What's new

Germany's head of Armed Forces Association: If you want peace, prepare for war


:bunny::bunny:

tumblr_mdt9m9SowV1rq82zeo1_500.jpg
 
. .
Good beard, but let's go even further back. There is no beard like US Civil War beard (and mustache)!

View attachment 191724

View attachment 191725

View attachment 191726

View attachment 191727



Oh, I never do. We invented beard:yahoo:... probably:partay:.

View attachment 191728

:lol: - we are sooooo off topic. I blame @Armstrong :bunny::bunny::bunny:

:D



Hahahahaha! You Europeans are your Burly Beards! Some of the great military minds of Japan , too, fielded beards.



Togo%20Heihachiro[1].jpg

Admiral Heihachiro Togo, The Supreme Admiral of the Imperial Navy during the Russo-Japanese War.


Admiral_Togo-1907[1].jpg

A picture of Admiral Togo during the Russo-Japanese War. Still young. :)


-------------

And how could I forget? His Imperial Majesty, the Meiji Emperor, Himself, sported the BEARD!

SF7319[1].jpg
 
.
.
Hahahahaha! You Europeans are your Burly Beards! Some of the great military minds of Japan , too, fielded beards.



View attachment 191729
Admiral Heihachiro Togo, The Supreme Admiral of the Imperial Navy during the Russo-Japanese War.


View attachment 191731
A picture of Admiral Togo during the Russo-Japanese War. Still young. :)


-------------

And how could I forget? His Imperial Majesty, the Meiji Emperor, Himself, sported the BEARD!

View attachment 191733

We should talk about Germany military,and not beards. :chilli::chilli:
@SvenSvensonov @Nihonjin1051
 
. . .
Agreed, and the German head of the Armed Forces association can't be more right. Right now, Germany is weak, even a nation like Poland... Poland!!! is taking its defense more seriously that Germany. Of course Poland it actually threatened by Russian, but as a NATO member Germany has an obligation to spend on its military and it hasn't been doing enough.

The German's like their peace a bit too much. Perhaps if Russia encroaches even further into Europe will their minds be changed.

I don't see Germany changing its stance towards defense otherwise:(.

On the Germany Navy - Deutsche Marine

Germany faces the challenge of being able to counter both conventional and asymmetric threats to security from the sea. The maritime capabilities of the Bundeswehr necessary to meet this challenge are provided by the Navy. But as of 2013 the number of professional and regular soldiers was planned to shrink by the reform forces by 14 percent to 12,500, 700 posts were vacant. In some areas up to 80 percent of the necessary troops were lacking.

While previously, reliable conscripts were delegated to the Navy, in the new centers for recruitment there is not a "sufficiently strong sense of Marine consciousness". Most would rather be recruited for service for other armed forces. It remains to be seen also if the current strategy of Von der Leyen’s for boosting enrolment into the military services will work: the navy, Der Spiegel reported in August 2014, was 1,400 short of personnel.

In the course of transformation of the Bundeswehr, the Navy is also evolving into an expeditionary force. The Navy is thus becoming positioned to conduct sustained operations also on a multinational scale and under threat off foreign shores. This is the Navy’s contribution to the containment of crises and conflicts where they arise and, if called for politically, their management. The special legal status of the high seas stands the Navy in good stead in that the sea can be used as a base for operations, with all forces interacting to deliver a desired effect in countries of deployment.

German maritime forces can pre-station unhindered in distant regions at an early stage, thus flanking diplomatic efforts. Besides their ability to conduct military operations at sea, they can make an effective contribution to operations ashore. They can also enforce embargo measures from the sea and support humanitarian relief and evacuation operations. Their considerable endurance in the mission area, their robustness and their operational versatility make the German Navy a vital component of multinational operations. Joint operations ashore can also be commanded from the sea.

About 90 percent of total world trade, almost 95 percent of the trade of the European Union and almost 70 percent of Germany's imports and exports are carried by sea. The German maritime industry employs around 400,000 people, the value added in this sector amounts to about 80 billion euros. After Greece and Japan, the Federal Republic is the third largest shipping nation in the world.

