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  • in reply to: Xian H-6 (Tu-16 clone) – modern variants #2235553
    Pinko
    Participant

    In anti-shipping role it’s quite slow (1,050 kph). C601 is relatively obsolete whilst C101 is short ranged (45 km). C30X series is more advanced.

    Most remarkable anti-ship weapon currently should be YJ-12, a near 400km range( flight profile depending), mach 3.5 ramjet missile, which was seen carried by H-6G 1stly:

    http://forum.keypublishing.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=211505&stc=1&d=1358673764
    http://forum.keypublishing.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=211471&d=1358584188

    in reply to: The 'JUST A NICE PIC…' thread #2236071
    Pinko
    Participant

    http://i.imgur.com/G7sLZ5Z.jpg

    in reply to: Chinese Air Power Thread 17 #2236130
    Pinko
    Participant

    Hu :confused:… care to translate, PLEASE !!?? :applause:

    Deino

    Nothing special about the words, but we know it’s a slogan on a banner, different period, different slogan. Now got it?

    in reply to: Chinese Air Power Thread 17 #2236255
    Pinko
    Participant

    …In consequence – since we don’t know the date this image was taken – it could be of the the already known J-20 prototypes sitting side by side with the also known J-10B prototypes … but it could also be a recent image showing the J-10B preserials and the J-20 prototype ‘2003’.

    Deino

    Well, the J20 is covered, it seems even those working for J10B do not have enough security clearance to see the J20 in detail.

    http://i.imgur.com/g4BsRrf.jpg

    in reply to: Chinese Air Power Thread 17 #2236268
    Pinko
    Participant

    Yes, that’s the 1000 $ question for today: When was that image taken ??

    Anyway, for me this picture shows at least a J-20-look-alike fuselage at CAC and as such is the first image from the inside of CAC showing the J-20.

    In consequence – since we don’t know the date this image was taken – it could be of the the already known J-20 prototypes sitting side by side with the also known J-10B prototypes … but it could also be a recent image showing the J-10B preserials and the J-20 prototype ‘2003’.

    Deino

    If you know the chinese words appeared in the images, you know that how recent those images are is no longer a 1000 $ question

    in reply to: Chinese Air Power Thread 17 #2236272
    Pinko
    Participant

    Two interesting images were posted today from the inside of CAC’s production facility: The one on top shows what looks very much like a J-20 fuselage and if it is a recent image it could be the next prototype ‘2003’. The second image below shows two J-10B together with an AL-31FN.

    Again: it is not knbown how old that image is …

    Now I got 2nd thought on how old the image is, after I doubted those images could be old at CDF.

    The J20 fuselage in the image is really the 2003’s. which means these images are quite recently, it also confirms J10B is in serial production now

    Sadly, by confirming those images are new, the author ( or snowden in CAC:p) most likely will be questioned for the leaking…

    in reply to: Xian H-6 (Tu-16 clone) – modern variants #2236517
    Pinko
    Participant

    Should review the latest DoD annual report on PLA,

    It 1st time confirmed H-6K or H-6M loaded with CJ-20 LACMs can target as far as Guam

    http://blogs-cdn.fas.org/security/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/cj-20.jpg

    in reply to: Chinese Air Power Thread 17 #2237239
    Pinko
    Participant

    Hongdu JL10 ( aka L-15) trainer for PLAAF

    http://i.imgur.com/3wYPsWa.jpg

    in reply to: Chinese Air Power Thread 17 #2237445
    Pinko
    Participant

    Anything about the J-20?

