Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Battles in Syrian city of Aleppo as military counterattack looms


BEIRUT -- Syrian authorities were sending reinforcements to strife-torn Aleppo, opposition activists said Wednesday, as outgunned rebels in the northern city tried to deliver a potentially decisive blow to the government of President Bashar Assad.
Street battles were ongoing in several neighborhoods, including districts close to the gates of the old city, with government forces shelling rebel-occupied quarters with artillery and helicopter gunships, the activists said. Many residents had fled or remained indoors in the city of 2 million, they said.
Parts of Aleppo are "a ghost city," said one opposition activist in Aleppo reached via Skype. "The people are scared of going out in the streets," noted the activist, who said he had visited Salahuddin, said to be under the control of rebels.
"There are destroyed buildings there and injuries and deaths," said the activist, who asked not to be named for security reasons.
In the video below, uploaded by opposition activists, rebels have torched what appears to be a police station. Thick black smoke is seen billowing from a building.


Rebels apparently got their hands on various types of arms, ammunition and even gas masks from a military supply barracks in this video:



Residents reportedly have shuttered shops, and gasoline and bread are in short supply. But neighborhoods away from the fighting in the sprawling city still retain some semblance of normalcy, though many people have left.
Video by a BBC crew in Aleppo shows rebels setting up sniper positions in battered buildings, firing on helicopters with a machine gun mounted on a captured tank, and rounding up men, presumably suspected regime collaborators.
The Syrian government said its forces in Aleppo had killed scores of "terrorists," the official term for the armed opposition. The state news service accused insurgents of assaulting citizens and attacking property in the al-Sakhour neighborhood, which also was reportedly under rebel control.
There was no definitive word on casualties. Rebel medics were treating wounded in makeshift clinics, which have sprung up in battle zones across Syria during the uprising.
Insurgents called the attack on Aleppo an all-out offensive that has galvanized dozens of rebel brigades from throughout northern Syria. The fighters are seeking to wrest control of the city and use it as a base to expand their power in the north, where they already have effective control of large swaths of territory.
"Aleppo now is the center of the revolution," said another opposition activist reached on the outskirts of the city. "The liberation of Aleppo means the fall of the regime."
Losing Aleppo would be a major blow to the Assad government, and there was widespread expectation of a concerted government counterattack with fresh reinforcements from northern garrisons.
On Tuesday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton predicted that rebel territorial gains could result in an insurgent "safe haven" inside Syria, presumably in the northern regions. She urged the opposition to start thinking about how to govern.
Neighboring Turkey, fearing a spillover in violence, said Wednesday that it had closed its borders with Syria, at least to commercial traffic.
The once-bustling truck traffic and movement of goods between the two nations has largely ceased because of the raging conflict. Syrian rebels have seized several border posts.
Turkey, once a close ally of Assad, has sided openly with the rebels trying to overthrow him and has provided a refuge for the opposition just across the border.


Source: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/world_now/2012/07/syria-battles-aleppo-military-counter-attack-looms.html

Botswana: Defence Force, U.S. to Conduct Joint Military Exercise


Gaborone — The Botswana Defence Force and the U.S. Embassy announced that Botswana will host a joint military exercise known as Southern Accord 12, August 1-17, 2012.
The exercise will involve approximately 700 BDF members and 700 American military personnel, and will take place on and around the Thebephatshwa Air Base. Joint exercise activities conducted during Southern Accord 12 will enhance the capabilities of military personnel for both countries in a variety of areas, including humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, anti-poaching, peacekeeping, and convoy operations, as well as aero-medical evacuation.
The United States has in the past two years conducted similar joint military exercises with African countries such as South Africa, Mozambique, Tunisia, Uganda, Mali and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
In partnership with the Botswana Defence Force, U.S. Air Forces Africa will take part in MEDLITE 12.
U.S. Air Forces Africa, headquartered at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, is the Air Force component to the United States Africa Command, the U.S. regional command that oversees and coordinates U.S. military activities in Africa.
MEDLITE 12 is the latest in a series of exercises involving U.S. military forces and partner militaries in Africa with the aim to establish and develop military interoperability, regional relationships, synchronization of effort and capacity-building. The exercise will improve the readiness of both countries' medical personnel and will consist of classroom instruction, a mass casualty and aero-medical evacuation exercise.
Additionally, BDF and U.S. personnel will conduct outreach programs in several rural communities, including Malwelwe, Mantshwabisi, Sernane and Mowane. These outreach activities will include dental and medical examinations, veterinary assistance as well as other medical procedures.

Source:http://allafrica.com/stories/201207250775.html

Monday, July 23, 2012

Canadians get key posts in RimPac


Canadian military leaders are taking up key command positions at the world's biggest maritime exercise for the first time in 40 years.
The six-week-long Rim of the Pacific, or RIMPAC, exercise has been taking place every two years since 1974. Twenty-two countries are now engaged around the Hawaiian Islands in all sorts of military simulations, from amphibious landings to diving operations and vessel boardings at sea, as well as some live-fire exercises.
Normally, the U.S. military occupies the top posts in the exercise. But this year, Canadians are in some key commands, the first time non-Americans have been given the opportunity.
Rear Admiral Ron Lloyd of the Canadian navy is the deputy commander of the combined task force — basically, the RIMPAC exercise writ large. Brig.-Gen. Michael Hood is the commander of the air component, and Commodore Peter Ellis is heading up the amphibious task group led by the USS Essex.
"I think it really is a recognition of Canada's ability. We have performed in a leadership role in Afghanistan, in Libya, in Haiti," Defence Minister Peter MacKay said in an interview.
More than 1,400 Canadian sailors, air personnel and soldiers are taking part in the exercise alongside forces from such countries as Russia, Australia and Japan. Canadian ships, a diving unit, several aircraft and an infantry company are participating.
MacKay was headed to the area Sunday, where he will board HMCS Algonquin.
"They love this type of training exercise just as they love deploying," MacKay said of the Canadian Forces.
"This is what they train for. This is a chance to test themselves vis-a-vis others, and in very real-time scenarios. This is as close as it gets to the real thing."
MacKay said the exercise benefits Canada because of the ties it reinforces in the Pacific Rim area. Canada is hoping to take part in the Trans Pacific Partnership, a proposed free-trade zone incorporating countries on either side of the Pacific.
"Much of the world's trade now is being done on the water, and it's being done in the Asia-Pacific region," MacKay said.
"There are concerns about issues such as piracy. The movement of commercial traffic is something Canada has to be concerned about, and strengthening and deepening our ties in the region naturally follows."
The Trans Pacific Partnership is strongly opposed by some economists and critics who say it will further erode Canada's manufacturing industries by opening up channels to send the country's raw materials abroad in exchange for value-added goods produced in other countries.



leading Seamen Barry MacLeod, foreground, and Ryan Burrell of a Canadian navy diving unit head to the surface after taking a sonar reading and GPS co-ordinate of an underwater mine during the 2010 edition of the RIMPAC military exercise in Hawaii. 



