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still dont know exactly,but those pics showed it's progress as @faries post from wiki

ya, just a little bit worried if the pictures you posted is actually showing us the current progress. :no:


Love This LPD...As maritime Country We need more unit of this type

Can't wait to see the Strategic Sealift Vessels project that currently built for the Philippines to be unfold in Novermber.


Plus, with our current capability to build LST, i hope we can replace all the old LST fleet we have with the new one from our national shipbuilder. I think we have more than 20 LST today, which most are already old and tired.

ab942dd9-74e5-4ef3-95f7-d56c48c79f23_169.jpg


Looks quite majestic really. 20 units LST like this will surely enable our navy to easily handle any logistical needs for transporting troops and fighting vehicles around our archipelago.


And yes, a few more LPD like this one won't be bad
 
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INDONESIAN WOMEN PILOT

1. Divi Chandani (instagram: divi_chandani)

8078199_20150715085318.jpg


2. Sarah W. Kusuma (instagram: sarah.widy)

8078199_20150715085501.jpg


3. Sari Ardisa (instagram: sariardisa)

8078199_20150715085726.jpg


4. Patricia Christabele (instagram: pchristabele)

8078199_20150715085857.jpg


5. Elesta Apriliana (instagram: elestaapriliana)

8078199_20150715090023.jpg


6. Iin Irjayanti (instagram: iin_mnz)

8078199_20150715090119.jpg


Flying is the best possible thing for women. :coffee:
 
Flying is the best possible thing for women.

Will be best if you try upload the pics in defence.pk server, don't copy the link directly from Kaskus, because it doesn't show-up correctly. :D


Marines
 
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ya, just a little bit worried if the pictures you posted is actually showing us the current progress. :no:




Can't wait to see the Strategic Sealift Vessels project that currently built for the Philippines to be unfold in Novermber.


Plus, with our current capability to build LST, i hope we can replace all the old LST fleet we have with the new one from our national shipbuilder. I think we have more than 20 LST today, which most are already old and tired.

ab942dd9-74e5-4ef3-95f7-d56c48c79f23_169.jpg


Looks quite majestic really. 20 units LST like this will surely enable our navy to easily handle any logistical needs for transporting troops and fighting vehicles around our archipelago.


And yes, a few more LPD like this one won't be bad
worried? I think the development is running on it's way... if there is a delay it is usually on any project :-)
 
worried? I think the development is running on it's way... if there is a delay it is usually on any project :-)

I said if, those pictures represent the current progress, which mean we lag far behind the schedule. This plane supposed to be rolled-out this August right.


11831742_864459440300409_182761567795941768_n.jpg
 
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I said if, those pictures represent the current progress, which mean we lag far behind the schedule. This plane supposed to rolled-out this August right.
yeah it's too late...if Roll out this august,first flight in October.after it we do more test flight and get Certification and begin to produce in 2016 but but till now we don't see completed prototype

LAPAN
 
yeah it's too late...if Roll out this august,first flight in October.after it we do more test flight and get Certification and begin to produce in 2016 but but till now we don't see completed prototype.

That's my first thought when i see the pictures... whaaat.. :nono: Hope that's not the case, and everything went smoothly.


11800374_957866104235834_2656787514380546321_n.jpg
 
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INDONESIAN WOMEN PILOT

1. Divi Chandani (instagram: divi_chandani)

8078199_20150715085318.jpg


2. Sarah W. Kusuma (instagram: sarah.widy)

8078199_20150715085501.jpg


3. Sari Ardisa (instagram: sariardisa)

8078199_20150715085726.jpg


4. Patricia Christabele (instagram: pchristabele)

8078199_20150715085857.jpg


5. Elesta Apriliana (instagram: elestaapriliana)

8078199_20150715090023.jpg


6. Iin Irjayanti (instagram: iin_mnz)

8078199_20150715090119.jpg


Flying is the best possible thing for women. :coffee:

Our military officer

11176098_732845260172040_1231932276_n.jpg
 
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US, Indonesia Kick Off Naval Exercise to Boost Maritime Cooperation

CARAT Indonesia 2015 begins.

By Prashanth Parameswaran
August 06, 2015

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CARAT Indonesia 2010. US Navy Photo

On August 3, the United States and Indonesia kicked off a series of bilateral naval exercises to boost their maritime partnership.

The 21st annual Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (CARAT) Indonesia will go on for a week on the ground in Surabaya and in the waters and airspace of the Java and Bali Seas. More than 1,000 U.S. military members will participate in CARAT Indonesia 2015, along with counterparts from the Indonesian Navy and Marines – known as Tentera Nasional Indonesia – Angkatan Laut (TNI-AL).

According to a U.S. Navy statement seen by The Diplomat, CARAT Indonesia 2015 will feature simultaneous amphibious landings, surface and anti-submarine warfare, visit, board, search and seizure demonstrations, mobile dive and salvage training, coastal riverine operations, maritime patrol and reconnaissance operations, a gunnery exercise, and an anti-air warfare missile live fire training exercise. Numerous civil action projects, aviation maintenance, sports exchanges, military law, and submarine warfare symposia will take place during the shore phase of the exercise.

“The diverse platforms and capabilities featured in this exercise will enable us to rehearse high-end tactical and integrated warfare scenarios in a realistic training environment both at sea and shore,” Rear Adm. Charlie Williams, commander of Task Force 73, a U.S. Navy task force of the Seventh Fleet which coordinates bilateral exercises for Southeast Asia, said.

