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> Military Thread V9, Happy birthday Malaysia & ATM ke 50 & 80

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kucinganaz
post Jun 4 2013, 07:58 PM

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Mej Smith ni dari negara mana ?
kerolzarmyfanboy
post Jun 5 2013, 12:53 AM

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QUOTE(kucinganaz @ Jun 4 2013, 07:58 PM)
Mej Smith ni dari negara mana ?
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kita punya maaa..kan uniform kita tuh..nama dia western gituh..
kucinganaz
post Jun 5 2013, 01:30 AM

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Mungkin muka dia dari tepi cam mat saleh kot hahaha.
atreyuangel
post Jun 5 2013, 09:10 AM

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QUOTE(kucinganaz @ Jun 4 2013, 07:58 PM)
Mej Smith ni dari negara mana ?
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Orang SAbah tak silap aku
salah sorang jurulatih paling veteren dalam PASKAU
no 2 paling veteren, no 1 lagi la, kalo ikut umo lama pencen dah, tp still jurulatih

Mejer Robot, skrg tak aktif Paskau dia, still komando, tp skrg dalam recovery pasal ada kemalangan waktu latihan tahun lepas, sama2 doa dia cepat sembuh
xtemujin
post Jun 5 2013, 11:14 AM

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Exclusive: Brazil closer to Boeing on jets deal after Biden visit
By Brian Winter | 4 June 2013 Wdnesday | 7:04pm EDT

(Reuters) - Brazil is closer to choosing Boeing Co.'s (BA.N) F-18 for one of the developing world's most sought-after defense contracts after U.S. Vice President Joe Biden addressed the government's main misgivings during a visit to Brasilia, officials told Reuters.

Biden met with President Dilma Rousseff on Friday and assured her that the U.S. Congress was likely to respect Boeing's agreement to transfer sensitive technology to Brazil as part of the deal, three officials who were present said on condition of anonymity.

The deal will involve 36 jets worth about $4 billion, with probable follow-up orders that would greatly increase the value of the contract over time. That makes it a critical prize for defense companies at a moment when the United States and many European countries are tightening military budgets.

The other finalists are France's Dassault Aviation SA (AVMD.PA) and Sweden's Saab AB (SAABb.ST).

Rousseff has not made her final decision, and the timing for an announcement remains unclear, the officials stressed.

But they said Rousseff's comments to Biden and other recent developments suggest a preference for Boeing, with a decision possible before she makes a state visit to the White House to see President Barack Obama in October.

"If it's Boeing, Biden will deserve much of the credit," one senior Brazilian official said.

Rousseff's main concern with Boeing's bid has been that the U.S. Congress could block technology transfers because of national security concerns. Brazil has cordial relations with the United States but angered some legislators in recent years through its interactions with Iran, Venezuela and other countries that antagonize Washington.

Rousseff, a pragmatic leftist, has said the technology is even more important than the jets themselves because the deal must boost Brazil's own budding defense industry, including planemaker Embraer SA (EMBR3.SA), to be worth the price.

In Friday's meeting, Rousseff first raised the jets deal and her concern over the transfers, officials said.

Biden did not make absolute promises about what Congress would do. But he did cite his more than three decades of experience in the Senate to address her worries point by point, the officials said.

"SEQUESTRATION" A FACTOR?

According to the officials' account, Biden explained that Senate Democrats have never gone against Obama on strategic defense sales, while most Republicans take the lead from Arizona Senator John McCain, who has expressed support for the Brazil deal.

Biden said U.S. defense budget cuts could reduce opposition in Congress to a deal that could help a U.S. company.

He also cited examples showing Congress has blocked defense sales in strategically difficult parts of the world such as the Middle East, but not peaceful, overwhelmingly democratic areas such as South America.

Before the conversation turned to other matters, Rousseff thanked Biden for giving her "strong" arguments to use in Boeing's favor, two of the officials said.

Asked to confirm the account, a White House official said: "We aren't going to comment on private conversations, but in general the United States strongly supports Boeing's bid."

Handicapping Brazil's decision on the jets deal has been difficult, largely because it has dragged on for so long.

Brazil first began looking into replacing its aging Mirage jets in the 1990s, and Rousseff's predecessor declared publicly in 2009 he was going to choose Dassault.