The HMCS Algonquin, left, is moored alongside the Australian ship Darwin at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam in Hawaii on Friday for the 2012 RIMPAC military exercise


Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/story/2012/07/15/rimpac-exercise-canadians.html



This week in photo


A Free Syrian Army soldier steps on portraits of President Bashar al-Assad at the Bab Al-Salam border crossing to Turkey July 22, 2012. Touching the soles of his shoes to the likeness of the president is an insult in the Arab world.



Panama's Special Force Border Police officer reacts as a helicopter takes off during a patrol in the area of Bonga, some 12 miles from the Panama-Colombia border in the region of Kuna Yala July 20, 2012.







Paramilitary soldiers lift logs during a physical training in mud in Chuzhou, Anhui province, July 18, 2012.






A Belgian Air Force C-130 cargo plane flies over Belgium July 19, 2012, during a rehearsal for the country's National Day traditional military parade. Belgium will celebrate its 182nd anniversary of independence on National Day on July 21, 2012.




Nasa Indians drag a soldier during an attack on half a dozen soldiers guarding a communications tower on the outskirts of Toribio, southern Colombia, Tuesday, July 17, 2012.




Read more: http://battleland.blogs.time.com/2012/07/23/military-photos-a-week-inside-the-armed-forces-july-14-22/#addition-colombia-indians


Sunday, July 22, 2012

4 killed after military helicopter crashes in Turkey


 A Turkish paramilitary helicopter crashed Sunday in a southeastern region where troops are fighting Kurdish rebels, killing four security personnel on board, officials said. Eight others were injured.
The S-70 Sikorsky helicopter, belonging to Turkey's paramilitary police force, crashed while landing near an outpost in Hakkari province, close to the border with Iraq, the military said in a statement posted on its website. It was carrying four crew members and 11 security personnel.
The military said the helicopter experienced a loss of power and crashed. But Firat News, an agency that is close to the rebels, claimed the helicopter was downed by rebel fire.
Kurdish rebels have used northern Iraq as a springboard for attacks on Turkish targets in their decades-long fight for autonomy in Turkey's Kurdish-dominated southeast. The conflict has claimed the lives of tens of thousands of people since 1984.





Link to news :http://www.foxnews.com/world/2012/07/22/4-killed-after-military-helicopter-crashes-in-turkey/



RIMPAC’s impact on military ties, bio fuel


The largest-ever Rim of the Pacific exercise will conclude Aug. 7 after bringing together 21 countries, 25,000 troops, 40 ships, six submarines and 200 aircraft for a 42-day training evolution.
While a lot of publicity has surrounded the Navy’s “Great Green Fleet” of biofuel-filled ships, there are other reasons to keep close watch of what’s going on in the waters around Hawaii.
This year’s larger military turnout could be credited to China’s growing economic influence and expanding blue-water navy. China’s pushiness into regional issues is unsettling some governments.
“This leads to greater demand for U.S. involvement and leadership to offset possible Chinese domination,” said Denny Roy, senior fellow with the East-West Center in Honolulu. “Almost everyone in the region wants an insurance policy against the possibility of overbearing Chinese behavior.”
But China wasn’t invited. It cut military ties with the U.S. in 2010 because of America’s arms sales to Taiwan, and the relationship got even cooler because of China’s dealings with Iran. In the buildup to RIMPAC, China’s state-run media grumbled that India got invited and they didn’t.
Chinese and U.S. forces have plans to partner down the road, however. In late June, Adm. Samuel Locklear, head of U.S. Pacific Command, met his Chinese counterpart and addressed a top military academy in China with hopes of rebuilding military-to-military ties. China and the U.S. in May agreed to jointly perform humanitarian assistance/disaster relief and counterpiracy exercises, according to the Congressional Research Service.
Relationships don’t have to be golden for countries to participate in RIMPAC, a neutral ground for nations that don’t typically interact or train together.
Russia, for example, sent warships to RIMPAC this year for the first time. So did Mexico, whose navy focuses largely on coastal patrol. Mexico’s leaders want greater U.S. cooperation and military interactions. The country’s play in RIMPAC, which included training with Marines, could signal the start of more joint maritime exercises.
The 2012 exercise sees a return of four countries — Colombia, France, Malaysia and Thailand — that first participated in the biennial event in 2010. India, Norway and the Philippines each sent command staffs to observe and work with the overall combined task force, but India shelved original plans to send a ship for what the task force commander, Vice Adm. Gerald Beaman, told reporters was another commitment.
Navy Secretary Ray Mabus’ biofuel initiative at RIMPAC has been impossible to ignore.
Despite congressional criticism over the high price of biofuel, Mabus still believes it’ll ultimately be cheaper and safer for the environment than petroleum-based fuels. The aircraft carrier Nimitz took on 180,000 gallons of a biofuel blend for aircraft; the algae-, fat- and plant-based biofuel also powered the cruiser Princeton and destroyer Chafee during RIMPAC.
It looks like the U.S. won’t go at it alone: Australia has agreed to work with the U.S. to develop biofuel for military use, and a larger demonstration is planned in 2016, The Australian newspaper reported.


Friday, July 20, 2012

New World Armed Forces Photo


J-20
Photo taken on July 18, 2012, shows a Colombian soldierin Colombia's southwestern Cauca province. Colombia's indigenous Nasa community Tuesday lashed out at a Colombian Army outpost in southwestern Cauca province, as the military refused to leave their land as requested, an army general said. 



Photo taken on July 18, 2012, shows a Colombian soldier pitching a tear gas grenade in clashes with Colombian aboriginals in Colombia's southwestern Cauca province. Colombia's indigenous Nasa community Tuesday lashed out at a Colombian Army outpost in southwestern Cauca province, as the military refused to leave their land as requested, an army general said


Syrian soldiers lift up guns as they salute Syrian President Bashar Assad at the Midan neighborhood in Damascus, Syria, on July 20, 2012. The Information Ministry organized a tour for journalists to the area following an official confirmation that the Syrian army has regained full control on the neighborhood that has witnessed fierce clashes between Syrian forces and armed groups over the past four days. According to media reports, the Syrian cleansed it from all "terrorist mercenaries and restored peace and stability to the area."


