What's new

Israel fence systems, quick response team at Pakistan, Bangladesh borders

ashok321

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 1, 2010
Messages
17,942
Reaction score
4
Country
Canada
Location
Malaysia
3_img113817192152.jpg



http://indianexpress.com/article/in...at-pakistanbangladesh-borders-bsf-dg-4794770/


India is deploying along its volatile border with Pakistan a smart Israel-developed fencing system having a ‘quick response team’ mechanism which strikes when the CCTV-powered control room detects an infiltration attempt. The BSF is implementing an ambitious project called the comprehensive integrated border management system (CIBMS) as part of the Narendra Modi government’s plan to completely seal the Indo-Pak and India-Bangladesh borders in the next few years.

The BSF is tasked with guarding the over 6,300-km-long two borders and its chief, in an interview to PTI, said the new frontier guarding systems will bring a “sea change”, for the first time, in this domain. “There is going to be a paradigm shift in our operational preparedness. As of now, we patrol from point-A to point-B (along the border). What we are now planning is to shift to a QRT (quick reaction team)-based system and a number of new technologies which have not been tried so far are being tested,” said K K Sharma, the director general of the 2.65-lakh personnel strong force.

Sharma, a 1982-batch IPS officer, explained how the new border guarding mechanism, first along the “volatile” Pakistan border and then at the Indo-Bangla frontier, will work. “The new equipment and technologies will be integrated and a feed, from CCTV cameras, will go to the border out post where there is a monitor installed.”

“This will be monitored round-the-clock by two or three men. Now, we have softwares which are in a position to detect any intrusion or any change in the scenario and create an alarm,” the DG said. An automatic alarm will indicate the exact place where this intrusion (at the border) is taking place or an attempt is being made or something is being seen, he said.

“Once we get the alarm, we will zoom our night vision cameras on that and when we come to know what is happening, we will be able to neutralise the threat. This is the idea,” Sharma said. The BSF, raised in 1965 for border guarding roles, is running two pilot projects of 5-km each in Jammu in this context and this, the BSF boss said, will subsequently be set up at four more porous patches: One each along the Indo-Pak IB in Punjab and Gujarat and one each at Tripura, West Bengal and Dhubri (Assam) along the Indo-Bangla border.

The DG said the new system will see that instead of his troops patrolling day-in-and-day-out along the border, they will be sitting in the border outpost ready to move if there is any threat. “This will be a sea change. We have leap frogged in terms of gaining technology. From the patrolling mode to the QRT mode. This is the CIBMS. This is a paradigm shift in what we are going to do now,” he said, adding however, the patrolling will not be totally done away with.

Sharma, who took BSF’s charge in February last year, said the “human intervention (armed troops) will come to neutralise (terrorists) only. “The technology will guard the borders for us. The technology will not have the weakness or frailties that humans have,” the DG said.

He said the systems, of smart fences and surveillance methods, is from the state-of-the-art technologies being used in Israel. “In fact, we will have the latest versions of all those things that are being used there (Israel),” he added.

The DG said it was his firm belief that the future of border guarding lies in technology and not in increasing the manpower. “This is what I also told a Parliamentary panel that please give me money for technology. Don’t give me more manpower. I am happy to say that the present government is very positive on this proposal,” the DG said.

The government has given us the mandate of sealing the borders with the help of technology where there are gaps initially and then increasingly deploy this by gauging the vulnerability at the borders, he said. Sharma, who has spent about five years in the BSF, said the new border fencing and surveillance system will be a multi-tier protocol.

“There cannot be a thing like 100 per cent fool-proof. But, this new system will be more effective than the existing system and we will have multi-layered security systems. If one fails, then the second system will detect it. This will be nearly fool proof… as fool proof as it can be,” he said. The BSF boss said the pilot projects put under trial are by the way of ‘proof of concept’ method, where an experiment determines if a concept for a particular task is feasible or not.
 
. .

