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Reports: Increase in Pakistan Defense and Nuclear Budgets Likely

May. 19, 2014 - 05:22PM | By USMAN ANSARI |

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Media reports indicate a budget increase is coming for the Pakistani military. (Aamir Qureshi / AFP)

ISLAMABAD — Media reports here have outlined that Pakistan is set to increase funding for the armed forces and the national nuclear body, the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC), under the forthcoming 2014-FY2015 budget.

The budget would be just over US $81 million for the PAEC, up from nearly $63 million the previous year (which was later increased to $66 million).

Mansoor Ahmed, from Quaid-e-Azam University’s Department of Defence and Strategic Studies, who specializes in Pakistan’s national deterrent and delivery programs, said although the figures earmarked for the national nuclear body are mainly for a civilian power generation project, there are national security implications.
“This sum is primarily geared toward the construction of the two 1,000-megawatt generation-III safeguarded Chinese nuclear power reactors to be established at Karachi, K-1 and K-2, that were recently initiated by the prime minister,” he said.

However, he added, “Additional financial allocations are most likely earmarked for the unsafeguarded Khushab Nuclear Complex where the fourth plutonium production heavy water reactor is reportedly nearing completion.”

Ahmed said the Khushab Nuclear Complex has been vital in allowing Pakistan to modernize its national deterrent due to its central role in the production of plutonium.

“These and other classified projects are presumably aimed at the development of a new variety of lightweight, compact and more powerful and efficient weapon designs, suitable for a variety of ballistic and cruise missiles, that require additional fissile material [plutonium] production, and fuel fabrication in addition to maintaining and improving existing infrastructure.

“All this has been possible due to the steady enhancement of indigenous manufacturing capabilities developed by the PAEC during the past 35 years,” he added.

The budget increase for the armed forces is also significant.
The new defense budget proper is said to be just over $7.6 billion. This is an increase from the nearly $6.4 billion the previous year, (revised later to $6.6 billion).

The budget is broken down to nearly $3.8 billion for the Army, about $1.6 billion for the Air Force and slightly more than $760 million for the Navy.

This puts the “operational” aspect of the budget at some $6.1 billion for the services and the remaining $1.5 billion earmarked for various defense and defense production bodies.

Former Australian defense attache to Islamabad, Brian Cloughley, says while the sources for the figures reported in the media “seem to be pretty good,” he cautions, “it’s still conjecture rather than hard fact.”

The possible increases “may well be because the Army and Air Force have asked for more in order to pay for the Waziristan operation” to root out the Pakistani Taliban, “which has got to take place, irrespective of what [Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif] thinks or says,” he said.

But this will not necessarily translate into acquisition of new equipment, he said.
“I think they’ll maintain the balance between operating costs and capital equipment acquisitions,” he said.
The Navy in particular could use a capital upgrade, he said.

“I don’t think it’s looking too good for the Navy” Cloughley said. Adding, “Pakistan has simply got to get some more submarines.”

The Navy operates two aging Agosta-70 submarines acquired in the 1970s and three more modern Agosta-90Bs equipped with air independent propulsion (AIP) under a deal signed in the 1990s, and which entered service in the last decade.

However, a deal for three German HDW Type-214 submarines fell through in 2008 due to a lack of finances, and negotiations have been underway for some time with China for six AIP-equipped diesel electric boats.
Analysts said these are likely the S-20 development of the Chinese Type-041 Yuan class, with government officials expecting a deal to be signed by the end of the year.

Analyst Usman Shabbir of the Pakistan Military Consortium think tank said too much cannot be read into the small size of the Navy’s budget, as it has generally been small compared with the other services.

“Large buys are not part of specific force budgets, so Navy’s budget will not tell you if [it] has money for subs or not”, he said.

There is more optimism among analysts over the possible acquisition of Chinese submarines than obtaining further Perry-class frigates from the US. These are desperately required to replace the aging ex-British Type-21 frigates.

One of the six Type-21s, Badr (ex-Alacrity), has already been decommissioned and the remainder will pay off by the end of the decade. Officials had hoped to acquire up to six Perrys to replace these, but to date only one, Alamgir (ex-McInerney) has been acquired. Recent proposals for three more are effectively being blocked by the US Congress.

