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Tyrant King
Drones, mini-subs among France’s special forces wish list
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PARIS ― The head of France’s special forces has presented a wish list to lawmakers that includes a modified NH90 helicopter and a mini-submarine to complement the Barracuda nuclear attack submarine.

The wish list also includes a new high-frequency radio, a medium-altitude, medium-endurance drone, and a small number of armored civilian vehicles, according to Adm. Laurent Isnard. The head of Special Operations Command spoke to the defense and armed forces committee of the lower house National Assembly on Dec. 19, but the official minutes were only just published on Jan. 22.

A budget of €250 million (U.S. $309 million) over seven years ― or an annual €36 million ― is needed for a “modernization” of the special forces, he said. Apart from aircraft, new equipment needs to be delivered early in the forthcoming multiyear military budget, as a renewal of the vehicle fleet is already two years late.



The special forces head laid out the wish list as French authorities draft the 2019-2025 multiyear budget law.

The special forces have undergone a transformation, as they now conduct “real military campaigns” rather than delivering a “lightning raid,” he said. Conflicts have evolved and enemies are so heavily armed that the
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, Iraq, was a “combination of Stalingrad and Twitter,” he said.

In Africa, France’s special forces hunt down “terrorists” in a bid to dismantle the networks, in close coordination with the American and French intelligence services, he said. France relied on U.S. support in the counterterrorism drive because the French lack medium-altitude, long-endurance drones and electronic intelligence systems.

NH90 helicopter

In regard to helicopters, it is “imperative to ... modernize and homogenize” the fleet for the special forces, which need the NH90 adapted to a special forces standard, he said. “Acquisition is desired to allow access to these fourth-generation helicopters.”



That would allow the special forces to hand over its Caracal helicopters to the
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, he said. Modifying the NH90 offeres interoperability with Australia and New Zealand, which are on the same track, as well as European allies, which fly the same rotorcraft. Working with those partners would cut development costs.

A special forces NH90 would also operate from French Navy warships considering the service already flies that helicopter, he added.

The Air Force lost two Caracal helos in operations last year, and an order for one Caracal is due this year after failing to be accepted in 2017, the parliamentary minutes show.



An Oct. 13, 2016, parliamentary report said the NH90 helicopters should not be less capable than the present fleet of Caracal and new-generation Cougar helos; its architecture should be open and allow upgrades over several decades; and it should be capable of modifications to allow for combat, airdrops, rope drops and night operations.

Mini-submarine

Naval special forces are “waiting impatiently for entry into service of the PSM3G in 2018,” he noted. That is a third-generation, propelled mini-submarine that would work in conjunction with the Barracuda submarine.

That mini-sub would work with the Mistral projection and command ship as an interim measure, he said. “The PSM3G is a rare and immediately available capability effective against the famous ‘area-denial’ threat — the special forces have to be able to get close to an enemy coast to call in a strike,” he said.

The mini-submarine is a relatively large unit, capable of being launched from the Barracuda while submerged, he explained. “They are undetected from departure to return from the mission; that is, to say, an intelligence-gathering mission without being seen, without a signature, without particular risk and with an impressive efficiency,” he said.

The particularly high-performing mini-submarine, according to Isnard, would be fully autonomous, run on battery power and have a navigation system.

The Suffren, the first-of-class Barracuda boat, is due for delivery in 2019 — a year late.

UAV

Speaking to the Air Force’s acquisition of the Reaper drone, he said it’s essential to take into account the special forces’ needs regarding intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance and weapons handling. Those capabilities were a “game-changer” and would assure a French “strategic autonomy” with regard to the United States. The special forces are closely tracking the development of light ISR aircraft, he said. This aircraft is among the first capabilities sent into theater in which the special forces are deployed.

Special Operations Command plans to launch an acquisition for a medium-altitude, medium-endurance, or MAME, drone with a flight range of 100 kilometers and six hours, he said. This UAV would carry kit for electronic intelligence and light weapons.

Three commandos could launch this type of drone, as compared to the weeks it would take to set up a base for the Reaper, the admiral noted. A MAME UAV could spot an enemy on the other side of a town and allow commandos to call in a strike.

“All this equipment is available off the shelf, we could buy it immediately if you grant us the necessary budget — these are small amounts,” he said. An armed MAME drone could help produce a concept of operations for the eventual use of armed UAVs with improved capabilities.

