wheel height
During the visit, Baroness Taylor also viewed a range of vehicles being used for training which is an essential element of the force protection mix alongside tactics, techniques and procedures. The training ensures troops can operate the vehicles to their full potential from the heavy duty Mastiff to the recently purchased Jackal.
Baroness Taylor paid tribute to the hard work of the staff at DST:
"The Defence School of Transport (DST) is a world class training facility, providing essential driver training before operations.
"I have been impressed by the scale and variety of training that takes place here. Alongside tactics and procedures, training is a vital part of Force Protection.
"The new quad bikes we have seen today will play an important role on operations, from logistics support to casualty evacuation.
"We remain committed to providing the best equipment and vehicles for our troops on the front line."
Baroness Taylor also visited the new accommodation under construction at Leconfield. Under Project SLAM (Single Living Accommodation Modernisation) a three-storey accommodation building for 144 recruits is nearing completion at the Defence School of Transport. The project began in September 2007, and is due for completion in late October.
Notes to Editors
1. The Defence School of Transport (DST) is the largest driver training school in Europe, possibly the World. Based near Hull in East Yorkshire, it is a purpose-built facility of 760 acres (308 hectares) which includes 16 kilometres of criss-crossing road training circuits, with roundabouts, junctions and even a purpose built hill, as well as 18 kilometres of cross country circuits with combat woods and water crossings thrown in.
2. The school has 1,200 different vehicles, ranging from saloon cars and motorcycles to military heavy goods trucks and up to the latest armoured troop vehicles, including the mighty Mastiff.
3. There are a thousand staff members, including some 778 civilian (although many are ex-military) instructors providing mostly one-on-one or one-on-two driver training across 114 different types of courses, many of which run several times a year, to around 13,000 students. On any given day there are between 1,000 and 1,200 people undergoing training.
4. The Quad ATVs (all terrain vehicles) can reach speeds of up to 75kph, reduced to a recommended speed of 50kph with the Trailer. The ATV kerbside weight is 300kgs and the trailer is 220kgs. Both can operate through streams/puddles of up to half their wheel height. The trailer is approximately 1.1m wide by 1.6m long for the body, with the overall length being 2.6m including the drawbar.
Albert Einstein
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
- Carlos Martín
- Sargento Segundo
- Mensajes: 365
- Registrado: 26 Jun 2007, 15:25
- Ubicación: Madrid
ISRAEL RETRASA LOS SISTEMAS DE DEFENSA DE SUS TANQUES
ISRAEL RETRASA LOS SISTEMAS DE DEFENSA DE SUS TANQUES
Sep 16, 2008 0:23 | Updated Sep 16, 2008 10:32
Tank defense system behind schedule
By YAAKOV KATZ
Plans to equip IDF tanks with an anti-missile defense system have been postponed by two years due to budgetary and development snags, defense officials said Monday.
According to the officials, the Trophy system, developed by state-owned Rafael, would now likely be installed on Merkava Mk4 battle tanks in 2010 and not this year, as was initially announced following the Second Lebanon War.
During the Second Lebanon War in 2006, Hizbullah fired thousands of anti-tank missiles at Israeli tanks and infantry units, damaging 40 tanks and killing 30 crew members.
According to a report in Defense News on Monday, tens of millions of dollars had already been invested in the Trophy program over the past eight years and it will take "double that amount" to equip hundreds of tanks in the coming years.
"We hope to start installing several of the systems on tanks in the beginning of next year," a top officer in the IDF's Ground Forces Command told The Jerusalem Post. "The massive fielding though will not happen until sometime in 2010." Industry sources told the Post that the Defense Ministry was mainly to blame for the delays and that Rafael's development of the system was dependent on the schedule it received from the IDF.
"We cannot work on our own," one source said. "The Defense Ministry has over the past two years repeatedly changed its schedule of when it wanted to conduct testing and installation and this has affected the development."
According to the report in Defense News, the Defense Ministry and Rafael only began installing the first systems on Merkava Mk4 tanks in late 2007 for integration and safety tests, the results of which were poor and required revisions to the ministry-provided specifications. As a result, the Trophy system was only installed on Merkava Mk4 tanks in February 2008 and underwent a live-fire test just two months ago.
Hizbullah is believed to have today thousands of Soviet-built Sagger, Cornet and Fagot antitank missiles, the French MILAN and the US-built TOW, all supplied by Iran and Syria. These missiles are usually fired by a two- or three-man team.
Some 400 tanks operated inside Lebanon during the war and while dozens were hit by anti-tank missiles, only 20 were actually penetrated. Following the war, the IDF decided to speed up development of an active-protection system for tanks and armored personnel carriers, with officers claiming in late 2006 that tanks would be equipped with the system by 2008.
The Trophy system creates a hemispheric protected zone around armored vehicles such as the Merkava tank. It is designed to detect and track a threat and counter it with a launched projectile that intercepts the anti-tank missile.
Israel Military Industries (IMI) is also developing its own system, called the Iron Fist. Claimed to be capable of neutralizing all anti-tank threats, including kinetic shells fired by enemy tanks, the Iron Fist is in its final stages of testing and is predicted to be declared operational and ready for mass production by the beginning of the next decade.