As I have noted previously, CARAT Indonesia is part of a set of annual bilateral exercises that the United States conducts with nine partner navies from South and Southeast Asia focused on maritime security – Bangladesh, Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Timor-Leste (See: “US Eyes Expanded Military Exercises with ASEAN Navies”). Indonesia has been part of CARAT since the exercise series first began in 1995. The longstanding partnership has led to both enhanced bilateral cooperation between two armed forces as well as an increased complexity in the exercises themselves.

“After more than two decades of annual training events between the armed forces, CARAT Indonesia remains a model for cooperation that has evolved in complexity and enables both navies to refine operations and tactics in response to both traditional and non-traditional maritime security challenges,” said Lt. Arlo Abrahamson, U.S. Navy spokesman for Task Force 73.

CARAT Indonesia 2015 runs until August 10. Following that, additional bilateral CARAT exercises will occur for the rest of the year with Bangladesh, Brunei, Cambodia, Malaysia and Thailand. Earlier this year, exercises were completed with Singapore and East Timor.

US, Indonesia Kick Off Naval Exercise to Boost Maritime Cooperation | The Diplomat
 
eurofighter ready for full transfer of technology with Indonesia
Eurofighter Typhoon Jet 2.jpg


Ambassadors and representatives of the Eurofighter founding countries (Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK) met with the Indonesian Defence Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu earlier this week and delivered a formal Letter of Support for Eurofighter which had been signed by the Defence State Secretaries and Minister of State on behalf of the Ministries of Defence of the four countries, the multinational company announced today August 6.



The Letter of Support further endorsed the information already provided by Eurofighter and underwrote the four countries’ full support of the transfer of technology elements associated with the world’s most versatile and reliable fast-jet fighter.
Through the procurement of Eurofighter and associated technologies, Indonesia would also be able to capitalise on the successful long-term relationship which has developed between PT Dirgantara Indonesia (PT DI) and the Airbus Group. This unique combination of operational and industrial capabilities could provide the basis for long-term strategic growth in the Indonesian aerospace sector.
Capitalising on the theme of innovation in the maritime sector, and in support of the activities surrounding the 20th National Technology Awakening Day, more than 25 senior representatives from Indonesia’s strategic industries, research institutes, relevant ministries, the air force and Eurofighter participated in a workshop yesterday in Jakarta.

workshop explored the innovative use of fighter jets in the maritime environment. The participants identified and discussed areas for further joint research and study in order to assist Indonesia realise its vision of becoming a maritime axis through the enhancement of its defence, surveillance and peacekeeping capabilities.

ted jointly by the Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education (Kemenristekdikti) and Eurofighter, the workshop was attended by government officials and engineers including Advisor on Defence Technologies to the Menristekdikti, the Secretary General of the National Research Council, the Head of the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI) and PT DI KFX Program Chief Engineer.

he workshop was facilitated by Eurofighter Head of Future Capabilities Laurie Hilditch. “If we are to apply innovation to support the Indonesian maritime axis vision, opportunities for deeper research into a range of Indonesian specific areas could be explored,” Hilditch said.
The initiative received a warm welcome from the participants, coming on the heels of National Coordination Meeting on Science and Technology (Rakornas IPTEK) with stakeholders representing academia, the government and businesses to develop a National Science and Technology Development Roadmap (4/8).
During the Rakornas, Menristekdikti called for a strong partnership between research communities and businesses to help propel Indonesia’s economy and boost the nation’s stature – a vision shared by the Eurofighter Consortium.
“Reliable maritime protection is a fundamental requirement for this archipelagic nation. Add to that strong indigenous capabilities in the aerospace sector, and Indonesia will truly ‘take off’ as a maritime axis,” Eurofighter Head of Industrial Offset Martin Elbourne said on the sidelines of the workshop. “This is an approach supported by Eurofighter in its continuing dialogue with Indonesia.”

Eurofighter GmbH ready for full transfer of technology with Indonesia
 
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Indonesia’s Navy Inducts Missile Craft into Western Fleet

Jakarta adds three KCR-40-class anti-ship missile craft to its arsenal.

By Prashanth Parameswaran
August 07, 2015

thediplomat_2015-08-06_19-10-18-386x257.jpg

Indonesia’s navy (TNI-AL) inducted three anti-ship missile craft into its Western fleet, local military sources reported August 3.

According to a statement by the navy’s Western Fleet (KOARMABAR), Indonesia inducted three KCR-40-class anti-ship missile craft into the fleet. The three vessels – KRI Surik (645), KRI Siwar (646) and KRI Parang (647) – were commissioned in September 2014 by former Indonesian defense minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro. They were built by local shipbuilder PT Palindo in Batam.

The 44m KCR-40 can reach a top speed of 30 knots and can accommodate 35 crew members. According to IHS Jane’s Fighting Ships, a KCR-40 is armed with a 20 mm Denel Vector G12 main gun, two 12.7 mm machine guns, and launchers that can fire C-705 surface-to-surface missiles.

The vessels will be used by the Western Fleet to tackle maritime security threats, which range from piracy along the Strait of Malacca to preserving Indonesian sovereignty and territorial integrity amid lingering disputes with its neighbors (See: “A New Indonesia Military Base Near the South China Sea?”).

The KOARMABAR statement also described the KR-40 as an ideal platform for the western region given its relatively shallow waters and multiple clusters of small islands that allow for ‘hit-and-run’ operations against other targets.

The TNI-AL currently has two fleets – the Western Fleet based in Jakarta and the Eastern Fleet in Surabaya – and is reportedly working on the establishment of a third fleet as well.

Indonesia’s Navy Inducts Missile Craft into Western Fleet | The Diplomat
 

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