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Open Discussion: Myanmar and Bangladesh Armed Force

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Burmese didn't build fishing boat for navy.. we built just corvettes and frigates with some stealthly feature.. our first frigates was built in 2008 while BD was lacking in capacity to build even small FAC.. :P even now u have an ability to build a frigate . after we built it 8 year ago..? :/


. :P

Yes we know - U have lack of captains and pilots . Dn't worry we will run ur Frigates or plains.. U r talking abt FAC ? We can buy or have the ability to built destroyer. What you will do with ur Frigates? Where our see land lvl in down and plus point for us? U have to reach the point with small boats. Then we have chance for target practicing.
 


WELL,THIS VIDEO SUMS IT ALL....
THE BEST COMPARISON BETWEEN OUR NAVIES...



^_^
 
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BNS OSMAN ( F18 ),The first guided missile frigate of Bangladesh Navy
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Detailed information :
Class and type: Modified Type 053H frigate
Displacement:
  • 1,448 standard
  • 1,729 full load
Length: 103.2 m (339 ft)
Beam: 10.7 m (35 ft)
Propulsion:
  • Two type 12 E 390V diesels; 16,000 hp (m) (11.9MW) sustained
  • 2 shafts
Speed: 26 knots
Range: 2,700 nmi (5,000 km; 3,100 mi) at 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph)
Complement: 300 (27 officers)
Sensors and
processing systems:
  • Radar System:
  • Surface: Square Tie (Type 254); I-band
  • Air & Surface: MX 902 Eye Shield (Type 922-1); G-band
  • Navigation: Fin Curve (Type 352); I-band
  • Fire Control: Wok Won director (Type 752A); Square Tie (Type 254), I-band
  • Echo Type 5 (Hull Mounted)
Electronic warfare
& decoys: Watchdog; Radar warning
Armament:
  • Missiles:
  • Guns:
    • 2 × China 3.9 in (100 mm) /56 (twin)
    • 8 × China 37 mm /63 (6 twin)
  • 2 × RBU 1200 5-tubed fixed launchers
  • D/C: 2 × BMB-2 projectors; 2 ranks
  • Mines: Can carry up to 60
  • Decoys: 2 × loral Hycor SRBOC Mk 36
  • 6-barreled chaff launcher



Further details :

Career
Osman is based in Chittagong, serving with the Commodore Commanding BN Flotilla (COMBAN). About 250 personnel serve aboard Osman, with most living on board. She is the first frigate of Bangladesh Navy who test fired C-802A missile in Bay of Bengal On May 12, 2008 which successfully hit the target. The ship has gone through major upgrades which includes replacement of propulsion system, new missile launching platforms and an addition of a combat data link.

Osman was deployed in Lebanon with the UN mission United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) from 17 May 2010 to 14 June 2014.She came back to Bangladesh on 11 August 2014. On her way, she visited the Port of Salalah and Port Sultan Qaboos of Oman, Port of Colombo of Sri Lanka and Mumbai and Chennai Port of India on goodwill mission.

On 11 October 2014, Osman was awarded the title of National Standard in recognition of the ship's quarter century of outstanding service in the Bangladesh Navy at home and abroad.


Design

Powered by two 8,000 hp type 12 E 390V diesel engines that drive two propellers, Osman has a maximum speed of 26 knots (48 km/h; 30 mph). She has a range of 2,700 nautical miles (5,000 km; 3,100 mi) at 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph).

Armaments
The ship's primary armament consists of eight C-802 anti-ship missiles. Her secondary armament consists of two twin 100 mm guns, mounted on the bow and stern. Anti-aircraft armament consists of four AK-230 twin 37 mm guns. For anti-submarine warfare, she is equipped with two RBU-1200 anti-submarine rocket launchers and two BMB-2 depth charge mortars. She can carry up to 60 mines.

Electronics
She is equipped with one MX 902 radar for air and surface search and one Type 352 Square Tie radar for surface search and fire control.



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Yes we know - U have lack of captains and pilots . Dn't worry we will run ur Frigates or plains.. U r talking abt FAC ? We can buy or have the ability to built destroyer. What you will do with ur Frigates? Where our see land lvl in down and plus point for us? U have to reach the point with small boats. Then we have chance for target practicing.