Cranes and other machinery are seen on the Israeli side of the border with Gaza Strip, on September 8, 2016. (AFP/Menahem Kahana)
Judah Ari GrossJudah Ari Gross is The Times of Israel's military correspondent.

The construction of Israel’s underground security barrier aimed at countering the Hamas terror group’s attack tunnels is picking up speed, the head of the IDF’s Southern Command said Wednesday, with hundreds of workers operating around the clock on the massive engineering project.

Maj. Gen. Eyal Zamir said the military was concerned that the construction on the barrier could spark a conflict with Hamas. The terror group sees its tunnels as a central weapon in the fight against Israel and the Defense Ministry’s barrier presents a threat to them.

“We hope they don’t try to challenge us,” he said.

Another military official added on Thursday that the army does not believe Hamas has any justification — “ethical, moral or military” — to prevent Israel from building a protective barrier. It will therefore not tolerate any attempts by the terror group to interfere with its construction, the official said.

“If it tries to, Israel will defend this barrier in every way possible,” the official said. “This barrier will be built. Period. At any price.”

In addition to disclosing additional information about the border barrier, the military on Wednesday also revealed that it had found two alleged Hamas tunnel sites buried beneath an apartment building and a family’s home in the northern Gaza Strip.


IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot, center, visits the Gaza Division with Col. Yaakov “Yaki” Dolef and head of the Southern Command Maj. Gen. Eyal Zamir in southern Israel on August 30, 2016. (IDF Spokesperson)

Zamir accused the Hamas terror group of purposefully building the tunnels under civilian structures to provide cover for its operations. That being the case, the general warned, “these sites are legitimate military targets. Anyone inside of one, should another conflict begin, endangers himself and endangers his family, and the responsibility is on the Hamas organization.”

The work on the 37-mile (60-kilometer) barrier began in earnest earlier this summer, and Zamir said it would be completed within two years. It will feature an advanced underground protection system that extends dozens of meters below the ground — the army would not specify the depth — in order to detect and destroy tunnels that attempt to penetrate into Israeli territory, as well as an above-ground metal fence adorned with sensors.

The Defense Ministry will also bulk up the defense along the Gaza coast, putting up breakwaters and other protective measures in order to prevent infiltration into Israel from the sea, as occurred during the 2014 Gaza war.

The military proposed building the barrier following the 2014 Gaza war, known in Israel as Operation Protective Edge. During the fighting, Hamas made extensive use of its tunnel networks to send fighters into Israel as well as to move its terrorist operatives and munitions within the Gaza Strip.


IDF infantrymen congregating around a tunnel entrance in Gaza, July 24, 2014. (Courtesy IDF Flickr)

However, some experts harbor doubt that the barrier will truly be the silver bullet to the tunnel problem that it’s often considered.

“There is no physical barrier that cannot be overcome,” said Col. (res.) Yossi Langotzky, who previously served as adviser to the IDF chief of staff on the threat of tunnels, during a conference on the issue last year.


Col. (res.) Yossi Langotsky, a former adviser to the IDF chief of staff on the issue of tunnels. (Weinspen/Wikimedia)

“If you build a system that can detect a tunnel up to 40 meters (130 feet) deep, [Hamas] will build a tunnel below 40 meters,” he told The Times of Israel on the sidelines of the conference.

The project is expected to cost approximately NIS 3 billion ($833 million), with each kilometer of the underground portion of the barrier costing approximately NIS 41.5 million ($11.5 million). The above-ground fence is significantly cheaper at just NIS 1.5 million ($416,000) per kilometer.

In order to speed up construction, concrete factories were built next to the Gaza Strip.

“We’re working according to plan on the barrier. In the next few months, this project is going to gain significant momentum,” Zamir said.

Currently, dozens of construction workers and engineering specialists from around the world are working on the project, at a few different sites, in order to fine-tune their operating methods. They wear flak jackets and are guarded by IDF soldiers.

