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This happen when you buy secondhand things.

Everything faces technical difficulties, whether it's new or secondhand. The aircraft still managed to land with 50% power that's what matter. Doesn't change the fact that C-130J is still a good reliable aircraft which can operate longer than it's original service life unlike your new transport aircraft.

In dealing with the opponent with no decent air force, Myanmar Navy doesn't need any SAM.

Bangladesh doesn't have decent air force so your navy doesn't need SAM?! :undecided: What?! :undecided: Seriously?! :rofl::rofl: I am extremely shocked seeing your level of stupidity and cockiness. :rofl::rofl: Are you trying to ignore the fact that your ships doesn't have any proper AD against anti-ship missile with your bold-dumb statement? :rofl::rofl:

You do know that you will face all three military wings i a full scale war right? And the most weakest military wing of Burmese military is your navy right? Just like the BAF. And BAF still has minimum ability to intercept your aircraft.

In the past twenty years, BN has managed to acquire only 4 new ships and the rest of the acquisitions are secondhand junks from all over the world.

Not all over the world. Only from China, UK and US. Doesn't change the fact that BN is still better than MN and only gonna get better unless you induct something good enough like Kilo or the LPD.

And 21 new ships actually in past 20 years including four LPCs and four corvettes. 20 of them were procured in 10 years. Five more in construction and 8 more in pipeline.

No new frigates were inducted in the past two decades.
Twenty years ago, BNS Bangabanghu was the only ship that has the sonar and ASW weapons.

You corrected your own mistake. BNS BB was commissioned in 2001. Do you know how many years in two decades?

Even the new C13B corvettes acquired from china are heavily downgraded and cheap version of Type 056 with no ASW suite.

Heavily downgraded??!! 😂😂 Just because it doesn't have sonar and torpedoes?! :rofl: That makes a ship "heavily downgraded"??!! :rofl: The Type 56 corvette we bought from China is not a downgraded version. It's the anti-surface warfare variant PLAN uses in it's fleet.

And our Type 56s are actually bit upgraded with a V-shaped hull to sustain heavy sea states/rough sea and two new corvettes have new 3D phased array radar which PLAN Type-56 still doesn't have yet. It can be fitted with sonar later if BN wants. These corvettes will be complemented by ASW variant of Durjoy class LPCs. The ASW version you are talking about is actually called Type 56A.

While Nigeria paid 42 mn$ for P18N, larger version of Type 056, BN spent hundred of millions of dollars for the smaller and downgraded ship.

Total $48.5 million actually. OPV doesn't cost that much compared to corvette. Your accusation is quiet baseless, ridiculous and dumb!! Try to use your brain sometimes.

Your frigates are not to defend the BD waters, just to fill the pockets of your topbrass through irregular deals.

Quite rich coming from a guy whose country is run by military junta which is responsible for oppressing it's minorities and involved in illegal drug business as part of Golden Triangle and controversial jade trade don't you think? Suu Kyi may have won the election but Burmese military still has huge influence in country. Suu Kyi is puppet controlled by your military.

BTW, your mighty junk navy are using the MANPADS.

So? That's from the Durjoy class LPC. Ship such as OPV, patrol craft, LHD/LPD, mine hunter which doesn't have proper air defense carries MANPADS. Your suppa mighty sea state 4 shallow hull 3000 tons Kyan Sittha might be the only exception which has pedestal mounted MANPAD. Why did your navy edit the SAM firing clip from Kyan Sittha in promotional video? Doesn't your MANPAD work? :cheesy: Cause i don't see any electro-optic sensor.

Turkish Navy.

1605878454454.png


German Navy.


Aussie Navy

1605879313365.png


Oh my!! What is this!! Suppa Mighty Burmese Navy feeling shy to fire even a single Igla MANPAD from it's suppa pawa corvette Kyan Sittha!! :cheesy:


Twenty years ago, BNS Bangabanghu was the only ship that has the sonar and ASW weapons.

Wrong. Two Type 41 Leopard class, Salisbury class and BNS Osman (Ex Type 53) had ASW capability. We had two Type 037 submarine chasers, one currently operational BNS Nirbhoy. We also had some torpedo boats.

After twenty years of modernization, BNS Bangabanghu is still the only ship that has the full ASW capability.

Two new Durgom class ASW LPCs are already in service.

