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> Military Thread V6, Selamat Hari Raya dan Kemerdekaan ke-54

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kuan1234
post Mar 25 2011, 02:06 AM

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QUOTE(travis_ckf @ Mar 25 2011, 01:13 AM)
ahh finally, the rafale has it's first "splash one" notworthy.gif
soscili: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12850975
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Is it also count as a kill if using air to ground missile to hit the plane on the ground?
DeFaeco
post Mar 25 2011, 08:31 AM

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Nope. The bogey already landed so that's considered a ground target.


Alfie007
post Mar 25 2011, 10:07 PM

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India, Singapore Explore Defense Cooperation

By VIVEK RAGHUVANSHI
Published: 23 Mar 2011 15:49


QUOTE
NEW DELHI - Maritime cooperation is emerging as a key area of cooperation between New Delhi and Singapore, where Indian Defence Secretary Pradeep Kumar took part in the India-Singapore Defence Policy Dialogue on March 21-23.

Kumar met with Teo Chee Hean, who is Singapore's deputy prime minister and defense minister, and other officials to explore new areas of defense cooperation, a senior Indian Defence Ministry official said.

As India looks to add warships to its fleet, to replace aging ships that will be retired in the next two to three years, maritime cooperation with nearby Singapore seems likely to increase, the ministry official said.

Indian Army sources said India wants to buy more robotic and unmanned assets, possibly from companies in Singapore.

Subgroups participating in the dialogue reported progress made was in talks on research and development cooperation, and regional security.

The dialogue, established under the India-Singapore Defence Cooperation agreement signed in October 2003, was co-chaired by Chiang Chie Foo, Singapore's permanent secretary for defense. Since signing the cooperation pact, India and Singapore have cooperated on military exercises, and troops from tiny Singapore have held land exercises in India.


Source of the above: Defense News

Also recently; Singapore and Indian Navies Conduct Maritime Exercise
Alfie007
post Mar 25 2011, 10:14 PM

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Singapore and Indonesian Navies Co-Host Multilateral Exercises

Posted: 25 Mar 2011, 1532 hours (Time is GMT +8 hours)

user posted image
The MCMEX, DIVEX and NMS participants with Singapore's Minister for Education and Second Minister for Defence Dr Ng Eng Hen.

user posted image
Singapore's Chief of Navy, Rear Admiral Chew Men Leong (left) with Indonesian Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Soeparno (right) at the opening ceremony of MCMEX and DIVEX.

QUOTE
The Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN) and Indonesian Navy (TNI-AL) are cohosting the 4th Western Pacific Mine Countermeasures Exercise (MCMEX) and Diving Exercise (DIVEX) from 25 Mar to 5 Apr 2011. Singapore's Minister for Education and Second Minister for Defence Dr Ng Eng Hen officiated at the opening ceremony of the two exercises at the Changi Command and Control Centre this morning.

The MCMEX and DIVEX are conducted under the ambit of the Western Pacific Naval Symposium (WPNS), which promotes mutual understanding, friendship, professionalism and interoperability among the personnel of the participating navies. More than 1000 personnel and 15 ships from 16 navies will be participating in the two exercises, which will be conducted in the Singapore Strait and the waters off the Indonesian island of Pulau Bintan. This year's MCMEX and DIVEX will, for the first time, feature multilateral information sharing at the Information Fusion Centre and the deployment of unmanned water vehicles. Also conducted under the ambit of the WPNS is the 3rd Naval Medicine Seminar (NMS), held from 23 to 25 Mar 2011, which involved 44 medical practitioners from 10 countries convening to discuss the topics of military diving and hyperbaric medicine.

At the opening ceremony, Dr Ng spoke of how the participating navies saw the need for a collective effort to maintain free navigation in international waters. He said, "The WPNS grouping first came about as a result of a bottom-up approach by regional navies wanting to address common maritime security interests, and has made considerable progress since." Going forward, Dr Ng urged the WPNS navies to continue to "be proactive in building platforms and capacity in information exchange and operational coordination, as well as develop their readiness to respond collectively should the need arise."

The participation of the WPNS countries in these exercises reflects their strong commitment to multilateral cooperation and the promotion of regional security. The cohosting of the exercises by the RSN and the TNI-AL also underscores the close and longstanding cooperation between the two navies.
Source of news: MINDEF, SG

For info on the exercise:
--> Fact Sheet: Background of the Western Pacific Naval Symposium, MCMEX, DIVEX and NMS

--> Official website for the 4th Western Pacific Mine Countermeasure and Diving Exercises (MCMEX/ DIVEX) and 3rd Naval Medicine Seminar (NMS)
SUShack3line
post Mar 26 2011, 01:06 AM

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Turkish Aselsan Leopard 2A4 Tank Modernization


Turkish Aselsan ALTAY Tank project


hopefully Malaysia will join this ALTAY project.
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This post has been edited by hack3line: Mar 26 2011, 01:09 AM
nas06
post Mar 26 2011, 11:35 AM

