Persian Gulf & Middle East Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Shake up for the Royal houses
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#2325 kwaigonegin, Today at 6:44 AM
was first

it's on top of us.cnn.com, on top of us.cnn.com, right now
Saudi princes, ministers targeted in anti-corruption sweep
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for the reason which is easy to understand hahaha Obama administration arms sales offers to Saudi top $115 billion: report
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What Really Matters in Trump’s $110B Saudi Arms Package
It’s still a lot of talk and no final sales, but long-stalled deals worth billions just got moving again.
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timepass

Brigadier
QATAR AND RUSSIA SIGN DEFENCE COOPERATION AGREEMENT

Russia-Qatar-Peninsula-01-692x360.jpg


Qatar and Russia have
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a memorandum-of-understanding (MoU) calling for increased military and technical cooperation.

The MoU was signed by Qatar’s Minister of State for Defence Khalid bin Mohammad Al Attiyah and his Russian counterpart Defence Minister Sergey Shoygu in Doha on Wednesday, October 25.

According to the
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, the MoU paves the way for the supply of armaments, including air defence systems. Additional specifics were not provided.

In 2017 the Russian defence industry has been making major inroads in the Arab Gulf and Middle East. Its most notable commercial success has been the
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long-range air defence system, which has been ordered by Turkey and is now drawing active interest from Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.

Qatar has charted a significant modernization roadmap for its armed forces. Of note are Doha’s plans for the Qatar Emiri Air Force (QEAF), which has 24 Dassault Rafale and 36 Boeing F-15QA fighters on order.

In September, Qatar also signed a letter-of-intent with BAE Systems for 24
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multi-role fighters and six
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trainer aircraft.

For Qatar, it is worth noting that it is forging a diverse arms supplier pool. Besides securing combat aircraft from three major suppliers (i.e. the U.S., France and the U.K), it has ordered land and naval systems from
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and
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, respectively.

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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Has the Iranian jet ever flown?
Qaher-313

No the first only a model with part in plastic for sure and the cockpit not big enough for the pilot
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:D we see only thatt with Iran and some others...
The 2nd more serious if i can say :) Rolling

Google search fake stealth fighter pics and
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LOL
 
Saturday at 9:55 PM
I happened to notice in Al Jazeera Twitter earlier this evening, now it's also Breaking News at gazeta.ru (
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) quoting some other sources saying the Saudis have successfully intercepted, in
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area, a ballistic missile launched off Yemen
and
Saudi crown prince calls Iran supply of rockets 'military aggression'
Updated 21 minutes ago
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Saudi Arabia’s crown prince said Iran’s supply of rockets to militias in Yemen is an act of “direct military aggression” that could be an act of war, state media reported on Tuesday.

Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s comments were published after Saudi air defense forces intercepted a ballistic missile that Saudi Arabia said was fired toward Riyadh on Saturday by the Iran-allied Houthi militia, which controls large parts of neighboring Yemen.

Saudi-led forces, which back the internationally-recognized government, have been targeting the Houthis in a war which has killed more than 10,000 people and triggered a humanitarian disaster in one of the region’s poorest countries.

The supply of rockets to the Houthi movement could “constitute an act of war against the kingdom,” state news agency SPA on Tuesday quoted Prince Salman as saying in a call with British Foreign Minister Boris Johnson.

Iran has denied it was behind the missile launch, rejecting the Saudi and U.S. statements condemning Tehran as “destructive and provocative” and “slanders”.

In reaction to the missile, the Saudi-led military coalition said on Monday it would close all air, land and sea ports to the Arabian Peninsula country.

The United Nations on Tuesday called on the coalition to re-open an aid lifeline into Yemen, saying food and medicine imports were vital for 7 million people facing famine.

“The situation is catastrophic in Yemen, it is the worst food crisis we are looking at today,” Jens Laerke of the U.N. Office for the Coordination for Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) told a briefing in Geneva.

The missile launch was “most likely a war crime” Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday but also urged Saudi Arabia against restricting aid access to Yemen, where the United Nations estimates nearly 900,000 people are infected with cholera.

“This unlawful attack is no justification for Saudi Arabia to exacerbate Yemen’s humanitarian catastrophe by further restricting aid and access to the country,” it said.

The coalition said aid workers and humanitarian supplies would continue to be able to access and exit Yemen despite the temporary closure of ports but the United Nations said it was not given approval for two scheduled humanitarian flights on Monday.

The United Nations and international aid organizations have repeatedly criticized the coalition for blocking aid access, especially to northern Yemen, which is held by the Houthis.