Now and then.
Good painting job.

That's how ship's hull will look without paint during maintenance/overhaul. 🙄

1605882903454.png


Yeah 20 yaers old 2nd hand frigates with HHQ7 sam which can't fire targets under 30m altitude and max range about 15km is somewhat better than manpads

What are you trying to say? Are you saying that it's NOT better than your MANPADS? 🤨 Even HISAR-A has the same minimum flight altitude. At least three of our frigates have better SAM system than yours with better chance to stop anti-ship missile. And these SAMs are integrated with radar and complemented by 37mm Type 76A and 40mm DARDO CIWS.
 
Last edited:
Oct 28, 2020

Without strategic weapons Myanmar will be divided into multiple pieces. What do you think? Myanmar army is strong enough to fight multi sided war against rebels, Bangladesh, Thailand and Western nations who will happily divide the country? No man.

Already the international community is fed up with the Rohingya issue. Myanmar has too many problems starting from civil war to Rohingya and cold war between India and China.

Myanmar armed forces is not strong enough to deal with such pressure no matter what you say. So strategic weapons are necessary to ensure sovereignty.


This is exactly why repeated false flag "unpleasant events" are regularly organized by the western powers, to convince the targeted people to accept the tremendous sacrifice needed to develop the military forces including the WMD components, and at the cost of civilian development.

It used to be China, Iran and North Korea, for several decades, making them backward in all fields as a consequence.

Now it is targeting Ethiopia and Burma!

Here the regular and latest "booster vaccination" offered by the western powers, just to make sure the people of Burma don't forget that they live under a constant existential threat:

Myanmar Condemns UN Rohingya Resolution

Myanmar has condemned a United Nations draft resolution on human rights for the Rohingya, backed by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the European Union, saying it is “intrusive” and “politically motivated”.

However, a majority of UN members – 131 countries – supported the resolution and the General Assembly approved it on Wednesday. Eight countries supported Myanmar and 31 abstained.

According to Myanmar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, U Kyaw Moe Tun, Myanmar’s permanent representative to the UN, said the assembly’s “adoption of the discriminatory draft resolution demonstrates the failure to uphold the principle of sovereign equality of nations, undermining impartiality and fairness, and application of double standards”.

The UN said the General Assembly expressed “grave concern at reports of serious human rights violations by the military and security forces, as well as violations of international humanitarian law in Myanmar against Rohingya and other minorities, notably in Kachin, Rakhine, southern Chin and Shan states”.

Following the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army’s (ARSA) attacks on border police outposts in Oct. 2016 and Aug. 2017 in northern Rakhine State, the military responded with “clearance operations”, which prompted more than 740,000 Rohingya to flee to neighboring Bangladesh. Their repatriation has been planned since 2018 but never implemented and no Rohingya have chosen to return officially through the government’s repatriation program, which has been suspended because of COVID-19.

The UN said: “Among the abuses are those involving arbitrary arrests, deaths in detention, torture, deliberate killing and maiming of children, recruitment and use of children for forced labour, indiscriminate shelling of civilian areas, the burning of homes and the forced displacement of over 860,000 Rohingya and other minorities to Bangladesh.”

The United States, Canada and Germany co-sponsored the resolution and urged Myanmar to cooperate with the United Nations human rights mechanisms formed since 2017, including the UN’s Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar and Special Rapporteur Tom Andrews, and to grant them access and assistance.

Germany, which represents the EU, said: “The humanitarian situation has not improved in recent years”, citing ongoing conflict in Rakhine State.

Coronavirus has exacerbated the situation, the German statement said. It added that the EU hopes “the draft will facilitate a solution for the Rohingya [and] sends a message of hope: the world doesn’t forget you, Rohingya people”.

U Kyaw Moe Tun said the text is “politically motivated”, “one-sided and barely reflects Myanmar’s efforts and initiatives to address the challenges, and to lay a firm foundation for lasting peace and prosperity”.

He added the sponsors of the resolution “conveniently ignore” attacks by ARSA and the Arakan Army. He denounced “illegitimate” pressure exerted on Myanmar which “fanned the flames” of conflict.

Myanmar formed its Independent Commission of Enquiry (ICOE) in 2018 to investigate allegations of human rights violations in Rakhine State.

In January, ICOE submitted its final report denying the security operations had genocidal intent. But the report admitted, “war crimes, serious human rights violations and violations of domestic law took place”.