Though US Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jonathan Greenert was in Pakistan last week, it is not known if transfer of equipment was discussed in addition to the reported talks about regional security. ■
Email: uansari@gannettgov.com.
 
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@Rashid Mahmood @fatman17 You gentlemen could most probably start a thread on Pakistani Navy and it's immense contribution to the GCC. I have personally met naval officers from KSA, UAE & Qatar who studied at the Pakistan Naval Academy.

I had more than 70 course mates from the Gulf countries in the Naval Academy.

I would like to add that Pakistan Navy help setup the Royal Saudi Navy, Qatari Navy, UAE Navy and to some extent the Omani & Libyan Navy.

In the late 70's & early 80's, their were more Allied cadets in the Naval academy than Pakistani cadets.
 
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Details of China's type 039B submarine revealed: Kanwa
  • Staff Reporter
  • 2014-06-02
  • 09:21 (GMT+8)
20140531039bsubmarine-112837_copy1.jpg

The details of China's Type 039B submarine, which is reportedly to be sold to Pakistan this year, have been revealed by the Canada-based Kanwa Information Center, reports Huanqiu, the website of China's nationalistic tabloid Global Times.

The Pakistani Navy has reportedly required that China install air-independent propulsion systems on the submarines it has chosen for the transfer of these related technologies in order to assemble the submarines in Karachi, the largest city in Pakistan.

China has called for tenders for its type S20P submarine, which is another version of the type 0369B submarine that the country builds to export. Pakistan hopes to obtain six type S20P submarines to obtain stronger underwater combat capabilities along with its three existing Agosta-class 90B submarines. Currently, China's PLA Navy has nine type 0369B submarines in service.

The type 0369B submarine is reportedly 66m long and 8.2m high, can dive as deep as 300 meters and has 1,850 tons of displacement above water and 2,200 tons underwater. Its maximum speed reaches 18 knots and it can propel up to 8,000 nautical miles at 16 knots. The double-hull submarine is highly automated and only requires 38 crew members.

The submarine is also equipped with an advanced seven-blade curved propeller and an X-shaped rudder. It carries Yingji 83 anti-ship missiles that have an attack range of 180 kilometers. The sonar and radar installed on the submarine are also state-of-the-art but their details have not been revealed.

Kanwa's report said the Pakistani Navy may ask China to integrate its cruise missile Babur, which can be launched underwater and has an attack range of 500 kilometers. The report also said the 039B submarines have been produced in Shanghai and Wuhan. The first of them is likely to be shipped to Pakistan while the remaining of them are to be assembled in the country.

Details of China's type 039B submarine revealed: Kanwa|Politics|News|WantChinaTimes.com

@fatman17 @Rashid Mahmood
 
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ملکی وسائل سے تیار'' پی این ایس دشت'' پاک بحریہ کے بیڑے میں شامل ہوگیا، چین کے اشتراک سے ٹیکنالوجی کی منتقلی کے معاہدے کے تحت تیار کیا گیا، تریسٹھ میٹر طویل، پی این ایس دشت، جدید ہتھیاروں، آلات اور میزائلوں سے لیس ہے
Dunya News: PNS Dasht added to Pak Navy's assets.
 
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Details of China's type 039B submarine revealed: Kanwa

  • Staff Reporter
  • 2014-06-02
  • 09:21 (GMT+8)
20140531039bsubmarine-112837_copy1.jpg

The details of China's Type 039B submarine, which is reportedly to be sold to Pakistan this year, have been revealed by the Canada-based Kanwa Information Center, reports Huanqiu, the website of China's nationalistic tabloid Global Times.

The Pakistani Navy has reportedly required that China install air-independent propulsion systems on the submarines it has chosen for the transfer of these related technologies in order to assemble the submarines in Karachi, the largest city in Pakistan.