    There is a dedicated J20 thread on 3rd page:

    http://forum.keypublishing.com/showthread.php?110612-J-20-Black-Eagle-Part-6/page21

    in reply to: Chinese Air Power Thread 17 #2238231
    Pinko
    Participant

    New pics for new thread:cool:

    http://i.imgur.com/1uwNcw6.jpg

    PLANAF starts to receive latest J11B batches.

    http://www.fyjs.cn/bbs/attachments/Mon_1306/27_199197_383967de09d623c.jpg?54

    J11B in PLANAF color (above) compared to the one in PLAAF service

    Pinko
    Participant

    Hmmm. I’m very skeptical about this report. While JF-17 might be a good ‘fit’ for Argentina, I don’t think it will happen any time soon. I also had some time with the boss of FAdeA at Paris, and he was talking about a ‘Pulquí III’ as being a notional future fighter being developed as part of the pan-South American UNASUR programme. Walking before running is the watchword as far as I could gather – let’s see if they can get a basic trainer (IA-73) to partner Pampa up and running first as UNASUR I (due to fly late next year – currently selecting powerplant).

    Why not, obviously there’s a clear path that the FC-1 will be further developed to add on more goodies, if money allows. And it always can have 1st batch of FC-1 in current config. for quick capability build-up.

    http://fotos.subefotos.com/5fa1a65a197e7b083238ad8515a53a56o.jpg 😀

    Pinko
    Participant

    Spying’s been around since man first started beating each other over the head with a rock.

    Why is this all viewed with such astonishmenbt.

    No astonishment, it’s all about balanced view on public media, it used to only one side story on how Chinese steal this, hack that.

    But sadly, even China is unable to protect the young whistleblower, which leads to his exile to elsewhere…

    Pinko
    Participant

    Jane´s: Argentine officials confirm joint-production talks over China’s FC-1 fighter

    Argentine officials confirm joint-production talks over China’s FC-1 fighter

    http://img213.imageshack.us/img213/7684/militairefc1298.jpg

    Richard D Fisher Jr, Paris – IHS Jane’s Defence Industry

    23 June 2013

    Officials from Argentine aerospace company Fabrica Argentina de Aviones (FAdeA) told IHS Jane’s at the 2013 Paris Air Show they have had multiple discussions with Chinese officials over potential co-production of the Chengdu Aircraft Corporation (CAC) FC-1/JF-17 multirole combat aircraft.

    Discussions are far from concluded, with FAdeA officials saying “technology transfer” issues remain a sticking point. Nonetheless, the discussions are the first formal effort that could lead to the co-production of a modern Chinese fighter in Latin America. FAdeA officials said the co-produced FC-1 could be called the ‘Pulqui-III’, recalling FAdeA’s Pulqui-II, Latin America’s first swept wing jet fighter, which was designed by Germany’s Kurt Tank for the government of Juan Peron.

    http://www.janes.com/article/23497/argentine-officials-confirm-joint-production-talks-over-china-s-fc-1-fighter

    Pinko
    Participant

    http://m.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/snowden-wants-people-of-hong-kong-to-decide-my-fate/2013/06/12/a69e94ee-d370-11e2-a73e-826d299ff459_story.htmlSA

    leaker Edward Snowden: U.S. targets China with hackers

    U.S. defense contractor Edward Snowden discusses his motivation behind the NSA leak and why he is revealing himself as the whistleblower behind the major story. (Courtesy of/The Washington Post)
    By Jia Lynn Yang, *Published: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2:28 PM ET
    * * * Aa *
    HONG KONG — Edward Snowden, the self-confessed leaker of secret surveillance documents, claimed Wednesday that the United States has mounted massive hacking operations against hundreds of Chinese targets since 2009.

    The former contractor, whose work at the National Security Agency gave him access to highly classified U.S. intelligence, made the assertions in an interview with the South China Morning Post. The newspaper said he showed it “unverified documents” describing an extensive U.S. campaign to obtain information from computers in Hong Kong and mainland China.

    “We hack network backbones — like huge Internet routers, basically — that give us access to the communications of hundreds of thousands of computers without having to hack every single one,” he told the newspaper.

    GALLERY
    Who is Edward Snowden? The 29-year-old government contractor who admitted that he was behind recent leaks of classified intelligence has vaulted from obscurity to international notoriety.
    According to Snowden, the NSA has engaged in more than 61,000 hacking operations worldwide, including hundreds aimed at Chinese targets. Among the targets were universities, businesses and public officials.