The report stated that crimes occurred including mass killings of Rohingya and the burning of abandoned Muslim villages, which were allegedly committed by the security forces.

Myanmar is currently fighting a lawsuit filed by The Gambia at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague alleging genocide against the Rohingya.

State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi defended the country against the charges last December. As the ICJ’s rulings are not binding, rights groups are pursuing an alternative approach by attempting to bring Myanmar’s generals to the International Criminal Court over alleged human rights violations.

U Aung Myo Min, a longtime human rights advocate, said allowing access to inquiries and cooperation with the international community and UN is a way to overcome the cycle of allegations against Myanmar.

He said successive governments in Myanmar have rejected the General Assembly’s resolutions, claiming they infringe on its sovereignty.

“But these objections in the past led to human rights cases going to the UN Security Council. If the current government does not cooperate, it might lead to further action against Myanmar,” he said.

Eight countries – China, Russia, Vietnam, the Philippines, Cambodia, Laos, Zimbabwe and Belarus – voted against this week’s UN resolution.

China said it will continue to assist talks between Myanmar and Bangladesh, which are crucial for Rohingya repatriation.

Russia’s representative said: “Myanmar requires real assistance, not sweeping criticism [and] such resolutions do not resolve human rights problems.”

Thirty-one countries abstained, including Japan, Thailand and Singapore.


Japan’s representative said: “The draft regrettably lacks balance and does not recognize Myanmar’s efforts to consolidate democracy.” However, the draft did reflect “the concerns of the international community about the humanitarian situation of the displaced and those living in Rakhine State”.


The General Assembly also approved six resolutions on human rights in Iran, North Korea, Syria and Russia.

https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/myanmar-condemns-un-rohingya-resolution.html

As a result to these so called "external threats", again not imaginary but really and craftily engineered by the Dystopian Empire since 1945 and its founding by the U.S. putschists, as playing the divide and conquer is the key to the U.S. military junta's survival, Ethiopia went to launch ... an indigenous "space program" with the aim to develop a space rocket able to carry satellite into orbit.

The Ethiopian government said it plans to build both the satellites and launch rockets locally with minimum reliance on foreign partners. In November 2015, the Mekele Institute of Technology in Ethiopia launched a rocket called Alpha Meles 30 kilometers into space. The rocket cost an estimated U.S.$2.3 million to develop, build, and launch.

The next step was to reach the Von Karman line delimiting the boundary with outer space, but there have been no reports of subsequent launches, until 4 years later, when in 2019 Ethiopia dropped the mask, as time was running out with its indigenous effort, disclosing its ambition to ... possess strategic missile of 5000 km range and nuclear warheads!

Indeed, Ethiopia asked France for the provision of thirty M51 SLBMs (!) with nuclear warheads.

The context was Ethiopia's ongoing dispute with Egypt over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.

Will France arm the Nobel Peace Prize?

Modifié le 18/11/2019 à 14:32 - Publié le 17/11/2019 à 15:00 | Le Point.fr

Two months before being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, the Ethiopian Prime Minister sent a letter to “His Excellency” President Emmanuel Macron. On July 22, 2019, Abiy Ahmed asked France to help him "to strengthen the Ethiopian air force" by providing him, on credit, with a state-of-the-art arsenal detailed on three pages. This list includes: 12 combat aircraft (including Rafale and Mirage 2000), 18 helicopters and 2 military transport planes manufactured by Airbus, 10 Dassault drones, electronic jamming systems and, even more surprisingly, around thirty M51 missiles with a range of over 6,000 kilometers… and with a nuclear warhead! A request at the very least extravagant (and illegal) knowing that both France and Ethiopia have signed the nuclear non-proliferation treaty.

Em0ZO1-W8AAMuvy

https://archive.vn/fAvPA/73cb2de6888141160627697206ad07909f8b1ca2.jpg ; https://archive.vn/fAvPA/4352dea8cb16747c8e3ef1f9061743bd8622d596/scr.png ; http://web.archive.org/web/20201120224131if_/https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Em0ZO1-W8AAMuvy?format=jpg&name=900x900 ; http://web.archive.org/web/20201114230136/https://www.lepoint.fr/monde/la-france-va-t-elle-armer-le-prix-nobel-de-la-paix-17-11-2019-2347906_24.php ; https://archive.vn/nl7fw
1. This list includes: 12 combat aircraft (including Rafale and Mirage 2000), 18 helicopters and 2 military transport planes manufactured by Airbus, 10 Dassault drones, electronic jamming systems and, even more surprisingly, around thirty M51 missiles with a range of over 6,000 kilometers… and with a nuclear warhead!

