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Pilot pesawat itu Aset negara yang harus dijaga, Apalagi pilot pespur. Mereka adalah pahlawan.
Yg sudah melewati proses waktu yang lama.
Sekbang TNI AU dan sekolah lainnya sudah dilewati.
Butuh biaya milyaran uang atau lebih buat nyetak 1 pilot pespur.
Apalagi yg sudah dipanggil adalah lulusan terbaik dan sudah menjabat jabatan penting.
Lebih baik eject karna harga pespur gak sebanding sama sekali dengan nyawa si pilot. Tapi yg sudah sudah berusaha survive dan menyelamatkan pesawat.
Hindari accident sekecil apapun, apalagi terjadi karna hal konyol masalah anggaran, saya gak mau.
Melawan kodrat untuk menjaga kedaulatan semoga selalu dijaga tuhan.

Enough! Semoga ini yg terakhir

#curhat #RIP

It took my concern too since the several crashes happened again and again in last few years.
There must be something isn't right at our air force management and they shouldn't deny it.
Practice makes perfect, every great man learn from their mistakes.
Hopefully this will be the last and it will only be "the most expensive experience" for us.
My deep condolesence for all victims.
 
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Made in the jungle of java, it seem the writer never been to java, this kind of stupidity most western toward south east asian nation.......cape dehhh

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They may have a point, not exactly jungle, but somewhere remote, covered with the lush of green.
 
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A bunch of amateurs? Indonesia's homegrown jihadis ridicule Daesh after Jakarta attack
Kate Lamb in Jakarta
Thursday 11 February 2016 03.24 GMT

Four weeks after Daesh claimed killings, veteran extremists scorn its lack of relative success while experts fear local groups are now a growing threat with ‘foreigners’ in their sights.

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Abu Tholut, former senior member of Jemaah Islamiyah, has been jailed twice for terrorism offences. Photograph: Kate Lamb for the Guardian
As Abu Tholut sips on his guava juice, his wispy silver beard brushing against the glass, he mulls the state of global jihad and his not insubstantial role in it.

“Al-Baghdadi,” scoffs the 54-year-old convicted terrorist, letting loose on his views of the leader of Islamic State. “When I went to Afghanistan in ’85, he would have been just 14.

“We call him,” he says with a smirk, “anak kemarin sore”.

The phrase in Indonesian refers playfully but somewhat derogatorily to the new kid on the block – like a child born just “yesterday afternoon”.

Tholut is seated with an entourage in a small restaurant in a suburban backstreet of Bekasi, a city 30km outside Jakarta, just months after being released from prison.

It was his second spell in jail for terrorism offences – in 2011 he was jailed for his involvement in a militant training camp – but he is now out on parole and is freely speaking his mind.

The backdrop to his remarks is an attack just weeks ago in the centre of the capital, which left eight people dead and dozens more injured.

Daesh has claimed responsibility for the assaults near Jakarta’s Sarinah department store, the worst terrorist attack in Indonesia since 2009.

In the world’s largest Muslim-majority nation, home to a radical fringe of sometimes interconnected but oscillating jihadi networks, it has raised fears about the spectre of more to come.

Tholut – himself a former senior member of one of those networks, Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), the south-east Asian militant group behind the 2002 Bali bombings – has strong views about what happened on 14 January.

“We can see in the video that they seem to be thinking on the spot. They were both thinking: ‘Where should we go? All right, you go there.’ It’s like they didn’t plan things and planned on the spot instead. Then the police came, and they shot them. A traffic cop,” he laughs.

The Sarinah attack was a laughable, bungled mess, he adds.

“Why did they bring a bomb into the parking lot, and then they just sat there? Who knows what they were doing, tinkering with it, then one sat down, and suddenly the explosion happened!” An animated Tholut pauses before laughing again: “What were they doing there?”

Aside from the oddity of hearing a convicted terrorist dissect the work of rookie jihadis over Nasi Padang (a banquet of small, spicy dishes stacked across the table), Tholut appears to have a point.
"Foreigners for the first time since 2009 are back on the agenda"
Sidney Jones
The Sarinah attacks were likely motivated by lethal, ideological convictions, but overall they were clumsy. The shooters struggled to hit targets even at close range. One attacker, seemingly by accident, killed himself as a bomb he was preparing to throw at police exploded. In total four attackers died and four civilians.

Many believe, though, that the lack of relative success of the attacks will not deter others in the future.

Since the deadliest terror attack in Indonesia – the Bali bombing that killed 202 people – there has been a string of smaller-scale attacks across Indonesia, among them a car bomb at the Australian embassy in 2004 and the bombing of the Ritz-Carlton and JW Marriot hotels in 2009.

