What's new

The Algerian Armed Forces.

1234574_661318113902665_643616648_n.jpg

1385704_661689220532221_843698110_n.jpg

1378529_661275113906965_1372001641_n.jpg

1383405_658870564147420_1141008763_n.jpg

1379761_658870324147444_811510697_n.jpg

1375041_658369204197556_1427818168_n.jpg

576177_136991153145243_1028822214_n.jpg


1380268_210051532505871_185209385_n.jpg


1001063_169343109910047_982483339_n.jpg

923553_156001737910851_713598037_n.jpg
 
No. They got 16 SU30 MKA's instead.


That was the deal . Instead MIG, used old cells and used or refurbished parts to build these SMT's. Algerian engineers discovered it during routine maintenance. That was the end of the love affair of MIG complex and the AAF. In fact the death of MIG industries is partially due to Algeria.

Do you know how many years the mig-29 which Algeria bought from Ukraine and Belarus have been used? I guess they are in their late life

No. They got 16 SU30 MKA's instead.


That was the deal . Instead MIG, used old cells and used or refurbished parts to build these SMT's. Algerian engineers discovered it during routine maintenance. That was the end of the love affair of MIG complex and the AAF. In fact the death of MIG industries is partially due to Algeria.
Do you know how many years the mig-29 which Algeria bought from Ukraine and Belarus have been used? I guess they are in their late life

No. They got 16 SU30 MKA's instead.


That was the deal . Instead MIG, used old cells and used or refurbished parts to build these SMT's. Algerian engineers discovered it during routine maintenance. That was the end of the love affair of MIG complex and the AAF. In fact the death of MIG industries is partially due to Algeria.
Do you know how many years the mig-29 which Algeria bought from Ukraine and Belarus have been used? I guess they are in their late life
 
The first batch of 3 ASW159 Wildcats to be delivered to Algeria. Citing Secret Dafaa, These crafts will be assigned to the 3 heavy corvettes C28A being built in China. It is assumed that they will be equipped with the Thales Flash Sonar, Torpedoes MU90 and MML missiles from small craft, will give the QBJ's an anti submarine capability that very few navies possess.
ORD_FASGW-L_on_AW159-SCMR_lg.jpg

MLU90
images


Thales Sonar

Light weight Multirole Missile(LMM)
lmm_missile.jpg


From the same source, Lockheed Martin is about to sign a contract on a undetermined number of C130 J with ISR and Command and control capabilities for land and sea. Unlike the one equipping the US forces, the Algerian version will be unarmed.
993521_603578699676607_1365959707_n.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Latest training helicopter made for Algerian made by the American Augusta Westland's subsidiary , seen in Algerian Colors in Philadelphia, USA. This training craft will shoulder the existing Sokol in training the Algerian Customs and Border Patrols.
 
From a Secret Difaa article that appeared on the Algerian daily Le Soir d'Algerie, a new arm contract is about to finalised with Russia. This contract is part of the Algerian restructuration and modernisation of its armed forces. This new contract will covert some of the defence systems that have already previously mentioned in this thread.

Air defence Systems
S400 Triumph
Since the S300PMU2 is not being built, Algeria will acquire the S400. No detail on how many unit will be acquired.
S400-Missile-Air-Defense-System.jpg

For the protection of sensitive and strategic installations the TOR air defence System is also included
images


Air Forces
A new batch of SU30 SM . These Su30 will be identical to the one equipping the VVS
[video]
[/video]
Sukhoi says that the Su-30SM features super-maneuverability and represents further evolution of the Su-30MK line. It differs from the earlier version in having radiolocation, radio communications and IFF systems, as well as ejection seats and a number of onboard devices “adapted to the requirements of the Russian air force.”

The Su-30SM has some unspecified advanced weaponry, according to Irkut. The company earlier said that the aircraft is able to deploy the supersonic anti-ship and land-strike Onix missiles, a completely Russian version of the Indo-Russian PJ-10 BrahMos. The air-launched version of this missile is sometimes called the Alfa.
Su-30SM.JPG

The aim of the AAF is to have around 150 of these highly manoeuvrable aircraft by 2016. The existing SU30MKA will be brought the SM format. However the SU35 was not chosen due to its similarity with its big brother the SU30 .

SU32

2 to 3 squadrons of the long range fighter bomber will be acquired

1538904.jpg


YAK 130 s

A batch of at least 36 armed new Yak 130 for air to ground and COINS .
yak-130-farnborough-2012.jpg


3 squadrons of Mi28 N to shoulder the aging hind MarkIII
1571364.jpg


Algeria will more likely join Irkut in the development of 5th generation T50 that will be deployed by 2020

Land Forces
180 T90 MS is believed to be among the item purchased with a similar number of BMPT terminator
Long range smerch rocket system
159632868.jpg

No artillery, these systems will be acquired elsewhere if not already acquired

Navy
There is two Project 20380 (Steregushchy class) vessel to built in Algeria with technology transfer
179225239.jpg


The coastal defence system "Bastion"
179225239.jpg


2 Kilo class submarine with option of 2 more
kilo-DNSC8703781.JPG
 
Sorry about the above error..
Coastal defence system acquired by the Algerian Navy
Yakhont-Bastion-TELs-1S.jpg


This System will give the QBJ the ability to secure the South of the Med and the detroit of Gibraltar.
 
