Is the real pkr portal or the fake one?
Military Thread V8, Ops Daulat
Military Thread V8, Ops Daulat
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Mar 2 2013, 01:01 AM
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Senior Member
1,062 posts Joined: May 2008 |
Is the real pkr portal or the fake one?
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Mar 2 2013, 01:22 AM
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Newbie
1 posts Joined: Jul 2011 From: HD10180/Earth-MilkyWay/Gliese581g |
suarapakatanrakyat.com is run by Pakatan Rakyat's enemies. It's confirmed FAKE.
Blog suarapakatanrakyat.com bukan blog pakatan pembangkang: Pengerusi PKR Sarawak Baru Bian QUOTE(MeLaMaL @ Mar 2 2013, 12:49 AM) PERKHABARAN yang baru diterima menyatakan bahawa 3 anggota komando polis dari Unit 69 Komando telah terbunuh terkena tembakan motar dalam pertempuran antara pasukan keselamatan dengan anggota tentera diraja Sulu yang meletus sejak pukul 10 pagi tadi. > > > p/s harapnya selepas ini wang negara tidak dibazirkan untuk membiayai upacara pengebumian negara untuk 3 anggota polis yang terkorban. Kanang dulu dah RM 1 juta satu pengebumian, ini 3 orang sekaligus!! - See more at: http://suarapakatanrakyat.com/2013/03/kris.../#comment-13911 dafuq is this shit?????? QUOTE(sleep_snore @ Mar 2 2013, 12:49 AM) suarapakatanrakya - Krisis Lahad Datu: Polis Patut Serang Guna Peluru Getah I dont know if this is trolling or satire article but this pissed me off badly.. QUOTE(kerolzarmyfanboy @ Mar 2 2013, 12:51 AM) QUOTE(haroldz123 @ Mar 2 2013, 01:01 AM) |
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Mar 2 2013, 01:27 AM
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Junior Member
575 posts Joined: Feb 2013 |
malaysians always dengki with each other..especially in politics..shame on us..
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Mar 2 2013, 01:33 AM
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Elite
1,157 posts Joined: Jul 2008 From: Petaling Jaya |
Whoever start the political post and flame post here will be reported.
Also Sotong is not welcome here. plz GTFO. |
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Mar 2 2013, 01:40 AM
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Senior Member
1,966 posts Joined: Jan 2003 From: No longer hanging by a NUS |
<Serius mode>
I think KDN has to seriously rethink its (sometimes inept) response once the dust has settled. I respect our men in uniform but can't help but feel that they've been let down by KDN's (and in effect the govt's) indecisiveness. Some things to think about: 1. Re-org of military assets Instead of being fixated with that little red dot (who are like our best-est buddies now, to the point that we want to see them in 90 mins), more military assets should be relocated to this new hot-spot. 2. Rethinking our strategy/response and operational capability Is our police/military properly equipped both in terms of equipment and training to deal with such incidents (terrorism/unconventional attacks)? i.e. we supposedly "surrounded" these infiltrators yet a big number were able to escape into plantations and the sea? Signals corp supposedly jammed their comms - yet they can still call their boss in phillipines? Our boys got jumped first by the infiltrators? I thought they were being monitored round-the-clock? Intel totally missed the fact they had much heavier weapons than initially thought? 3. Exactly who should be in charge? It is unclear who should be in charge - police or military - and when - to the point everyone is asking (and asking again) why police got sent in and not military? What is the SOP? Some say it's police jurisdiction cos they're on our soil, but given that we're dealing with a bunch of battle-hardened armed intruders shouldn't the military take over? No disrespect to VAT/UTK but the army might be a better choice in this situation. At the same time the relevant ministers seem to very "lepas tangan" attitude. 4. Please tell us what's going on instead of a total media blackout It's infuriating that with the local media blackout that we have to depend on the phillipines media for information. This lack of clear information does nothing but induces fear, rumor-mongering and paranoia. Please, our country is "under attack" - we demand to know (without sacrificing confidential info) what's going on. This post has been edited by cks2k2: Mar 2 2013, 01:40 AM |
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Mar 2 2013, 01:44 AM
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Newbie
1 posts Joined: Jul 2011 From: HD10180/Earth-MilkyWay/Gliese581g |
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Mar 2 2013, 01:44 AM
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Junior Member
575 posts Joined: Feb 2013 |