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I was wondering, what kind of Soldier Modernization Program (SMP) do ATM have currently?
I know other countries like S'pore and Aussie had implemented the program.
IMHO, we should progress in it to improve our soldiers capabilty.
KYPMbangi
post Mar 26 2011, 07:31 PM

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News told that RMAF is interested in seeking AEWAC.
Dun dun dun~..
lulz
post Mar 26 2011, 07:41 PM

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rmaf have been interested in awacs since forever.
Alfie007
post Mar 26 2011, 08:18 PM

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Exercise Cope Tiger, an annual trilateral air exercise by Singapore, Thailand and the United States

user posted image
Exercise directors (from left) COL Neo Hong Keat from the RSAF, Group Captain Thawonwat Chantanakom from the RTAF and COL Robert A. Huston from the USAF officiating at the closing ceremony of Exercise Cope Tiger 2011 at Korat Air Base.

user posted image
The Exercise directors of Exercise Cope Tiger 2011 sharing a light moment after the closing ceremony at Korat Air Base.

QUOTE
Exercise Cope Tiger, an annual trilateral air exercise conducted by Singapore, Thailand and the United States, came to a close at Korat Air Base, Thailand, yesterday. The closing ceremony was officiated by Colonel Neo Hong Keat from the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF), Group Captain Thawonwat Chantanakom from the Royal Thai Air Force and Colonel Robert A. Huston from the United States Air Force.

The exercise was conducted in two phases - the first phase, a command post exercise, was held at Paya Lebar Air Base in Singapore from 14 to 16 Dec 2010, while the second phase was a flying training exercise conducted at Korat Air Base from 14 to 25 Mar 2011. This year’s exercise, the 17th in the series, saw the deployment of about 100 aircraft, 34 ground-based air defence systems and more than 2,300 personnel from the participating forces. The RSAF also deployed its G550 Airborne Early Warning aircraft for the first time in Exercise Cope Tiger 2011. Some exercise participants also took part in a one-day joint socio-civic programme where basic health and dental services were provided to the local community in Korat.

Established in 1994, Exercise Cope Tiger seeks to enhance professionalism and interoperability of the participating forces, and promotes rapport and mutual understanding among their personnel.
user posted image
The RSAF's G550-AEW aircraft (centre) flying in tight formation in Korat, Thailand during Exercise Cope Tiger. This was the aircraft's maiden participation in an overseas training exercise.

user posted image
CPT (Dr) Ong seeing a local patient during the joint socio-civic programme.

QUOTE
This year's Exercise Cope Tiger - an annual trilateral air exercise - saw more than a hundred military aircraft and 34 Ground-based Air Defence (GBAD) systems operating in tight concert as the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF), Royal Thai Air Force (RTAF) and United States Air Force gathered for the second phase of the exercise held at Korat Air Base, Thailand from 14 to 25 Mar.

The exercise also marked the inaugural participation of the RSAF's G550-Airborne Early Warning (AEW) aircraft in an overseas training exercise. The first G550-AEW aircraft was delivered to the RSAF in February 2009 to replace the ageing E2C Hawkeye AEW.

"The exercise provided an excellent platform to validate our procedures as we learnt to interoperate with our foreign counterparts in a different environment and operational setting," said Captain (CPT) Toh Su Sin, an Air Warfare Officer in 111 Squadron, which operates the G550-AEW aircraft.

Equipped with a sophisticated mission suite that includes an Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar, the G550-AEWs have a detection range of more than 200 nautical miles.


Exercise Cope Tiger 2011 started with a command post exercise held at Paya Lebar Air Base in Singapore from 14 to 16 Dec last year before moving on to the second phase, the flying training exercise, in Thailand.

"The exercise has been a very fruitful and successful one for the RSAF. Its realistic scenarios gave us an excellent opportunity to hone our air combat readiness and competencies, both at the planning and execution levels," said Colonel (COL) Neo Hong Keat, RSAF exercise director.

"The opportunity to work alongside the other two countries also provided a great platform for cross-learning and sharing."

Apart from professional exchanges, exercise participants such as F-16C/D fighter pilot Lieutenant (LTA) Low Siyuan also valued the chance to interact with his foreign counterparts. "It is good to be able to work so closely with one another and exchange lessons freely and I've learnt a lot from my counterparts," said LTA Low.

"Through the exercise, I have forged many friendships with others in the RSAF and the US Air Force," he added.

This was something which the RTAF exercise director Group Captain Thawonwat Chantanakom also spoke of: "The working relationships and friendships that our airmen and crew have built up over the years have made working together a smooth process. I know that we can fall in with our counterparts and be a much more effective fighting unit, than if we had never worked together."

"Each air force brings to the table confidence and the abilities of weapon employment which we can learn from, and vice-versa. This allows the USAF to work alongside highly professional air force personnel from the RSAF and RTAF, and benchmark our methodologies in order to improve on them," agreed COL Robert Huston, USAF exercise director.

As part of this year's exercise, the participants also provided basic health and dental services to the local community in Korat in a one-day joint socio-civic programme. An eight-member medical personnel led by CPT (Dr) Jocelyn Ong worked together with their RTAF and USAF counterparts to provide basic health and dental care to the communities at Korat .