Smashed cars are seen at the Midan neighborhood in Damascus, Syria, on July 20, 2012


Palestinian Muslims walk by Israeli soldiers to cross the Qalandia checkpoint, located near West Bank City of Ramallah, to go to pray at Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem for the 1st Friday of the Holy month of Ramadan on July 20, 2012.



Palestinian Muslims walk by Israeli soldiers to cross the Qalandia checkpoint, located near West Bank City of Ramallah, to go to pray at Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem for the 1st Friday of the Holy month of Ramadan on July 20, 2012.


Thursday, July 19, 2012

Another Update on North Korea

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea announced on Wednesday that its leader, Kim Jong-un, had assumed the title of marshal, a move widely seen as aimed at bolstering his authority over the military, which analysts say he has been trying to tame through a reshuffling of top generals. The announcement of Mr. Kim’s new, seemingly redundant title — he had already been the supreme commander of the Korean People’s Army — was made two days after the dismissal of the chief of the military’s general staff, Vice Marshal Ri Yong-ho. On Tuesday, North Korea announced the promotion of a little-known general to vice marshal. The shifting fortunes of the generals reflected Mr. Kim’s attempt to use the increased leverage of the ruling Workers’ Party to rein in the military and consolidate his grip on the power, analysts said.“There is a power game going on, and it’s clear that the party people won the first round against the military generals,” said Chang Yong-seok, a senior researcher at the Institute for Peace and Unification Studies in Seoul, referring to the governing Workers’ Party. “What we see is not just the reshuffle of the military, but the continuation of the reshuffle of the power elite.”Analysts said they were unsure if the young Mr. Kim, who took over in December after his father died, was responding to a perceived challenge to his authority or was taking a proactive move to solidify control.There was no indication so far that his actions would translate into a change in foreign policy, which remains grounded on the notion that the country is under imminent threat from South Korea and the United States.The promotion of Hyon Yong-chol to vice marshal, announced in the main party newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, followed the removal of Vice Marshal Ri, who was also one of the highest-ranking members of the Workers’ Party. The official explanation for his departure was illness, but analysts cast doubt on that because he had recently been seen in photographs with Mr. Kim and looked healthy.In dealing with a country as opaque as North Korea, analysts had few clues to go on when assessing the importance of the military shuffle. They based their judgments on the recent appointments of family members of Mr. Kim and some of his closest allies in the Workers’ Party to top military posts, as well as hints of change in Mr. Kim’s first public speech, in April.In that speech, Mr. Kim used the term “the party’s military” several times in what experts say might have been a clue that he intended to use the party to diminish the political power of the one-million-member military, whose influence had expanded under his father, Kim Jong-il.After suffering a stroke in 2008, Kim Jong-il designated Vice Marshal Ri to help his sonwin the military’s allegiance to smooth his succession. But Kim Jong-il also appointed Kim Kyong-hui, a beloved sister, and her husband, Jang Song-thaek, to help his son win a strong following in the Workers’ Party, analysts say, setting up a possible struggle for the young man’s loyalty.Some analysts saw signs of palace intrigue in the removal of Vice Marshal Ri, with the implication that the aunt and uncle, now both four-star generals, and their allies in the party had won a crucial battle.“The young and inexperienced Kim Jong-un is riding the backs of his aunt and uncle,” said Baek Seung-joo, the chief North Korea analyst at the state-financed Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in Seoul. Mr. Chang, with the Institute for Peace and Unification Studies, said that the struggle was not over and that the generals might try to fight back. “Even if it’s not yet a challenge to Kim Jong-un’s own power,” he said, “we may see more conflicts between the party and the military as they fight for their stakes within his regime.”


Viewers at a train station in South Korea watch as North Korea's state media reported Kim Jong-un was given the title of marshal.

Link to news: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/18/world/asia/shifts-in-north-korea-may-be-attempt-to-rein-in-military.html?_r=1

UAE and Bahrain complete joint military exercise

Abu Dhabi: The UAE and Bahrain yesterday concluded a joint air force military exercise with the participation of UAE Air Forces and Air Defence and the Royal Bahraini Air Force.The exercise, ‘Union of Falcons 1 / 2012’, comes within the framework of military cooperation and coordination in the field of military expertise and information between the countries. It also falls within the framework of a series of joint exercises carried out between GCC countries to train personnel in the field of planning and managing joint military operations, and activating unified procedures for planning and carrying out these operations.The joint exercise included training in a number of areas such as air military movement and defence, in addition to tactical maneouvering, air force operations, and piloting.Major General Pilot Ebrahim Nasser Al Alawi, Deputy Commander of the UAE Air Force and Air Defence, said that this joint military exercise is in no way linked to current regional and international events. He pointed out that GCC forces were keen on developing military exercises and preparation by continuing to carry out such military exercises that help increase the military preparedness, which complements the march of comprehensive development of all its military units, arms and equipment




Link to news: http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/uae/government/uae-and-bahrain-complete-joint-military-exercise-1.1044697