QUOTE(cks2k2 @ Mar 2 2013, 01:40 AM) <Serius mode> agreed..btw, does the conflict over? coz there's pinoy news said remaining kiram followers surrendered and the prince dead..I think KDN has to seriously rethink its (sometimes inept) response once the dust has settled. I respect our men in uniform but can't help but feel that they've been let down by KDN's (and in effect the govt's) indecisiveness. Some things to think about: 1. Re-org of military assets Instead of being fixated with that little red dot (who are like our best-est buddies now, to the point that we want to see them in 90 mins), more military assets should be relocated to this new hot-spot. 2. Rethinking our strategy/response and operational capability Is our police/military properly equipped both in terms of equipment and training to deal with such incidents (terrorism/unconventional attacks)? i.e. we supposedly "surrounded" these infiltrators yet a big number were able to escape into plantations and the sea? Signals corp supposedly jammed their comms - yet they can still call their boss in phillipines? Our boys got jumped first by the infiltrators? I thought they were being monitored round-the-clock? Intel totally missed the fact they had much heavier weapons than initially thought? 3. Exactly who should be in charge? It is unclear who should be in charge - police or military - and when - to the point everyone is asking (and asking again) why police got sent in and not military? What is the SOP? Some say it's police jurisdiction cos they're on our soil, but given that we're dealing with a bunch of battle-hardened armed intruders shouldn't the military take over? No disrespect to VAT/UTK but the army might be a better choice in this situation. At the same time the relevant ministers seem to very "lepas tangan" attitude. 4. Please tell us what's going on instead of a total media blackout It's infuriating that with the local media blackout that we have to depend on the phillipines media for information. This lack of clear information does nothing but induces fear, rumor-mongering and paranoia. Please, our country is "under attack" - we demand to know (without sacrificing confidential info) what's going on. |
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Mar 2 2013, 01:45 AM
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Senior Member
1,966 posts Joined: Jan 2003 From: No longer hanging by a NUS |
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Mar 2 2013, 01:51 AM
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Junior Member
575 posts Joined: Feb 2013 |
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Mar 2 2013, 01:54 AM
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Elite
1,157 posts Joined: Jul 2008 From: Petaling Jaya |
QUOTE(cks2k2 @ Mar 2 2013, 01:40 AM) <Serius mode> I think KDN has to seriously rethink its (sometimes inept) response once the dust has settled. I respect our men in uniform but can't help but feel that they've been let down by KDN's (and in effect the govt's) indecisiveness. Some things to think about: 1. Re-org of military assets Instead of being fixated with that little red dot (who are like our best-est buddies now, to the point that we want to see them in 90 mins), more military assets should be relocated to this new hot-spot. 2. Rethinking our strategy/response and operational capability Is our police/military properly equipped both in terms of equipment and training to deal with such incidents (terrorism/unconventional attacks)? i.e. we supposedly "surrounded" these infiltrators yet a big number were able to escape into plantations and the sea? Signals corp supposedly jammed their comms - yet they can still call their boss in phillipines? Our boys got jumped first by the infiltrators? I thought they were being monitored round-the-clock? Intel totally missed the fact they had much heavier weapons than initially thought? Still rumors on comm jammer nothing confirm on regarding the use of comm jammer. also they can still be able to use sat phone 3. Exactly who should be in charge? It is unclear who should be in charge - police or military - and when - to the point everyone is asking (and asking again) why police got sent in and not military? What is the SOP? Some say it's police jurisdiction cos they're on our soil, but given that we're dealing with a bunch of battle-hardened armed intruders shouldn't the military take over? No disrespect to VAT/UTK but the army might be a better choice in this situation. At the same time the relevant ministers seem to very "lepas tangan" attitude. Under national security act, all incident that involve insurgent and terrorist will be under police jurisdiction 4. Please tell us what's going on instead of a total media blackout It's infuriating that with the local media blackout that we have to depend on the phillipines media for information. This lack of clear information does nothing but induces fear, rumor-mongering and paranoia. Please, our country is "under attack" - we demand to know (without sacrificing confidential info) what's going on. We should introduce media guidelines for such incident |
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Mar 2 2013, 01:58 AM
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Junior Member
575 posts Joined: Feb 2013 |
those com jammers..i heard it on militarymalaysia.net..don't know if it is true..