Given Germany’s maritime dependency, it is additionally vital to make adequate provisions for Germany’s security. A special responsibility falls to the Navy to protect the coastal waters and sea lines of communication of Germany and its allies. This means having capabilities for sea surveillance as well as for countering sea mines, submarines and terrorist threats to the maritime space, including support of Federal and Land police forces.

One of the German Navy’s main attributes is its ability to integrate rapidly into multinational task forces. Almost all of its forces are assigned to NATO. The Navy continued to contribute on a regular basis to all four NATO Standing Maritime Groups, thus ensuring that Germany is generally represented in the NATO Response Force at all times. The German Navy pledged naval forces of task force strength to the European Union, plus the Glücksburg Maritime Headquarters as the Maritime Component Command for given joint operations. This also includes setting up a maritime contribution to the EU battlegroups.

Deutsche Marine - Organization
The Fleet Command, in its function as a higher command authority, is a force provider as well as a headquarters and lead command. As a force provider it is responsible for ensuring that operational forces are available. As a competent headquarters it has an important function in the further evolution of naval and naval air forces, this also in cooperation with external partners.

The fleet is divided into two flotillas and two naval air wings. The forces of the boat flotillas have been combined as Flotilla 1 in Kiel. This step has been taken not just to streamline command structures but first and foremost to bring expertise in conducting operations in coastal waters together under one roof. ACentre of Excellence for Operations in Confined and Shallow Waters (COE CSW) has, moreover, been established with Flotilla 1. Here, new concepts and procedures are to be developed and tested together with the other services and international participants. NATO allies will also be invited to contribute to the Centre of Excellence, thus strengthening Germany’s role in the Alliance. With the reduction of the number of frigate squadrons from four to two in January 2006 and the establishment of a permanently available operational headquarters, the Destroyer Flotilla has been reorganised to form Flotilla 2.

The German Navy has set up a battalion of naval protection forces to protect own units in confined waters and in port. It is streamlining its structures and improving its operational and command and control capabilities by establishing rapidly available, embarkable operational headquarters. The Naval Office is responsible for course-based training, armaments, equipment and naval logistics. Subordinate to the Naval Office are the Navy schools, the five base commands, the Naval Command and Control Systems Command, and the Naval Service Test Command.


One area where Germany sorely lacks, especially when faced with the threat of Russian long-ranged missiles, is in missile defense. The MEADS program, which the US pulled out of, was once choice:

Patriot: Uncertainties Abound

The Bundeswehr is seeking a successor system to replace its ageing PATRIOT air defence systems. It must choose between a MEADS-based system and an evolved PATRIOT system for the Luftwaffe’s future TLVS Tactical Air Defence System. The German Chief of Staff is due to make a selection decision by mid-2015 at the latest. In the context of this selection decision, Raytheon is pushing hard for a “German Evolved PATRIOT”, tailored to meet the Luftwaffe’s requirements. According to the vendor, it can be available in half the time and at one third the cost compared to other systems. Above all, however, the evolved PATRIOT system is to have the 360-degree capability and open system architecture required by the Luftwaffe.

Costs for PATRIOT modernisation scarcely calculable

Consequently, Raytheon wants to modernise key elements of the German PATRIOT Config-3 systems, such as radar, software, command posts and vehicles, for the Bundeswehr. MEADS elements and the IRIS-T SL secondary missile are also to be integrated in the German Evolved PATRIOT. Military experts and many members of parliament consider this extremely risky, due to the closed system architecture of the PATRIOT system. This undertaking, they fear, is tantamount to development of a new system. Many of the innovations Raytheon is proposing currently exist only in the advertising material. Whether Raytheon is actually able to deliver significantly less expensively and twice as fast as other suppliers is thus highly disputed.

Members of the Parliamentary Defence Committee remain unconvinced as well. With regard to other projects in which similar promises were made, they say, “We’ve heard that often before. We know what that leads to.” Yet the 360-degree capability and the open system architecture that the German customer demands already exist in the competing MEADS system. Its functionality has already been successfully proven in a number of trials. Modernising the PATRIOT would mean developing – and paying for – capabilities that MEADS already has. Critics also note that, even after modification, the PATRIOT still won’t measure up to MEADS’ performance. For example, the PATRIOT apparently will not offer all-round 360-degree protection against ballistic missiles.