Should we consider the Ethiopian case as the template for Burma's "civilian space program"?

Is the development of nuclear armed ICBMs the real goal of the Tatmadaw?

And why should Burma be the only nation in the world to seek civilian space rockets when the military purpose is the norm for all space powers?

Unlike Ethiopia, the Tatmadaw doesn't lack of strategic allies that can provide both a diplomatic umbrella, hardware supply and technology transferts. Russia and to a lesser degree North Korea will always stand with Naypyitaw.

6e323515d66ee30841cae4a9a7318d3b72b3e685.gif

ae4ffdaeb02c2ea160fb33e41686a846f36755ca.gif

4b7f704c1b6a7a2291742bd3986353bc70cc2569.png
022c2d783cdf337beef335add6afdbf99880963d.png




:cool:🚬
 
This is exactly why repeated false flag "unpleasant events" are regularly organized by the western powers, to convince the targeted people to accept the tremendous sacrifice needed to develop the military forces including the WMD components, and at the cost of civilian development.

It used to be China, Iran and North Korea, for several decades, making them backward in all fields as a consequence.

Now it is targeting Ethiopia and Burma!

Here the regular and latest "booster vaccination" offered by the western powers, just to make sure the people of Burma don't forget that they live under a constant existential threat:

Myanmar Condemns UN Rohingya Resolution
Myanmar has condemned a United Nations draft resolution on human rights for the Rohingya, backed by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the European Union, saying it is “intrusive” and “politically motivated”.
However, a majority of UN members – 131 countries – supported the resolution and the General Assembly approved it on Wednesday. Eight countries supported Myanmar and 31 abstained.
According to Myanmar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, U Kyaw Moe Tun, Myanmar’s permanent representative to the UN, said the assembly’s “adoption of the discriminatory draft resolution demonstrates the failure to uphold the principle of sovereign equality of nations, undermining impartiality and fairness, and application of double standards”.
The UN said the General Assembly expressed “grave concern at reports of serious human rights violations by the military and security forces, as well as violations of international humanitarian law in Myanmar against Rohingya and other minorities, notably in Kachin, Rakhine, southern Chin and Shan states”.
Following the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army’s (ARSA) attacks on border police outposts in Oct. 2016 and Aug. 2017 in northern Rakhine State, the military responded with “clearance operations”, which prompted more than 740,000 Rohingya to flee to neighboring Bangladesh. Their repatriation has been planned since 2018 but never implemented and no Rohingya have chosen to return officially through the government’s repatriation program, which has been suspended because of COVID-19.
The UN said: “Among the abuses are those involving arbitrary arrests, deaths in detention, torture, deliberate killing and maiming of children, recruitment and use of children for forced labour, indiscriminate shelling of civilian areas, the burning of homes and the forced displacement of over 860,000 Rohingya and other minorities to Bangladesh.”
The United States, Canada and Germany co-sponsored the resolution and urged Myanmar to cooperate with the United Nations human rights mechanisms formed since 2017, including the UN’s Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar and Special Rapporteur Tom Andrews, and to grant them access and assistance.
Germany, which represents the EU, said: “The humanitarian situation has not improved in recent years”, citing ongoing conflict in Rakhine State.
Coronavirus has exacerbated the situation, the German statement said. It added that the EU hopes “the draft will facilitate a solution for the Rohingya [and] sends a message of hope: the world doesn’t forget you, Rohingya people”.
U Kyaw Moe Tun said the text is “politically motivated”, “one-sided and barely reflects Myanmar’s efforts and initiatives to address the challenges, and to lay a firm foundation for lasting peace and prosperity”.
He added the sponsors of the resolution “conveniently ignore” attacks by ARSA and the Arakan Army. He denounced “illegitimate” pressure exerted on Myanmar which “fanned the flames” of conflict.
Myanmar formed its Independent Commission of Enquiry (ICOE) in 2018 to investigate allegations of human rights violations in Rakhine State.
In January, ICOE submitted its final report denying the security operations had genocidal intent. But the report admitted, “war crimes, serious human rights violations and violations of domestic law took place”.
The report stated that crimes occurred including mass killings of Rohingya and the burning of abandoned Muslim villages, which were allegedly committed by the security forces.
Myanmar is currently fighting a lawsuit filed by The Gambia at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague alleging genocide against the Rohingya.
State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi defended the country against the charges last December. As the ICJ’s rulings are not binding, rights groups are pursuing an alternative approach by attempting to bring Myanmar’s generals to the International Criminal Court over alleged human rights violations.
U Aung Myo Min, a longtime human rights advocate, said allowing access to inquiries and cooperation with the international community and UN is a way to overcome the cycle of allegations against Myanmar.
He said successive governments in Myanmar have rejected the General Assembly’s resolutions, claiming they infringe on its sovereignty.
“But these objections in the past led to human rights cases going to the UN Security Council. If the current government does not cooperate, it might lead to further action against Myanmar,” he said.
Eight countries – China, Russia, Vietnam, the Philippines, Cambodia, Laos, Zimbabwe and Belarus – voted against this week’s UN resolution.
China said it will continue to assist talks between Myanmar and Bangladesh, which are crucial for Rohingya repatriation.
Russia’s representative said: “Myanmar requires real assistance, not sweeping criticism [and] such resolutions do not resolve human rights problems.”
Thirty-one countries abstained, including Japan, Thailand and Singapore.
Japan’s representative said: “The draft regrettably lacks balance and does not recognize Myanmar’s efforts to consolidate democracy.” However, the draft did reflect “the concerns of the international community about the humanitarian situation of the displaced and those living in Rakhine State”.
The General Assembly also approved six resolutions on human rights in Iran, North Korea, Syria and Russia.
https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/myanmar-condemns-un-rohingya-resolution.html