    The interview was the first time Snowden has surfaced publicly since he acknowledged in interviews with The Washington Post and Britain’s Guardian newspaper Sunday that he was responsible for disclosing classified documents outlining extensive U.S. surveillance efforts in the United States.

    Senior American officials have accused China of hacking into U.S. military and business computers. Snowden’s claims of extensive U.S. hacking of Chinese computers tracks assertions made repeatedly by senior Chinese government officials that they are victims of similar cyber-intrusions.

    Snowden’s claims could not be verified, and U.S. officials did not respond to immediate requests for comment.

    In the interview with the Morning Post posted online late Wednesday, Snowden said he stood by his decision to seek asylum in Hong Kong, a semiautonomous city, after leaking documents about a high-level U.S. surveillance program.

    “People who think I made a mistake in picking Hong Kong as a location misunderstood my intentions,” he said in the interview. “I am not here to hide from justice; I am here to reveal criminality.”

    He added, “I have had many opportunities to flee HK, but I would rather stay and fight the United States government in the courts, because I have faith in Hong Kong’s rule of law.”

    By speaking with Hong Kong’s oldest English-language newspaper, Snowden seemed to be directly addressing the city he has chosen as his safe harbor. And by disclosing that he possesses documents that he says describe U.S. hacking against China, he appeared to be trying to win support from the Chinese government.

    Snowden told the Hong Kong newspaper that he was describing what he says are U.S. cyber attacks on Chinese targets to illustrate “the hypocrisy of the U.S. government when it claims that it does not target civilian infrastructure, unlike its adversaries.”

    Some in Hong Kong are responding to his campaign. A rally is being organized Saturday to support the 29-year-old former government contractor, who has been in the city since May 20. A Web site, http://www.supportsnowden.org, has been set up with details about the event, which will include speeches from human rights activists and local legislators.

    Activists in Hong Kong said they admired Snowden’s effort to shed light on his government’s practices.

    “He is a brave man. The authorities cannot use the ‘anti-terrorism’ excuse to invade people’s privacy without boundaries,” said Yang Kuang, a prominent Hong Kong activist. “I hope more and more people will stand out and expose such practices.”

    Snowden said in his interview that he has “been given no reason to doubt [Hong Kong’s] legal system.”

    “My intention is to ask the courts and people of Hong Kong to decide my fate,” Snowden said.

    Snowden is up against an extradition treaty between the United States and Hong Kong that many view as being clear — that in the vast majority of cases, Hong Kong must cooperate with U.S. government requests for help apprehending suspected criminals.

    The United States has yet to file a formal extradition request, although there are other ways for the governments to be cooperating.

    James To Kun-sun, a Hong Kong legislator and solicitor, said that even without an extradition request, the United States can ask Hong Kong law enforcement to watch Snowden while the U.S. Justice Department moves on its investigation. The FBI has a legal attache in Hong Kong, and Snowden has also identified a CIA presence in the city.

    “I suspect in this case . . . the FBI tells the HK police, ‘The request will be very soon,’ and [they can] ask police to keep an eye on him,” Kun-sun said.

    Once an extradition request is received, a judge here will decide whether it falls under the treaty and whether Hong Kong law enforcement should help the United States by, for example, collecting evidence or carrying out an arrest. Snowden could also appeal any decision, so the process could be drawn out.

    “As long as I am assured a free and fair trial, and asked to appear, that seems reasonable,” Snowden said in the interview.

    He added that he plans to stay in Hong Kong as long as the city will have him.

    Liu Liu contributed to this report from Beijing.

    in reply to: PLAN News Thread #4 #2000693
    Pinko
    Participant

    Size comparison:

    http://www.fyjs.cn/bbs/attachments/Mon_1305/25_221204_e8d0a46def09cda.jpg?164

Viewing 15 posts - 46 through 60 (of 1,105 total)