Then we should rename the F/A-22 to Saint George, as afterall he defeated the Dragon 😀
About the Aster system on the Type 45 read this site:
http://frn.beedall.com/paams.htm
MBDA’s site:
http://www.mbda.net/site/FO/scripts/siteFO_contenu.php?lang=EN&noeu_id=89
No, this is a political question as it deals with nuclear weapons building and using them. If the mini nukes are used to destroy some underground complex it means that a nuke is used indeed, with all the negative consequences such a weapon has. That means the nuclear borders have been crossed and nukes are into play.
So this means that the US has the right to use nukes freely and when it pleases her and other countries should abandon them?
What would you reccomend? Low flying aircraft like helos that the rebels can shoot down? As shown in Afghanistan and Iraq Helos are vulnerable to ground fire… F-16s with LGBs at medium altitudes are not.
Algeria has already a lot of helo’s like the Super Hind Mi-35 armed with anti-tank missiles while the guerilla’s don’t even have tanks or other armored vehicles in numbers/ Algeria also fields the SU-24MK who can easily fulfill the precision bombing role.
The AFM had an article about these planes in Algerian service some time ago, I believe. The article also mentioned that there was a serious lack of good reconnaissance and surveillance aircraft to monitor suspected areas. I doubt the MiG-29 is the best choice for that and the purchase is likely only to satisfy the ****-extension dreams of the country’s corrupt authorian regime.
Well, the British seem also to be hurt by the bad economic situation and a falling government income like everyone else in Europe. And if you don’t want to push a pile of debt ot future generations, you have to cut the spending even if it’s very sad. 😮
The opponents of the Alegerian Regime in this low intensity “civil war” are highly mobile Islamic guerilla’s (GIA) operating in small groups and they mostly do some hit and run actions, slaughter villages and kidnap tourists and other people. They reach the papers from time to time when they slaughter some village in a most brutal way again. The GIA came into being I believe when the islamists won the elections in 1992 but the socialist government was unwilling to let them take offic.e IMHO these new MiGs will be completely useless for countering these fighters.
Why is this a “no brains” issue? Seeing China as a potential rival in the region doesn’t sound very stupid to me.
Why is this a “no brains” issue? Seeing China as a potential rival in the region doesn’t sound very stupid to me.
How did the Argentinians use their subs then? I read that the British navy used about every asset available and wasted every munition available in search of the two U-209s which were never found.
Ha, read this:
Navy War College Review Winter 2004
CHINA’S AIRCRAFT CARRIER AMBITIONS
Seeking Truth from Rumors
Ian Storey and You Ji
http://www.nwc.navy.mil/press/Review/2004/Winter/art6-w04.htm
That was cool 😀
Dumping nuclear weapons all over the world and finally going after Bin Laden after more than two years are indeed the actions of true and faithful US ally. 😀
Weak on Terror
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: March 16, 2004
My most immediate priority,” Spain’s new leader, José Luis RodrÃguez Zapatero, declared yesterday, “will be to fight terrorism.” But he and the voters who gave his party a stunning upset victory last Sunday don’t believe the war in Iraq is part of that fight. And the Spanish public was also outraged by what it perceived as the Aznar government’s attempt to spin last week’s terrorist attack for political purposes.
The Bush administration, which baffled the world when it used an attack by Islamic fundamentalists to justify the overthrow of a brutal but secular regime, and which has been utterly ruthless in its political exploitation of 9/11, must be very, very afraid.
Polls suggest that a reputation for being tough on terror is just about the only remaining political strength George Bush has. Yet this reputation is based on image, not reality. The truth is that Mr. Bush, while eager to invoke 9/11 on behalf of an unrelated war, has shown consistent reluctance to focus on the terrorists who actually attacked America, or their backers in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.
This reluctance dates back to Mr. Bush’s first months in office. Why, after all, has his inner circle tried so hard to prevent a serious investigation of what happened on 9/11? There has been much speculation about whether officials ignored specific intelligence warnings, but what we know for sure is that the administration disregarded urgent pleas by departing Clinton officials to focus on the threat from Al Qaeda.
After 9/11, terrorism could no longer be ignored, and the military conducted a successful campaign against Al Qaeda’s Taliban hosts. But the failure to commit sufficient U.S. forces allowed Osama bin Laden to escape. After that, the administration appeared to lose interest in Al Qaeda; by the summer of 2002, bin Laden’s name had disappeared from Mr. Bush’s speeches. It was all Saddam, all the time.