As a result to these so called "external threats", again not imaginary but really and craftily engineered by the Dystopian Empire since 1945 and its founding by the U.S. putschists, as playing the divide and conquer is the key to the U.S. military junta's survival, Ethiopia went to launch ... an indigenous "space program" with the aim to develop a space rocket able to carry satellite into orbit.

The Ethiopian government said it plans to build both the satellites and launch rockets locally with minimum reliance on foreign partners. In November 2015, the Mekele Institute of Technology in Ethiopia launched a rocket called Alpha Meles 30 kilometers into space. The rocket cost an estimated U.S.$2.3 million to develop, build, and launch.

The next step was to reach the Von Karman line delimiting the boundary with outer space, but there have been no reports of subsequent launches, until 4 years later, when in 2019 Ethiopia dropped the mask, as time was running out with its indigenous effort, disclosing its ambition to ... possess strategic missile of 5000 km range and nuclear warheads!

Indeed, Ethiopia asked France for the provision of thirty M51 SLBMs (!) with nuclear warheads.

The context was Ethiopia's ongoing dispute with Egypt over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.

Will France arm the Nobel Peace Prize?
Modifié le 18/11/2019 à 14:32 - Publié le 17/11/2019 à 15:00 | Le Point.fr
Two months before being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, the Ethiopian Prime Minister sent a letter to “His Excellency” President Emmanuel Macron. On July 22, 2019, Abiy Ahmed asked France to help him "to strengthen the Ethiopian air force" by providing him, on credit, with a state-of-the-art arsenal detailed on three pages. This list includes: 12 combat aircraft (including Rafale and Mirage 2000), 18 helicopters and 2 military transport planes manufactured by Airbus, 10 Dassault drones, electronic jamming systems and, even more surprisingly, around thirty M51 missiles with a range of over 6,000 kilometers… and with a nuclear warhead! A request at the very least extravagant (and illegal) knowing that both France and Ethiopia have signed the nuclear non-proliferation treaty.
Em0ZO1-W8AAMuvy
https://archive.vn/fAvPA/73cb2de6888141160627697206ad07909f8b1ca2.jpg ; https://archive.vn/fAvPA/4352dea8cb16747c8e3ef1f9061743bd8622d596/scr.png ; http://web.archive.org/web/20201120224131if_/https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Em0ZO1-W8AAMuvy?format=jpg&name=900x900 ; http://web.archive.org/web/20201114230136/https://www.lepoint.fr/monde/la-france-va-t-elle-armer-le-prix-nobel-de-la-paix-17-11-2019-2347906_24.php ; https://archive.vn/nl7fw
1. This list includes: 12 combat aircraft (including Rafale and Mirage 2000), 18 helicopters and 2 military transport planes manufactured by Airbus, 10 Dassault drones, electronic jamming systems and, even more surprisingly, around thirty M51 missiles with a range of over 6,000 kilometers… and with a nuclear warhead!

