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patt_sue
post Dec 21 2016, 08:29 PM

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QUOTE(BorneoAlliance @ Dec 21 2016, 07:25 PM)

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did the aircraft crashed into ammo dump?
BorneoAlliance
post Dec 21 2016, 09:40 PM

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DDG_Ross
post Dec 21 2016, 09:44 PM

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QUOTE(patt_sue @ Dec 21 2016, 08:29 PM)
did the aircraft crashed into ammo dump?
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near not into
KYPMbangi
post Dec 21 2016, 10:12 PM

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Su-27 fighter jet crashes in Kazakhstan

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QUOTE
The Sukhoi Su-27 fighter jet of crashed near an airport on Wednesday while training flight, military sources said.

The pilot received no injuries and successfully ejected prior to the crash.

“Today, 21 December, during the training flight at night as a result of the incident Su-27 aircraft crashed, pilot Major A.Iskakov made every effort and took a plane from the settlement, and then ejected.”, – Reported in the official Defense Ministry comments on the incident aircraft.


[sos]
Fat & Fluffy
post Dec 21 2016, 10:58 PM

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QUOTE(KYPMbangi @ Dec 22 2016, 12:12 AM)
Su-27 fighter jet crashes in Kazakhstan

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[sos]
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kazak plane? hmm.gif
DDG_Ross
post Dec 21 2016, 11:02 PM

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final salute to Major Kayamboo Chellam

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BorneoAlliance
post Dec 21 2016, 11:41 PM

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Here’s How A Warship Crew Eats In The Middle Of A Fight



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The Danish navy’s 455-foot frigate HDMS Peter Willemoes carries heavy artillery guns, missiles and machine guns to protect convoys and patrol dangerous waters. It also has 160 souls aboard, with a very efficient cafeteria to keep them fed even while the vessel is taking fire.

In this segment of the Smithsonian Channel’s Mighty Ships, we get a glimpse at what a military mealtime looks like in the midst of a critical situation. I’m sure you wouldn’t catch these sailors bailing out in the middle of doing something like extinguishing a fire to grab a snack, but at a certain point, people are going to lose effectiveness without sustenance.

When people have to eat, the Willemoes has Logistics Officer “Klaus” and his team of cooks (who get 74 minutes to prepare food) feed the entire crew, clean the kitchen and return to their own battle stations.

Klaus breaks the sailors into three groups to get them all through a buffet. Each sailor gets six minutes to eat dinner before being cleared out for the next wave.

While what we’re seeing in this video appears to be an exercise rather than actual combat, it’s a pretty impressive display of efficiency. And here I was thinking I had skills lapping up cereal straight from the bowl so my hands could stay free to type.


Foxtrot Alpha
BorneoAlliance
post Dec 22 2016, 12:01 AM

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Chinese special forces seek anti-terror training in Chechnya

Chinese special forces want to be trained in tackling suicide bombers at a private institute in the Chechen city of Gudermes. Moscow is presently studying the proposal.

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QUOTE
China has requested the Russian government to allow its special forces to be trained in anti-terror measures at a private institute in Chechnya.

The Security Council of Russia and the Russian Foreign Ministry are studying the proposal, Daniil Martynov, head of the privately run Chechen International Special Forces Training Center in Gudermes said.

He added that the Chinese military approached the center at the Annual Warrior Competition in Jordan, where a Chechen division won first place.
QUOTE
“It was an interesting experience” because the Chechen and Chinese units operate under different conditions, Martynov said. “We have extensive experience in the field of identification of suicide bombers in public places and dealing with suicide belts. The Chinese have developed effective systems to prevent the use of bladed weapons. It is also useful to us, and we will implement this experience.”
QUOTE
The center, which is backed by private investments and gets no government funding, is the brainchild of Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov. In November 2016, Kadyrov said he was looking for foreign instructors, including some "tough guys" from the U.S.


RBTH
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post Dec 22 2016, 09:30 AM

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QUOTE(Fat & Fluffy @ Dec 21 2016, 10:58 PM)
kazak plane?  hmm.gif
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indeed this belongs to Khazakstan... the red star is a different compared to RuAF's red star
azriel
post Dec 22 2016, 02:57 PM

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Indonesian Navy in talks with PTDI for MPA variants of NC-212-200 aircraft

IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
22 December 2016

The Indonesian Navy (Tentara Nasional Indonesia - Angkatan Laut: TNI-AL) is currently in talks with state-owned aircraft manufacturer PT Dirgantara Indonesia (PTDI) over the acquisition of two additional NC-212-200 airframes.