In the years since, the police have been the main target, in retribution for damage authorities have inflicted on extremist networks.

But the evolution of Daesh – and its attraction to the hundreds of Indonesians who have left their country to join it – has significantly altered the dynamics, with foreigners once again becoming targets.

Speaking at a recent forum in Jakarta, analyst Sidney Jones spoke of the changing nature of the targets.

“We are in, I think, for more attempts at violence. Unfortunately, the three groups that everyone is targeting are police, number one, and foreigners and Shia [Muslims] number two and three” said Jones, “Foreigners for the first time since 2009 are back on the agenda.”

In the wake of Sarinah, the government has turned its attention to bolstering the country’s counter-terrorism laws and thwarting planned attacks, but there are other glaring issues in the system that many believe desperately need to be addressed.

Competition between pro-Daesh figures, flourishing extremism in Indonesian jails and the prospect of trained fighters returning from Syria are all factors of concern in Indonesia’s extremist landscape.

Structurally the fragmented nature of Daesh-aligned networks here is one reason why analysts like Jones believe there will be more attacks.

A leadership struggle has developed between three Indonesians who have joined Daesh in Syria, and it appears to be driving a battle for control of the Indonesian and Malaysian wing of Daesh, Katibah Nusantara.

The three Indonesians in question are Bahrumsyah – who currently heads the Malay-speaking fighting unit – Abu Jandal and Bahrun Naim.

“The competition between these three can have lethal consequences in Indonesia because how do you prove you are the person most deserving of leadership and acknowledgement? It’s by organising your followers to do something,” Jones says.

While it is believed the latest attack was locally organised at the behest of hardline cleric Aman Abdurrahman, the competitiveness between the three kicked in immediately after word reached Syria.

Bahrumsyah, who was apparently surprised by the news, ordered one of his contacts to conduct a similar assault directly after, according to a February 2016 report by the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (Ipac). Police arrested the suspected would-be attacker before he had the chance to follow through.

Months earlier Bahrun Naim – who has organised a comprehensive jihadi committee on the encrypted messaging app Telegram – sent funds for attacks in Indonesia, and has tried to engineer lone wolf attacks in Malaysia and Singapore as well.

These threats and the Jakarta attacks have led the Indonesian president, Joko Widodo, to call for the country’s counter-terrorism strategy to be revised.

Authorities have complained of the lack of legal framework to pursue would-be terrorists and there is a push to bring in more stringent laws by mid-2016. While support for Daesh was criminalised in 2014, no current legislation outlaws travelling to join Daesh.

At least 300 Indonesians have continued to leave for Syria – would-be fighters, families, women and children – but it is getting harder to get there. Last year alone 215 people were deported back to Indonesia, and tighter border controls have been cited as one possible explanation for the refocusing of jihadi energy at home.​

"If JI decides that this is the day to take action, they will do it.
This is what the government is afraid of"

Abu Tholut
One of the biggest vulnerabilities is the Indonesian justice system itself, where hardline sentiment has grown and flourished.

In the months leading up to the Sarinah attack, each of the four perpetrators visited the maximum-security prison of Nusa Kambangan to meet with pro-Daesh leaders. One of the Sarinah gunmen was released on terrorism charges last August, raising questions about recidivism and monitoring of convicted terrorists post release.

Meanwhile, lax controls inside Nusa Kambangan have also allowed jailed cleric Aman Abdurrahman to become a spiritual figurehead of the pro-Daesh movement from behind bars.

A fluent Arabic speaker, Abdurrahman has translated streams of extremist doctrine into Indonesian, which is then widely circulated on hardline websites.​

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Jailed cleric Aman Abdurrahman is a spiritual figurehead for the pro-Daesh movement inside Indonesia.
Days before the Sarinah attack he issued a much-shared fatwa calling for his followers to join Daesh in Syria “and if you cannot emigrate then wage jihad with spirit wherever you are”.

The freedoms enjoyed in prison have drawn criticism – even from senior hardliners in the Indonesian jihadi movement.

One is Abu Jibril, once second in command in JI.

“It is very free, he has laptops and cell phones. When I was arrested I wasn’t allowed any of that,” Jibril told the Guardian, comparing his own detention in Malaysia to Abdurrahman’s. “You can translate all the news from Syria and thus help to form public opinion about Daesh in Indonesia.”

Jibril made the comments after speaking at a hardline event at a Bekasi mosque in late January, where he and Abu Tholut outlined their conception of an Islamic caliphate.