By the year’s end, over 1,000 people, both Israelis and migrant workers, will be operating on the border barrier in approximately 40 locations.


This February 10, 2016, file photo shows IDF soldiers keeping watch as a machine drills holes in the ground on the Israeli side of the border with the Gaza Strip as they search for tunnels used by Palestinian terrorists planning to attack Israel. (AFP/Menahem Kahana)

The order in which the areas along the border receive the underground barrier is determined in accordance with an assessment of the security risk, a military official said last year.

The Defense Ministry offered tenders to a variety of companies, who are charged with building not only the underground barrier but also army posts and command-and-control centers along the border.

The barrier is being built inside Israeli territory, Zamir said. The current metal fence surrounding the Strip, which lies exactly on the border, will remain in place, while the new fence is built a few dozen meters inside Israel.


Illustrative. A hydromill at a construction site in Tel Aviv. (Sharshar/Wikimedia/CC BY-SA 4.0)

In order to construct the underground barrier, the workers are using a German hydromill, a powerful piece of drilling equipment that cuts deep, narrow trenches into the earth.

In addition to opening up the ground where the barrier will be constructed, the hydromill is also expected to expose any previously undiscovered or newly dug Hamas tunnels that enter Israeli territory.

The space left behind by the hydromill — and any Hamas tunnels that get in the way — is then filled with a substance known as bentonite, a type of absorbent clay that expands when it touches water.

This is meant to prevent the trenches from collapsing, but also has the additional benefit of indicating the presence of a tunnel, as the bentonite would quickly drain into it.

Workers then pour regular concrete into the trench. Metal cages with sensors attached are then lowered into the concrete for additional support.

In the briefing, the general described the current situation in the Strip as precarious. “On the one hand there’s stability, on the other it’s potentially explosive,” he said.

Zamir said Hamas does not appear interested in fighting a war with Israel now. “We see that Hamas is deterred, restrained and is also reining in terror attacks” from Gaza.

‘On the one hand there’s stability, on the other it’s potentially explosive’

In July 2014, Israel launched Operation Protective Edge in response to rocket fire from Gaza. During the 50-day campaign, the IDF destroyed some 14 tunnels that entered Israeli territory, along with 18 internal tunnels, and depleted Hamas’s weapons stores.

In the time since the 2014 war, on average between one and two rockets have been fired from Gaza into Israel each month. They have been fired by fringe Salafist groups, not by Hamas, which took control of the Strip in 2007 and has ruled the coastal enclave ever since.

But Zamir added that while the terror group is working to prevent attacks in the Strip — Tuesday night’s rocket notwithstanding — Hamas is still “fanning the flames” and directing terrorist activities in the West Bank and Jerusalem.

“It is also continuing to strengthen itself and prepare for the next war,” Zamir said.

http://www.timesofisrael.com/reveal...hwarting-barrier-idf-says-it-could-spark-war/
 
. .
These kind of systems are within the capability of Indian private companies to do. Give them 3-4 years time and they will come up with world class solution. We can save hundreds of millions of dollars.
 
. .
Israel fence systems, quick response team at Pakistan, Bangladesh borders
Sunday, August 13, 2017
By: Indian Express

Source Link: CLICK HERE

  • 3_img113817192152.jpg
  • 3_img113817192152.jpg
  • 3_img113817192152.jpg


India is deploying along its volatile border with Pakistan a smart Israel-developed fencing system having a ‘quick response team’ mechanism which strikes when the CCTV-powered control room detects an infiltration attempt. The BSF is implementing an ambitious project called the comprehensive integrated border management system (CIBMS) as part of the Narendra Modi government’s plan to completely seal the Indo-Pak and India-Bangladesh borders in the next few years.

The BSF is tasked with guarding the over 6,300-km-long two borders and its chief, in an interview to PTI, said the new frontier guarding systems will bring a “sea change”, for the first time, in this domain. “There is going to be a paradigm shift in our operational preparedness. As of now, we patrol from point-A to point-B (along the border). What we are now planning is to shift to a QRT (quick reaction team)-based system and a number of new technologies which have not been tried so far are being tested,” said K K Sharma, the director general of the 2.65-lakh personnel strong force.

