jueves, 27 de junio de 2024
Municiones singapuresas para Europa
miércoles, 10 de abril de 2024
Financiamiento del ATGM Enforcer
Financiamiento propuesto para acelerar la producción de Enforcer
La campaña para acelerar la producción del misil MBDA Enforcer (Campaña de aumento de producción Enforcer – EPIC) se vio reforzada por la propuesta de financiación bajo los auspicios del programa ASAP de la Comisión Europea. MBDA está invirtiendo fuertemente en su capacidad de producción en Europa y la compañía considera que EPIC contribuye significativamente a la resiliencia y soberanía de los países clientes. El Enforcer es un misil lanzado desde el hombro con alta predicción, capacidad de operación pasiva diurna y nocturna, posibilidad de ser utilizado desde espacios reducidos y un alcance de hasta 2.000 m. Puede atacar objetivos fijos y móviles con blindaje ligero, objetivos fuera de la línea de visión y objetivos en entornos urbanos. Su diseño modular permitirá desarrollar opciones futuras, incluida una familia de municiones para uso terrestre, aéreo y naval (Fotos: MBDA).
jueves, 13 de agosto de 2020
miércoles, 1 de abril de 2020
viernes, 13 de diciembre de 2019
Cómo Putin persigue y mata a sus opositores
How Russian Agents Hunt Down Kremlin Opponents
A secret Russian death squad appears to be killing Moscow's enemies in the West in an effort to destabilize Europe. Perpetrators with connections to the Russian government appear to be responsible for the slaying of a Georgian national in Berlin. By DER SPIEGEL StaffDer Spiegel
Bernd von Jutrczenka/ DPA
The Russian Embassy in Berlin, where two workers have been expelled following the recent murder of a Georgian national.
In the summer of 2013, a killer in Moscow rode a bicycle toward his victim. The Russian businessman Albert Nazranov saw him, and a short brawl ensued. The killer shot the man in the head and upper body at close range. Then he rode away. All of that can be seen in surveillance footage of the crime.
In the summer of 2019, a killer also rode a bicycle toward his victim, only this time in Berlin. He shot Zelimkhan Khangoshvili, of Georgia, in the head and upper body at close range, before riding away. That's how witnesses described the scene.
Reporting by DER SPIEGEL, Bellingcat, The Insider and The Dossier Center now reveals that not only were both murders very similar -- they were also likely carried out by the same person. A forensic comparison of both perpetrator photos reveals clear similarities. The man who carried a passport bearing the name Vadim Sokolov in Berlin was the Russian Vadim Krasikov, the killer who is thought to have also struck in Moscow.
German General Federal Prosecutor Peter Frank has now assumed responsibility for the investigation into the Berlin murder case at the federal level because, he says, they are of "special importance." Germany's chief prosecutor believes that Russian government authorities deliberately issued Krasikov's new identity, an assumption based on the fact that Moscow took the surprising step in 2015 of revoking an international search warrant for Krasikov and issuing a new identity card to him with the name "Vadim Sokolov" a short time later. It's not likely to have been a coincidence.
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The Chief Federal Prosecutor's Office is accusing the Russian government or one of its henchmen of having murdered Khangoshvili in broad daylight at the end of August, a hitjob on German soil against a man who had come to the country as an asylum-seeker,
A similar crime committed in the United Kingdom last year sparked an international crisis when suspected agents with the Russian military intelligence agency GRU conducted an attack on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter using the Russian neurotoxin Novichok. Twenty-nine countries expelled 146 Russian diplomats in response to the crime. Berlin also forced four representatives of Russia to leave the country.
A Slow Political Response
Despite the similarities, officials in Berlin seemed to be struggling in coming up with a political response to the Khangoshvili murder. For some time, officials said evidence in the case was too unclear. They argued that a fake ID in Russia could also be obtained through bribery and that it couldn't automatically be assumed that the Russian government had been involved.But last Wednesday, just as the German federal prosecutor took over the case, the government in Berlin also adopted a tougher line. They ordered the chargé d'affaires at the Russian Embassy to the Foreign Ministry, where officials informed him that two staffers in the defense affairs division of the embassy, both of whom are believed by German security authorities to be members GRU intelligence service, would be expelled from Germany.