“The forming of a caliphate in Indonesia is inseparable from the global Islamic community,” explained Jibril after his sermon. “The forming of a caliphate should be agreed by the Muslim community worldwide.”

While both speakers are virulently anti-Daesh, the event shows the old jihadi guard hasn’t faded into oblivion just yet.

Hundreds of men in prayer caps and women in face veils attended the event, which was patrolled not by any visible police presence but burly members of the Islamic group Majelis Mujahidin Indonesia (MMI).

Dressed in black vests with the words MUJAHIDIN printed in bright yellow capital letters across the back, the MMI members busied themselves on walkie-talkies around the mosque perimeters.​

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A security guard from the Majelis Mujahidin (Mujahidin Council), right,
stands outside a talk by three radical Islamic preachers near Jakarta.

In the courtyard people posed in front of a replica Ka’bah, the black shrine of Mecca, while inside the event was being MC’d by a former police officer who joined the other side.

That two senior ex-JI members are given free reign to espouse their radical but non-violent views might be unnerving, but analyst Taufik Andre, from the Institute for International Peace Building, says the police are watching.

Andre believes the authorities are prioritising Daesh while taking a soft approach to JI.

“The police are trying to negotiate with the JI elite to influence them not to carry out attacks here,” he says, “And for that there will be no law enforcement, or action.”

Yet in the long term, JI could be more of a threat. The JI network took a series of hits after the Bali bombings, but there are strong indications the group has been quietly reconsolidating: recruiting members, conducting religious outreach and producing weapons clandestinely.

To what end, though, no one really seems to know.

“That’s what makes it dangerous. Something with powers yet to be known,” says Tholut. “You have to remember that the majority of the people who were in Afghanistan and the Philippines are in JI. The trained ones are all there.”

Documents seized by authorities in 2013 show that JI is thinking globally and long-term by targeting the recruitment of highly trained professionals, including chemical technicians and Arab and Chinese linguists.

And in terms of organisational capacity, Jones says the group “may be back up to the strength in had in 2000, 2001”, a year before it orchestrated the Bali bombing. Although she says it does not see – for now at least – Indonesia as a legitimate battleground for jihad.

Now he is a free man once more, Abu Tholut says he may go back to keeping animals, especially “venomous” ones, but he is of the opinion that his old network may be more dangerous in the future than the less experienced newcomers who support Daesh.

“All they have to do is wait for the orders. If JI decides that this is the day to take action, they will do it. This is what the government is afraid of,” he says, “far more so than Daesh.”

The Guardian - goo.gl/C62i4L
 
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Coming soon..... Kapal Markas KKP (140 meter, Marine and fishery HQ Vessel)
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Kayaknya sekarang lagi demam model kapal LPD ya, sampe KKP pun gak mau ketinggalan. Cuma mungkin bedanya kapal ini gak dikasih ramp door.
Btw, sepertinya ide mas mengenai kapal LPD 140m buat flagshipnya TNI-AL udah direalisasikan tuh sama ibu Susi, cuma bedanya ini buat KKP :D
 
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even the ministry of marine & fisheries want LPD, and the basarnas order 24 new helicopter. the navy really need to do something in their wishlist.
something like destroyer or so
 
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Kayaknya sekarang lagi demam model kapal LPD ya, sampe KKP pun gak mau ketinggalan. Cuma mungkin bedanya kapal ini gak dikasih ramp door. Btw, sepertinya ide mas mengenai kapal LPD 140m buat flagshipnya TNI-AL udah direalisasikan tuh sama ibu Susi, cuma bedanya ini buat KKP

even the ministry of marine & fisheries want LPD, and the basarnas order 24 new helicopter. the navy really need to do something in their wishlist.
something like destroyer or so

Ya, kalau sudah begini TNI AL mau tidak mau harus mengikuti arus. Bakamla sedang bikin kapal patroli 110 meter, KKP berencana bikin kapal markas 140 meter, basarnas juga order heli besar-besaran, mudah-mudahan TNI AL tergerak untuk melakukan pengadaan alutsista yang lebih berotot :)

Untuk pengadaan 2 kapal RS TNI AL yang akan datang, mudah-mudahan terpengaruh dengan rencana bu Susi yang akan bikin kapal markas 140 m.
 
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Confirmed: Indonesia Will Buy 10 Russian S-35 Fighter Jets
A deal will be signed by Indonesia’s defense minister during his visit to Moscow in March.

