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F-15 nya belinya nyicil-nyicil gitu, pertama 12 lalu 12 lagi lalu 8 terus 8 lagi, total ada 40 unit, mulai order pertama tahun 2005, hmmm. Seharusnya Indonesia punya Flanker juga segitu kali yak wkwkwk

Ready to Signature New Contract, Russia Planning the Delivery of 50 units BMP-3F to Indonesia


Import-export defense company Rosoboronexport from Russia, announced the Indonesian government intent to repeat her order of amphibious infantry fighting vehicle tank, the ubiquitus new Russian BMP-3F.

Director of Rosoboronexport Anatoliy Isaykin stated that the company will soon sign a contract of delivery infantry fighting vehicles BMP-3F new to Indonesia.

"Indonesia will buy BMP-3F. In the near future, we will follow up on it, "said Isaykin when asked about the new contracts with the Indonesian news agency RIA Novosti. Before, Isaykin had said that he plans to negotiate with defense ministers in a number of ASEAN countries during LIMA 2015 exhibition in Malaysia in which are now underway, that's including with the head of the Indonesian military agencies.

http://indonesia.rbth.com/news/2015...nexport_berencana_kirim_50_unit_b_27 133.html
 
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LIMA 2015: Indonesian Maritime Surveillance Aircraft Embark on Thales’ Airborne Maritime Situation Control Technology

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The Airborne Maritime Situation and Control System (AMASCOS) Indonesia selected for its Indonesian Aerospace (IAe)-built CN235-220 maritime surveillance aircraft provides the aircraft with the capability that is needed for the country’s Anti-Surface Warfare (ASuW) and Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) operations.

The solution supplied by Thales can also be employed for an array of other modern mission scenarios, including vessel search and identification; Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) patrol; drug, smuggling and piracy control; search and rescue (SAR); disaster surveillance; and maritime patrol roles.

Visiting one of the three Indonesian Navy CN235-220s at LIMA 2015, MILITARY TECHNOLOGY learned that the sensors adapted to the aircraft in particular include a FLIR Systems Star SAFIRE III EO/IR turret, Thales’ OCEAN MASTER 400 radar, and the same company’s TOTEM 3000 Inertial Reference System. As said, the single aircraft operated by the Indonesian Air Force also carries a Radar Warning Receiver (RWR); fitment of an RWR to the three Indonesian Navy airframes will be an option for future upgrades.

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Jean-Michel Eustache, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) Marketing Manager at Thales Airborne Systems, speaking to MILITARY TECHNOLOGY at LIMA 2015, outlined AMASCOS’ unique performance characteristics: “AMASCOS integrates a number of sensors that [can] include an electro-optical/infrared [EO/IR] sensor turret like Thales Optronique’s CHLIO system, Thales’ OCEAN MASTER search radar, an RWR like Elettronica’s ALR 733 device, and a Magnetic Anomaly Detector [MAD] for detecting submarines.

The latter can be CAE’s AN/ASQ-508 system. According to him, AMASCOS has a modular architecture, allowing the system to be easily adapted to smaller aircraft performing surveillance from a single console, to larger aircraft equipped with four or five consoles. AMASCOS has been integrated on a variety of aircraft to date, including – besides CN235/220s – Alenia ATR 72s (Turkey); Beechcraft KING AIRs (Malaysia); Bombardier DASH 8s (United Arab Emirates Air Force); Dassault Falcon 900s (Japan); and Gulfstream IVs (Turkey).

miltechmag.com/2015/03/lima-2015-indonesian-maritime.html

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Google Translate (Sorry)

Both Military and Non Military Industry Will Soon Be Built

8 March 2015

It was delivered by the Chairman of the Executive Team KKIP, Admiral (Ret) Sumardjono, accompanied by Deputy Chief Tim, Marsdya (Ret) Eris Herryanto when he met with the Coordinating Minister for maritime, Indroyono Susilo, in Jakarta, on Wednesday (4/3). KKIP final target, according to him, presenting a strong national defense, developed and independent with the support of the strong domestic defense industry.