Latest images of Estonian Soldiers during operations in Afghanista








Exercise Viking Express 2012







German Soldiers at the Joint Multinational Readiness Center

World armed forces picture




Canadian military focus shifting more toward Asia-Pacific


OTTAWA — Against a backdrop of booming economic activity and underlying regional tensions, more than 1,400 Canadian troops are participating in a massive U.S.-led military exercise in the Pacific this month.
It's not the first time Canada has been involved in the Rim of Pacific exercise, or RIMPAC, which has been held every two years since 1974.
But this year's iteration features the largest-ever contribution of Canadian military personnel and equipment — and is the first time Canadians have occupied senior leadership positions within the predominantly American operation.
It's also the latest in a string of efforts to project the Canadian Forces' image into the Asia-Pacific region as Canada pursues economic opportunities amid an environment of simmering conflicts.
"The security domain in the region is not very solid," said retired rear-admiral Roger Girouard, who served as commander of the navy's Pacific force until 2007.
"The way to overcome these things is for more and more nations to be exerting their presence."
There is a growing sense that while the Pacific Rim has been the scene of extraordinary economic growth in recent years, China's unquenchable thirst for energy and natural resources are causes for concern.
"It raises these flashbacks to the rise of Japan before the Second World War," said Girouard.
"Japan went to war to secure its access to resources. I'm not saying that is what's going to happen, but it is on the spectrum of possibilities."
China, which has emerged as the Asia-Pacific region's military powerhouse, has already bumped up against a number of its neighbours over contested maritime boundaries and navigation rights.
It is currently in a standoff with the Philippines over a tiny atoll in the South China Sea and has been involved in an increasingly tense back-and-forth with Japan over a string of uninhabited islands in the fish- and resource-rich East China Sea.
Given the economic importance of the region and the size of the players involved, any conflict could have a major destabilizing impact that would be felt even by Canada.
"Our interests are clearly in sustaining a peaceful and regular transit of goods from Asia," said Brian Job, a defence expert at the Asia-Pacific Foundation of Canada.
"There would be some spillover effects certainly for Canada should those economic routes be disrupted. The energy market would be in turmoil and trade would be dislocated. And more generally, you'd see an upset in relationships."
China has also been flexing its muscles in the Arctic, challenging assertions that the treasure trove of natural resources that lie below the ocean floor are the sole domain of northern nations.
"They're coming up into our Arctic saying, 'These are international resources and this is the global commons,'" Girouard said. "These cause tensions."
The U.S. has already announced it is pivoting or rebalancing its military toward Asia, from the old Cold War-era focus on Europe.
This has included posting marines in northern Australia for the first time, signing new defence agreements with Singapore and the Philippines, and basing 60 per cent of its naval forces in the region.
While Canada isn't about to deploy massive numbers of troops, ships and aircraft to the region, the Canadian Forces has made a number of inroads.
During a three-country tour through East Asia in March, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced Canada had signed an agreement strengthening military ties with Japan.
Then, at the beginning of June, Defence Minister Peter MacKay attended a high-level Asia security forum in Singapore, where he talked about trying to "reconnect" Canada with "the Pacific community of nations."
MacKay also revealed that Canada was hammering out a logistics agreement with Singapore that would give the Canadian military a foothold in the region.
"Clearly there's a full-court press on the trade side, and this would be seen as complementary to that," Job said of the Conservative government's recent actions in Asia.
"There's a real co-ordinated effort to raise our profile."
What isn't clear is the degree to which the Conservative government will commit the Canadian Forces to the region — and whether it will sustain the enhanced engagement.
"The defence side of this (engaging Asia) is always going to be limited on the basis of our resources," said Job.
"It's very, very difficult to suggest that there's a rationale for any sustained military presence in the South China Sea area. But we certainly have taken steps that are quite in contrast to where we were a couple of years ago."




Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Updates on North Korea General


 North Korea elevated a little-known general to the rank of vice marshal—the top title of the senior military official ousted Monday—as diplomats and analysts puzzled over the biggest shake-up in the regime since Kim Jong Eun took power after the death of his father, Kim Jong Il, in December.
Military figures in recent years have taken a huge number of positions in the ruling Worker's Party, and when Kim Jong Il died they held more posts than at any previous point in his 17-year reign. But the ouster Monday of Ri Yong Ho, coming after three civilians were put in military positions and two military leaders were removed in April, appears to signal a reversal of that trend, some analysts said.
"I think the tide has turned," said Aidan Foster-Carter, a North Korea watcher at LeedsUniversity in England. "Under Kim Jong Il, possibly because his own military credentials weren't so strong, the military rose significantly. But Kim Jong Eun's arrival has been managed by the political party."
Others cautioned that it is too early to know precisely why Mr. Ri, a longtime confidante of the Kim family, lost his job—though most outsiders doubt the official explanation that he was ill. They note Mr. Ri appeared healthy in recent pictures, frequently at Kim Jong Eun's side.
"It's very difficult to tell," said Moon Chung-in, a Yonsei University political scientist and participant in the inter-Korean summit meetings in 2000 and 2007. "But if there is a confrontation happening between the civilian leaders and the military, that would lead to a major rupture in North Korea."
The North's state news agency, which used a mere four sentences to announce the dismissal of Mr. Ri on Monday, took just two on Tuesday to report the promotion of Hyon Yong Chol, who became one of six vice marshals at the head of the North's military. He wasn't appointed to the political posts that Mr. Ri held.
North Korea's state news agency said nothing else about the leadership change, and on Tuesday continued its routine of heatedly criticizing South Korea, the U.S. and Japan, countries it routinely portrays as scheming to invade it. The agency also reported the departure of the North's Olympic team for London and the efficiency of "new kinds of stone-processing machines" at a Pyongyang factory.
Officials in the U.S. on Monday played down the significance of the shakeup.
South Korea's top official for dealing with the North, Unification Minister Yu Woo-ik, steered clear of the matter, and on Tuesday reissued an invitation to Mr. Kim's government for working-level talks on matters including reunions of separated Korean families.
Japanese officials said they were following developments in the North with interest. China, North Korea's economic benefactor and principal political ally, made no comment.
Zhang Liangui, professor of international strategic research at the Party School of the China Communist Party Central Committee, said North Korea is "very mysterious."
"It's hard for us to understand exactly what they are up to," he added. "But from my understanding, this appears to be political combat."
The ousted Mr. Ri had been a rising star since 2003, when he was put in charge of the military unit guarding the capital city and responsible for the Kim family's personal security. His power grew just as the number of military leaders holding positions in non-military parts of the North Korean regime skyrocketed. Since Kim Jong Il signaled in 2009 that his son Kim Jong Eun would succeed him, many analysts have viewed the political prominence of military officials as evidence the Kim family needed military support for the transition.
Among the people to gain a bigger role in April was Choe Ryong Hae, a general's son who held political jobs until September 2010, when he was named a general—despite never having served in the military—on the same day as Kim Jong Eun. In April, Mr. Choe was elevated to vice marshal and put in charge of political operations in the military.
"Even more directly than Ri's departure, with Choe's appointment, the party is trying to show the military who's boss," Mr. Foster-Carter said.




Link to news: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303612804577532403475602384.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