The Foreign Ministry justified the decision by saying that the cooperation by the Russian authorities has been "insufficient." "We view the expulsions as a very strong message to the Russian side to provide us with immediate and comprehensive support in clarifying the identity and background of the alleged perpetrator," said Helge Braun, chief of staff at Angela Merkel's Chancellery. "Given that there has been a lack of support for months, I have absolutely no comprehension of how Russia could be outraged or even be thinking about countermeasures."
Addressing a question about the case at last week's NATO summit in London, Chancellor Merkel stated: "We took this action because we have not seen Russian support in helping us solve this murder." Merkel has left open whether she will take up the issue with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Ukraine summit in Paris on Monday. But it's difficult to imagine that she wouldn't.
The government in Berlin wants to wait until the investigationsproceeds further before considering whether to take further punitive action against Moscow. Officials in the Chancellery are still wary about comparing the foreign policy fallout of the Khangoshvili killing with the Skripal case. But the circumstantial evidence is strong and there is much to suggest that Georgian national Zelimkhan Khangoshvili was killed for political reasons, even if Russia, as so often in the past, has denied all accusations.
Überwachungsvideo
A screen capture from the surveillance camera footage of the murder of Russian businessman Albert Nazranov in Moscow.
The sky over Berlin was steel blue on August 23 when, just before noon, Khangoshvili set out for his Friday prayers. His route to the mosque took him through the Kleiner Tiergarten, a park in Berlin's Moabit district.
Investigators firmly believe that the Georgian had been spied on and the killer knew the route he would take.
Guests were enjoying the sun in the park out in front of Café Alverdes when a man approached on a black mountain bike at 11:58 a.m. and abruptly began shooting. Two bullets fired from a 9mm pistol with a silencer struck Khangoshvili in the head.
The shooter, who fled by bike, stumbled briefly, injuring his leg, before taking a side street south for several hundred feet toward the bank of the Spree River, where he changed his clothes in the bushes. He packed his clothes and the Glock 26 pistol into a bag and sank it into the river at Lessing Bridge. He also threw the bicycle into the river as well as the wig and hair trimmer he likely used to alter his beard.
He continued his escape on a Volteboard e-scooter -- one that had been purchased, not rented. The perpetrator probably would have succeeded in escaping unscathed had it not been for two teens who had coincidentally been at the banks of the river and saw the whole spectacle as it unraveled. They watched as the man rapidly transformed himself and called the police, who then arrested the suspected killer at a nearby train station. One of his bags contained a powder designed to throw-off sniffer dogs, making it harder to track him. His return flight to Russia had been booked for the same weekend. The man denied the accusations against him at his arraignment and has remained silent ever since.
Initially, the Berlin Public Prosecutor's Office and a Berlin police homicide unit handled the investigation into the shooting. When local Chief Prosecutor Ralph Knispel, an expert on organized crime, appeared at the scene of the murder, there was initial speculation in the media that criminal gangs might be behind the slaying. But Knispel had another, more prosaic reason for being there: He is on call on Fridays.
But the speculation continued anyway. Given that the victim was a Chechen with a Georgian passport, many wondered if the murder might have been linked to gang rivalry. For a time in Germany, Khangoshvili had been classified as a potential Islamist threat, and some speculated that the link to his murder could be found there.
An Enemy of the Russian State
But investigators soon uncovered indications that Russia saw him as an enemy of the state. Khangoshvili comes from the Pankissi Valley in Georgia and when the second Chechen War broke out in 1999, many young people in the valley set out to join the fighting. Khangoshvili also took part, becoming a commander and a confidant of Chechen separatist leader and President Aslan Maskhadov, who was killed by the Russian secret service in 2005.Khangoshvili returned from the war in 2004 and was possibly under surveillance from that point onward. Khangoshvili's ex-wife Manana T. says she is sure that she saw the spies standing on the street watching him. After her father was kidnapped, the two no longer felt safe and they fled to the Georgian capital Tbilisi. Once there, though, she says they kept receiving warning messages. In an interview with DER SPIEGEL, Manana T. recalled being told: "They're looking for you. You're in danger." She said her husband was shot at in the center of Tbilisi in 2015, but the perpetrator was never found.
The reason for the threat was likely Khangoshvili's role in the Chechen war, but also the fact that he subsequently worked for the Georgian security authorities. It is believed that information from him was passed on to the CIA in the United States -- current and former intelligence officials from Georgia, Ukraine and the U.S. have confirmed as much. "If the Americans or us needed information from the Chechen diaspora in Turkey, for example, Zelimkhan was our man," said a former Georgian official. "His work has saved lives," said another source.