The meeting also presented 7 National Defense Industry Program which includes; Development of the KF-X fighter jet / IF-X, Submarine Development, Industrial Development propellants, rocket National Development, National Missile Development, National Radar Development and Development of Medium and Heavy Tank.

Coordinating Minister for maritime, Indroyono Susilo Executive Team KKIP appreciate the work that continues to realize the independence of the nation in the field of defense industry. He hoped that the defense industry will be built, in addition to referring to the compliance posture of the main equipment of weapons systems (defense equipment), can also function as well for non-military activities, such as the manufacture of tanks synergized with the manufacture of tractors, heavy construction equipment and heavy equipment in the mining world.

Including the manufacture of tactical vehicles, Jeep sort Komodo modified for non-military version. Not to forget, the provision of military transport aircraft ready modified for natural disaster management, artificial rain and SAR. In order to remain a national priority programs, Indroyono suggested that 7 National programs already included in the Defense Industry (RPJMN) 2014-2019. So that it can be prioritized into Government Work Plan (RKP). (JMOL)

Industri Pertahanan Militer & Non-Militer Segera Dibangun | JURNAL MARITIM

From Antara News Agency, but I cannot see Antara's one.
 
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Saab offers solutions for
RI’s defense ambitions

Dicky Christanto, Gothenburg/Linkoping/Stockholm | World | Thu, March 19 2015, 7:39 AM


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Flying high: Swedish jet fighter Gripen D flies in demo flight in Linkoping, Sweden, last week. JP/Dicky Christanto
World News



Saab AB recently invited the Indonesian media to visit a number of cities in Sweden to see what the Swedish defense giant could offer to Indonesia, especially in terms of modernizing the Indonesian Air Force as well as other related defense capabilities.

In Gothenburg, Saab introduced its Erieye airborne early warning (AEW) system and radar manufacturing facilities.

The Erieye AEW is based on active electronically scanned array (AESA) technology, which boasts a multi-tasking capability.

Saab vice president and airborne surveillance systems head Lars Tossman told the group that the Erieye AEW system would be a good fit for Indonesia’s geography as it could cover more area than the conventional systems.

Covering 900 square kilometers in diameter, the Erieye AEW system can scan targets beyond the horizon. This equals a 500,000 square kilometers area with a height of 20 kilometers, allowing the system to detect potential targets.

“We’re in the middle of discussing this with the Indonesian government,” Tossman said in a discussion held last week.

For daily operations, the system requires two aircraft equipped with Erieye radars to cover 80 percent of Indonesia’s territory. One aircraft can be deployed from Jakarta to cover the western part and another from Makassar, South Sulawesi, to monitor the eastern part of the country.

The Erieye AEW system has been certified to be placed on two platforms: Sweden’s own Saab 2000 turboprop airliner and the Brazilian Embraer ERJ 145 regional jet.

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Say cheese!: Indonesian journalists pose with Swedish air force officials and Saab staff during a visit to Satenas Air Force Base last week. Courtesy of Ade Marboen


Tossman said to encourage other countries to acquire the system, it was also possible to install it on other platforms, such as the Indonesian-made CN-235/295 manufactured by state-owned PT Dirgantara Indonesia.

However, he warned that installing the Erieye AEW system on other platforms would then oblige the user to make improvements to the assigned aircraft, which would cost more money. The platform required Saab certification before it could house the Erieye AEW system.

Meanwhile, Lars Ekstrom of Saab’s airborne surveillance system, who served in the Swedish Air Force, said the Erieye AEW system had been tested in Mexico in 2006. The system helped the Mexican Air Force rid the country’s air space of aircraft allegedly bringing illegal drugs to the country.

“The strategy could be applied to Indonesia. The system could be directed at the most prone areas like the Malacca Strait, while it also monitors other activities simultaneously,” he told The Jakarta Post.

He said the Erieye AEW system could also be deployed to monitor illegal fishing activities across the 17,000-island archipelago.