The problems in modernising the 40-year-old PATRIOT systems in the US appear to bear out the parliamentarians’ concerns. There, this air defence system has been an object of criticism for some time, due to exorbitant cost overruns and inadequate reliability. The US Army just recently suffered another significant setback. The Congressional committee responsible for overseeing the programme refused to approve the requested additional funding for modernising the US PATRIOT systems for the third time in a row. For fiscal year 2015 alone, this cut came to $95 million – making total cutbacks since 2013 now $180 million. The cost estimates have more than doubled in the last 12 months alone. They have been deemed virtually impossible to calculate and could continue to rise through 2018. According to the Congressional committee, there are no reliable figures, only a lot of question marks. The total modernisation cost was originally estimated at $2.2 billion. This figure does not even include procurement costs.

Additionally, there are major problems with the reliability of the PATRIOT system. According to a Pentagon report, the overall system and the radar do not perform up to the required standard. The capabilities of the PATRIOT systems are presently under discussion in Poland as well. Raytheon is offering the air defence system in Poland in the context of the Wisła modernisation programme, a commitment running into the billions. However, high-ranking Polish officers have now come to seriously doubt that PATRIOT is able to defend against modern Russian Iskandar short-range missiles (NATO code: SS-26 Stone). The Iskandar-M has a range of up to 500 kilometres. It can be armed with both conventional and nuclear warheads. The missile flies at several times the speed of sound, is highly agile and extremely manoeuvrable, so that it is extremely difficult to intercept using systems currently in service. Russia first deployed the Iskandar-M during the conflict in Georgia in 2008. The missiles are also said to be stationed in the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad.

German Evolved PATRIOT – a risky choice?

The PATRIOT is currently deployed by 12 user nations. The system was originally developed back in the early 1970s. This guided-missile system went into service with the Luftwaffe in September 1989. The system made headlines during the two Gulf Wars in the early 1990s and 2000s. After PATRIOT batteries shot down several British fighter aircraft, it was found that the system had problems with friend/foe identification. Additionally, the PATRIOT showed only a limited capability in intercepting Iraqi Scud-B and Al Hussein short-range missiles. The guided-missile system was subsequently upgraded to fire Lockheed Martin PAC-3 CRI missiles, which entailed considerable technical effort and financial expense. The German systems are still unable to fire the high-performance PAC-3 MSE interceptor missile. Further funding would be necessary to enable use of the PAC-3 MSE missile with the PATRIOT system and take advantage of even a portion of its performance potential. The launchers would have to be modified at considerable expense. Additionally, the radar processors would have to be digitalised and the corresponding software modified. In recent years, over €500 million has been spent solely on modifications to the German system. In spite of these modifications, the PATRIOT remains expensive to operate. This is one of the reasons why the Luftwaffe reduced its contingent from 24 to 12 batteries.

At present, all 12 PATRIOT user nations are equipped with systems having a uniform system definition which follows the PATRIOT roadmap defined by the US Government. The US Government held, and continues to hold, system sovereignty. How the system definition will look in the long term for the international partners, however, is currently unclear. Still, experts are certain that the US variant and the international system definitions will diverge.

Already, Raytheon is now promoting three different PATRIOT upgrade versions:

  • The US variant: the US plans to continue using the PATRIOT and integrate it in the Integrated Air and Missile Defense Battle Command System (IBCS). This will replace the PATRIOT combat management system (with its closed system architecture) using Northrop Grumman’s IBCS solution (with an open system architecture, like MEADS). In full possession of the technical facts, the American customer has decided against Raytheon’s proposal to further develop the PATRIOT combat management system. The future modern IBCS configuration will be reserved solely for US forces, and will not be exported.
  • The export variant: this is intended for the existing PATRIOT export market. To date, the only improvement in the export variant is a digitalisation of some components in the PATRIOT weapon system. This version is in service in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The development was mainly financed by the UAE. However, this variant does not have an open system architecture, as it cannot be fully networked with other air defence systems. Therefore, this solution does not meet the German requirements.
  • The proposed German variant, German Evolved PATRIOT: at present, this version exists only on paper. It has been customised specifically for the German customer. This variant is also equipped with a C-band radar with an active phased array antenna. In view of the changes to the radar, this variant is de facto a new development. The German Evolved PATRIOT would be a variant that does not yet exist on the market in this form. Key components and technologies would first have to be developed from scratch and tested. It differs considerably from the American and the current export versions. With respect to the other PATRIOT variants, it represents an isolated solution. Ongoing development and use of a German PATRIOT would have to be financed by the Bundeswehr alone. A cost-sharing with other PATRIOT user nations is not assured. Furthermore, a German Evolved PATRIOT does not conform to the IBCS roadmap defined by the United States.
Germany is currently conducting a review to determine whether the MEADS-based air defence system or a PATRIOT system developed especially for Germany is to be chosen. The two solutions were also the subject of an expert assessment conducted by the consultancy KPMG, the engineering firm P3 and the legal firm of Taylor Wessing. Defence Minister von der Leyen commissioned these consultancies to review key defence projects at the start of the year. The consultants used the results of their analyses to formulate recommendations for individual defence projects and for defence project management.

According to a spokesperson for the Ministry of Defence, this study also gave rise to a number of questions with respect to the further development of ground-based air defence systems in general. These questions need to be resolved before a final decision is taken. The cost overruns and performance shortfalls in the PATRIOT system that have come to light in the US have gained public attention in Germany and Poland. For Germany, the German Evolved PATRIOT entails incalculable risks. Many questions remain regarding the technical feasibility and the burden on the taxpayer. In view of the lack of funding for a PATRIOT modernisation in the US and the resulting lack of future prospects, there is the increasing suspicion that foreign investors are being sought for PATRIOT – in spite of the fact that most of the work will still be performed in the US and that the American “black box” policy will cement the dependency of PATRIOT users for decades to come.



@SvenSvensonov --- the German Armed Forces is only 200,000 strong, combined? That is too small for a nation of their size. It should be at par with France's or the UK's. Just my opinion.
 
.
Agreed, and the German head of the Armed Forces association can't be more right. Right now, Germany is weak, even a nation like Poland... Poland!!! is taking its defense more seriously that Germany. Of course Poland it actually threatened by Russia, but as a NATO member Germany has an obligation to spend on its military and it hasn't been doing enough.

Sometimes the worst thing you can do to a sleeping giant, that knows how to drink, is well... wake it up. The rallying cry to arms can be 7-1.

@SvenSvensonov --- the German Armed Forces is only 200,000 strong, combined? That is too small for a nation of their size. It should be at par with France's or the UK's. Just my opinion.

To be honest Germany isn't neighboring any country that threatens it. The Danes, waffle eating Belgians, surrendering French, tine tiny Luxembourgers, fortified Swiss, disheartened Czech or the Poles.

The divided Germans had two of the strongest standing armies after the US and Soviets. Most of those guys are still around. A mobilization shouldn't be so hard.

Along with the 39,000 US soldiers chilling out there.

@Gabriel92 no offense :P

french-foreing-legion-training-2.jpg
 
.
Sometimes the worst thing you can do to a sleeping giant, that knows how to drink, is well... wake it up. The rallying cry to arms can be 7-1.



To be honest Germany isn't neighboring any country that threatens it. The Danes, waffle eating Belgians, surrendering French, tine tiny Luxembourgers, fortified Swiss, disheartened Czech or the Poles.

The divided Germans had two of the strongest standing armies after the US and Soviets. Most of those guys are still around. A mobilization shouldn't be so hard.

Along with the 39,000 US soldiers chilling out there.

@Gabriel92 no offense :P

french-foreing-legion-training-2.jpg

I know. :enjoy:
Your post even made me laugh :lol:
 
.
Why am I hearing the theme music for Red Alert ringing in my ears?

The Germans should take their defence seriously.
 
.
Lots of war-mongers here-usual suspects,not surprised at all.Germany does not need to prepare for anything.Current army is more than enough to ensure its defence.Now from other hand if Germany has intention to take active part in NATO illegal wars and mass murders of civilians...
 
. . . .
Back
Top Bottom