Yet for a variety of reasons, from budget constraints to election cycles, successive governments have not pulled the trigger. Company executives, some of whom have spent a decade or more pursuing Brazil, have joked in private that the country may have no real intention of buying the jets at all.

LONG-TERM RELATIONSHIP

Nevertheless, there are mounting reasons to believe that Rousseff will announce her decision before the end of this year, and that Boeing will be the winner.

Brazil's military has said maintaining its Mirages will become difficult after this year. Meanwhile, the sensitivities of spending billions of dollars during a rough economic spell could lead Rousseff to announce her decision before 2014, when she faces reelection.

Rousseff has cast the deal as a crucial part of Brazil's strategic alignment for decades to come - a message she repeated to Biden on Friday, the officials said.

While defying Washington's wishes on issues like Syria, Rousseff has sought a closer partnership with the United States. She has received a steady stream of Cabinet secretaries and senators, and accepted Obama's invitation for a state visit, the first by a Brazilian leader in 20 years.

The United States, for its part, chose Embraer in February to provide the Air Force with 20 light attack planes - a deal many Brazilians saw as a necessary condition to buy the F-18.

Boeing has also deepened its partnership with Embraer in recent months.

Meanwhile, the government has been less happy with the other finalists. France's recent agreement to build submarines with Brazil has resulted in fewer technology transfers than expected, one official said.

France and Sweden reportedly opposed Brazil's candidate to lead the World Trade Organization, who won the post last month. The United States also favored a different candidate, but was more restrained in its support, in Brazil's view.

"We notice these things, and they're all factors in the (jets) decision," a Brazilian official said. "This is so much money, and we want to choose the right partner."

(Reporting By Dave Gregorio)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/06/04/...E9531AC20130604
OlgaC4
post Jun 5 2013, 02:02 PM

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I might be slow poke but this is funny leh.
Throw the machine gun tripod at the taliban.


noavatar
post Jun 5 2013, 02:17 PM

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US admiral urges compromise in Asian sea dispute


KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — The U.S. will oppose moves by any country to seize control of disputed areas in the South China Sea by force, the top American military commander in the Pacific said Wednesday, adding that rival claimants might need to seek compromises to resolve the feud over potentially oil-rich territories.

Adm. Samuel Locklear, commander of U.S. Pacific Command, did not mention any country by name, but China's increasingly aggressive claims to disputed islands have triggered worries about confrontations with others including the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei.

"We will oppose the change of status quo by force by anyone," Locklear told reporters during a visit to Malaysia. "We need to retain the status quo until we get to a code of conduct or a solution by party nations that is peacefully accepted."

Southeast Asian governments want a legally binding code of conduct with China to deter hostile actions and prevent fighting. But Beijing has not clearly said when it would discuss the proposal.

Locklear said the U.S. would not take sides but added that a code of conduct that enables maritime officers "to understand the boundaries of what they can do (would be) in the best interest for a peaceful solution."

He nevertheless said tensions were unlikely to escalate badly because the countries "understand this could be a long process, they understand restraint."

China has sought to resolve disputes through bilateral negotiations, but some of the countries want multilateral talks, feeling Beijing's size is too much of an advantage in direct talks.

"It seems to me that when you have a collective perspective, it is more viable in the long run," Locklear said. "You can't get through a complex situation without give and take. So I think in the long run, there will be a compromise."

Source: TheHuffingtonPost



kimyee73
post Jun 5 2013, 02:28 PM

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QUOTE(kerolzarmyfanboy @ Jun 2 2013, 03:06 AM)
ahah! i knew it..PR bloggers said we bought that Agosta at 370 million USD..haha thanks for the info brother
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I remember we paid for the Agosta refurbishment, not DCNS.
noavatar
post Jun 5 2013, 03:03 PM

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The influential Egyptian Islamist cleric Yusuf al-Qaradawi recently issued a fatwa, or religious proclamation, with regard to Syria. The sheik called for Sunni Muslims throughout the Middle East to join the rebels in their fight against the regime in Damascus.


azriel
post Jun 5 2013, 03:18 PM

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QUOTE
Netherlands to Deliver Weapons to Indonesia After All

Nick Ottens  |  June 4, 2013

The Netherlands intend to sell naval ship equipment and technology to Indonesia in an arms deal that could be worth €345 million, the government announced on Tuesday.