Sharma, a 1982-batch IPS officer, explained how the new border guarding mechanism, first along the “volatile” Pakistan border and then at the Indo-Bangla frontier, will work. “The new equipment and technologies will be integrated and a feed, from CCTV cameras, will go to the border out post where there is a monitor installed.”

“This will be monitored round-the-clock by two or three men. Now, we have softwares which are in a position to detect any intrusion or any change in the scenario and create an alarm,” the DG said. An automatic alarm will indicate the exact place where this intrusion (at the border) is taking place or an attempt is being made or something is being seen, he said.

“Once we get the alarm, we will zoom our night vision cameras on that and when we come to know what is happening, we will be able to neutralise the threat. This is the idea,” Sharma said. The BSF, raised in 1965 for border guarding roles, is running two pilot projects of 5-km each in Jammu in this context and this, the BSF boss said, will subsequently be set up at four more porous patches: One each along the Indo-Pak IB in Punjab and Gujarat and one each at Tripura, West Bengal and Dhubri (Assam) along the Indo-Bangla border.

The DG said the new system will see that instead of his troops patrolling day-in-and-day-out along the border, they will be sitting in the border outpost ready to move if there is any threat. “This will be a sea change. We have leap frogged in terms of gaining technology. From the patrolling mode to the QRT mode. This is the CIBMS. This is a paradigm shift in what we are going to do now,” he said, adding however, the patrolling will not be totally done away with.

Sharma, who took BSF’s charge in February last year, said the “human intervention (armed troops) will come to neutralise (terrorists) only. “The technology will guard the borders for us. The technology will not have the weakness or frailties that humans have,” the DG said.

He said the systems, of smart fences and surveillance methods, is from the state-of-the-art technologies being used in Israel. “In fact, we will have the latest versions of all those things that are being used there (Israel),” he added.

The DG said it was his firm belief that the future of border guarding lies in technology and not in increasing the manpower. “This is what I also told a Parliamentary panel that please give me money for technology. Don’t give me more manpower. I am happy to say that the present government is very positive on this proposal,” the DG said.

The government has given us the mandate of sealing the borders with the help of technology where there are gaps initially and then increasingly deploy this by gauging the vulnerability at the borders, he said. Sharma, who has spent about five years in the BSF, said the new border fencing and surveillance system will be a multi-tier protocol.

“There cannot be a thing like 100 per cent fool-proof. But, this new system will be more effective than the existing system and we will have multi-layered security systems. If one fails, then the second system will detect it. This will be nearly fool proof… as fool proof as it can be,” he said. The BSF boss said the pilot projects put under trial are by the way of ‘proof of concept’ method, where an experiment determines if a concept for a particular task is feasible or not.
http://www.defencenews.in/article/I...e-team-at-Pakistan,-Bangladesh-borders-283670
 
.
These kind of systems are within the capability of Indian private companies to do. Give them 3-4 years time and they will come up with world class solution. We can save hundreds of millions of dollars.

I wonder if the time frame was provided by the engineers behind TEJAS/ARJUN ?
 
.
Thanks God. Now the Hanuman army will be controlled. As no terrorist will infiltrate. What will happen to the Sir ji Kal strikes. And who will be blamed for when Indian army will be attacked by Pakistani Invisible warriors.
 
. .
We need automated gun turrets, specially in Bangladesh borders, so that infidels like Ashok321 can't illegally enter out country, and claim fake citizenship.

Noop it would be very generous way, for his likes we need Guantánamo bay, where we can Jaleel him day and night.

Only way now is to cross over like hanuman:lol:
Abduls on strike again..
 
. .
indian establishment will never do that i mean how can they blame Pakistan for all of its failure then?
 
. . .
Back
Top Bottom