Monday, July 16, 2012

Nigerian military plans major operation after Jos attacks

Nigerian military will launch sweeping operations in villages around the city of Jos, where suspected insurgents responsible for last weekend's deadly ethnic attacks are thought to be hiding.Nigeria’s military appears ready to begin a major operation to raid suspected hideouts across the central Nigerian Plateau State, where insurgents responsible for last week’s violence are thought to be based. More than 200 people were killed in sectarian attacks between mainly Muslim Fulani herdsmen and Christian Birom villagers near the city of Jos over the weekend of July 9. Police blamed the violence on tribal differences over land, but an Islamist insurgent group, Boko Haram, claimed responsibility for the attacks, including the wholesale massacre of 63 Christian parishioners taking refuge in a preacher’s house.In a statement by the director of defense information, Col.Mohammed Yusuf, said that Nigerian Armed Forces were planning a full-scale military operation, called “operation sweep and search,” to raid the villages of Mahanga, Kakuruk, Kuzen, Maseh, and Shong 2. Those are places that serve as hideouts for criminals, Col. Yusuf said, adding that civilians living in those areas should leave, since there might be “collateral damage” to innocent villagers.“This temporary relocation is for a while and the villagers will relocate when the operation is completed,” Yusuf’s statement said.To avoid “collateral damage,” he said, inhabitants of villages “where these criminal elements use as hideouts should vacate to a safer place where an arrangement is being made for them by the State government.” Groups representing Fulani herdsmen, however, urged villagers to stay put and pray, a sign that clashes with the military may be imminent.Nigeria’s military – which has ruled Nigeria directly following five separate coups and “caretaker” governments since independence in 1960 – has never shied from taking action in internal security matters, and particularly against any group that challenges the authority of the Nigerian state.Like the military’s response to the Biafran separatist movement in the late 1960s, and the Niger Deltainsurgence of 2006 until the present, the Nigerian Armed Forces reaction to Boko Haram – an Islamist group that aims to replace the Nigerian government with Islamic sharia law – has been accused of substantial human rights abuses and excessive force, but Nigerian officials say that harsh methods are justified against violent groups such as Boko Haram.Mohammed Abdullahi, secretary for the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association – which often speaks for the disparate Fulani-speaking community – urged villagers to disregard the military order, adding that association members would not move an inch from their villages.“We are calling on the Federal government, United Nations, and other Human Rights bodies to put eyes on the possible genocide being planned by the soldiers," the group said in a statement. "If this is allowed to happen,” the Fulani group warned, “nobody should blame the Fulani man for taking every measure necessary to defend himself."Ardo Isa Jafaru, an ethnic Fulani from the Jos area, blamed powerful ethnic Fulani politicians, such as National Security Adviser Sambo Dasuki, and religious figures such as Sultan Saad Abubakar from failing to stand up for the Fulani people in the current standoff.  “The irony here is that the National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, is a not only a Fulani but, like the Sultan, a direct descendant of DanFodio,” Mr. Jafaru said, referring to the famed religious mystic Usman dan Fodio, a religious mystic who led a rebellion that created a Fulani state in 1808 in what is now northern Nigeria. “How could these injustices be perpetrated just two weeks after [Mr. Dasuki] visited Jos and assured the world that he will do his possible best to bring peace? Is driving the Fulani from their homes a means of bringing about peace?”Many Fulani accuse the Nigerian military of siding with Birom villagers in what the Fulani see as a land dispute.By launching an operation into Fulani areas, the Nigerian military will only make the problem of Boko Haram worse, according to the Cattle Breeders Association, adding that while ethnic Fulani would not be able to vacate their homes in 48 hours, they are willing to open dialogue with the government.In Nigeria, three things are intertwined – religion, politics, and ethnicity – according to a report by the 12-member joint delegation of World Council of Churches (WCC), led by General Secretary Olav Fyske Tveit of Norway andJordanian Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad, chairman of the board of the Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought.If dozens of separate problems were resolved, it would contribute to overall peace, while inaction over other problems such as corruption, mismanagement, land disputes, and the lack of aid for victims or punishment for troublemakers have the potential to fuel tensions. This is especially true in Nigeria's "Middle Belt," where the mostly Muslim north meets the largely Christian south, according to the report."There is a possibility that the current tension and conflict might become subsumed by its religious dimension (especially along geographical 'religious fault-lines')," the report said, warning that blaming only religion for the strife would make that incomplete view "a self-fulfilling prediction.”The Nigerian military insists its operation is only a “temporary” measure, adding that “the residents should be rest assured that as soon as the operations are over, they will be called back to their residences. Inconveniences caused are highly regretted.”The Fulani herdsmen group warned that any operation in a predominantly Fulani area amounts to genocide, and argued that members would not fold their arms and watch some the army “continue their acts of terrorism” against a region with more than 150,000 inhabitants.The herdsmen urged the government to force the military to stand down, but added that if they don’t, they will simply “instigate another crisis that has the potential of being worse than Boko Haram.”

Link to news: http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Africa/2012/0716/Nigerian-military-plans-major-operation-after-Jos-attacks

Sunday, July 15, 2012

North Korea military chief, ally of new leader, relieved of duty


SEOUL -- North Korea's military chief, a close ally of the reclusive state's new leader Kim Jong Un, has been relieved of all his posts due to illness, the country's official news media said on Monday.
Ri Yong Ho was relieved of all his political posts in the ruling Workers' Party Korea at a politburo meeting on Sunday, including a powerful position as vice chairman of the Central Military Commission, North Korea's official KCNA news agency said.
Ri, 70, is a career military man who held the rank of vice-marshal, according to South Korean government database.
Ri has been a prominent member of new leader Kim's circle of close political allies. Kim took power after his father Kim Jong-il died last December.
It was not clear who would succeed Ri. North Korea didn't elaborate on Ri's condition or future.
Ri has been at Kim Jong Un's side since the young man emerged as his father Kim Jong Il's successor in 2010, often standing between father and son at major events. That role appeared to deepen after Kim Jong Il's death in December, helping the younger Kim solidify support among the military.
Ri wielded power from his position at the intersection of three crucial institutions: the Korean People's Army, the Central Military Commission of the ruling Workers' Party and the Standing Committee of the party's influential Political Bureau
Ri also oversaw an influential Kim Jong Un support group comprising officers in their 50s and 60s whom commanders consider rising stars, according to Ken Gause, a North Korea specialist at CNA, a U.S.-based research organization.
Hong Hyun-ik, an analyst at private Sejong Institute near Seoul, was skeptical about the illness claim, saying that when top North Korean officials do get sick, they typically remain in office while deputies handle their duties. There had been no previous sign that Ri was ill, he added.
Hong said the change appears aimed at replacing an appointee of Kim's late father with a closer confidant.
"It can be seen as part of a general change," Hong said, adding that he expects similar news on the dismissal of other aging, senior officials will come out in coming weeks.
Animosity on the Korean Peninsula has deepened since a North Korean rocket launch in April that the U.N. called a cover for a banned long-range missile test. North Korea says it was a satellite launch.
North Korea has repeatedly threatened harm to South Korea's president and his supporters in recent months, angry over perceived insults to its leadership and recent U.S.-South Korean military drills that Pyongyang says are a prelude to an invasion.

