Armée Pakistanaise

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dil@w
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Re: Armée Pakistanaise

Message par dil@w »

Pakistan a effectué un tir test de son nouveau missile de croisière Hatf-7 Babur développé localement

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Pakistan today conducted a successful test fire of the indigenously developed multi tube Cruise Missile Hatf-VII (Babur), having a range of 700 kilometers. Babur Crusie Missile is a low flying, terrain hugging missile, which can strike targets both at Land and Sea with pin point accuracy. It carries stealth features. Equipped with modern cruise missile technology of Terrain Contour Matching (TERCOM) and Digital Scene Matching and Area Co-relation (DSMAC), it can carry both nuclear and conventional warheads. The missile was launched from a state of the art Multi Tube Missile Launch Vehicle (MLV), which significantly enhances the targeting and deployment options of Babur Weapon system.
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dil@w
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Le Général Kayani portant le nouvel uniforme de l'armée pakistanaise
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"It's better to stand and fight. If you run away, you'll only die tired"
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dil@w
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Re: Armée Pakistanaise

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Le Pakistan développe des armes nucléaires tactiques

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afin d'augmenter ses capacités nucléaires, le Pakistan cherche a développer des armements nucléaires tactiques et ainsi rejoindre le cercle des puissances nucléaires qui possède ou développe ce genre d'armes: les USA, la Russie, la France, la Chine et donc le Pakistan. L'Inde elle ne fait pas partie de ce petit monde tout comme la Grande Bretagne, israel (:?:) et la Corée du Nord.
ces têtes nucléaires tactiques pourraient être montées sur des missiles courte portée tel que le Nasr de 60km de portée récemment développé et déployé sur un véhicule qui en porte 2 à la fois.
http://bit.ly/UwE6Pi
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"It's better to stand and fight. If you run away, you'll only die tired"
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scorpion-rouge35
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Re: Armée Pakistanaise

Message par scorpion-rouge35 »

la Flotte sous marine pakistanaise

Agosta-90B

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Agosta-70

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Daphne Class

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THE ALGERIAN ARMY

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mig 29/32
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Re: Armée Pakistanaise

Message par mig 29/32 »

les sous-marins pakistanais de type agosta seront ils remplacés par des sous-marins de nouvelles générations? ( une rumeur disait des type 209 ou 214 mais selon un récent numéro de DSI il a été question de sous-marins chinois )
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scorpion-rouge35
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Re: Armée Pakistanaise

Message par scorpion-rouge35 »

je crois que les pakistanais vont plutôt resté chez la France pour s’équiper de sous marin vue qu'il ont déjà une expérience d'une trentaine d'année sur ce type de technologie .
THE ALGERIAN ARMY

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mig 29/32
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Re: Armée Pakistanaise

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scorpion tu penses aux scorpène ou aux marlin ?
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l'adjudant/chef
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Re: Armée Pakistanaise

Message par l'adjudant/chef »

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c'est pas l'arme qui tue mais l'être humaine qui tir sur la gâchette

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dil@w
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au moins les deux dernières photos sont les forces indiennes Adjudant/Chef
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"It's better to stand and fight. If you run away, you'll only die tired"
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Re: Armée Pakistanaise

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Pakistan’s new frigates a boost for anti-piracy, maritime security efforts

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Written by Guy Martin Thursday, 08 November 2012 21:06
altThe Pakistan Navy will next year take delivery of its fourth and final F-22P frigate. The locally built vessel will help it ensure maritime security, not just for Pakistan but also for the international community as the Pakistan Navy combats piracy and other threats in the Indian Ocean region.

Commodore Hisham of the Pakistan Navy, speaking at the International Defence Exhibition and Seminar (IDEAS) in Karachi today, said that Pakistan’s Navy has been part of Combined Task Force 151 (CTF-151) since January 2009 in an effort to combat piracy in the Gulf of Aden.

CTF 151 is an international naval task force that operates in the Gulf of Aden and off the eastern coast of Somalia covering an area of approximately 1.1 million square miles. It was established in January 2009 to conduct counterpiracy operations under a mission-based mandate throughout the Combined Maritime Forces (CMF) area of responsibility.

Pakistan has from the beginning participated in CTF-151 and so far has rotated 13 ships in the Task Force and commanded it twice. In December the Pakistan Navy will take command for a third time.

With the advent of pirates using hijacked mother ships from which to launch attack skiffs, piracy has expanded far beyond the Somali coast. Pirates have struck as far as the western coast of India, the Somali Basin and close to Pakistan’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). Indeed, Hisham noted that there have been three incidences of piracy on the edge of Pakistan’s EEZ in recent times.