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Mar 2 2013, 02:01 AM
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Senior Member
1,966 posts Joined: Jan 2003 From: No longer hanging by a NUS |
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Mar 2 2013, 02:04 AM
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Elite
1,157 posts Joined: Jul 2008 From: Petaling Jaya |
QUOTE(kerolzarmyfanboy @ Mar 2 2013, 01:58 AM) arteyu have more info in these.QUOTE(cks2k2 @ Mar 2 2013, 02:01 AM) anyway it still rumors whether the military or police were using it.which I think they were not using it at that times. |
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Mar 2 2013, 07:08 AM
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Junior Member
76 posts Joined: Dec 2009 |
Doolittle Raider, WWII Hero, Dies at Age 96
![]() Griffin pictured in the photo on the left with his 'Hell's Cargo' crewmates 1st Lt. Charles S. Meyers Jr., center and Sergeant Everett Hunt. On the right is an image in later years. (Cincinnati.com) Green Township, OH - Tom Griffin, one of just five surviving Doolittle Raiders, died Tuesday night in his sleep at the Fort Thomas VA hospital. He navigated one of 16 B-25 bombers from an aircraft carrier in the middle of the Pacific during the early dark days of World War II to launch a surprise daylight attack on Tokyo, lifting American morale. The longtime Green Township, Ohio resident was 96. By his own count, Mr. Griffin cheated death eight times during World War II. The first time was when he took off in a land-based bomber from the deck of the USS Hornet at 9 a.m. April 18, 1942. The mid-ocean takeoff made history. No land-based bomber had ever taken off from an aircraft carrier in combat. The Raiders made history later that day when they bombed Tokyo in partial payback for Japan's Dec. 7, 1941, surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. The Raiders have a connection to the Midlands. The group was brought to what is now the Columbia Metropolitan Airport where they were informed of their mission. Mr. Griffin's plane, which he named, the Whirling Dervish, knocked the lights out in Tokyo. The Whirling Dervish's bombs flattened the Tokyo Gas & Electric plant. After spending months and traveling thousands of miles behind enemy lines, he returned home - "they gave us three weeks off" - only to be sent on bombing runs from North Africa to Europe. He was shot down and taken prisoner on July 4, 1943, after a mission over Sicily. He was freed nearly two years later. "Spending the last 22 months of the war in a German prison camp was no fun," Mr. Griffin recalled. His last day in camp was supposed to be his last day on Earth. The Germans had planned to execute all of the prisoners of war on April 30, 1945. But on that day, the camp was liberated by American troops. "That was a glorious day," Mr. Griffin recalled. "Never saw the sun shining so brightly." The ranks of the Doolittle Raiders once numbered 80. Mr. Griffin's passing leaves just four survivors. They are: d*** Cole (a Dayton native and the copilot of Gen. Jimmy Doolittle, the leader of the raid and its namesake), Robert Hite, Edward Saylor and David Thatcher. The remaining Raiders will have their 71st reunion April 17-21 in Fort Walton Beach, Fla., where Mr. Griffin's passing will be noted with a toast and the words: "To those who have gone." He had hoped to attend the event. "I had also planned to live to be 100," Mr. Griffin said during an interview just after a heart condition landed the retired accountant in the Fort Thomas facility in late November. "But the way I feel, with my ticker, I might have to eat my own words." He said that with a satisfied smile. "What a life I've had," Mr. Griffin added, leaning back in an easy chair his sons had installed in his room. "It's a great old life if you can get a good design for living and you can come up at my age and say: 'Well, I didn't do too badly.' " In anyone's book, he did quite well, as a GI, a husband and a dad. After the war, Mr. Griffin, a native of Green Bay, Wis., moved to Cincinnati with his wife, Esther. They raised two sons, John and Gary, and he opened an accounting office in Cheviot. His tall, lanky frame was regularly seen walking from his office to the nearby post office. Mr. Griffin kept quiet about his time as a Doolittle Raider. That ended in 1977. When his son, Gary, was hired to play keyboards with the Beach Boys, the musician told an interviewer, "you should be talking with my dad. He's more important. He's a Doolittle Raider." With that, Tom Griffin's secret was out. For the next 35 years, he went to