In 2015, Khangoshvili fled to Ukraine, where he provided support for the Ukrainian government. At the time, many "Kadyrovsty," as the infamous fighters of the Chechen dictator Ramzan Kadyrov are known, were fighting in the eastern part of the country. At the end of 2016, Khangoshvili reached Germany, where he registered with the authorities under a different name.
DER SPIEGEL
At his asylum hearing in the city of Eisenhüttenstadt in the state of Brandenburg, he reported that he had fought against Russian troops and that he had already been the subject of an attack, which is why he was seeking asylum. Germany's domestic intelligence agency, the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, researched his claims and sent a warning note to authorities in Brandenburg and Berlin on Feb. 21, 2017, with a copy also being sent to the Federal Criminal Police Office and the Federal Police. If Khangoshvili's presence in Germany became known, the agency warned, he could be in danger from "Chechens loyal to Kadyrov" or "pro-Russian actors," for example.
Shortly afterward, officials rejected his application, with the police classifying him as an Islamist threat at almost exactly the same time. That classification was based on a Russian claim that Khangoshvili belonged to a terrorist group called the Caucasian Emirate. It was only later, in June 2019, that officials in Berlin withdrew the Islamist threat classification. They had placed him under surveillance but found no indication that he might present any kind of threat. They also didn't see his murder coming.
Turning Point
Although investigators suspected from the very beginning that Russia could be behind the murder, they lacked evidence. The turning point came about a month ago when officials at the Berlin State Criminal Police Office discovered a five-year-old Interpol red notice in the files -- a manhunt request from Russia. The man in question was alleged to have murdered Vadim Kraskov in Moscow in 2013.The manhunt photo was strikingly similar to the one of detained murder suspect Sokolov. Experts who have seen the image say it is "highly likely" that it is the same person.
Comparisons of the photos conducted by DER SPIEGEL and Bellingcat using facial recognition software and three different photos of Krasikov and one of Solokov showed matches of 82 to 90 percent.
Bellingcat/ DER SPIEGEL
Facial recognition software found close matches between photos of Krasikov and Solokov.
German investigators became suspicious about the fact that Russia had withdrawn its search request for Krasikov in the summer of 2015 for no apparent reason and only two months before an ID document was issued for the first time under the name "Sokolov." It's a strong indication that government agencies may have intervened. Perhaps a Russian secret service agency wanted to save an assassin from imprisonment so they could use him for their own purposes.
In their joint reporting and research into the killing, DER SPIEGEL and Bellingcat learned that Russian prosecutors had linked Krasikov in 2008 to the murder of an entrepreneur and local politician in the Karelia province that had been committed one year earlier. The case was reopened in the spring of 2015, according to local media reports, apparently because two men confessed they had been involved in the murder. But the case never went to trial.
Krasikov, as Russian flight databases show, later traveled to Kyrgyzstan under his real name. And beginning in 2016, he flew numerous times to Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula occupied by Russia.
The question investigators are now seeking to address is that of who helped Krasikov aka "Sokolov" commit the murder in Berlin. Who spied on the victim, who supplied the perpetrator with the gun, the bike and the electric scooter? Was this an assassination ordered from Moscow or from the Chechen capital Grozny? Or was it part of a large-scale execution program directed by the Kremlin?
A Trail of Death in Europe
Either way, it does appear that a death squad dispatched from Moscow has left a trail of death in Europe over the past several years. "You can see there is a concerted program of activity," Alex Younger, the head of MI6, the British foreign intelligence, said in a rare briefing with journalists on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference earlier this year. "And yes, it does often involve the same people." The suspected assassins usually shoot their victims, but they also don't shy away from the use of poison.After a dinner in April 2015, Emilian Gebrev suddenly began feeling discomfort. His eye wouldn't stop itching. It got worse the next day.
The Bulgarian arms manufacturer, who had supplied enemies of Russia, vomited and collapsed in a restaurant in Sofia before falling into a coma at the hospital. He had been poisoned, but doctors were unable to determine the substance used.
Gebrev barely survived that attack as well as another that followed a month later. Investigations by the authorities didn't go anywhere until the poison attack on Skripal and his daughter three years later.
The arms manufacturer from Bulgaria followed the reports and was puzzled by them. There were obvious parallels to his case: The victims had been on the Kremlin's radar for some time, they came into contact with a mysterious substance, and they barely survived. Gebrev informed the Public Prosecutor's Office, and the British and Bulgarian authorities began cooperating on the cases from that point on. No end is in sight yet for the investigations.