The Iron Fist consists of a radar and passive optical system that detects incoming threats and destroys them within a fraction of a second by using a combustible blast interceptor. Unlike the Trophy, which fires off a large number of projectiles, the Iron Fist intercepts incoming threats by using a mortar-shaped rocket that destroys the threat by using a blast effect which crushes its soft components or deflects the incoming missile.
Rafael spokesman Amit Zimmer said the Trophy program was being "executed according to the schedule and requirements that were agreed upon between the IDF and the Defense Ministry."
The Defense Ministry spokesman's office said the program's schedule was continuing according to plan.
Albert Einstein
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
- Carlos Martín
- Sargento Segundo
- Mensajes: 365
- Registrado: 26 Jun 2007, 15:25
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GRANDES RECORTES PRESUPUESTARIOS DE DEFENSA EN GRAN BRETAÑA
GRANDES RECORTES PRESUPUESTARIOS DE DEFENSA EN GRAN BRETAÑA
[/b]
Defence chiefs plan equipment cuts amid £2bn hole in budget
Richard Norton-Taylor The Guardian, Tuesday September 16 2008
Defence chiefs are drawing up plans for big cuts in Britain's military equipment programme, abandoning, cutting, or delaying projects as a result of severe pressures on their budget. They are facing up to the fact that they have been signing up to prestigious, programmes - including the procurement, at a cost of £3.9bn, of two aircraft carriers, the largest ships ever to be built for the Royal Navy - without considering how they were going to be funded, senior officials say.
"They ordered and ordered without paying attention to the budget," one senior defence source admits.
Ministers insist there is no need for a full-scale defence review despite a desperate, unanticipated, shortage of equipment - notably tough armoured personnel carriers and helicopters - for British troops in Afghanistan engaged in operations for which there is no end in sight. Ministers refer, instead, to "an examination of the equipment programme".
Faced with an estimated £2bn hole in the defence budget, military planners are preparing to tell ministers that the time has come to make hard decisions. Officials say these are likely to include:
· Abandoning a £1bn plan to buy 70 Super Lynx helicopters for the army and navy, a move with serious implications for Yeovil, home of AgustaWestland which would have manufactured the aircraft;
· Cutting the number of new Type 45 destroyers for the navy from the original 12 planned to six;
· Scrapping early a number of the navy's older destroyers and frigates;
· Reducing the number of Future Rapid Effects System (Fres) hi-tech armoured vehicles planned for the army;
· Scrapping some of the army's large tanks and long-range howitzers;
· Offloading more Eurofighter/Typhoon aircraft to the Saudis who have already bought 72 of them.
Defence officials suggest that money could be saved by buying alternatives to the Future Lynx, such as American Black Hawk helicopters, off the shelf. However such a move could lead AgustaWestland, the Italian-owned company, to close its plant in Yeovil with a loss of 4,000 jobs.
Military commentators say the controversy has echoes of the Westland affair of the mid-1980s when Michael Heseltine resigned as defence secretary. He quit in protest at the decision to allow a US firm to take over the helicopter company rather than a European consortium.
The Lynx is not the only helicopter to be abandoned. The army's fleet of Gazelle helicopters is to be phased out early. The only army regiment assigned to cope with civil emergencies, including floods, is to be disbanded next year.
Over the past year Gazelles have flown more hours than other military helicopters, according to MoD figures. Ministers argue that Gazelles do not play a significant "combat" role and that the Lynx would also be unsuitable for operations in Afghanistan. British troops there need bigger helicopters, such as Chinooks, officials say.
Nick Harvey, Liberal Democrat defence spokesman, said: "Disbanding the country's only army air regiment specifically trained to deal with domestic security seems to run wholly counter to the prime minister's recent national security strategy. Given how overstretched our forces are in other parts of the world, there is a danger that we leave the home front unprepared."
[/b]
Albert Einstein
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
- Carlos Martín
- Sargento Segundo
- Mensajes: 365
- Registrado: 26 Jun 2007, 15:25
- Ubicación: Madrid
COREA DEL NORTE REALIZA PRUEBAS CON MOTORES PARA MISILES
COREA DEL NORTE REALIZA PRUEBAS CON MOTORES PARA MISILES
N.Korea Tests Missile Ignition
North Korea has reportedly conducted an engine ignition test for a long-range missile, presumably the Taepodong-2 missile with a range of 6,700 km, at a new long-range missile test site under construction in Dongchang-li, North Pyongan Province. For the test, the rocket engine of a missile is laid out horizontally at the test site and ignited to test its performance.
The test confirms that part of the Dongchang-li test site, which is expected to be completed by 2009, is already operational, and that North Korea has been continuing development of long-range missiles.
The engine is presumably for a Taepodong-2 missile, whose test firing failed in July 2006, or an improved version with a range of longer than 10,000 km. A government source said after the failed test in 2006, North Korea has intermittently conducted engine ignition tests and continued development of long-range missiles.
The Dongchang-li test site is said to be much larger and better than the one in Musudan-ni. Its existence was first reported in the foreign press last Thursday.
At a session of the National Assembly Defense Committee on Thursday, Defense Minister Lee Sang-hee said construction is 80 percent complete.
Albert Einstein
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
“Lo importante es no dejar de hacerse preguntas.”
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