Hisham said that Somali piracy has strategic fallout which includes disruption of trade, a rise in insurance premiums and freight charges and altered routes as shipping companies avoid high risk areas.

Hisham pointed out that terrorists and pirates operate hand-in-glove, as money made through piracy is used to further terrorist activities ashore, which distracts from activity at sea.

Apart from counter-piracy duties, the Pakistan Navy is also part of Combined Task Force 150 (CTF-150), a multinational coalition naval task force working under the 25 nation coalition of Combined Maritime Forces. It was established to promote maritime security in order to counter terrorist acts and related illegal activities, which terrorists use to fund or conceal their movements. CTF-150‘s Area of Operation covers the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden, Indian Ocean and Gulf of Oman.

The activities of CTF-150 directly influence events ashore, as terrorist organisations are denied a risk free method of conducting operations or moving personnel, weapons or income-generating narcotics.

Pakistan has five times commanded the Combined Task Force 150 since 2004. Hisham noted that the Pakistan Navy’s contribution to regional maritime security has involved 44 ships in rotation since 2004, which have accumulated more than 50 000 hours at sea. Pakistan Navy ships have had the second highest on-task time in the coalition second only to the United States.

Pakistan’s ability to provide maritime security is being increased with the arrival of its four new F-22P or Zulfiquar class multi-purpose frigates, the first of which was commissioned in September 2009. The Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuilding Group, China State Shipbuilding Company, the China Shipbuilding and Trading Company and Karachi Shipyard and Engineering Works (KSEW) are all involved in the production of the vessels.

The first three frigates were built in China at the Hudong Zhonghau Shipyard, while the last vessel is being built by Karachi Shipyard and Engineering Works. The class carry Harbin Z-9 helicopters and are armed with a 76 mm gun, 30 mm Type 730B close-in weapons systems, FM-90N surface-to-air missiles, C-802 surface-to-surface missiles, ET-52C torpedoes and RDC-32 anti-submarine rockets.

The fourth frigate was launched in June last year at the Karachi Shipyard and Engineering Works. During the launch ceremony the Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Noman Bashir said that a strong navy was needed to defend the maritime interests of Pakistan. He said that the country does not have any aggressive plans but needed to protect sea routes, the exclusive economic zone and international energy lines that pass close to the coast. He said this was not only in the interest of Pakistan but the entire international community.
http://www.defenceweb.co.za/index.php?o ... Itemid=249
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sadral
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Re: Armée Pakistanaise

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Pakistan and China to jointly market Al Khalid tank
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Pakistan’s Norinco and Pakistan’s HIT yesterday signed an agreement to jointly market the Al Khalid main battle tank, especially to emerging market economies like Asia and Africa, which cannot afford more expensive Western products.

The memorandum of understanding was signed at the International Defence Exhibition and Seminar held in Karachi, Pakistan. Heavy Industries Taxila (HIT) and Norinco Corporation will also jointly market other products, such as security vehicles.

Qasim Ijaz Cheema, Cost Accountant at HIT said that the Al Khalid tank was designed by Pakistan in collaboration with China, which exported it without Pakistan’s permission. The new agreement makes provision for joint marketing and profit sharing.

So far, around 300 Al Khalids have been produced. Cheema said there was great interest in the Middle East and Africa for the tank. It is aimed primarily at emerging markets that cannot afford expensive main battle tanks.

The Al-Khalid is based on the Norinco Type 90-II main battle tank. It was originally meant to be license built at HIT, but design improvements made for the Pakistan Army resulted in the Al Khalid

Armament includes a 125 mm smoothbore gun, coaxial 7.62 mm machine gun and a 12.7 mm machine gun for engaging ground and aerial targets. The Al-Khalid can engage targets while it is stationary or moving. The tank is powered by a Ukrainian 6TDF diesel engine developing 1 200 hp, for a top speed of more than 70 km/h.

HIT also produces the Al Zarrar tank, with 500 built, but these are not for export as they are being built specifically for the Pakistan Army.
http://www.defenceweb.co.za/index.php?o ... Itemid=249
« Une page est tournée ; l'Algérie est d'abord fille de son histoire, qu'elle ait surmonté l'épreuve coloniale et même défié l'éclipse, atteste, s'il en était besoin, de cette volonté inextinguible de vivre sans laquelle les peuples sont menacés parfois de disparition.
L'ornière qui nous a contraints à croupir dans l'existence végétative des asphyxies mortelles nous imposa de nous replier sur nous-mêmes dans l'attente et la préparation d'un réveil et d'un sursaut qui ne pouvaient se faire, hélas ! que dans la souffrance et dans le sang. La France, elle-même, a connu de ces disgrâces et de ces résurrections. » Le président Houari Boumediene.