There is currently a planned procurement for off-the-shelf mini-drones, possibly through a lease.

Communications

It is critical the new long-distance communications deliver interoperability with allied special forces and intelligence services, Isnard noted at the committee hearing.

Land vehicles

On the vexed issue of a heavy vehicle, Isnard said a first batch of 25 units delivered in February 2017 had been returned to the manufacturer because their road-worthiness was deemed “dangerous.” That batch is now expected in June, with the rest due, at the earliest, by the end of 2019.

A light vehicle, currently in its prototype stage, is expected to be delivered in 2020, Isnard said.

The Direction Générale de l’Armement procurement office ordered the heavy and light vehicles from Renault Trucks Defense.

The armored civilian vehicles are urgently needed for discreet transportation in urban areas when French special forces work with allies and local rebel groups, he said.
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Nov 11, 2017
Daumen hoch! Pouce en l'air!
AI45_Airbus.jpg

Intrigue Of Shakespearean Proportions Unfolds In Airbus’ Top Echelon
Nov 9, 2017
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and
NATO buyers to meet with Airbus over billions in A400M fines
Airbus will meet with several NATO members on Feb. 5 in London to discuss reductions to fines imposed on the company due to delivery delays and failing to meet contract capability requirements for its A400M Atlas military transport aircraft program,
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.

If Airbus is unable to convince buyer countries to put a cap on financial penalties, the company fears the $21 billion program will be seriously at risk.

Delivering aircraft that fail to meet contracted capability requirements behind schedule have lead buyers like
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. Technical problems in manufacturing, specifically with cracking in the engine’s gearbox, have put the project years behind schedule. As a result, Germany’s share of costs have risen from an expected $10 billion to nearly $12 billion.

Commenting on the program’s financial issues last February, Airbus CEO Tom Enders said the company committed an “original sin” by signing a contract that was
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Enders said the company made another “incredible blunder” in assuming liability for the engines.

Airbus paid $2.6 billion to cover financial penalties and slow deliveries in 2016, adding to the nearly $6.2 billion the company has paid in penalties since accepting the A400M contract in 2010.

Officials from Belgium, France, Germany Luxemborg, Spain, Turkey and the United Kingdom, as well as Europe’s procurement agency OCCAR, will meet with Airbus in attempt to hash out an agreement capping financial penalties. Airbus received a $4.3 billion bailout from the seven countries in 2010.
source is DefenseNews
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timepass

Brigadier
Lockheed teams up with Rheinmetall for German military helicopter contract...

BERLIN, Feb 5 (Reuters) - U.S. arms manufacturer Lockheed Martin Corp and German peer Rheinmetall AG said they will team up to compete for a 4 billion euro ($4.9 billion) contract to supply the German military with heavy-lift helicopters.

The two companies told Reuters they had signed a strategic agreement on the tie-up, which they are set to formally announce on Tuesday.

Germany in December approved plans to buy 45 to 60 new heavy-lift helicopters, kicking off a competition between Lockheed, which is offering its massive CH-53K helicopter, and Boeing Co, which will offer its smaller twin-rotor CH-47.

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The German defence ministry expects to issue a request for information in the second half of 2018, with a contract expected to be awarded in mid-2020 and deliveries to begin in 2023, replacing Germany's existing fleet of CH-53G aircraft.

Lockheed said in an emailed statement to Reuters that it had chosen Rheinmetall as its "lead teammate" for the bid because of the German company's "wealth of experience and knowledge."

It said it would name other German partners in coming weeks. "The goal is to offer German military forces as a comprehensive solution that includes the CH-53K helicopters as well as additional services in maintenance, service, training and programme support," Rheinmetall said in an emailed statement to Reuters.

Rheinmetall Chief Executive Armin Papperger said the team would offer "the best possible state-of-the-art aircraft for the German Air Force as successor for the legacy CH-53G fleet."

Dan Schultz, president of Lockheed's Sikorsky helicopter unit, who flew earlier CH-53 model helicopters while serving in the U.S. Marine Corps, said in Lockheed's statement that the new CH-53K model was "the most powerful heavy-lift helicopter that we have ever built."

Boeing plans to offer Germany the CH-47 Chinook already used by eight other NATO countries. It has said it also plans to form partnerships with German industry, but has not announced any specific partners so far.