@Ceylal if you get all of the above weapons which you mentioned specially the missile systems and Frigates and Submarines and last but not least the SU-30 and SU-32 that would be awesome :yahoo:
 
@Ceylal if you get all of the above weapons which you mentioned specially the missile systems and Frigates and Submarines and last but not least the SU-30 and SU-32 that would be awesome :yahoo:
With all the unstability of the neighboring countries and the spread of highly lethal weapons close to its borders from the Ex Libyan armories, Algeria has seen for the first time its troops deployed deep in its southern borders with the right to pursuit.
After the attack on the Tingentourine gas complex, our defence forces were given the legal tools to be pro-active and to deal with the threat before it reaches our borders.
hausse.jpg

[video]
[/video]
One of the pain in the @ss
[video]
[/video]

portes_de_l__avenir_732170639.jpg
 
Ex British officer on the Tiguentourine gas plant attack and the Algerian special forces action.

http://www.veteranstoday.com/2013/01/20/algeria-way-to-go-general-tartag/
This was a huge, carefully planned operation. There was no hope of getting everybody alive, SAS or no SAS. In my opinion the decision to strafe the convoy of Landcruisers was the right one. There was little hope of recovering any hostages and no other way of stopping them.

My preliminary view is that the Algerian Special Forces showed impressive fire discipline, were well-led and were careful to discriminate between terrorists and hostages. Our people were treated well once the firefight was over and we should be thanking the Algerians.

We also need to be asking tough questions of BP and its partners. We know BP has been penetrated by the DVD (the old Anglo-Iranian Oil Company pretty much reported to the Abwehr, keeping quiet about oil reserves in the Middle East for fear that we wouldn’t have to expose tankers to German U-Boats in the Atlantic). From where did the terrorists get their plan of the complex? And what were plant security doing? That convoy of ‘mechanicals’ must have raised a fair old dust cloud. There may not have been time to get the T-90’s down from In Amenas but there was surely time to lock the plant down. It would be interesting to know what Sterling and the other security boys were allowed by way of kit. I’ll bet it wasn’t a Bushmaster 35 mil, which would have come in handy.

GCHQ may have some questions to answer too. That part of the world is great for SATINT – wide open spaces, lots of dust from moving vehicles, and more birds than there used to be, given the situation in Mali. How was that convoy missed? What did they think a bunch of pick-ups with machine-guns and Landcruisers were doing in southern Algeria? Admiring the view? Wandering about on safari, hoping to pot the odd rhino? Doing a wildlife documentary for BBC2?

The Algerians were right to keep London in the dark. They know about the DVD, whose ops in Algeria go back to the civil war, when the Jerries were trying to pull the rug from under the Fourth Republic. They also know that London is penetrated. The Algerian Prime Minister is somewhat better informed than David Cameron, almost inevitably with Sir Jeremy Heywood as the Cabinet Secretary. Sir Jeremy of course plays the role of Sir Humphrey Appleby in Whitehall, and does it with aplomb (the role of the Cabinet Secretary, apart from running the country, is to keep the Prime Minister in the dark).

Algiers knew full well that if they told London Dachau would have it in half an hour and AQIM in an hour. The same applies to Washington. They must have found it trying, having this irritating little man in London demanding sensitive intelligence which they knew well he wouldn’t be able to keep quiet. Cameron has been humiliated by this episode, yet another reason to thank the Algerians. Well done boys!
 

7abibi beautiful updates and especially the photo that I have quoted now since I noticed Abd al-Qadir ibn Muhyiddin or Abdelkader el Djezairi as he is also known as. Great Muslim and Algerian hero. Apparently he was an fellow Hashemite too on his fathers side which made him a Sharif.

10x501l.gif


2i88wv5.jpg


What saddens me though is that French is used on that photo. It should be Arabic or Berber which is also a Hamito-Semitic language of the Afro-Asiatic language branch and thus two related languages not to say people.

If Algerians want to adopt another language other than Arabic and Berber then they should adopt English. French is just the symbol of the French tyranny and the French occupation of Algeria in my humble opinion.

Please continue the great updates.
 
Last edited:
now since I noticed Abd al-Qadir ibn Muhyiddin or Abdelkader el Djezairi as he is also known as. Great Muslim and Algerian hero. Apparently he was an fellow Hashemite too on his fathers side which made him a Sharif.
Algerians abhor the cult of personality. Emir Abdelkader was a Sufi and conducted himself like any other Algerian in those time. He was a charismatic orator ahead of his time, a pragmatic leader and a fervent human right advocate long before the west knew its meaning.
His family tree
Family Tree
Emir Abdelkader son of Muhieddine son of Mustafa son of Mohammed son of Mokhtar son of Abdelkader son of Ahmed Al-Mokhtar son of Ali son of Ahmed son of Abelqawi son of Abdelkader son of Ahmed son of Mohammed son of Abdelqawi son of Messaoud son of Taawus son of Yaqub son of Khaled son of Yousef son ofAhmed son of Bashar son of Mohammed son of Al-Akbar son of Abdullah son of Hassan Abelqawi son of Ahmed son of Mohammed Ben Idris Al-Asghar son of Idris son of Hassan Al-Muthana son of Hassan son of Fatmia daughter of of Prophet Mohammed (Peace Be Upon Him).

Early life
Emir Abdelkader was born in the town of Mascara near Oran (western Algeria) on Tuesday 6thSeptember 1808, his family originally from Amazigh (Berber) tribe of Beni Ifren which they were part of the Zenata tribe, also his family are descendants from Idrisid dynasty which they are descendants of the Prophet Mohammed (Peace Be Upon Him).

Emir's house
home.jpg

Emir Zaouia
zawiya+in.jpg


zawiya+out.jpg
 
November 1st, seen by Algerians...
5127_dilem_131030101013.jpg

Winter time
The french changed to winter time by setting back their clock by one hour
[the bubble], this weekend the Algerian will set back their clock by 58 years.
 
Back
Top Bottom