Links Between Attacks
But deeper research does show connections between the two murder attempts. Forty-five-year-old Denis Sergeev, a senior GRU officer and graduate of Russia's Military Diplomatic Academy, played a central role. Beginning in 2012, the agent, operating under the alias "Sergey Fedotov," traveled often to Europe and didn't have any difficult obtaining his visas.Shortly before the Skripal assassination attempt, Sergeev traveled to England with a passport issued with the name Fedotov. It is believed that he acted as the local coordinator for the poison attack on Skripal from a London hotel room, a suspicion based on flight information and mobile-phone connection data.
It's likely he played the same role in the attack on the Bulgarian arms manufacturer. On April 24, 2015, Sergeev, alias Fedotov, set off for Bulgaria by direct flight from Moscow. He had booked his return flight for a week later. But Fedotov then took a last-minute flight via Istanbul back to Moscow on the evening of April 28, the very date that Emilian Gebrev collapsed in the restaurant and then fell into a coma. Just a coincidence? Unlikely.
Sergeev wasn't the only GRU employee to fly to Bulgaria during the period in question. Confidential documents from flight databases and passenger manifests document trips of eight GRU agents to the country. Presumably, they are all linked to the attempted murder. The GRU people were also in the country at the time of the second attack on the Bulgarian.
Attacks like these are coordinated by a unit that carries a five-digit number: 29155. The agents in the Skripal and Gebrev cases are members of this secret unit of the Russian military intelligence service GRU.
A Russian Campaign to Destabilize Europe
At the beginning of October, the New York Times became the first media organization to reporton how Western intelligence services now unanimously believe the unit has been responsible for a whole slew of subversive actions in Europe. There have been indications of the existence of the group for some time now.Reporting by Bellingcat, The Insider and DER SPIEGEL reveals a detailed picture of the mission, structure and members of the unit -- and how it is linked to the Russian power apparatus.
The reporting shows that the team of around 20 soldiers and a highly decorated major general serves as a tool for a broad-based campaign by the Kremlin that aims to destabilize and weaken Europe. The GRU agents with Unit 29155 are just the kind of men for this kind of job -- they're ready when things get rough and they are trained for these types of sensitive operations abroad involving sabotage, subversion and assassinations. They're like shadow fighters.
By establishing the team within the military intelligence service, it falls under the authority of the Defense Ministry. However, the connection data from phone calls made during missions indicate that the agents sometimes received instructions from people close to the Russian president. The belief is that they are Putin's killers.
Alexei Nikolsky/ Sputnik/ Kremlin Pool/ EPA-EFE/ REX
Vladimir Putin: The reporting shows that people close to the Russian president were communicating with the agents at the times of the crimes.
Research conducted into numerous sources, including registries of Russian civilians, passport databases and websites of military academies, shows that the members of the squad for the most part have similar backgrounds. They are between their late 30s and mid-40s, graduates of respected academies and tend to have combat experience, such as in the wars in Chechnya or Ukraine. They often served in special military forces. Above all, though, they are ruthless.
The team was likely established in 2009. Entries in Russian military forums suggest that the unit was set up as a training department for special operations. A 2012 Defense Ministry decree mentions a bonus payment for a special "sub-unit" of this department -- a likely reference to the 20-member hit team.
The unit's presumed commander is Major General Andrei Averyanov, a graying man in his early 50s. According to entries in insurance databases, he lives in an upscale residential district outside Moscow.
A video shows an elegantly dressed Averyanov at his daughter's 2017 wedding, escorting her to the altar. One of the guests who can be clearly identified in the video is Anatoliy Chepiga, aka "Ruslan Boshirov," one of the two suspected perpetrators behind the poisoning of Sergei Skripal in Britain.
'We'll Get You No Matter Where You Are'
On the one hand, the agents operate in the utmost secrecy, but on the other, they make amateurish mistakes, such as in the Skripal case, where they were captured on numerous surveillance cameras and were quickly identified. "Too much is invested in these people to just use them up and throw them away," says a German security official. "On the other hand, though, the use of a rare neurotoxin is essentially a calling card. They want to ensure that the message is clear: 'We can do what we want.' And thus far, it must be said, the consequences have been slight." A second official says: "It's a form of communication: 'We'll get you no matter where you are.'"It is difficult to determine where and how often members of the secret unit have struck in Europe. GRU agents travel under assumed names in many European Union countries. There are indications that the unit was involved in the failed 2016 overthrow attempt in Montenegro. The Spanish judiciary, meanwhile, is investigating possible destabilization efforts by the GRU in the conflict over Catalonia's independence. Investigators are particularly interested in two trips to Barcelona taken by the agent Fedotov. Then, on Wednesday, the French newspaper Le Monde reported that members of the Russian unit met regularly in the French Alps.