The aircraft, which are being negotiated for in maritime patrol aircraft (MPA) configurations, are meant to be deployed with the TNI-AL's Aviation Squadron 800 at the Juanda airbase in Surabaya.

The NC-212-200 platform, which is capable of being deployed from more austere and remote airstrips given its short take-off and landing (STOL) abilities, is meant to complement the TNI-AL's fleet of existing and incoming fleet of larger CN-235-200 MPAs.

Financing for the platforms will be provided for by funds allocated under the USD162 million allotment by the Indonesian Ministry of Defence for MPA acquisitions in the 2015-19 fiscal period.


http://www.janes.com/article/66490/indones...12-200-aircraft
Fat & Fluffy
post Dec 22 2016, 05:11 PM

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Japan's government approves record military spending

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TOKYO: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government on Thursday approved an increase in defence spending to record levels to counter growing Chinese military power in the East China Sea and an escalating North Korean ballistic missile threat.

Abe's cabinet on Thursday signed off on a 1.4 percent increase in spending to 5.13 trillion yen (US$43.66 billion) for the year starting April 1.

If approved by lawmakers, which is highly likely given the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's control of parliament, it will be the fifth straight annual increase in outlays.

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Under Abe, Japan's Self Defense Forces are pivoting away from guarding the nation's north to reinforce an island chain stretching 1,400 km (870 miles) along the southern edge of the East China Sea.

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That means fewer tank divisions in favour of building a mobile force equipped with hardware such as tilt-rotor Osprey carriers, ships, amphibious vehicles and mobile missile batteries.

Japan is also spending more to upgrade its ballistic missile defence, in response to advances in North Korea's ballistic missile programme.

(Reporting by Tim Kelly)

- Reuters
Fat & Fluffy
post Dec 22 2016, 06:11 PM

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In Myanmar, profit clouds army pledge to return seized land

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YE BU, Myanmar: Maw Maw Oo discreetly pushed the "record" button on her smartphone as the state ministers from Aung San Suu Kyi's months-old civilian government started talking.

For the next hour they tried to convince her that farmers from her village in eastern Myanmar should sign away ownership claims to land the farmers say they were granted the right to cultivate in perpetuity but was later seized by the military.

Maw Maw Oo refused the deal, under which villagers would be allowed to work some plots on a portion of the land the army says it does not need.

Since her uncle set himself on fire in a dramatic protest last year, the 45-year-old widow and mother-of-three has become a leader among the residents of Ye Bu, a village in Shan State roiled by a lengthy dispute with the country's still-powerful armed forces.

When Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) stormed to power in an election last year, the victory was in part driven by rural anger over land seizures under military governments that ruled for decades.

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Now campaigners such as Maw Maw Oo want to hold the party to its pledges to provide redress.

"The NLD gave us a lot of promises during the election campaign that they will find solutions for land conflicts with the military, but no solution has appeared until now," said Maw Maw Oo, who says she records all her meetings.

At stake in Ye Bu is valuable farmland, on much of which military officials have sought to develop agro-industrial projects with companies including Asia's largest agricultural conglomerate, Charoen Pokphand Group of Thailand.

Few of the villagers who say they lost land have any documents supporting their claim - not unusual in rural Myanmar.

Suu Kyi's administration has tried to establish cordial relations with the generals and has not challenged the army's outsized economic role, which hinges on control of resources and vast land holdings.

The NLD wanted a solution to the land issue that did not "damage the image and dignity" of the military, said Soe Nyunt Lwin, previously a pro-democracy activist but now Shan state's planning and finance minister. On the other hand, "I don't want farmers in prison", he said.

"We won in the election with the manifesto which clearly said we would sort out the land problem, so we cannot stay in power without finding a solution."

COURT ACTION

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In Ye Bu, interviews with civilian officials, an army major and nearly two dozen farmers show that the local military command is putting up a fight to keep the land it now controls.

The army is suing 96 farmers, including Maw Maw Oo, who have continued to work on the disputed land on charges including trespassing and destruction of property, court documents show.

The first verdicts could come as soon as Thursday, and could deal a blow to hopes the NLD can resolve thousands of outstanding land disputes around the country.