Ekstrom added that the total time needed to build the system from scratch was about four years because it would require an extensive amount of research.

Currently in the region, the Royal Thai Air Force is already operating the Erieye AEW system mounted on Saab 2000 aircraft. The system was acquired as a package with Thailand’s acquisition of Saab’s JAS-39 Gripen light, single-engine, multi-role jet fighters.

The next stop was Satenas Air Base, a two-hour drive into the middle of the country, where Lt. Col. Michael Lundquist, operational commander of the F7 Skaraborg Air Force Wing, was based, just outside Linkoping.

Lundquist said the air base had been dedicated to training all Gripen pilots from inside and outside Sweden. All pilots will participate in Swedish fighter pilot training over 36 months.

According to Lindquist, they had developed a learning experience that would free students of stress, with instructors avoiding a “blame culture” and working with students to find solutions.

The Swedish Air Force is the biggest customer for Gripen. It has purchased 100 Gripen C single-seater and D dual-seater jet fighters. Sweden is prepared to procure another 60 fighters in the immediate future.

Brazil recently procured 36 Gripen NGs and South Africa purchased 17 Gripen Cs and nine Gripen Ds. In Southeast Asia, Thailand is the only country flying the Gripen, with an acquisition of 12 jet fighters.

From Satenas, the group headed to Gripen production line in Linkoping. A solo 15-minute performance from a Gripen D during the Linkoping visit showed what the fighter could do. Various aerobatic maneuvers were displayed and fighter looked solid and up to the task.

In his presentation, Saab senior vice president and business area aeronautics head Ulf Nillson stated that Saab offered a complete package tailored for each customer.

Within the package, he went on, a long-term partnership and the comprehensive transfer of technology were included.

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Dewa Made J. Sastrawan - JP/Dicky Christanto


In Stockholm, the group spoke with Indonesian Ambassador to Sweden and Latvia Dewa Made J. Sastrawan, who said he expected Saab would have the opportunity to offer its package to Indonesia.

“I’ve looked everywhere and I can’t find a more complete strategic defense package supported by the comprehensive transfer of technology than the one offered by Saab. I hope they can make an offer to the government back home,” he said.

Saab deputy CEO and senior vice president Lennart Sindahl said Saab was more than willing to continue discussions with the Indonesian authorities regarding the need to improve its jet fighters.

However, in a late development, Indonesian Military (TNI) spokesman Maj. Gen. Fuad Basya said the TNI had decided to opt for the Russian-made Sukhoi Su-35 to replace the ageing, American-made Northrop F-5E/F Tiger II.

“The Sukhoi Su-35 will replace the F-5E/F. The Defense Ministry will finalize it,” Fuad told the Post, adding that more information on the decision would be available from the ministry.- See more at: Saab offers solutions for RI’s defense ambitions | The Jakarta Post
 
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20150319antarafoto-latihan-marinir-indonesia-amerika-190315-ho-3.jpg


Sejumlah prajurit Taifib Korps Marinir TNI AL dan US MARSOC mengikuti upacara pembukaan latihan dengan sandi Lantern Iron 15-5524 di Pusat Latihan Tempur Korps Marinir Baluran, Karangtekok, Situbondo, Jatim, Kamis (19/3). Latihan tersebut untuk meningkatkan pengetahuan dan kemampuan teknik dan taktik prajurit Taifib Korps Marinir serta mempererat kerja sama dengan prajurit US MARSOC dalam bidang militer yang berlangsung hingga 10 April. (ANTARA FOTO/Sertu Mar Kuwadi)

20150319antarafoto-latihan-marinir-indonesia-amerika-190315-ho-1.jpg


Asisten Operasi Komandan Pasmar-1 (Asops Danpasmar-1) Kolonel Mar. I Made Sukada (kiri) menyematkan tanda peserta latihan kepada prajurit Korps Marinis AS pada pembukaan latihan dengan sandi Lantern Iron 15-5524 di Pusat Latihan Tempur Korps Marinir Baluran, Karangtekok, Situbondo, Jatim, Kamis (19/3). Latihan tersebut untuk meningkatkan pengetahuan dan kemampuan teknik dan taktik prajurit Taifib Korps Marinir serta mempererat kerja sama dengan prajurit US MARSOC dalam bidang militer yang berlangsung hingga 10 April. (ANTARA FOTO/Sertu Mar Kuwadi)
 