Full article at: http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/07/15/12755903-north-korea-military-chief-ally-of-new-leader-relieved-of-duty?lite

China removes grounded warship, easing sea tensions


Chinese navy ships safely removed one of the country's warships Sunday from a disputed shoal off the western Philippines where it had run aground while on a security patrol and sparked fears of another maritime standoff in the South China Sea.The warship will sail back to port with minor damage, and no crew member was injured, Chinese Embassy spokesman Zhang Hua said in a statement that suggested the vessel did not spill any oil.The frigate became stuck Wednesday night on Half Moon Shoal, about 110 kilometers (70 miles) from the western Philippine province of Palawan, prompting China and the Philippines to send rescue ships. Both countries were already locked in a tense dispute over another shoal off the northwestern Philippines.The South China Sea is a flashpoint in diplomatic relations, with various Asian nations claiming all or part of its islands and waters.Philippine navy chief Vice Admiral Alexander Pama said at least six Chinese navy ships, along with smaller utility boats, helped refloat the grounded frigate. Filipino coast guard vessels had been deployed near the area to help if needed, he said.
The Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila said Saturday the Philippines was investigating the circumstances that led to the accident. The government on Sunday expressed relief that the delicate incident was over."We are glad to note that Chinese authorities have successfully extricated their stranded frigate" and that it will leave Philippine-claimed waters, department spokesman Raul Hernandez said.Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said the Philippines did not plan to protest because the Chinese frigate and other foreign ships could sail through any country's exclusive territorial zone.
The shoal is called Hasa Hasa in the Philippines and is claimed by China as part of the Nansha island chain, known internationally as the Spratly islands. The Spratlys are a major cluster of potentially oil- and gas-rich islands and reefs long disputed by China, the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia, Vietnam, and Brunei.Chinese and Philippine officials are still negotiating an end to a tense dispute over Scarborough Shoal, about 700 kilometers (400 miles) away, which has been continuing for more than three months. The Philippines has withdrawn its ships from Scarborough to ease tensions, but Chinese government surveillance ships have remained in the area.The Philippines, meanwhile, said Sunday it would continue to offer another area near the South China Sea to foreign investors for oil and gas explorations despite protests from China. China claims ownership of those waters, which Filipino officials say include an area just 55 kilometers (34 miles) off the Philippine province of Palawan.











Saturday, July 14, 2012

PLA army aviation force shifts from support type to main-battle-assault one


(Source: PLA Daily) 2012-07-12

As an air-confrontation drill conducted by an army aviation force under the information-based conditions was unveiled at a place in the south of China’s Yangtze River on the day, June 11 is a day destined to be remembered in the history of the army aviation force of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA). A PLA army aviation brigade, which was just upgraded from a PLA army aviation regiment, dispatched the PLA’s new-type helicopters for the first time to participate in the actual-troop drill and made its debut by dispatching the PLA’s largest helicopter fleet for emergency combat drill before tens of PLA generals.

The troop unit’s shift from a “pupa” to a “butterfly” is a miniature of the transformation and development of the PLA army aviation force. According to the briefing, after it was put under a group army from an army aviation regiment directly under a military area command in 2003, the brigade initially realized the shift from the support type to the main-battle-assault one in its over-nine-year transformation and development period, becoming the “iron fist in the air” in the joint strikes for victories.

In the summer of last year, a ground-and-air joint combat drill was conducted on the snow-covered plateau, marking that the combat areas of the PLA army aviation force have expanded from plain to plateau. As a result, the PLA army troops possess the capability for launching the air-to-ground precision strike in the high altitude areas.

The “lying on the ground” army troops really begin to fly, said a leader of the Army Aviation Department of the PLA General Staff Headquarters. He added, “The ‘two reductions and two additions’, namely, the establishment of the PLA Army Aviation Force soon after the one-million disarmament in 1985 and the establishment of the PLA Army Aviation Academy after the 500,000 disarmament in 1999, allowed the army aviation force building to take the “express train” of our times. As a result, the army aviation force has gradually developed into a powerful combat force with air-ground integration and air-sea integration capabilities.”

Today, the PLA army aviation force has established its own operation theory systems supported by the 19 monographs, which are developed from scratch and from weak to strong, and its main plane-model development realized the leap from the imported ones to the independent innovation and mass-production ones.



Turkish military tries to dispel speculation over downed jet


The Turkish military on Friday tried to damp down speculation about the loss of one of its warplanes last month, repeating its assertion the jet was shot down by Syria and by something other than anti-aircraft fire.
Speculation in Turkey has been mounting since the armed forces released a written statement on Wednesday that appeared to contradict previous official accounts of the June 22 incident and suggested the military may be revising its initial stance.
In that statement, the General Staff referred to the aircraft which "Syrian official authorities subsequently claimed to have shot down". The use of the word 'claimed', absent from previous accounts, aroused confusion over an incident which many Turks had initially feared could lead to a war.
Further adding to uncertainty over the plane's fate, the armed forces statement declared no traces of "petroleum-based, combustible or fire accelerant substances, organic and inorganic explosive substance residues, or any kind of ammunition" were found on debris from the wreckage floating on the sea's surface.
The lack of any further explanation in the statement prompted a flurry of speculation in the Turkish media over what had caused the F-4 reconnaissance jet to crash off the coast of Syria and whether it had even been shot down at all.
However, in another written statement on Friday, the military reasserted its position the jet had been brought down by Syria and said it had tried to make this clear to the public in all its previous statements.
It said the findings from examinations of the flotsam referred to in Wednesday's statement meant the possibility of the plane being shot down by anti-aircraft fire "as Syria claims" had "disappeared".
The loss of the plane raised tensions between Syria and Turkey, which has been harboring Syrian rebel forces and refugees on its territory and has called for the departure of President Bashar al-Assad. Turkey dispatched its own air defense systems to its long frontier with Syria days after the incident.
While Syria said hours after it crashed into the Mediterranean that it had shot down the F-4 jet, official accounts from Ankara and Damascus differ over where and with what the jet was brought down.
Syria says it shot the F-4 jet in self-defense and without knowing that it was a Turkish aircraft. It says it shot the plane at close range with anti-aircraft fire after it flew into its air space at high speed and low altitude.
Turkey has said it violated Syrian air space accidentally for a few minutes but maintains its plane was shot down by a missile without warning, 13 nautical miles off the Syrian coast in international air space. It says all its identification systems were open.
According to international law, a country's sovereign airspace extends 12 nautical miles from a nation's coastline. Anti-aircraft fire is only effective up to a maximum 2.5 miles.