More than 2,300 personnel from the participating forces took part in Ex Cope Tiger 2011, which is the 17th in the series. It formally concluded on 25 Mar with a closing ceremony officiated by the three exercise directors from the RSAF, RTAF and USAF.
Source of the above: MINDEF, SG & cyberpioneer respectively.


ayanami_tard
post Mar 27 2011, 08:27 PM

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QUOTE(nas06 @ Mar 26 2011, 12:35 PM)
I was wondering, what kind of Soldier Modernization Program (SMP) do ATM have currently?
I know other countries like S'pore and Aussie had implemented the program.
IMHO, we should progress in it to improve our soldiers capabilty.
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berat bang~

xleh bwk masuk hutan
kuan1234
post Mar 27 2011, 08:28 PM

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3 different country, different salute pattern?

Alfie007
post Mar 27 2011, 10:41 PM

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Different countries, different national drill patterns..

However it's odd that in Malaysia, the execution of salutes between RMP & MAF officers are done differently.. One can easily notice this at the annual Independence Day Parades..
heavyduty
post Mar 28 2011, 12:23 AM

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QUOTE(Alfie007 @ Mar 27 2011, 10:41 PM)
Different countries, different national drill patterns..

However it's odd that in Malaysia, the execution of salutes between RMP & MAF officers are done differently.. One can easily notice this at the annual Independence Day Parades..
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maybe its because of their different foundations? hmm.gif hmm.gif

different entities so they use different drill manual.they were not fouded at same period an both have different origins an history.same why the french foreign legion has a slower marching step than other units
DeFaeco
post Mar 28 2011, 06:33 AM

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QUOTE(Alfie007 @ Mar 27 2011, 10:41 PM)
Different countries, different national drill patterns..

However it's odd that in Malaysia, the execution of salutes between RMP & MAF officers are done differently.. One can easily notice this at the annual Independence Day Parades..
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The RMP follows the UK tradition of saluting by showing the palm aka the gentleman's salute. Apparently this was done in the old days to show the person that you are saluting that one is not holding a weapon and has no hostile intentions.

I'm not sure why MAF salutes using the palm down method but in the UK, the Royal navy uses this because in the old days, sailors tend to get their hands dirty with grease while performing duties on ships. So, as a symbol of respect to the higher ranks, they salute with the palm down so as not to reveal their dirty hands.


e36.hartge
post Mar 28 2011, 09:15 AM

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QUOTE(nas06 @ Mar 26 2011, 11:35 AM)
I was wondering, what kind of Soldier Modernization Program (SMP) do ATM have currently?
I know other countries like S'pore and Aussie had implemented the program.
IMHO, we should progress in it to improve our soldiers capabilty.
*
if u browse to previous thread...already got some infos

HangPC2
post Mar 28 2011, 10:23 AM

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Sources : http://victorkoo.blogspot.com/



atreyuangel
post Mar 28 2011, 06:31 PM

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oh how much I miss this thread, the problems with my PC is still a bummer!
hope gigabyte taiwan can sort this out!

QUOTE(travis_ckf @ Mar 25 2011, 01:13 AM)
ahh finally, the rafale has it's first "splash one" notworthy.gif
soscili: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12850975
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somehow I feel glad that our MKM has a similar system with the Rafale!

QUOTE(lulz @ Mar 26 2011, 07:41 PM)
rmaf have been interested in awacs since forever.
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well who knows, maybe this year! whistling.gif

QUOTE(DeFaeco @ Mar 28 2011, 06:33 AM)
The RMP follows the UK tradition of saluting by showing the palm aka the gentleman's salute. Apparently this was done in the old days to show the person that you are saluting that one is not holding a weapon and has no hostile intentions.

I'm not sure why MAF salutes using the palm down method but in the UK, the Royal navy uses this because in the old days, sailors tend to get their hands dirty with grease while performing duties on ships. So, as a symbol of respect to the higher ranks, they salute with the palm down so as not to reveal their dirty hands.
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IINM the origin of a salute is from Jousting Sports, when Knights will remove their helm visor (steel visor not like rempit BOGO!) when approaching their opponent as an acknowledgment that they will be sticking each other out! laugh.gif

This post has been edited by atreyuangel: Mar 28 2011, 06:35 PM
admnovsk
post Mar 28 2011, 06:49 PM

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anyone here knows what's the procedure to enrol to askar wataniah? tried to find info in the not...not helping much
atreyuangel
post Mar 28 2011, 07:34 PM

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QUOTE(admnovsk @ Mar 28 2011, 06:49 PM)
anyone here knows what's the procedure to enrol to askar wataniah? tried to find info in the not...not helping much
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Hi, you can go here!
http://mymil.forums2u.com/t84-askar-wataniah-malaysia

good luck
TSwanvadder
post Mar 28 2011, 10:01 PM

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QUOTE(atreyuangel @ Mar 28 2011, 07:34 PM)
Tengok balik menyampah betul bila nak kene register lol

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