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Re: Armée Pakistanaise

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Pakistan Test-Fires Medium-Range Ballistic Missile

Nov. 28, 2012 - 03:58PM
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Pakistan conducted a training launch Nov. 28 of the Ghauri/Hatf V medium-range ballistic missile at an undisclosed location. (ISPR)
ISLAMABAD — Pakistan test-fired its Ghauri/Hatf-V (Vengeance V) medium-range ballistic missile Nov. 28, a liquid-fueled missile that some observers say is not well-suited to Pakistan’s needs.

According to the military’s Inter Service Public Relations (ISPR) media branch, the Ghauri/Hatf-V was test-fired “by a Strategic Missile Group of the Army Strategic Force Command on the culmination of a field training exercise that was aimed at testing the operational readiness of the Army Strategic Force Command.”

The test was monitored at the National Command Center by the National Command Authority’s fully automated Strategic Command and Control Support System (SCCSS).

“The SCCSS enables robust command and control capability of all strategic assets, with round-the-clock situational awareness in a digitized, network-centric environment to decision-makers at the National Command Centre,” the ISRP said.

Analysts claim the Ghauri, with a range of 1,300 kilometers, is based on the North Korean Nodong-1 ballistic missile, but it is not Pakistan’s most capable delivery asset. They doubt its continuing suitability for Pakistan’s needs.

Mansoor Ahmed, a lecturer in the Department of Defence and Strategic Studies at Quaid-e-Azam University here, said the Ghauri is not a particularly effective weapon or suited to Pakistan’s operational requirement.

“Unlike solid-fueled missiles, liquid-fueled ballistic missiles cannot store the fuel for long periods and have to be refueled prior to launch, which takes several hours, thus making them vulnerable to first strikes,” said Ahmed, an expert on Pakistan’s nuclear program and its delivery systems. “Given the relative lack of Pakistan’s strategic depth, such systems are not the first choice in missile systems for nuclear warhead delivery, which explains why the Ghauri remains the only liquid-fueled system in its missile inventory.”

Ahmed said he agrees the launch was more a test of the readiness of the Army Strategic Force Command and the SCCSS than of the missile itself.

He also highlighted the missile’s checkered history.

Despite being announced as a success, the first test of the missile on April 6, 1998, was a failure, with the missile burning up on re-entry. It had to be heavily redesigned and improved by the National Engineering and Scientific Commission, and the National Defense Complex, before it could enter service again.

“However, the missile’s range has remained constant at 1,300 kilometers over the years, indicating that Pakistan has only one Ghauri system with eight other solid-fueled missile systems,” Ahmed said. “Moreover, a solid-fueled alternate system in the form of Shaheen-1A was recently tested.”

But the Ghauri is cheaper than solid-fueled missiles, and therefore more expendable when testing launch and control systems, Ahmed said, and it may offer Pakistan a “possible springboard for a space launch vehicle,” akin to the British Blue Streak ballistic missile.

http://www.defensenews.com/article/2012 ... |FRONTPAGE
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Crashes raise concern about Pakistani air force

By By SEBASTIAN ABBOT, Associated Press – 1 day ago

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Over a dozen Pakistani air force planes have crashed in roughly the past 18 months, raising concerns about the health of an aging fleet that officials are struggling to upgrade because of a lack of funds.
A significant number of the air force's combat aircraft are nearly half a century old and have been called on in recent years to help the army fight a domestic Taliban insurgency that has killed thousands of people. This has added to the strain on a force that has historically focused on countering the threat from Pakistan's neighbor and archenemy, India.

Pakistan has turned to the U.S. and China for help in modernizing its air force, but economic woes have strained the government's budget, even for the country's powerful military. Tension with the U.S. over a host of issues, including the covert raid that killed Osama bin Laden last year, also hasn't helped.

Shahzad Chaudhry, a former senior Pakistani air force officer, said the number of planes that have crashed "would be worrying for any air force."

"If I were air force chief, I certainly wouldn't want to see over a dozen airplanes being lost," said Chaudhry. "Obviously we need to bring those numbers down."

At least 13 planes have crashed since May 2011, many because of technical problems, according to a record maintained by The Associated Press. The air force did not respond to request for comment on the crashes.

The most recent accident occurred on Nov. 22, when a Dassault Mirage fighter jet crashed on a routine night training mission in central Punjab province, killing the pilot. The air force said at the time that it was investigating the cause of the crash, but eyewitnesses said the plane caught fire before it fell out of the sky.