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Russian arms industry targets new markets

March 18, 2015 Alexander Korolkov, specially for RIR

The rift with the West and the subsequent sanctions imposed in 2014 have not substantively impacted Moscow’s leading position as a seller of arms. Amid increased competition, Russia’s armament industry is consolidating its presence in India and is looking for new markets in the Latin American, African, and Southeast Asian countries.

Russia sold weapons worth $10 billion in 2014, a 9% increase over the preceding year, says IHS Jane’s Annual Defence Budgets Review. However, Rosoboronexport says that in 2014 Russian arms exports were $3 billion higher than the figure published by IHS Jane’s. Against the background of what the United States achieved during this period, even this figure loses its impressiveness. In 2014, US arms manufacturers sold weapons worth $23.7 billion, racking up a 19% growth over the previous year. In other words, even if we make an adjustment, in terms of absolute value (American weapons being more expensive), the growth of US sales dynamics are almost two times higher than that of Russia’s.

Middle East factor

What is the reason for this growth in US arms sales? The answer is simple – the instability in the Middle East. Here, over the years that the US had been the dominant power in world politics, the Americans succeeded in significantly strengthening their position, and their allies experienced all the delights that high oil prices could bring to their lives. The allies that Russia inherited from the Soviet Union (such as Syria and Iraq) find themselves under sanctions and fighting civil wars.

In these conditions, US defence companies are free to take full advantage of the situation of the instability created by their government in the Middle East. As a result, just in this market, in 2014, the US weapons sales surpassed those of Russia by several times – $8.4 billion versus $1.5 billion (Russia was behind even the UK in sales, and only slightly ahead of France). Russia’s client, for example, is the civil war-torn Syria. This is in stark contrast to the key military partner of the US in the region – Saudi Arabia, which according to IHS Jane’s, became the most lavish buyer of weapons in 2014, spending $6.4 billion, with plans to increase this amount by 50% in 2015.

Sacred cows of Russian imports

These record purchases by Saudi Arabia have allowed it to move ahead of the traditionally largest arms importer – India. And this leads us to a discussion about the situation in the main markets for Russia.

Last year, the Russian defense industries sold the most products to China – $2.3 billion, followed by India with $1.7 billion, and Vietnam and Venezuela at $1 billion each. The future prospects of these markets raise a number of questions. “We forecast a drop in exports due to the fact that many weapons purchasing programs have been completed, and this trend will be reinforced by the sanctions,” Jane has noted in its analytical report. India, which has a number of joint-projects with Russia, such as the development of the BrahMos and the creation of a fifth generation fighter FGFA, is nevertheless increasingly looking towards the West, expanding cooperation with Israel, the US, and the EU. This trend was clearly manifested during the recent visit of US President Barack Obama to this country. This strategy allows India, which has proclaimed a policy of “Make in India”, to obtain more advanced technologies and diversify its imports. In addition, cooperation with India is hard to reconcile with the development of Russia’s relations with China. Thus, the decision to supply S-400 air defence systems to China elicited an extremely painful reaction from Russia’s Indian partners. As for Venezuela, Iran, and Algeria, their purchasing power, just like in Russia itself, is suffering from falling oil and gas prices.

The Way Ahead

In January, at a meeting of the Military-Technical Cooperation Commission, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the need to find new markets for Russian weapons in the Latin American, African, and Southeast Asian countries. In Latin America, Russia is working on a variety of projects with Brazil, which is considering purchasing Russian air defence systems and cooperation in the helicopters sphere. Russia is also looking at possibilities of cooperation with Peru, Argentina, and Nicaragua, but most of the rare “rich pickings” of these markets do not go to Moscow.