German investigators are now wondering whether Averyanov's men may have had something to do with the murder in the Berlin park. And is it possible the killers from Moscow have been involved in previous crimes in Germany?
Both German prosecutors and the Federal Criminal Police Office have taken an interest in the second question when it comes to an investigation independent of the Berlin park murder. According to information obtained by DER SPIEGEL, the recently launched investigation, codenamed "Novi," has turned up indications that the two alleged Skripal assailants spent three days near Frankfurt in 2014. The investigators would like to find out what they were doing there.
According to the most recent reporting by DER SPIEGEL and Bellingcat, Averyanov likely also had contacts in Germany.
What Did Putin Know?
Is Russian President Vladimir Putin continually informed of the missions undertaken by the GRU unit? Are all attempts apparently aimed at destabilizing the West approved by him? The cyber-attacks, the hacks, the troll factory offensives, the assassinations of state enemies -- all of it?Not necessarily, but way back in 2006, Putin signed a law that expressly allowed the state to commit murder overseas. "The truth was that Putin had been using deadly force to wipe out his enemies from the first days of his presidency, and the West had long been looking away," British journalist Heidi Blake writes in her recently published book "From Russia with Blood." Even the Soviet Union, she writes, had been expert in the art of killing without leaving an evidence trail.
Blake and her team spent two years investigating mysterious deaths suffered by people with links to Russian oligarchs. The victims had all fallen into disfavor with Putin and fled to Britain. Such as Boris Berezovsky, a Russian mathematician, engineer and businessman who was found dead in his apartment in 2013, hanged by his cashmere scarf. Eight of his close friends and business partners also lost their lives under strange circumstances. In 15 such cases, the journalists found a clear evidence trail leading to Russia.
Blake says the cases are part of Russia's propaganda operation. In her book, she quotes from a televised Putin interview in which he said that he is capable of forgiveness, "but not everything." When the interview asked what he is unable to forgive, Putin answered: "Betrayal."
Germany's Own Skripal Case?
Even shortly after the murder in the Berlin park Kleiner Tiergarten, German politicians began speculating that it may have been a political assassination. German diplomats under the leadership of Foreign Minister Heiko Maas began spreading the word three days after the murder that a political affair was on the horizon and it was unclear how it might end. They spoke of "our own Skripal incident."The Chancellery and Foreign Ministry initially agreed on a conservative strategy: For as long as the case remained a murder investigation under the leadership of the Berlin city-state authorities, they didn't want to get involved. Only when federal prosecutors took over, according to the plan, would political measures be taken.
During the fall, frustration grew within the German government. After investigators failed to get anywhere with a request for assistance sent to Russian authorities, the government elected to get the Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND), Germany's foreign intelligence agency, involved.
Via their liaison in Moscow, the BND inquired with the Russians if they could perhaps provide assistance outside of normal official law-enforcement channels, which is not an abnormal request among intelligence agencies. The response was noncommittal. When the BND asked more directly if they could investigate in Russia themselves, the tone became harsher. A German operation, the BND was given to understand, would be interpreted as a hostile act and the Russians threatened to even go so far as to arrest the BND agents. Cooperation from Moscow, it now became clear, would not be forthcoming. In response, the Chancellery elected to expel two Russian agents from the country, a step taken just as German federal prosecutors took over the murder investigation.
Norbert Röttgen, chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee in German parliament and a member of Merkel's conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party, called it an "appropriate measure." He added: "We want good relations with Russia, but not when suspicions of a state-ordered contract killing in Germany are not investigated according to the letter of the law."
'A Joint European Reaction Is Necessary'
The focus of the investigation, Röttgen said, must include an exploration into the question as to whether the Berlin park murder fits into the Russian pattern of killing agents who have defected and other enemies of the state. "Should that be proven, a joint European reaction is necessary, as happened in the Skripal case."Michael Link, a leading member of the Free Democrats in German parliament, agrees. "We can't jump to conclusions before the investigation is complete. At the same time, though, the parallels to the Skripal case cannot be ignored," Link says. He says there are suspicions that the Kremlin may once again have committed vigilante justice in Europe. "For the German government, that means they must seek out support and urgently place the issue on the agenda of the European foreign ministers meeting scheduled for Monday."