Nearly half the planes that have crashed were decades-old Mirage fighters. They make up at least a quarter of the force's fleet of about 400 combat aircraft, according to the website GlobalSecurity.org. Many were built nearly 50 years ago and acquired from foreign militaries that had already retired them.

"We bought them at almost throw-away prices, brought them over, overhauled them and continue to operate them," said former Pakistani air force chief Tanvir Mahmood. "This was our compulsion because of the financial constraints that we had."

Chaudhry, the former senior air force officer, said the Mirage was a "very sturdy platform" that shouldn't fail easily.

"But when you have the intensity of an operational combat environment, problems tend to be there," said Chaudhry.

The crashes raise questions not only about the age of the aircraft, but also flight maintenance practices, said Sajad Haider, a celebrated former air force pilot who has written a book about the service.

Other planes that have gone down include the Chengdu F-7 fighter jet bought from China, the JF-17 Thunder fighter jet jointly developed with China and Pakistan's Mushshak trainer, a propeller plane.

The most advanced fighter jet operated by the Pakistani air force is the F-16 Fighting Falcon, over 60 of which were purchased in various batches from the U.S. over the past three decades.

U.S. military support came to a halt in the 1990s because of sanctions imposed on Pakistan over its nuclear program, but resumed in 2001 when Washington needed Islamabad's support to fight al-Qaida and the Taliban in Afghanistan. Military assistance largely dried up once again over the past two years because of renewed tensions between the two countries, although the U.S. did deliver more than a dozen new F-16s purchased by Pakistan.

One of the reasons Pakistan turned to China for help with its air force was the country's troubles with the U.S.

The government has purchased over 100 F-7 fighter jets from China, mostly in the 1980s, and has reportedly ordered more advanced FC-20 fighter jets in recent years. Pakistan is also domestically producing the JF-17 fighter jet, jointly developed with China, but it has not yet entered full service.

"The JF-17 program was pushed through during my tenure of office because we knew we couldn't live with these old Mirages and some of our old Chinese planes for too long," said Mahmood, who served as air force chief from 2006 to 2009.

The current head of the air force, Tahir Rafique Butt, told Pakistan's Senate defense committee at the end of November that the force was struggling to modernize its equipment and technology because of a shortage of funds, said the head of the committee, Mushahid Hussain.

While Pakistani military spending makes up about 20 percent of the government's budget, the air force is lower down the totem pole than the powerful army.

Hussain said the air force was doing the best with what it has, but the recent spate of crashes "was linked to use of technology that is fast becoming outmoded and obsolete."

"That reinforces the argument the air force was making to us about a lack of resources," said Hussain.
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FILE - In this Nov. 14, 2011, file photo, villagers stand near wreckage of a Pakistani air force fighter jet that crashed in Attock near Islamabad, Pakistan. Over a dozen Pakistani air force planes have crashed in roughly the past 18 months, raising concerns about the health of an aging fleet that officials are struggling to upgrade because of a lack of funds. A significant number of the air force’s combat aircraft are nearly half a century old and have been called on in recent years to help the army fight a domestic Taliban insurgency that has killed thousands of people. This has added to the strain on a force that has historically focused on countering the threat from Pakistan’s neighbor and archenemy, India. (AP Photo/Ghulam Shabbir, File)

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FILE - In this May 17, 2012 file photo, a Pakistan air force official, right, takes photographs of the wreckage of a plane which crashed in Nowshera, Pakistan. Over a dozen Pakistani air force planes have crashed in roughly the past 18 months, raising concerns about the health of an aging fleet that officials are struggling to upgrade because of a lack of funds. A significant number of the air force’s combat aircraft are nearly half a century old and have been called on in recent years to help the army fight a domestic Taliban insurgency that has killed thousands of people. This has added to the strain on a force that has historically focused on countering the threat from Pakistan’s neighbor and archenemy, India. (AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad, File)
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/art ... 24fa8a805d
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Pak Navy test-fires missile from warship
By: INP | December 21, 2012, 7:08 pm
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Pakistan Navy test-fired a long-range missile from a warship on Friday.

Pakistan Navy Chief Admiral Asif Sandila along with Chairman Nescom witnessed the firing of the missile.

The naval chief on this occasion said that the successful firing of the missile was a testimony of the professional acumen and insurmountable capability of the warship. He said that the officers and soldiers of the Pakistan Navy deserve compliments.

Admiral Asif Sandila further said that Pakistan Navy was ever ready to meet any challenges. He added that the government was aware of the needs of the Pakistan Navy and efforts are afoot to address them.
http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news- ... om-warship
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