"I sued them because we already told them: 'If you want to work here, you have to follow the discipline of the Eastern Command'," army officer Major Aung Htwe told Reuters in an interview. "But they have the mindset that this is their own land."

In August, at the meeting attended by Reuters reporters, ministers in the NLD-led state government told Maw Maw Oo and another villager that the officials had negotiated a settlement with the military.

Some villagers would be allowed to continue farming and might see the charges dropped, if they acknowledged the military as the lawful owner of the land.

CARVED UP

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Despite reforms under the previous government, Myanmar's land laws are piecemeal and contain overlapping provisions.

The vast majority of land seizure cases date from the 1990s and early 2000s, amid a military-led transition from socialism to a market-driven economy. The state technically owned all land, but farmers were granted rights to cultivate it.

Families who may have cultivated land for generations rarely hold any formal title. Tax receipts are often used as proof of ownership, but the damp climate makes preservation of paper records difficult.

Although army chief Min Aung Hlaing said in 2013 the military would hand back unused land, only a fraction of land earmarked by lawmakers has been returned, according the NLD's Sein Win, who sat on the Farmland Investigation Commission, a parliamentary body tasked with scrutinising thousands of land grab claims before the election.

The village of Ye Bu - or "hot water" - dates from the early 1970s, when General Ne Win, the authoritarian ruler of the country then known as Burma, launched a plan to resettle people from the dry zone in the country's centre.

Farmers cleared virgin jungle and expected to work the land thereafter themselves, said Maw Maw Oo's father, Lu Than.

But in 2004, about 4,000 acres near the village was divided among government ministries to develop into plantations, said Hlaing Min, deputy director of the district-level land records office in state capital Taunggyi.

"Many soldiers came down to my farm when I was growing corn and destroyed it by force," farmer Aung Din told Reuters. "It was the time of the military government. No one dared to go against what they were doing."

Authorities paid villagers no compensation, locals said.

At least 10 Ye Bu villagers have tax receipts showing that they tilled the land before its seizure, but others say their documents have been mislaid or damaged.

Hundreds say they previously farmed the land, but the military only recognises 47 people as having any claim.

"DIDN'T DARE"

A military official told Reuters the land at Ye Bu was needed to feed soldiers and their families.

Tim Millar, programme manager at Namati, a legal advocacy working on land disputes across Myanmar, said a key factor influencing whether the military would keep contested land was its potential for profit.

The army, which took control of all 4,000 acres in Ye Bu in 2009, has granted private companies and individuals permission to set up a sugar cane plantation, an ethanol factory and corn fields, residents and a paralegal working for Namati said.

In 2012 it invited a local branch of CP Group - a conglomerate run by Thailand's richest family - to rear chickens for egg production on the land. CP Group entered Myanmar - then largely closed to foreign investors - in 1996.

Two serving managers and a former veterinarian at Myanmar CP Livestock, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said until recently the company regularly contracted out farming work to military units.

"We don't dare to enter the CP area because they made a fence," said Myint Myint Khine, one of three farmers Reuters spoke to who said the chicken farm was constructed on their farmland.

There is no suggestion that CP Group had any involvement in or knowledge of farmers being turned off land. But events in Ye Bu highlight the risk to investors in Myanmar's rapidly opening economy of becoming sucked into land disputes.

A spokesman told Reuters CP was not currently involved in managing the farm it set up near Ye Bu, although it did not rule out returning to the site.

Myanmar CP Livestock spokesman Soe Lwin said the Ye Bu operation had been suspended at the army's request in May, leaving the chicken farm empty. The company had stopped working with the military elsewhere in Myanmar, he said.

"TRESPASSING"


In May 2015, Maw Maw Oo camped out on the farmland she says is hers, an act that would earn her the first of several criminal charges for trespassing.

Maw Maw Oo's uncle, Myint Aung, hearing a rumour that his niece had been arrested, scrawled messages of protest on a wooden board, poured gasoline down his front and set himself alight. He later died of his burns.

This year Ye Bu farmers again sowed the fields in the planting season that began in May. In June, the army began filing lawsuits against them, court records show.

Major Aung Htwe said most of the farmers the army recognises as having some claim have signed its proposed deal, which requires farmers to pay the military for irrigation.

But Maw Maw Oo said she and around 20 others declined, citing a lack of long-term guarantees.