The Saudi-led coalition has been targeting the Houthis since they seized parts of Yemen in 2015, including the capital Sanaa, forcing President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi to flee and seek help from neighboring Saudi Arabia.

In an interview with CNN television on Monday, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir accused the armed Lebanese Hezbollah group of firing the missile at Riyadh from Houthi-held territory.

“With regards to the missile...that was launched on Saudi territory, it was an Iranian missile launched by Hezbollah from territory occupied by the Houthis in Yemen.”

He said the missile was similar to one launched in July at Yanbu in Saudi Arabia and was manufactured in Iran, disassembled and smuggled into Yemen, then reassembled by the operatives of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards and Hezbollah, “then it was launched into Saudi Arabia.”
 
Lebanon could lose out on US military aid after surprise resignation
10 hours ago
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they don't say how much it would be, so so I used google and ... wouldn't be much:

"... the Foreign Military Financing (FMF) ... In 2016, the FMF to Lebanon amounted to $85.9 million."
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The GoWind based vessels are very decent ships.
hey Jeff
Naval Group lands deal with UAE for new warships
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The United Arab Emirates has selected the Gowind corvette from Naval Group in a planned order for two warships and an option for two more, in a bid to boost the Gulf state’s naval capability, UAE and France announced.

The Naval Group now launches contract negotiations for the vessels, which will seek to meet UAE requirements, the company said in a statement.

“As part of its development strategy for the naval forces of the UAE, the acquisition of two multi-mission Gowind Combat-type corvettes was confirmed by the UAE,” the two nations said Nov. 9 on a visit to UAE by French president Emmanuel Macron.

“The ships will be built by the French high-tech company, Naval Group in partnership with Abu Dhabi Ship Building Company (ADSB),” said the joint statement, adding there is an option for two more vessels.

The planned procurement includes the Thales Tacticos combat management system, which was picked over the Naval Group Setis, a defense executive said.

The Raytheon Evolved Seasparrow Missile and MBDA Exocet will likely arm the Gowind ships as those weapons are fitted on the UAE Navy’s six-strong fleet of Baynunah corvettes, the Quwa website reported. A common inventory, logistics and training would be the advantages of such a selection. French shipyard CMN designed the Baynunah, which also ships the Raytheon Rolling Airframe Missile, a 76-mm gun and two 27 mm guns.

“We are proud the United Arab Emirates have selected the design of the Naval Group’s Gowind corvettes,” Naval Group chairman Hervé Guillou said in a statement. “With our UAE partner ADSB, we will now pursue discussions with the Armed Forces to allow the finalization of the acquisition contract.”

Naval Group competed with CMN, Dutch firm Damen and Italian shipyard Fincantieri, La Tribune reported.

Naval Group has sold four Gowind vessels in a €1 billion (US $1.17 billion) deal to Egypt, with options for two more, and six Gowind to Malaysia.

Macron went to the UAE for the Nov. 8 official opening of the Abu Dhubai Louvre museum, a prestige project which took 10 years to build and which permanently houses 600 artworks and 300 on loan from France.
 
Saturday at 9:55 PM
I happened to notice in Al Jazeera Twitter earlier this evening, now it's also Breaking News at gazeta.ru (
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
) quoting some other sources saying the Saudis have successfully intercepted, in
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
area, a ballistic missile launched off Yemen
and
Saudi crown prince calls Iran supply of rockets 'military aggression'
Updated 21 minutes ago
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now US Air Force official: Missile targeting Saudis was Iranian
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Iran manufactured the ballistic missile fired by Yemen’s Shiite rebels toward the Saudi capital and remnants of it bore “Iranian markings,” the top U.S. Air Force official in the Mideast said Friday, backing the kingdom’s earlier allegations.

The comments by Lt. Gen. Jeffrey L. Harrigian, who oversees the Air Force’s Central Command in Qatar, further internationalizes the yearslong conflict in Yemen — the Arab world’s poorest country.

Saudi Arabia long has accused Iran of giving weapons to the Shiite rebels known as Houthis and their allies, though Tehran has just as long denied supplying them. Riyadh quickly backed up Harrigian’s allegations in a statement to The Associated Press.

“How they got it there is probably something that will continue to be investigated over time,” the lieutenant general said. “What has been demonstrated and shown based on the findings of that missile is that it had Iranian markings on it. That in itself provides evidence of where it came from.”
“There have been Iranian markings on those missiles,” Harrigian told journalists at a news conference in Dubai ahead of the Dubai Air Show. “To me, that connects the dots to Iran.”

There was no immediate reaction from Tehran.