Lockheed's CH-53K, which includes an on-board diagnostic system, is due to make its international debut at the Berlin air show in April.

The U.S. Marine Corps plans to buy 200 of the new CH-53K helicopters at an average price of around $88 million per plane and expects to declare it ready for combat use in 2019.

Germany hopes to start buying its helicopters in 2023, and Israel and Japan have also expressed interest in the CH-53K.

Experts say the Boeing Chinook could cost Germany less to buy, but it will require upgrades in coming years that could add costs. It also carries less, so it would take more flights to accomplish the same mission as a CH-53K. ($1 = 0.8054 euros) (Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Susan Fenton)

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timepass

Brigadier
Lithuania: Russia deploying more missiles into Kaliningrad...

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"Lithuania's president says Russia has deployed additional nuclear-capable missiles in its Baltic Sea exclave of Kaliningrad on a permanent basis, calling it a threat to Europe.

Dalia Grybauskaite told reporters Monday after visiting NATO troops in the town of Rukla that "Iskander missiles are being stationed in Kaliningrad for permanent presence as we speak." She called it a threat not only to Lithuania but to "half of all European countries."

The head of Russian parliament's defense committee, Vladimir Shamanov, confirmed the missiles' deployment in remarks carried by Russian news agencies. He added that the move comes as a response to NATO's buildup near Russian borders."

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LOL I put the Italian on my Facebook on Sunday, but after I had noticed about the French now, I thought I should post here
Two FREMM Frigates launched in one week!
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The simultaneous launching of NORMANDIE and MARCEGLIA represents another great success of the OCCAR management, demonstrating indeed the exemplary synergies among Industry and the French and Italian Navies.

The sixth French FREMM frigate ASW (anti-submarine) NORMANDIE was floated on the 1st of February 2018 in the Naval Group Lorient site, under the supervision of OCCAR FREMM Programme Division and the French defence procurement agency (DGA). This launching, which has occurred just 12 months after the start of hull assembly in the building dock, is a real success to respect the strict and challenging schedule of the FREMM Programme to deliver 6 anti-submarine FREMM to the French Navy by 2019, as planned in the French Military Programming Law 2014-2019.

The next major step will be the installation of mast infrastructure with the ship’s main sensors and the integration of the Combat Management System. In this autumn, the NORMANDIE will leave the dry dock to undergo its first sea trials foreseen in the first quarter of 2019, before delivery to the French Navy planned in mid 2019.

In the aftermath, just 2 days after, the eighth Italian FREMM frigate, named Antonio MARCEGLIA in honour of the highly decorated Navy Lt Colonel, was launched on the 3rd of February at the FINCANTIERI integrated shipyard in Riva Trigoso (Genoa). The ship is the fourth launched in the General Purpose (GP) configuration.

The ceremony took place in the presence of the Italian Minister of Defence Roberta Pinotti, and other military, religious and civil authorities. Among them Admiral Walter Girardelli - Italian Navy Chief of Staff and Giuseppe Bono - CEO of Fincantieri.

The Godmother was Ms Silvia Marceglia, granddaughter of the Engineer Officer, who deserved the highest military decorations for his bold exploits during the Second World War.

The Frigate will complete the outfitting and will start Harbour and Sea Acceptance Tests in La Spezia – Muggiano shipyard. At the end of the trials, ITS Antonio MARCEGLIA will be delivered to Italian Navy in 2019.

Six Italian warships and four French ones are now in service for the two Navies; another eight ships are under construction out of a total number of 18 foreseen by the FREMM Programme, the most ambitious naval programme in Europe.

Thanks to the OCCAR Management, the Programme proceeds regularly with top performance thanks to a continuous technical survey action, a tailored risk management and a systematic impulse to increase the product quality. The evident results are given by the efficient deployment in theatre of both Italian and French Frigates, which have clearly demonstrated in real operations their high operational flexibility and dual use capabilities.
 

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
So to summerise

6th for France
8th for Italy
1 for Egypt
1 for Morocco

Total 16 units in the water, very heavy frigates 6,000 tons only 16 VLS?