"I've already lost my uncle in this dispute, so I'm never going to sign," said Maw Maw Oo. "This land is for our future generations."

(Editing by Alex Richardson)

- Reuters

DDG_Ross
post Dec 22 2016, 10:10 PM

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dem turks just abandon a leopard 2 for the isis scums..
http://syria.liveuamap.com/en/2016/22-dece...ish-leopard-2a4

the abandoned turkish leopard 2a4
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another perspective of the picture with the excavator
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the al-bab sheikh aqil hospital where the battle took place is now under isis control
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azriel
post Dec 22 2016, 10:45 PM

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QUOTE(DDG_Ross @ Dec 22 2016, 10:10 PM)
dem turks just abandon a leopard 2 for the isis scums..
http://syria.liveuamap.com/en/2016/22-dece...ish-leopard-2a4

the abandoned turkish leopard 2a4
user posted image

another perspective of the picture with the excavator
user posted image

the al-bab sheikh aqil hospital where the battle took place is now under isis control
user posted image
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Looks like the Turks got the Leopard 2A4 back plus an ISIS BMP-1.

https://aw.my.com/en/forum/showthread.php?9...n-combat/page15





DDG_Ross
post Dec 22 2016, 11:03 PM

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QUOTE(azriel @ Dec 22 2016, 10:45 PM)
Looks like the Turks got the Leopard 2A4 back plus an ISIS BMP-1.

https://aw.my.com/en/forum/showthread.php?9...n-combat/page15
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hmm.. unconfirmed report say there might a second turkish leopard captured.. oh well sweat.gif

the second "captured" leopard
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This post has been edited by DDG_Ross: Dec 23 2016, 12:56 AM
azriel
post Dec 22 2016, 11:56 PM

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Leopard 2RI MBTs during Indonesian Army Combined Arms Exercise in Natuna. Credit to Pen Kostrad.

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This post has been edited by azriel: Dec 23 2016, 12:06 AM
SUSKLboy92
post Dec 23 2016, 12:02 AM

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QUOTE(bereev @ Dec 22 2016, 09:27 PM)
what is the semi round tings that alway put on mortar some time put few peaces, was it some Load to restric the mortar flying ?
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You didn't read that post did you? I repeat for you

QUOTE
Each 'donut' on average gives a 1km boost in addition to the main propellant inside the bomb itself, depending on elevation. At most you can add 5-6 'donuts' to a mortar round.

SUSGregyong
post Dec 23 2016, 12:40 AM

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QUOTE(bereev @ Dec 22 2016, 09:27 PM)
what is the semi round tings that alway put on mortar some time put few peaces, was it some Load to restric the mortar flying ?

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QUOTE(KLboy92 @ Dec 23 2016, 12:02 AM)
You didn't read that post did you? I repeat for you
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Here, I fixed your response for you biggrin.gif
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MilitaryMadness
post Dec 23 2016, 07:11 AM

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QUOTE(bereev @ Dec 22 2016, 09:27 PM)
what is the semi round tings that alway put on mortar some time put few peaces, was it some Load to restric the mortar flying ?
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On the contrary, those things are extra propellant charges that make the bomb fly further actually.
azriel
post Dec 23 2016, 12:03 PM

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QUOTE
Radio Holland to supply patrol boats with NavCom

22. Dezember 2016

Radio Holland Malaysia (RHM) has been selected by Destini Shipbuilding & Engineering to supply navigation and communication (NavCom) equipment for six New Generation Patrol Crafts (NGPC).

The vessels are being built for the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA). According to Radio Holland the scope of work encompasses detailed design, supply, installation and testing and commissioning of the navigation and communication equipment. That includes the steering system and thermal cameras.

NGPCs are used for maritime search and rescue operations

The NGPC’s are equipped with the latest technology and design. They are being built to replace the older patrol vessels as part of an upgrading program in Malaysia. The newbuildings achieve a top speed of 24 kn and have a crew capacity of 41. They will be deployed to patrol the entire Malaysian waters for maritime search and rescue operations. According to Danny Tan, area manager for Radio Holland Singapore and Malaysia, the vessels will start operations in 2018.

Radio Holland is the renowned global NavCom, Connectivity, On Board ICT, and Service & Maintenance brand within the RH Marine Group.


http://www.hansa-online.de/53619-2/?p=53619

This post has been edited by azriel: Dec 23 2016, 12:51 PM

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