Saudi Arabia says it shot down the missile Nov. 4 near Riyadh’s international airport, the deepest yet to reach into the kingdom. Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Ministry later said investigators examining the remains of the rocket found evidence proving “the role of Iranian regime in manufacturing them.” It did not elaborate, though it also mentioned it found similar evidence after a July 22 missile launch. French President Emmanuel Macron similarly this week described the missile as “obviously” Iranian.

Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said in a statement Tuesday that the July launch involved an Iranian Qiam-1, a liquid-fueled, short-range Scud missile variant. Iran used a Qiam-1 in combat for the first time in June when it targeted Islamic State group militants in Syria over twin militant attacks in Tehran.

Harrigian declined to offer any specifics on what type of missile U.S. officials believed it was, nor did he show any images of the debris. He also didn’t explain how Iran evaded the blockade by the Saudi-led coalition, which intensified after the missile targeting Riyadh.

The Houthis have described using Burkan-2 or “Volcano” Scud variants in their recent attacks, including the one Nov. 4. Those missiles are reminiscent of the Qiam, wrote Jeremy Binnie of Jane’s Defense Weekly in a February analysis.

“The Burkan-2 is likely to heighten suspicions that Iran is helping Yemen’s rebel forces to develop their ballistic missile capabilities,” Binnie wrote.

Adding to that suspicion is the fact that Yemen’s missile forces previously never had experience in disassembling and rebuilding the weapons, said Michael Knights, a fellow at The Washington Institute For Near East Policy who previously worked in Yemen.

It is “not a stretch to believe that Tehran is supporting the Houthi missile program with technical advice and specialized components,” Knights wrote in an analysis Thursday. “After all, the Houthis have rapidly fielded three major new missile systems in less than two years while under wartime conditions and international blockade.”

Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Culture and Information later contacted the AP and sent military briefing papers alleging Iran smuggled weapons into Yemen by boat and truck.

“The parts are later assembled under supervision of Iranian military experts, who also help the Houthi militia plan attacks targeting Saudi civilians,” the ministry said in a statement to the AP. “Smuggled Iranian Qiam or Zelzal warheads are mounted onto Yemeni-made Burkan ballistic missiles.”

The U.S. already is involved in the war in Yemen and has launched drone strikes targeting the local branch of al-Qaida, though it stopped offering targeting information under the Obama administration over concerns about civilian casualties. That prohibition continues today, though the Air Force continues to refuel warplanes in the Yemen theater and offers support in managing airspace over the country, Harrigian said. The Saudi-led coalition also uses American-made bombs and ordinance in its attacks.

The U.S. has come under attack once amid the Yemen war. In October 2016, the U.S. Navy said the USS Mason came under fire from two missiles launched out of Yemen. Neither reached the warship, though the U.S. retaliated with a Tomahawk cruise missile strikes on three coastal radar sites in Houthi-controlled territory on Yemen’s Red Sea coast.

At the time, authorities said the missiles used in that attack were Silkworm missile variants, a type of coastal defense cruise missile that Iran has been known to use.

When the Houthis seized Sanaa in September 2014, their allied fighters also took control of the country’s ballistic missile stockpile. The Yemeni military was widely believed to possess around 300 Scud missiles at the time, though exact figures remain unknown.

The Saudi-led coalition entered the war in March 2015 on the side of Yemen’s internationally recognized government. It then attacked Sanaa’s ballistic missile base in April 2015, touching off massive explosions that killed several dozen people. Saudi Arabia implied at the time that the Scud arsenal in Yemen had been seriously degraded, if not entirely destroyed, as a result of the airstrikes.

But by June 2015, the rebels fired their first ballistic missile into Saudi Arabia near the southwestern city of Khamis Mushait. In the time since, Yemen’s rebels have fired over 70 ballistic missiles into Saudi Arabia, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ missile defense project.

For its part, Iran long has denied offering any arms to Yemen, though it has backed the Houthis and highlighted the high civilian casualties from the Saudi-led coalition’s campaign of airstrikes.

But others in Iran have been coy about the ballistic missiles in Yemen. Mehdi Taeb, an influential hard-line cleric who is a brother to the intelligence chief of the hard-line Revolutionary Guard, said in April that Iran tried three times to send missiles to Yemen. The Guard, answerable only to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, oversees Iran’s missile program.

The cleric said ultimately the administration of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani ordered the transfers stopped over negotiations on the nuclear deal with world powers, without offering a specific time for the attempted shipments.