China has called for tenders for its type S20P submarine, which is another version of the type 0369B submarine that the country builds to export. Pakistan hopes to obtain six type S20P submarines to obtain stronger underwater combat capabilities along with its three existing Agosta-class 90B submarines. Currently, China's PLA Navy has nine type 0369B submarines in service.

The type 0369B submarine is reportedly 66m long and 8.2m high, can dive as deep as 300 meters and has 1,850 tons of displacement above water and 2,200 tons underwater. Its maximum speed reaches 18 knots and it can propel up to 8,000 nautical miles at 16 knots. The double-hull submarine is highly automated and only requires 38 crew members.

The submarine is also equipped with an advanced seven-blade curved propeller and an X-shaped rudder. It carries Yingji 83 anti-ship missiles that have an attack range of 180 kilometers. The sonar and radar installed on the submarine are also state-of-the-art but their details have not been revealed.

Kanwa's report said the Pakistani Navy may ask China to integrate its cruise missile Babur, which can be launched underwater and has an attack range of 500 kilometers. The report also said the 039B submarines have been produced in Shanghai and Wuhan. The first of them is likely to be shipped to Pakistan while the remaining of them are to be assembled in the country.
Details of China's type 039B submarine revealed: Kanwa|Politics|News|WantChinaTimes.com

@fatman17 @Rashid Mahmood

PN is now looking for 8 boats as the Agosta=70's will also be retired.
fleet would then look like:
3 Agosta 90 AIP
8 S20P AIP (4 boats to be manufactured in China and 4 in Pakistan). this would take at least 3-6 years after signing of contract.
 
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Sea Platforms
Pakistan inducts second Azmat missile patrol craft
Ridzwan Rahmat, Singapore - IHS Jane's Navy International
12 June 2014


First-in-class PNS Azmat, sister ship of PNS Deshat, was comissioned in 2012. Source: Pakistan Navy

The Pakistan Navy inducted a second Azmat-class missile patrol craft in Karachi on 12 June.

The 63 m vessel, christened PNS Dehshat , was built at Pakistan's Karachi Shipyard and Engineering Works under a technology transfer agreement with China Shipbuilding & Offshore Company's Xingang Shipyard.

Dehshat is the second of two vessels delivered under a government-to-government contract signed in 2010. First-of-class PNS Azmat was produced in Tianjin and commissioned by the Pakistan Navy in June 2012.

Design for the vessels is based on the People's Liberation Army Navy's Houjian (Type 037/2)-class missile boat, incorporating stealth features in its superstructure.

According to IHS Jane's Fighting Ships , the Azmat-class is armed with two quadruple launchers for eight C-802A surface-to-surface sea-skimming missiles, two twin 37 mm guns, and one Type 630 30 mm six-barrelled gun as a close-in weapon system. The vessel can accommodate a crew of 15 and can reach a top speed of 30 kt. It has a range of 1,000 n miles at a speed of 18 kt.

The Pakistan Navy's Chief of the Naval Staff, Admiral Mohammad Asif Sandila, who presided over Dehshat 's induction ceremony, described the vessel as an example of the growing friendship between Pakistan and China and a project that has revitalised the Karachi shipyard and Pakistan's defence production capabilities.

Local media reports indicate that Dehshat will most likely be deployed as a patrol and search-and-rescue vessel with the Pakistan Navy's coastal areas command, based in Karachi.
 
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Laser quest: Phalanx, LaWs and the future of close-in weapon systems
18 June 2014 Julian Turner

Close-in weapon systems (CIWS) remain a shipboard necessity for detecting and engaging missiles and aircraft at short range. Julian Turner assesses the latest upgrades to Raytheon’s ubiquitous Phalanx CIWS and analyses LaWS, a revolutionary laser-based defence system being field-tested by the US Navy.
Phalanx.jpg