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By Franz-Stefan Gady
February 11, 2016
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Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons/Russavia

Indonesia has agreed to purchase 10 Russian Sukhoi Su-35S multirole fighter jets, according to Indonesian media reports. Indonesia’s Minister of Defense, General Ryamizard Ryacudu, will visit Moscow in March to sign the final agreement.

Already in September 2015, Gen. Ryamizard announced that a decision to purchase Russian jets had been made. “A decision was made to decommission U.S. F-5 Tiger fighter jets and purchase Russian aircraft instead of them,” Indonesia news agency ANTARA quoted the defense minister as saying. “The purchase will be made gradually, depending on the financial possibilities of the country’s government,” he added.

In January 2016, Indonesia’s ambassador to Russia, Djauhari Oratmangun, still only told Russian media that “negotiations are ongoing. The Minister of Defense wants to visit Russia in April to continue the discussions.” Yet, the date appears now to have been pushed forward and negotiations concluded.

Originally, Indonesia was looking to purchase 16 Su-35S. The Ministry of Defense has “agreed to buy a squadron of Su-35s,” Ryamizard said in September 2015. However, he clarified this week: “We will buy only ten.” The defense minister also said that the deal will include pilot training and knowledge transfers through a military exchange program.

A joint military-technical cooperation commission began talks in late in November 2015 in Jakarta to discuss details of the contract, including technological transfers. (Indonesian law stipulates that at least 35 percent of the aircraft’s technology needs to be transferred to the country as part of the defense deal.)

The Su-35S is a single-seat, twin-engine upgraded fourth-generation super-maneuverable multirole fighter powered by two AL-117S turbofan engines, and featuring fifth-generation aircraft technology, including “a sophisticated avionics suite based on a digital information management system, a cutting-edge radar with a long-range aerial target acquisition and increased multiple-target tracking/engagement capabilities, and enhanced thrust-vectoring engines,” IHS Jane’s Defense Weekly explains.

The Indonesia Air Force (TNI-AU) currently operates 12 F-16A/Bs aircraft, six (some sources say 12) F-5E/F fighter jets, five Russian-made Su-27s and 11 Su-30s, along with 15 Hawk 209 sub-sonic light combat aircraft used for training purposes.

“Indonesia’s turn toward Russian fighters stemmed partly from necessity. Its 12 remaining F-16A/Bs and 16 remaining F-5E/F fighters experienced severe maintenance problems in the wake of a US embargo, triggered by the Indonesian military’s widespread human rights abuses in East Timor,” according to Defense Industry Daily.

How many of these aircraft are actually operational is unknown. As The Diplomat reported in the past, the Indonesian Air Force has had enduring problems with aviation safety. For example, an F-16 fighter jet malfunctioned and caught fire during a ceremony to honor Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, last April (See: “Will Indonesia’s Fighter Jet Malfunction Affect its Defense Policy?”). The crash of a C-130 Hercules transport plane killed 143 people in June 2015.

Confirmed: Indonesia Will Buy 10 Russian S-35 Fighter Jets | The Diplomat

Indonesia to retire Ahmad Yani-class frigates from 2017
Ridzwan Rahmat, Singapore - IHS Jane's Navy International
11 February 2016
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The TNI-AL's Ahmad Yani-class guided missile frigate, KRI Abdul Halim Perdanakusuma. According to a schedule decided at the 2016 iteration of an annual naval technical and logistics work plan meeting, the class will be retired at a rate of one ship a year from 2017. Source: TNI-AL
Key Points
  • Indonesia will start to decommission the Ahmad Yani class from 2017
  • Retirement paves way for the induction of new SIGMA 10514 vessels
The Indonesian Navy (Tentara Nasional Indonesia - Angkatan Laut, or TNI-AL) is scheduled to decommission the first of its six Ahmad Yani-class frigates in 2017, a TNI-AL source told IHS Jane's on 10 February.

The schedule was decided at the 2016 iteration of an annual naval technical and logistics work plan meeting that took place in early January at the TNI-AL's Western Fleet (KOARMABAR) headquarters in Jakarta. "The Ahmad Yani class will be decommissioned at a rate of one ship a year from 2017 until 2022," the source said.

According to IHS Jane's Fighting Ships , the vessels were first commissioned into the Royal Netherlands Navy (RNLN) between August 1967 and May 1968 as the Van Speijk class. They were then transferred to the TNI-AL between 1986 and 1989.

Ahmad Yani-class vessels have an overall length of 113.4 m, an overall beam of 12.5 m, and a hull draught of 4.2 m. The platform displaces 2,880 tonnes at full load and can accommodate a crew of 180.