Link to site: 
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/07/13/us-syria-crisis-turkey-jet-idUSBRE86C0VT20120713



Friday, July 13, 2012

Iranian reports: Military maneuvers display better accuracy, firing capability of missiles

TEHRAN, Iran — War games this month showcased missiles with improved accuracy and firing capabilities, Iranian media reports said Friday, an apparent response to stepped up Western moves against Iran’s nuclear program.Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards conducted the exercise in the central desert, firing ballistic missiles including a long-range variety meant to deter an Israeli or U.S. attack. The targets were models of foreign military bases, and the stated goal was to show that Iran’s missiles can hit Western bases and Israel.The U.N. Security Council has imposed several rounds of economic sanctions on Iran, aimed at persuading Iran to halt its uranium enrichment program. The sanctions have hit Iran’s economy, but its leaders have refused to scale down the nuclear program.In the latest step, The European Union put a ban against purchase of Iranian oil in force on July 1. EU purchases accounted for 18 percent of Iran’s oil exports.Several Iranian news websites reported Friday that 90 percent of the missiles hit their targets and said this showed their increased accuracy.Another achievement, the reports said, was Iran’s capability of firing multiple missiles within seconds. The media reports said this would create a challenge for the U.S. or Israel to intercept incoming missiles should a war break out.Iran has a variety of missiles. including a Shahab-3 variant with a range of 2,000 kilometers (1,200 miles) that can reach Israel and southern Europe. The missiles, which can carry a nuclear warhead, are also capable of hitting U.S. bases in the region.Some of the missiles used during the war games used solid fuel, the reports said, improving the accuracy of the missiles.The elite Revolutionary Guard’s Aerospace Division is in charge of Iran’s missile program.“Within 10 minutes, a considerable number of missile were fired at a single target. The achievement, called high firing density, makes it impossible for anti-missile systems to intercept and destroy them. In the end, the target is definitely hit,” said a report on irannuc.


Link to the news: http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/reports-military-maneuvers-displayed-better-accuracy-firing-capability-of-irans-missiles/2012/07/13/gJQAk1DOhW_story.html

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Military plane crash in Mauritania kills 7


NOUAKCHOTT, Mauritania (AP) — Seven people were killed in Mauritania on Thursday in the crash of a military plane chartered by a Canadian mining company to transport gold, an aviation official said.

The plane caught fire shortly after taking off from an airstrip in Nouakchott, the West African nation's capital. The pilot attempted to return to the runway but failed to reach it, said the official affiliated with Mauritania's flight control agency.

The military crew members, custom officials and contractors working for a Canadian mining company aboard died on the spot. All of them were citizens of Mauritania, the official added. He declined to be named in line with department policy.

He said the plane was bound for the Tasiast gold mine some 200 kilometers (125 miles) north of the capital. It is owned by Canada's Kinross Gold Corporation.

The company said the YAK-12 plane was chartered to bring gold back from the mine to the capital and had no gold aboard at the time of the accident. In a statement, the company said those killed were the two pilots, two custom officials and three of the firm's security personnel contractors.

The Mauritanian official, however, said earlier that three military crew members, two custom officials and two of the mining company's employees were killed.

Link to news: http://www.businessweek.com/ap/2012-07-12/military-plane-crash-in-mauritania-kills-7

NATO Military Supplies Roll Again Through Pakistan

WASHINGTON – NATO military supplies are rolling once again through Pakistan to help the alliance fight the Taliban in Afghanistan, saving an estimated $100 million a month over alternative supply routes. There are questions, however, whether this will lead to better relations between Washington and Islamabad, which had closed down the supply route for seven months after NATO planes accidentally killed 24 Pakistani soldiers. The so-called southern route, which runs through Pakistan, is the most direct and cost effective way to send supplies to U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan.
 Seth Jones, an expert on Afghanistan with the RAND Corporation, said the southern route is essentially made up of several roads.“One of the key ones is fuel and other materiel that comes through the port of Karachi, and then comes up various routes, some of it through Quetta and Chaman and across the Afghan border into Kandahar Province,” Jones said. “Others go through Peshawar and up through the Khyber Pass into eastern Afghanistan around Jalalabad and then into Kabul,” he added. But Stephen Blank, a national security affairs expert at the U.S. Army War College, said the southern route is dangerous.“The topography is one of the roughest in the world.  Basically it’s a single road in many places,” said Blank. “So you are so vulnerable to attacks. It’s a dangerous road.”Jones said areas “around the [Pakistani] Federally Administered Tribal Areas, the route that goes through the Khyber Pass is controlled by militias.” As an example, he cites Manghal Bagh, leader of the Lashkar-e-Islam militia group that controls that part of the road.“The United States has to pay off and the truckers have to pay off some of these militias to get items through their territory,” Jones said. “So it is always susceptible to targeting by a range of militias and insurgent groups, both on the Pakistan side as well as the Afghan side of the border.”Pakistan recently re-opened the southern route after having closed it down for seven months after a U.S.-led coalition air strike that accidentally killed 24 Pakistani soldiers near the Afghanistan-Pakistan frontier.Border guards check trucks en-route to neighboring Afghanistan in Pakistan's tribal area of Khyber, Jul4, 2012.​​Pakistani officials wanted an apology from President Barack Obama, but finally settled for Secretary of State Hillary Clinton telling the Pakistani foreign minister, Hina Rabani Khar: “We are sorry for the losses suffered by the Pakistani military.”But Stephen Blank of the U.S. Army War College explained that there is another reason why the Pakistanis closed down the vital route.“There is a great deal of anti-Americanism now in Pakistan, a belief that the United States is using Pakistan territory for operations without consent and just treating Pakistan as a pariah,” Blank said.
“The government of Pakistan and the military essentially refuse to accept the fact that they bear a lot of responsibility for support of terrorists and Taliban forces and so on, who are using Pakistan, basically, as a sanctuary in the war in Afghanistan,” said Blank.“And they get very upset when this is pointed out to them in the United States, and they say well, ‘Okay, we are going to retaliate by using whatever means we have and basically shutting down the supplies to Afghanistan,’” he added.But even now that Pakistan is letting NATO supplies move through its territory, experts still question whether the decision to re-open the southern route is a prelude to better relations between Washington and Islamabad.Even so, they point out that using Pakistan’s southern route will save the alliance an estimated $100 million a month, most of which has been used to ship supplies via the longer northern route that winds its way from the Baltic States, through Russia and Central Asia.Analysts also point out that both southern and northern routes will be used to move soldiers and equipment out of Afghanistan, as the United States and other NATO countries wind down their military presence in that country. But some experts said that moving NATO’s 130,000 troops - 90,000 of them American - out of Afghanistan will present a huge logistical challenge.
Link :http://www.voanews.com/content/nato-supplies-roll-through-pakistan/1403861.html

China’s Jiaolong submersible plunges below 7,000 meters


This definitely may have military applications in the future, as well as commercial ones. China is planning to mine the seabed for minerals.

A week after China made history by sending astronauts to its space station, the country has celebrated another success in proving its technological prowess.

At 11 a.m. local time on Sunday, the country’s manned submersible Jiaolong successfully completed its deepest test dive yet, to 7,020 metres in the Mariana Trench in the western Pacific Ocean, reports China Daily.