Last year, the Netherlands canceled a €200 million tanks sale to its former colony after lawmakers had expressed worried about human rights abuses there. Among them was the Labor Party’s Frans Timmermans who is now foreign minister.

The latest deal will not involve the Dutch Government. Rather a Dutch company has applied to sell technology for frigates that are supposed to be build in Romania as well as Indonesia itself. Timmerman’s department insists that the delivery meets all legal requirements for weapons exports.

Opposition parties were taken aback nevertheless. Both the liberal Democrats and far left Socialists accused Labor of changing his position, something Désirée Bonis, its foreign policy spokeswoman, denied. “Indonesia is a friendly nation and a democracy,” she said. “So there’s nothing wrong with this.”

The previous coalition, which included the conservatives besides Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s liberals, who are still in power, similarly argued last year, however, that human rights in the island nation had “marked improved,” even if there were still “internal tensions” in the Maluku and Papua islands, majority christian provinces that once aspired to autonomy or independence. It wanted to sell up to one hundred German made Leopard tanks to the country—which could hardly have been deployed to the Moluccas or Papua given the mountainous terrain and dense forestation there—but the anti-immigration Freedom Party, which otherwise supported Rutte’s minority government, objected because Indonesia is the world’s largest Muslim country.

Indonesia later bought the tanks from Germany.


source
noavatar
post Jun 5 2013, 03:19 PM

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user posted image


Spanish solider carrying a H&K G36 rifle fitted with the Spanish Future Solider program (COMFUT / COMbatiente FUTuro) accessories. The rifle is equipped a huge day/night scope with integrated ballistic computer and camera. For close quarter combat (and when the main optic’s battery runs dry) an EOTech holographic sight is included. Along with the scopes, an underbarrel grenade launcher and rail-mounted flashlight add a few more pounds to the already heavy weapons system.



zimhibikie
post Jun 5 2013, 03:20 PM

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QUOTE(noavatar @ Jun 5 2013, 03:19 PM)
user posted image
Spanish solider carrying a H&K G36 rifle fitted with the Spanish Future Solider program (COMFUT / COMbatiente FUTuro) accessories. The rifle is equipped a huge day/night scope with integrated ballistic computer and camera. For close quarter combat (and when the main optic’s battery runs dry) an EOTech holographic sight is included. Along with the scopes, an underbarrel grenade launcher and rail-mounted flashlight add a few more pounds to the already heavy weapons system.
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Spain still got the money to develop this?
cks2k2
post Jun 5 2013, 03:24 PM

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how to actually fight in that? so damn bulky.
TSyinchet
post Jun 5 2013, 03:24 PM

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wear that in our forest I think he will able to tahan 5mins.
noavatar
post Jun 5 2013, 03:25 PM

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QUOTE(zimhibikie @ Jun 5 2013, 03:20 PM)
Spain still got the money to develop this?
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The Spanish Ministry of Defence ended 2012 with a budget overspend of 28.65%
zimhibikie
post Jun 5 2013, 03:25 PM

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QUOTE(yinchet @ Jun 5 2013, 03:24 PM)
wear that in our forest I think he will able to tahan 5mins.
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probably its more towards FIBUA.
cks2k2
post Jun 5 2013, 03:27 PM

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this whole future combat systems idea has gone way overboard.
TSyinchet
post Jun 5 2013, 03:29 PM

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QUOTE(zimhibikie @ Jun 5 2013, 03:25 PM)
probably its more towards FIBUA.
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I dun really like the idea on putting too much equipment.
zimhibikie
post Jun 5 2013, 03:31 PM

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QUOTE(yinchet @ Jun 5 2013, 03:29 PM)
I dun really like the idea on putting too much equipment.
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same here..probably can put a few but light equipment on soldier and rifle...bulky like that, surely hinder movement of soldier coming and going inside building...
TSyinchet
post Jun 5 2013, 03:35 PM

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QUOTE(zimhibikie @ Jun 5 2013, 03:31 PM)
same here..probably can put a few but light equipment on soldier and rifle...bulky like that, surely hinder movement of soldier coming and going inside building...
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Currently waiting google glass application to be use in military.
not a new idea, in fact the tech come from military now going into the commercial.
google just make it better in design and more ergonomic sensible.



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