“They said come back because the Americans said, ‘If you send missiles to Yemen, we will end the negotiations,’” Taeb said.
 
this is interesting:
Trump’s Asia Trip Takes Toll On ISIS Fight
Nov 8, 2017
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(don't worry, I know Trump is thousands of miles away from the Middle East LOL)
President Donald Trump’s 13-day trip to Asia is being facilitated by dozens of U.S. military refueling tankers and cargo aircraft that regional operators say are needed in the Middle East to fight terrorists.

Initial estimates indicated the president’s trip would require 80 tanker and cargo missions in total, officials told Aviation Week. The Pentagon declined to provide exact numbers of aircraft required. But spokesman U.S. Navy Capt. Kevin Stephens stressed that air mobility support for the trip, which includes stops in Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam, and the Philippines, is an important mission with vital national security implications.

The level of air mobility support provided for the current trip is “not extraordinary” and consistent with that provided for similar travel in previous administrations, Stephens stressed.

But the trip, coming close on the heels of a series of devastating hurricanes in the Southern U.S. and Caribbean, has continued to limit regional commanders’ access to additional mobility assets at a time when they are trying to support both a surge in Afghanistan and defeating the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

So far, the U.S. Air Force has been able to limit the effect on the fight by asking units to take on extra missions, rerouting flights, and pulling certain aircraft off standby, said Brig. Gen. Gregory Jones, U.S. Air Force Central Command (Afcent) director of mobility forces, in a Nov. 4 interview at the Combined Air Operations Center (CAOC) here. Top priority equipment—primarily munitions, food and water—is getting where it needs to go, but less urgent resources such as construction material are delayed.

If there is a sudden surge in fighting, however, it would be a struggle to keep up with demand, Jones said.

“Right now the way that the fighting is going on we’re able to keep up. But if there was a spike somewhere or a catastrophic event, if they ran out of ammunition at a certain location, for example, we would have to reprioritize,” Jones said.

The CAOC is the command-and-control center that monitors and directs air operations in the region.

Afcent’s limited mobility assets are stretched thin across multiple combat zones from the Horn of Africa to Pakistan. When the president announced a surge of 3,500 troops to Afghanistan, the service hoped U.S. Transportation Command (Transcom) would lend additional aircraft—C-5 Galaxy,
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Globemaster and
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Hercules airlifters, KC-10 and KC-135 tankers, as well as contracted commercial airliners—to transport troops and equipment to theater.

But for most of the summer, all of Transcom’s mobility assets were dedicated to evacuations and moving precious food and water to civilians stranded by the storms. This left no additional aircraft available to help with the Afghanistan surge.

“We didn’t lose anything in country—what we didn’t get was additional help with the 3,500-ish plus-up in Afghanistan, plus their equipment,” Jones said. “Normally we would’ve gotten additional help from Transcom with that, and we didn’t get it, so we had to take that out of hide.”

Afcent expected Transcom would begin lending a hand as soon as it got its head above water. But then Trump decided to take a 13-day, five-country trip to Asia at a time when tensions in the region are sky-high over North Korea’s nuclear weapons program. Transcom has dedicated more than 80 cargo and tanker missions over the next few weeks to the presidential tour, Jones said.

Stephens, Transcom chief of public affairs, said 80 missions was an initial estimate, and he now believes the trip will take “somewhat” fewer. Still, he acknowledged there could be a delay in getting some equipment to forces in the Middle East.

“Based on the priorities, there are routinely circumstances in which the movement of certain assets are temporarily delayed in favor of higher-priority missions,” Stephens said. “We work to alleviate the effects of any delays by communicating the constraints daily with combatant commands through their mobility liaison teams.”

Limited access to C-17s is particularly stressing, as the larger U.S. Army vehicles cannot fit inside the smaller C-130s, Jones said. He noted that once Trump’s trip is over, he expects to get additional help from Transcom with mobility for the Afghanistan surge.

On top of flying the chief executive to a given location, presidential travel involves the movement of large numbers of personnel and equipment, including communications, security, logistics, local travel and maintenance, Stephens said. Visiting multiple locations in close succession also drives up requirements.

“On any given day there is a set amount of air mobility capacity available for military missions,” Stephens said. “U.S. Transcom, as DOD’s manager for transportation, plans, allocates, routes, schedules and tracks available air assets in order to meet commanders’ requirements.”
 

delft

Brigadier
From:
US Air Force official: Missile targeting Saudis was Iranian
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The comments by Lt. Gen. Jeffrey L. Harrigian, who oversees the Air Force’s Central Command in Qatar, further internationalizes the yearslong conflict in Yemen — the Arab world’s poorest country.
Beside US and UK support for KSA aggression against Yemen.
 
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