China now joins an exclusive club of countries that are capable of achieving human access to the deep sea. The other countries are the United States, Russia, France and Japan. The achievement will allow China to explore more than 99.8% of the ocean floor, Liu Cigui, director China’s State Oceanic Administration (SOA), told the media.

“Jiaolong’s 7,020-metre dive is a remarkable milestone achievement,” says Jian Lin, a marine geophysicist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts. “It symbolizes China’s increasing leadership in scientific exploration of the deep ocean.”

Jiaolong, named after a mythical sea dragon, is about eight metres long and weighs nearly 22 tonnes, with a crew of three. The construction of the vessel, spearheaded by SOA and the science ministry, began in 2002.

Yesterday’s dive was the fourth of six that Jiaolong is scheduled to undertake in the current expedition. During the 11-hour dive, the scientists aboard Jiaolong conducted geological surveys, took photographs and video footage and collected water, rock, sediment and animal samples.

The depth that Jiaolong reached is not the deepest place humans have ever been. But it is the deepest point achieved by any scientifically designed manned submersible. The previous record holder was Japan’s Shinkai, which can dive to a depth of 6,500 metres.

The submersible’s three-person crew can allow for a range of sophisticated scientific activities such as observations, collecting biological and geological samples, deploying instruments, and conducting experiments, says Lin.

“Jiaolong’s deep-diving capability will lead to exciting scientific discoveries in the coming years,” says Lin.


Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Su-30MKK/MK2 Flanker


A $1.85 billion contract was signed by Chinese and Russian military leaders in late 1999 to purchase 38 Su-30MKK fighter bombers for PLAAF, with the first 10 delivered by KNAAPO on December 20, 2000, and the second 10 delivered on August 21, 2001. The rest of the batch were delivered by the end of 2001. More advanced and powerful than JH-7 operated by PLAN, Su-30MKK will become the first fighter bomber operated by PLAAF capable of carrying a wide range of Russian-made precision-guided air-to-surface weapons including TV guided missiles (Kh-29T & Kh-59ME), anti-radiation missiles (Kh-31P), TV guided bombs (KAB-500KR & KAB-1500KR). In addition it can also carry Sorbtsiya ECM pods at wingtips as well as Sapsan-E EO pod (containing TV camera and laser designator) and APK-9 datalink pod for Kh-59ME underneath its engine air intake. Its maximum weapon load is 8 ton. Its range can be extended up to 5,200km by in-flight refueling, even though China currently does not have a suitable tanker (e.g. Il-78) yet. As the result, it is expected to replace some of the roles ofH-6 medium bomber to launch long range strikes against high value targets deep inside the enemy territory. The aircraft features Su-35 style tailfins with square tips and twin nose wheels. It also features a glass cockpit, an NIIP N001VE fire-control radar (range 100km, engage 2 aerial targets simultaneously, plus multiple AG modes) capable of firing R-77E active radar homing AAM. The first test fire of R-77E by Su-30MKK was carried out in June 2002. In addition, the older R-27 semi-active radar homing AAM can also been carried. It was reported that Su-30MKK can be used as a mini-airborne command post to direct up to 16 of the same type via datalink to engage the enemy aircraft. Unlike Su-30MKI acquired by IAF, it lacks canard foreplanes, AL-31FP thrust-vectoring engine (Su-30MKK still uses AL-31F) and N-011M phased-array radar, however its delivery schedule is two and half years faster (in full standard). The acquisition of this F-15E class fighter bomber by PLAAF would inevitably tip the military balance in the North East Asia. Currently the first 19 of Su-30MKKs are stationed at Wuhu Airbase in Southeast China, directly facing Taiwan and the South China Sea, while the rest 19 were assigned to the PLAAF Flight Test & Training Base. In July 2001 China ordered the 2nd batch of 38 Su-30MKKs worth $1.5 billion during Chinese President's visit to Moscow. All of them were delivered to PLAAF 18th Division Stationed at Changsha Airbase. In January 2003 China ordered 24 Su-30MK2s (featuring an upgraded N001VEP radar able to fire Kh-31A AShM to attack two targets simultaneously) for the PLA Naval Aviation. All were reportedly delivered to China by the end of August 2004. Unfortunately one was lost in March 2004 due to pilot error. The aircraft was later replaced. Su-30MKK/MK2 is expected to be superceded by the indigenous J-16 currently under development 









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Y-9 Tactical Transport Aircraft program back on track?


According to Shanfei’s press release posted on its website (http://www.shanfei.com/xwzx/new/20090713,1.html) the Y-9 dual-purpose Tactical Transport Aircraft project has been restarted. Shanfei upper management acknowledged elements that caused the delay of this important project. They included: unbalanced department workload, lack of research capability, project planning, funding, in addition to a shortage of parts, limited parts assembly lines and final assembly, and limited test flight capabilities. There were also technology limitations, frequent accidents due to low safety standards, poor quality control, undefined procedures and poor production work flows that led to a serious delay of the project.
Here are the words in Shanfei’s press release and judging from the language used AVIC, Shanfei’s parent company, must be getting hard on them.
 运研制按计划要求正常推进。但 由于任务繁重、研发能力和资源不足,对现场生产组织提出挑战,多项工作进度不同程度滞后;零件生产、部装、总装、试飞等能力未填平补齐,受现场技术质量问 题处理影响,生产不畅,任务不均衡,严重影响产品交付效率;因违反程序、操作规程等原因,多次发生质量、安全事故,安全生产形势严
The Y-9 Tactical Transport Aircraft, or YunShuji-9 project, was reported back in 2001 as an enlarged version of the PLA’s workhorse Y-8 transport: a Chinese version of the C-130 Hercules with an airdrop payload capability of 20,000kg or 100 paratroopers. The older Y-8 had a max airdrop payload of 13,200kg. The Y-9 has a built-in RoRo ramp for quick offloads/airdrops. It will also have a max range of 3000km, allowing it to reach most of China from Wuhan—the central city in China and also home to the 15th airborne army. Strategically, this allows the Chinese military a quick reaction to any trouble spot and is one of the reasons why the Y-9 project is so important. Also, it lessens the reliance on Russia for transport aircraft, even though it is not in the same class as the Russian Il-76’s payload of 50,000 to 88,000kg. But the Y-9 is a homegrown and inexpensive solution that is capable of dropping armor such as ZBD03/ZLC2000 Airborne Infantry Fighting Vehicle. The PLA’s order for 36 Il-76s placed in 2005 is still under negotiation.
Now that the project is seriously behind schedule, it will not be surprising to see management changes take place at Shanfei.