4 to go on the order books 2 more for French and 2 for Italy

If there isn’t any exports
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
The peril of going with the latest and greatest tech and crammed as many function as possible on single platform
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German Navy experiences “LCS syndrome” in spades as new frigate fails sea trials
With 90% new systems, this bigger, lighter-crewed monster frigate is not ready for duty.

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- 2/7/2018, 5:20 PM

2560px-BADEN-WURTTEMBERG_00257_cropped-800x533.jpg

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/ The Baden-Wurttemberg, listing slightly to starboard as usual, has been sent back to shipbuilders—refused by the German Navy.
Ein Dahmer
The German Navy has a lot of problems right now. It
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, in part because of a chronic repair parts shortage. The Deutsche Marine is still flying helicopters older than their pilots—the Sea Lynx entered service in 1981, and the Sea King in 1969—and has long-delayed their replacement. And now the service is facing problems with its newest ships so severe that the first of the class failed its sea trials and was returned to the shipbuilders in December.

As Christian Mölling, a defense-industry expert at the German Council on Foreign Relations in Berlin,
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, German military procurement is “one hell of a complete disaster. It will take years to sort this problem out.”

FURTHER READING
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The Baden-Wurttemberg class frigates were ordered to replace the 1980s-era Bremenclass ships, all but of two which have been already retired. At 149 meters (488 feet) long with a displacement of 7,200 metric tons (about 7900 US tons), the Baden-Wurttembergs are about the size of destroyers and intended to reduce the size of the crew required to operate them (in this way, they are similar to the
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and the Zumwalt-class destroyers).

Like the LCS ships and the Zumwalt, the Baden-Wurttemberg ships were conceived of in the mid-aughts—the product of lessons allegedly learned from the “asymmetric warfare” of the Gulf and Iraq Wars.

Like the Zumwalt, the frigates are intended to have improved land attack capabilities—a mission capability largely missing from the Deutsche Marine’s other post-unification ships. The new frigate was supposed to be a master of all trades—carrying Marines to deploy to fight ashore, providing gunfire support, hunting enemy ships and submarines, and capable of being deployed on far-flung missions for up to two years away from a home port. As with the US Navy’s LCS ships, the German Navy planned to alternate crews—sending a fresh crew to meet the ship on deployment to relieve the standing crew.

It was to be a wonder ship and evidence of the resurgence of the Deutsche Marine. At least that was the plan.

Instead, the Baden-Wurttemberg now bears the undesirable distinction of
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. In fact, the future of the whole class of German frigates is now in doubt because of the huge number of problems experienced with the first ship during sea trials. So the Baden-Wurttemberg won’t be shooting its guns at anything for the foreseeable future (and neither will the Zumwalt for the moment, since the
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).

System integration issues are a major chunk of the Baden-Wurrenberg’s problems. About 90 percent of the ship’s systems are so new that they’ve never been deployed on a warship in fact—they’ve never been tested together as part of what the US Navy would call “a system of systems.” And all of that new hardware and software have not played well together—particularly with the ship’s command and control computer system, the
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(ANCS).

Built by Atlas Electronik GmbH of Bremen, ANCS is a brand-new multi-role command and control system for the ship’s weapons and sensors. It is intended to tie radar, sonar, and other sensor data (along with information from the ship’s helicopter and drones and the ship’s weapons fire control systems) into a suite of consoles. The system is supposed to allow a small team of sailors and officers to centrally manage nearly the entire operation of the ship and its weapons from joystick-equipped stations in the ship’s operations room. Atlas has marketed the combat system as “The system for frigates and corvettes of the new generation,” and the F125 class was to be ANCS’s big debut.

FURTHER READING
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But integration of the sensors and weapons hardware with the command and control system has gone poorly, to say the least. The problems weren’t fixed before sea trials began in April of 2016, and Germany’s Federal Office of Bundeswehr Equipment, Information Technology and In-Service Support (BAAINBw), the agency of the German government that oversees procurement of military systems, pushed functional tests of the operations room’s systems back to the end of August of 2017 That’s beyond the ship’s original scheduled commissioning date of July 28. And, as of December, the problems had not yet been addressed to the extent that the BAAINBw would accept as successful.

On top of the information systems issues, there are other problems: the
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, is overweight, and can’t make top speed with its first-time-deployed combined turbine propulsion system that combines diesel and gas.