This wasn’t just a rhetorical switch; crucial resources were pulled off the hunt for Al Qaeda, which had attacked America, to prepare for the overthrow of Saddam, who hadn’t. If you want confirmation that this seriously impeded the fight against terror, just look at reports about the all-out effort to capture Osama that started, finally, just a few days ago. Why didn’t this happen last year, or the year before? According to The New York Times, last year many of the needed forces were tied up in Iraq.
It’s now clear that by shifting his focus to Iraq, Mr. Bush did Al Qaeda a huge favor. The terrorists and their Taliban allies were given time to regroup; the resurgent Taliban once again control almost a third of Afghanistan, and Al Qaeda has regained the ability to carry out large-scale atrocities.
But Mr. Bush’s lapses in the struggle against terrorism extend beyond his decision to give Al Qaeda a breather. His administration has also run interference for Saudi Arabia — the home of most of the 9/11 hijackers, and the main financier of Islamic extremism — and Pakistan, which created the Taliban and has actively engaged in nuclear proliferation.
Some of the administration’s actions have been so strange that those who reported them were initially accused of being nutty conspiracy theorists. For example, what are we to make of the post-9/11 Saudi airlift? Just days after the attack, at a time when private air travel was banned, the administration gave special clearance to flights that gathered up Saudi nationals, including a number of members of the bin Laden family, who were in the U.S. at the time. These Saudis were then allowed to leave the country, after at best cursory interviews with the F.B.I.
And the administration is still covering up for Pakistan, whose government recently made the absurd claim that large-scale shipments of nuclear technology and material to rogue states — including North Korea, according to a new C.I.A. report — were the work of one man, who was promptly pardoned by President Pervez Musharraf. Mr. Bush has allowed this farce to go unquestioned.
So when the Bush campaign boasts of the president’s record in fighting terrorism and accuses John Kerry of being weak on the issue, when Republican congressmen suggest that a vote for Mr. Kerry is a vote for Osama, remember this: the administration’s actual record is one of indulgence toward regimes that are strongly implicated in terrorism, and of focusing on actual terrorist threats only when forced to by events.
http://www.assemblee-nationale.fr/12/budget/plf2003/a0260-06.asp
L’armement air-sol modulaire (AASM)
L’armement air-sol modulaire est lui aussi un armement tiré sur coordonnées, mais beaucoup moins ambitieux et coûteux qu’un missile de croisière. Il s’agit d’un armement d’usage banalisé pour des objectifs dont le système de protection ne justifie pas l’emploi de missiles de croisière.
Il consiste à adjoindre à des armements classiques, tels que des bombes de 250 kilos, un kit d’accroissement de portée (propulseur) et un kit de guidage. La portée demandée est de 15 kilomètres en très basse altitude et de 50 kilomètres pour un tir depuis la haute altitude. L’AASM doit pouvoir être emporté par n’importe quel type d’avion, largué à basse, moyenne ou haute altitude, et tiré par tout temps, jour et nuit. La précision demandée est une précision décamétrique sans guidage terminal et une précision métrique avec guidage terminal. L’AASM doit aussi avoir la capacité multicibles. Il devra ensuite évoluer jusqu’à comporter un corps de bombe de 1000 kilos ou un cargo à sous-munitions et un autodirecteur offrant une précision métrique tous temps.
Le nombre de munitions prévu montre bien le caractère usuel qu’il est prévu de donner à cet armement. Il est en effet prévu la fabrication de 3 000 exemplaires dont 2 000 pour l’armée de l’air, les 1 000 autres étant pour la marine. Un premier marché se compose de 744 unités, dont 496 pour l’armée de l’air, 240 à précision décamétrique et 256 à précision métrique. L’armée de l’air devrait passer deux autres commandes en 2005, l’une de 728 unités à précision décamétrique, conduisant à un total de 968 pour cette version, et l’autre de 776 unités à version métrique, conduisant à un total de 1032 et au total général de 2000. Le calendrier prévisionnel de livraison figure au tableau ci-après.
Calendrier de livraison des AASM
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
Total
Version décamétrique
50
160
30
120
160
160
160
128
968
Version métrique
206
170
160
160
160
176
1 032
2 000
Le coût total prévu pour l’AASM est aujourd’hui de 408,3 millions d’euros, en diminution de plus de 10 % par rapport au coût prévu à la date de lancement. L’armée de l’air, qui, outre son programme d’achat, assure les deux tiers du développement, a dépensé à ce jour 64,76 millions d’euros pour l’AASM. Elle a inscrit 15,29 millions d’euros à ce titre à l’article 17 du chapitre 53-71 en 2003.