In Africa, the Soviet Union left Russia not only a rich legacy in the form of unpaid debts of the countries in this region, but also in the sphere of military-technical cooperation. However, over the last 20 years, almost all of these communications were lost, and now they need to be rebuilt anew, while competing in this not too rich market with cheap Chinese-made counterparts. Much more promising, in terms of potential profits, are the markets in APR countries. Among the most promising deals here are the current negotiations being held with Indonesia for the supply of Su-35 fighter jets, to replace obsolete American F-5 fighters.

Russian arms industry targets new markets | Russia & India Report
 
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20150319antarafoto-latihan-marinir-indonesia-amerika-190315-ho-3.jpg


Sejumlah prajurit Taifib Korps Marinir TNI AL dan US MARSOC mengikuti upacara pembukaan latihan dengan sandi Lantern Iron 15-5524 di Pusat Latihan Tempur Korps Marinir Baluran, Karangtekok, Situbondo, Jatim, Kamis (19/3). Latihan tersebut untuk meningkatkan pengetahuan dan kemampuan teknik dan taktik prajurit Taifib Korps Marinir serta mempererat kerja sama dengan prajurit US MARSOC dalam bidang militer yang berlangsung hingga 10 April. (ANTARA FOTO/Sertu Mar Kuwadi)

20150319antarafoto-latihan-marinir-indonesia-amerika-190315-ho-1.jpg


Asisten Operasi Komandan Pasmar-1 (Asops Danpasmar-1) Kolonel Mar. I Made Sukada (kiri) menyematkan tanda peserta latihan kepada prajurit Korps Marinis AS pada pembukaan latihan dengan sandi Lantern Iron 15-5524 di Pusat Latihan Tempur Korps Marinir Baluran, Karangtekok, Situbondo, Jatim, Kamis (19/3). Latihan tersebut untuk meningkatkan pengetahuan dan kemampuan teknik dan taktik prajurit Taifib Korps Marinir serta mempererat kerja sama dengan prajurit US MARSOC dalam bidang militer yang berlangsung hingga 10 April. (ANTARA FOTO/Sertu Mar Kuwadi)


In English :

Indonesian, US marines conduct joint exercise in Situbondo

Kamis, 19 Maret 2015

Situbondo, E.Java (ANTARA News) - The Indonesian Marine Amphibious Reconnaissance Force started a joint exercise program with the US Marines in Karangtekok, Situbondo district, East Java, on March 19, 2015.

The joint exercise with the United States Marine Corps is held at the Baluran Marine Corps Combat Training Centre in Karangtekok, code-named "Iron Lantern." The training will conclude on April 10, 2015.

Marine Corps Commandant Major General (Mar) A. Faridz Washington said here Thursday that global situations, particularly maritime security, demand optimal readiness of the Marine Corps.

"To achieve the optimum level of readiness, the Marine Corps soldiers are required to possess the highest standards in terms of techniques and tactics to deal with various situations. Hence, Iron Lantern 15-5524 is expected to equip them with all requirements," he stated.

The exercise focuses on land and sea fighting, from planning to execution phases.

During the exercise, Indonesian and US Marines will share their knowledge, especially their amphibious reconnaissance capabilities, jungle warfare, and sniper tactics, through both theory and practice sessions.

The Task Force Commander, Major Marine Freddy Ardianzah, remarked that Lantern Iron 15-5524 exercise aims to increase the knowledge and technical abilities as well as tactical reconnaissance of amphibious soldiers and to strengthen Indonesias friendship with the US Marine Special Forces in the military field.

He explained that curriculum for the exercise includes classroom theory and practice in the field.

Theory lessons consist of first aid for the victims of wars, combat patrols, identification techniques as well as action against explosives. Practical sessions will cover sniper shooting, urban warfare operations, swamp forest patrols, initiated swimming exercises, amphibious raids, advanced coastal surveillance, and other survival techniques.(*)

Indonesian, US marines conduct joint exercise in Situbondo - ANTARA News
 
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