Should we consider the Ethiopian case as the template for Burma's "civilian space program"?

Is the development of nuclear armed ICBMs the real goal of the Tatmadaw?

And why should Burma be the only nation in the world to seek civilian space rockets when the military purpose is the norm for all space powers?

Unlike Ethiopia, the Tatmadaw doesn't lack of strategic allies that can provide both a diplomatic umbrella, hardware supply and technology transferts. Russia and to a lesser degree North Korea will always stand with Naypyitaw.

6e323515d66ee30841cae4a9a7318d3b72b3e685.gif

ae4ffdaeb02c2ea160fb33e41686a846f36755ca.gif

4b7f704c1b6a7a2291742bd3986353bc70cc2569.png
022c2d783cdf337beef335add6afdbf99880963d.png




:cool:🚬
Iran does not have nukes. At least not now. Moreover Iran as a muslim country will recieve great scrutiny for producing nukes.
 
Iran does not have nukes. At least not now. Moreover Iran as a muslim country will recieve great scrutiny for producing nukes.


Bro, Iran is the partner of North Korea. All the know-how are common.

R&D departments are located in both nations.

Iran is the financial department of the team, as it is less subjected to sanctions after the JCPOA accords, and it has quasi infinite reserves of oil.

Meanwhile North Korea is the testing ground of the team, to thwart enemy terrorist operatives that plague Iran with acts of sabotages, bombings and a sprea of assassination of targeted key scientists.

Therefore Iran already possess the blueprints for the Hwasong-15 ICBM, Hwasong-16 FOBS ICBM, Pukguksong-4 SLBM and all the nuclear designs including thermonuclear and EMPs one!

Iran has the facilities to produce the hardware, as it only requires CNC and softwares. What it might be lacking is enough Plutonium or higly enriched military grade Uranium, but it is catching up very fast with the latest underground cascade enrichment plant.

Why can Italy develop solid propellant ICBM under the guise of the Vega space launcher, Japan its Epsilon SLV, South Korea its solid fuel GEO satellite launcher?

This is called double standard practice.

Any nation can do it. That is why Iran has developed the solid propellant Qaem satellite carrier back in 2011s, with size equivalent to the Vega!


20160304-kp-01-7.jpg

http://www.dprktoday.com/content/photo/2016/20160304-kp-01-7.jpg
http://www.dprktoday.com/index.php?type=42&no=1964
왕들의 궁전-만경대학생소년궁전을 찾아서 (2)
나어린 미술가들의 솜씨
访王的宫殿--万景台学生少年宫(2)
儿童美术家的手艺
16-03-09 10:51
http://www.xici.net/d228225918.htm
▲ North Korean version of the Iranian "Qaem" SLV. 주체105(2016)년 3월 4일

Now it is the turn for the Tatmadaw to develop a "solid propellant GEO satellite launcher"! Only not to alarm its enemies.

And it has already collected many samples of the Chinese Long March-11 solid propellant carrier's fallen stages, that are based on the DF-31 ICBM!

:cool:🚬
 
Galatic Penguin? you must be a troll who is high on yaba.

Thank you for your extremely good-faith criticism. I will give it the attention it deserves.

Indeed, all my contributions as a dedicated OSINT are based on well documented and proven hard facts.

Glad that serious readers might find it helpful and enjoy my posts.
:cool:🚬
 
Dawei SEZ is a going to be built with Japanese help at a price tag of 8 Billion USD and It's going to be the biggest SEZ in the ASEAN. It also In clues a deep sea port.
 
What are these?

Frigate and corvette I believe.
We are building all these new ships at breakneck speed in order to not only modernise the navy but turn it into a proper blue waters navy to better secure the coast. A lot of arms shipments towards the AA has been coming from either the coastal areas or through Bangladesh. And we all know our favourite bear Winnie the Pooh is the one supplying them
 

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