schools and hospitals and community groups to tell his stories. He did not talk about his heroics as a husband. When his wife became ill and needed to go into a nursing home, he visited her every day. He walked from his house to the nursing home, fed his wife and at the end of the day brought home her clothes. At night, he washed and ironed her clothes. Then, he walked them up to her room the next morning. He did that for three years until her death in 2005. During his 25 years as a public speaker, Mr Griffin was regularly introduced as a "hero." Every time he heard that word, he would wince, shake his head and humbly decline the title. "I'm no hero," he said one last time in November in his hospital room. "I just did my job as best I could." http://www.wltx.com/news/article/224298/2/...ws%7Cbc%7Clarge This post has been edited by AKace: Mar 2 2013, 07:09 AM |
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Mar 2 2013, 07:26 AM
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Senior Member
653 posts Joined: May 2011 From: SOVIET SARAWAK |
So after Lahad Datu incedent, Are Malaysian Military will step up or remain constant ? I dont think it will be the last of Sultan Sulu landing armed party.
Im waiting for the sulu to comeback in a few month or so. |
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Mar 2 2013, 07:40 AM
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Elite
1,157 posts Joined: Jul 2008 From: Petaling Jaya |
QUOTE(TruthHurts @ Mar 2 2013, 07:26 AM) So after Lahad Datu incedent, Are Malaysian Military will step up or remain constant ? I dont think it will be the last of Sultan Sulu landing armed party. I think tighter control in the borders is warrants but would not be as strict as current condition.Im waiting for the sulu to comeback in a few month or so. MMEA SOP will be review as I was been told. We will be looking for additional spending to increase the capabilities of our armed force in term of asset and base. |
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Mar 2 2013, 07:46 AM
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Senior Member
908 posts Joined: Oct 2011 |
QUOTE(yinchet @ Mar 2 2013, 07:40 AM) I think tighter control in the borders is warrants but would not be as strict as current condition. good,im too busy with my work.so cant update my thread that much MMEA SOP will be review as I was been told. We will be looking for additional spending to increase the capabilities of our armed force in term of asset and base. |
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Mar 2 2013, 08:15 AM
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Senior Member
653 posts Joined: May 2011 From: SOVIET SARAWAK |
QUOTE(yinchet @ Mar 2 2013, 07:40 AM) I think tighter control in the borders is warrants but would not be as strict as current condition. Ask the millitary to get Attack Helicopter better. For situation like Lahad Datu, we should know what type of equipment is require for that type of condition since its already happen, proper gear is needed. MMEA SOP will be review as I was been told. We will be looking for additional spending to increase the capabilities of our armed force in term of asset and base. Like at the shoreline and during night time. Military with Attack Helicopter will surely have the upper hand since like the current invader use Mortar to attack the ground force. And at Night can use FLIR to see and monitor their movement and position the invader has set up. |
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Mar 2 2013, 08:19 AM
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Elite
1,157 posts Joined: Jul 2008 From: Petaling Jaya |
QUOTE(TruthHurts @ Mar 2 2013, 08:15 AM) Ask the millitary to get Attack Helicopter better. For situation like Lahad Datu, we should know what type of equipment is require for that type of condition since its already happen, proper gear is needed. Attack heli is always on military wish list.Like at the shoreline and during night time. Military with Attack Helicopter will surely have the upper hand since like the current invader use Mortar to attack the ground force. And at Night can use FLIR to see and monitor their movement and position the invader has set up. Currently tighten up the coastal lines patrol would be the priority. Btw certain VVIP have take a joy ride on Eurotiger in LIMA2013. |
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Mar 2 2013, 08:50 AM
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Junior Member
575 posts Joined: Feb 2013 |
army should procure ground radar to monitor the seas..
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