You can't afford destroyers much less build one. Most of your frigates are hand me downs from the British and are 40/50 years old. Your latest frigate was a US Coast Guard cutter.
 
Burma's latest ethnic conflict intensifies as violence spreads in Shan State

The dispute between the militias of the Ta’ang National Liberation Army and the Shan State Army began last year

  • 34-burnma-soldier-afpget.jpg
Soldiers in Burma’s army, the Tatmadaw, in Shan State AFP/Getty
When Aye Khaung saw 500 soldiers arrive in her village in Burma’s northern Shan State, she was fearful. Sitting in the grounds of the monastery she now calls home, she picks at nail varnish on her thumbnail as she recounts the moment when the country’s latest ethnic conflict arrived in the remote village of Ban-nin.

“When I saw their guns and knives I was afraid, because I knew they could kill me,” she says.

The violence between the militias of the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) and the Shan State Army – South (SSA-S) began last year and has intensified. The Burmese army, or Tatmadaw, is also operating in the area – taking control, it says, of the latest of many long-running ethnic armed conflicts to flare up in the country.



Too afraid to answer the questions from the Tatmadaw soldiers about whether TNLA or SSA-S soldiers were in the area, Aye Khaung claims her silence did not go unpunished. “I was too afraid to answer. Then they beat me on my shoulder and head. They punched me and they beat me with a stick,” she says. “I was so afraid and my whole body was shaking. Afterwards I could not eat anything and I felt sick.”

34-Aung-San-Suu-Kyi-get.jpg

Aung San Suu Kyi, whose party is due to take over the government in April (Getty)

Aye Khaung, dressed in a pink Minnie Mouse T-shirt, looks younger than her 19 years. Two days after her beating, the soldiers were still in her village, so she ran away to Kyaukme, a local town.

It is a journey many others have made, and by the end of February more than 4,000 people had sought shelter in the 21 monasteries around Kyaukme.

Aye Khaung looks up nervously as someone approaches. It is just one of the monastery’s monks, sweeping, but she waits for him to pass before she continues: “Whenever I think about going back to my home I cannot eat and I cannot sleep. I’m still afraid there will be soldiers.”For Maran Ja Taung, returning home was the start of her nightmare.

She fled fighting in the village of Ho Pone along with her four children and her husband in January. When they returned in February, the homes of 300 villagers had been burnt and the community’s livestock slaughtered and eaten.

Maran Ja Taung’s husband went to look for vegetables, not realising that whoever had destroyed their livelihoods had left one last surprise: a landmine. “When he stepped on the landmine, he did not die,” says Maran Ja Taung through her tears. “I heard the bomb blast and ran to him. He had lost his legs. He was lying there, bleeding.” She tried to get her husband to hospital, but the first one they came to would not accept him. He died on the way to the second hospital.

“On the way there he said to me: ‘Please forgive me because I cannot support our family any more,’ ” she says. “I told him I can earn, we can survive. I thought he was asleep, then I realised he wasn’t breathing.”

34-graphic.jpg

It is not clear who burned the homes, slaughtered the livestock and laid the landmines, as ethnic armed groups and the Burmese military had been operating in the area, but Maran Ja Taung says the ethnic armies fled the scene when the local civilians did.

Even Burma’s revered Buddhist monks have not escaped abuse. Soldiers from the TNLA locked U Thu Sat in his monastery. “I was afraid I would get shot,” he says, as he also waits in Kyaukme for the chance to go home.

“I asked them to stop fighting but they did not listen to me. They said I did not need to worry, and they were there for my security, but I think they were using me for protection.” The Burmese Army and the ethnic armed groups did not respond to a request for comment over the alleged incidents.

The new government of Aung San Suu Kyi says its first priority, when it takes power at the end of the month, is to deal with ethnic conflict. But for the scared, homeless and mourning people of Shan State, that moment cannot come quickly enough.
 