None of this should come as a surprise to seasoned military procurement watchers, given
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. In the case of the Zumwalt, the vast number of bleeding-edge technologies incorporated increased the development time of the ship accordingly. Cost overruns (and a shift in mission requirements and budget constraints) forced the Navy to cut the order down from an originally planned 32 ships to a mere three. The LCS ships have had their own problems, and new construction orders have been frozen while the Navy looks at building bigger, better-armed, and better-crewed “frigate” versions of the ships.

But for the German military—which has seen a collapse in its funding over the past two decades—these sorts of issues have a much more substantial impact on readiness: they are a symptom of a much larger, long-running problem with Germany’s management of its military. Since the “peace dividend” of reunification and the end of the Cold War, Germany’s military budget has plummeted to just 1.15 percent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2016—well below the two-percent mark required by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
 
The peril of going with the latest and greatest tech and crammed as many function as possible on single platform
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German Navy experiences “LCS syndrome” in spades as new frigate fails sea trials
...

yeah Aug 1, 2017
... sounds like their Political Engineers subscribed to the USN LCS boondoggle, too:

"According to the German Navy, the F125 will be deploying with little over 100 personnel.
...
New sensor-weapon concepts are prepared for the enhanced flexibility and scalable control-options of the frigates."

...


...
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.
...
gosh it's the Freedom (not the Liberty) though
 

timepass

Brigadier
AIRBUS COULD OFFER MILITARY VARIANTS OF THE A320NEO

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Airbus Defence & Space (DS) announced that it was exploring the prospect of offering militarized variants of its A320neo commercial airliner, including maritime patrol aircraft (MPA) and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) versions, such as airborne early warning and control (AEW&C).

Speaking at the 2018 Singapore Air Show, Airbus DS’ Head of Military Aircraft Fernando Alonso said that the company was already in-touch with several prospective customers for converted A320neo aircraft.

“We are starting to investigate the possibility of opening a new line of products based on the A320neo military derivative,” said Alonso (via
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). “The A320 is a smaller platform than the A330, and with the neo engines it is an extremely efficient platform. It’s well known, robust and proven in service.”

However, while this is an enticing prospect for Airbus DS considering the paucity of comparable new MPA and ISR platforms in the A320neo’s size, range and endurance-class (this market is limited to the Boeing P-8 Poseidon/Neptune and Kawasaki P-1), Airbus DS did not launch a program – the process is tentative.

If it gains traction, Airbus DS says it will leverage its experience with converting the A330 into the widely adopted Multi-Role Tanker and Transport (MRTT) to converting the A320neo into an MPA and AEW&C.

The
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has a maximum take-off weight (MTOW) of 73.5 tons and ferry range of 6,500 km.

Notes & Comments:

The Boeing Poseidon/Neptune and Kawasaki P-1 are the sole competitors in the market of supplanting legacy Lockheed Martin P-3C Orion MPAs, at least from the perspective of air arms seeking to replace the P-3C with aircraft of comparable – or superior – payload, range and endurance. Granted, there are smaller MPAs entering the market, such as the
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, but the paucity of options in the large platform space could provide Airbus DS a sustainable long-term business opportunities.

That said, it is difficult to fathom an Airbus A320neo MPA being cost-effective without anchoring launch orders from key NATO countries, such as France and Germany. The U.K. has committed to the P-8, which has built relatively sizable scale thanks to orders from the U.S., Australia, India and Norway.

Airbus DS did not fare as well as anticipated managing the A400M, a joint-program driven by NATO, but A320neo-based MPA and AEW&C need not suffer the same way. For example, Airbus DS can simply mirror Saab by integrating commercially-off-the-shelf (COTS) subsystems to the A320neo, such as the Leonardo Seaspray maritime surveillance radar, Star SAFIRE electro-optical/infrared (EO/IR) turret and COTS suites for electronic support measures (ESM) and anti-submarine warfare (ASW). This would simplify the process and help control costs by leveraging existing and credible subsystems.

In terms of a MPA specifically, the challenge – and cost driver – would be from potentially modifying the A320neo to have an internal bay (like the P-8) atop of integration and testing. Relying solely on external hardpoints may not yield as much payload carriage as the P-8. Nonetheless, a MPA variant of the A320neo would provide another option for legacy P-3C users, especially those unable to access the P-8 or K-1 due to foreign relations and/or fiscal challenges.

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