Designed to engage and destroy supersonic anti-ship missiles and high-speed aircraft that have penetrated outer fleet defensive envelopes, close-in weapon systems such as Raytheon's Phalanx remain the primary point defence solution for close-in air and surface threats.
In September 2013, the US Navy awarded Raytheon a $136.2m contract to upgrade 19 Phalanx CIWS and produce four SeaRAM anti-ship missile (ASM) defence systems. In May 2014, the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) - one of 25 allied navies to employ Phalanx on its surface combatant ship classes - took delivery of four 1B kit modifications and two conversions of the land-based system.
Building upon the original rapid-fire, computer-controlled radar and 20mm gun system, the Phalanx 1B weapon package incorporates a side-mounted forward looking infra-red camera (FLIR) to counter the threat of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), mines and small surface craft in littoral waters.
SeaRAM uses advanced Phalanx Block 1B sensors and replaces the Gatling gun with an 11-round Rolling Airframe Missile guide, and is intended to enlarge Phalanx's keep-out range against evolving anti-ship missiles as well as rotary and fixed-wing aircraft.
"Close-in weapon systems remain the primary point-defence solution to counter close-in air and surface threats."
"Phalanx is a vital ship self-defence system, providing the critical inner layer of protection to sailors, marines and ships," said Rick Nelson, vice president of Raytheon Missile Systems' Naval and Area Mission Defense product line. "With SeaRAM comes a significant extension of that inner-layer battlespace and the capacity to effectively engage multiple high-performance threats."
The Block 1B Phalanx close-in weapon system
The Phalanx CIWS developed by Raytheon is a rapid-fire, computer-controlled, radar-guided gun system designed to defeat anti-ship missiles and other close-in air and surface threats. A self-contained package, it automatically carries out a range of functions usually performed by multiple systems, including search, detection, threat evaluation, tracking, engagement and kill assessment.
Phalanx Block 1B, the latest upgrade, features surface mode configuration and augments the proven anti-air warfare capability by adding a forward-looking infrared sensor and optimised gun barrels to the Block 1A configuration. This not only allows Phalanx to be used against littoral threats such as helicopters and high-speed surface vessels, but also adds control stations with situational awareness that allow operators to visually track and identify targets before engagement.
Phalanx's advanced 3D search radar extracts slow-moving targets from high-clutter environments by employing digital moving target identification processing and narrow correlation windows. The on-screen radar display allows the operator to rapidly locate targets using both infrared and radio frequency tracking, meaning that the system can detect small boats when other radars cannot.
The superior sensor suite features enhanced operability in the shape of day and night detection as well as fire-control and sensor capability for other shipboard gun and missile systems. The Phalanx 1B package also offers improved firepower in the shape of enhanced lethality cartridges that increase kinetic energy and mass by up to 50%. Optimised gun barrels are 48cm longer, 8.6kg heavier and reduce both dispersion and projectile yaw.
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In summary, the Phalanx Block 1B system offers positive threat identification, augments the ship's radar performance in sea and land clutter, increases its outer defence perimeter and counters subsonic and supersonic ASMs, UAVs, fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters high-speed surface vessels.
The system also compares favourably with rival European CIWS systems such as Goalkeeper and DARDO in terms of key metrics such as armaments, range and rate of fire.
The SeaRAM anti-ship missile defence system
Configured to provide the highest level of ship self-defence and extended keep-out range capability, SeaRAM extends the inner layer battlespace and enables ships to effectively engage with multiple high-performance, supersonic and subsonic threats.
SeaRAM combines key attributes of the Phalanx CIWS, including its high-resolution search and track sensors and quick response capability, with Raytheon's leading-edge Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) guided weapon system. SeaRAM takes advantage of RAM's superior accuracy, extended range and high manoeuvrability, while an 11-missile RAM launcher assembly replaces Phalanx's 20mm gun.

Crucially, with military budgets under increased scrutiny, SeaRAM is also an affordable capability upgrade - the above-deck system fits the exact footprint of the Phalanx, uses the same power and requires minimal shipboard modification.
Announcing the remanufacture, overhaul and upgrade deal with the US Navy in September 2013, Nelson said: "Raytheon's ability to remanufacture Phalanx equivalent to new manufacture condition, in appearance, operation and performance, provides a significant cost savings to our customers."
The contract, which also has a $94.8m option for 2014, bringing its potential cumulative value to $231m, offers purchases for the US Navy, the US Army, Japan and Pakistan under the foreign military sales programme.
 
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