The vessel is armed with an Oto Melara 76 mm main gun as a primary weapon and four 12.7 mm machine guns for point defence. Submarine prosecution capability is facilitated by six 324 mm tubes that can deploy the Honeywell Mk 46 lightweight torpedo.

The TNI-AL, however, has not specified which of the six ships is slated to be decommissioned first in 2017.


Want to read more? For analysis on this article and access to all our insight content, please enquire about our subscription options ihs.com/contact



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Indonesia Mulls Intelligence Cooperation with Russia


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TEMPO.CO
, Jakarta-President Joko Widodo today, February 10, met with delegation from the Russian Government. Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs Luhut Panjaitan said both countries discussed cooperation in defense and intelligence sector.

“There are several forms of cooperation in intelligence sector, such as exchange of information, as well as defense and drugs,” said Luhut on Wednesday, Feb. 10, adding that both countries also discussed relation between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Regarding intelligence cooperation, Luhut said Indonesia saw the need for cooperation with Russia as Indonesia has mainly focused on working with intelligence from western countries, especially the United States.

Luhut said intelligence cooperation with Russia would provide many benefits for Indonesia. The forms of cooperation discussed were exchange of information, training of human resources and equipment.

For defense sector, Russia offered several advanced technologies, such as Sukhoi SU-35 aircraft, helicopters, submarines and fast ships. Luhut said Indonesia has yet agreed on the cooperation because there will be further meetings to discuss details of the cooperation. “The most important thing is there must be transfer of technology, so we are not merely a market for developed countries,” said Luhut.

Luhut continued that Indonesia and Russia also agreed to cooperate in narcotics prevention, including exchange of information.

In the meeting, President Jokowi also discussed the tension between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Luhut said the President stated his wish for Indonesia to play a role in abating the tension between both countries. “Russia welcomed the move even though they said they did not have great interests in the issue,” he said.

The Russian delegation was led by Nikolai P. Patrushev, Secretary of Russian Security Council who was accompanied by the Deputy Security Eugeny Lukyanov and Russian Federation Ambassador for Indonesia Mikhail Galuzin. President Jokowi was accompanied by Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs Luhut Panjaitan, Justice and Human Rights Minister Yasonna Laoly, Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi and National Police Chief Gen. Badrodin Haiti.

Indonesia Mulls Intelligence Cooperation with Russia | National | Tempo.Co :: Indonesian News Portal



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Chief of Naval Staff (Kasal) Brunei Darussalam Laksma Norazmi Pengiran Dato Seri Pahlawan Haji Mohammad bin Pengiran along with some of staff, paid a visit to the Headquarters of the Indonesian National Army (TNI Headquarters) Cilankap, East Jakarta, Thursday (02/11/2016).


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BAN PHROMNIMIT, Thailand (Feb. 10, 2016) -- Members of the Royal Thai Armed Forces, U.S. Army and Indonesian National Armed Forces worked together to construct a one-room multi-purpose educational building here Feb. 2, before the start of Exercise Cobra Gold 2016.The construction at Ban Phromnimit is one of six humanitarian civic action sites in which the Thai, U.S. and partner nation's militaries will work together on civic programs to support security and humanitarian interests of friends and partner nations.
 
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Indonesia to Start Producing IFX Jet Fighters in 2020

TEMPO.CO, Bandung - State aircraft company, PT Dirgantara Indonesia, will start producing jet fighters "Indonesian Fighter Xperiment (IFX)" in 2020, its President Director, Budi Santoso, said.

"We will begin producing them in 2020 and continue for the next 20 years," he said here on Thursday.

The aircraft will be produced to meet the Indonesian militarys need for two squadrons of jet fighters and will be sold abroad as well, Budi added.

He said the second phase of cooperation contracts between the Indonesian Defense Ministry and the South Korean Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) and between PT Dirgantara Indonesia and Korean Aerospace Industries (KAI) was signed last January on the basis of starting the production of the planes prototype.

The prototype of the Korean Fighter Xperiment/Indonesian Fighter Xperiment will be produced in South Korea and Indonesia starting this year and until 2019, he said.

He said the prototype of the jet fighters will be produced in South Korea and the rest will be assembled in Indonesia.

The production of the planes will involve numerous Indonesian scientists and technicians for each unit, Budi said.

He added that 300 Indonesians will study and research the production of the KF-X/IF-X jet fighters.


ekspor,ekspor

en.tempo.co/read/news/2016/02/12/055744291/Indonesia-to-Start-Producing-IFX-Jet-Fighters-in-2020
 
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