Burma's latest ethnic conflict intensifies as violence spreads in Shan State

The dispute between the militias of the Ta’ang National Liberation Army and the Shan State Army began last year

  • 34-burnma-soldier-afpget.jpg
Soldiers in Burma’s army, the Tatmadaw, in Shan State AFP/Getty
When Aye Khaung saw 500 soldiers arrive in her village in Burma’s northern Shan State, she was fearful. Sitting in the grounds of the monastery she now calls home, she picks at nail varnish on her thumbnail as she recounts the moment when the country’s latest ethnic conflict arrived in the remote village of Ban-nin.

“When I saw their guns and knives I was afraid, because I knew they could kill me,” she says.

The violence between the militias of the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) and the Shan State Army – South (SSA-S) began last year and has intensified. The Burmese army, or Tatmadaw, is also operating in the area – taking control, it says, of the latest of many long-running ethnic armed conflicts to flare up in the country.



Too afraid to answer the questions from the Tatmadaw soldiers about whether TNLA or SSA-S soldiers were in the area, Aye Khaung claims her silence did not go unpunished. “I was too afraid to answer. Then they beat me on my shoulder and head. They punched me and they beat me with a stick,” she says. “I was so afraid and my whole body was shaking. Afterwards I could not eat anything and I felt sick.”

34-Aung-San-Suu-Kyi-get.jpg

Aung San Suu Kyi, whose party is due to take over the government in April (Getty)

Aye Khaung, dressed in a pink Minnie Mouse T-shirt, looks younger than her 19 years. Two days after her beating, the soldiers were still in her village, so she ran away to Kyaukme, a local town.

It is a journey many others have made, and by the end of February more than 4,000 people had sought shelter in the 21 monasteries around Kyaukme.

Aye Khaung looks up nervously as someone approaches. It is just one of the monastery’s monks, sweeping, but she waits for him to pass before she continues: “Whenever I think about going back to my home I cannot eat and I cannot sleep. I’m still afraid there will be soldiers.”For Maran Ja Taung, returning home was the start of her nightmare.

She fled fighting in the village of Ho Pone along with her four children and her husband in January. When they returned in February, the homes of 300 villagers had been burnt and the community’s livestock slaughtered and eaten.

Maran Ja Taung’s husband went to look for vegetables, not realising that whoever had destroyed their livelihoods had left one last surprise: a landmine. “When he stepped on the landmine, he did not die,” says Maran Ja Taung through her tears. “I heard the bomb blast and ran to him. He had lost his legs. He was lying there, bleeding.” She tried to get her husband to hospital, but the first one they came to would not accept him. He died on the way to the second hospital.

“On the way there he said to me: ‘Please forgive me because I cannot support our family any more,’ ” she says. “I told him I can earn, we can survive. I thought he was asleep, then I realised he wasn’t breathing.”

34-graphic.jpg

It is not clear who burned the homes, slaughtered the livestock and laid the landmines, as ethnic armed groups and the Burmese military had been operating in the area, but Maran Ja Taung says the ethnic armies fled the scene when the local civilians did.

Even Burma’s revered Buddhist monks have not escaped abuse. Soldiers from the TNLA locked U Thu Sat in his monastery. “I was afraid I would get shot,” he says, as he also waits in Kyaukme for the chance to go home.

“I asked them to stop fighting but they did not listen to me. They said I did not need to worry, and they were there for my security, but I think they were using me for protection.” The Burmese Army and the ethnic armed groups did not respond to a request for comment over the alleged incidents.

The new government of Aung San Suu Kyi says its first priority, when it takes power at the end of the month, is to deal with ethnic conflict. But for the scared, homeless and mourning people of Shan State, that moment cannot come quickly enough.

The more the Burmese fight amongst themselves,the weaker they get bruh...

You can't afford destroyers much less build one. Most of your frigates are hand me downs from the British and are 40/50 years old. Your latest frigate was a US Coast Guard cutter.

Umm,how many submarines you have?
 
The more the Burmese fight amongst themselves,the weaker they get bruh...



Umm,how many submarines you have?

Myanmar is getting training to use submarines from other countries.They will only buy it when their economy will be able to support this.....
 
Rather than posting pictures to compare who is looking better and pretty, it is better to post strength,data and statistics and recent advancements to compare. BTW, which/what are the enemies of the both nations respectively?
 
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