Roderich Kiesewetter, the foreign policy spokesman for the conservatives in parliament, believes the expulsion of the two Russian agents was the correct response. "Depending on the results of the federal prosecutors' investigation," he said, "a clear and unified European response cannot be excluded."
Vadim Krasikov, aka Vadim Sokolov, the suspected murderer in Berlin, lived for many years in Irkutsk. He has two grown children, a daughter and a son. When DER SPIEGEL reached his wife by phone, she was surprised. Her husband left her 16 years ago, she said, and she hadn't heard anything from him since then. "I thought he had died long ago."
By Maik Baumgärtner, Jörg Diehl, Matthias Gebauer, Christo Grozev, Martin Knobbe, Roman Lehberger, Peter Müller, Fidelius Schmid, Jörg Schmitt, Christoph Schult, Tatjana Sutkowaja and Wolf Wiedmann-Schmidt
martes, 19 de marzo de 2019
Nadie quiere ayudar a reconstruir Siria
No One Wants to Help Bashar al-Assad Rebuild Syria
The Syrian president appears comfortably in power, but his supporters in Moscow can’t afford to pay for reconstruction; his adversaries in the West can, but won’t.A Syrian Democratic Forces fighter walks down an empty street in As Susah, Syria, on February 16. CHRIS MCGRATH / GETTY
When the Syrian conflict began, in March 2011, Bashar al-Assad seemed likely to be ousted, like other strongmen swept away by the Arab Spring. Eight years later, Assad is still president, but of a fractured, demolished country. Now one big question is: Who will pay to rebuild Syria?
The bill is large. The United Nations estimates the cost of reconstruction at $250 billion (about four times Syria’s prewar GDP, or roughly the size of Egypt’s economy). Russia wants the West to pay up; its military support is essential to the Assad regime’s survival, but it has its own economic constraints. However, the United States and its Western allies have adamantly refused, absent meaningful political changes. There would be “no reconstruction without [a] political transition,” a French embassy spokeswoman recently told me. Last fall, Nikki Haley, then the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, dismissed as “absurd” Russia’s push for Western support. That leaves 18 million people, about a third of whom are refugees, facing an uncertain future in a country that’s far worse off now than it was when the conflict began. Reconstruction remains essential despite Donald Trump’s withdrawal of most U.S. troops, signaling Washington’s little appetite for further engagement in Syria.
Theoretically, a successful reconstruction effort could see millions of displaced Syrians returning home. (Of course, the problem of security inside Syria would remain.) But as long as parts of the country remain unlivable, the refugee crisis that has gripped Europe for the past few years risks exacerbation, potentially subjecting many more generations of Syrians to living in refugee camps at the mercy of often unfriendly host countries.
Russia, which intervened in the conflict in 2015 and is keen to preserve its newfound regional influence, can’t take on the cost of reconstruction. Its economy is in tatters, made worse by sanctions imposed following its invasion of Ukraine’s Crimea in 2014 and its interference in the 2016 U.S. elections; the threat of further punitive measures over its seizure in November of Ukrainian vessels near the Kerch Strait and the Sea of Azov, which both countries share under a 2003 treaty; and low oil prices. But Moscow has tried, with no success, to get the international community to pay.
The U.S. and Europe have made reforms, including a political transition, a precondition for any role in reconstruction. They are also banking on the fact that Assad’s main backers, both internal and external, will realize that ongoing support for him will keep the purse strings closed.
“Assad is a principal obstacle to rehabilitation of Syria, and eventually the Alawite business class and those who support the regime externally will find that he’s a liability and an albatross that will grow,” a Western diplomat recently told The Atlantic. The diplomat added, “I’m told that before the war, the capital budget was $60 billion, and last year the capital budget was $300 million, of which only 20 percent was actually spent. Not only does it not have the money, but they don’t have administrative [or] political capacity to build the country.”
For years, the West has pressed Russia to compel Assad to make concessions.
“The issue really is, how much power do [the Russians] have to force real reforms, actual reforms that devolve power away from Damascus, that decentralize power somewhat?” Mona Yacoubian, who studies Syria at the U.S. Institute of Peace, told me in a recent interview. “And here, it’s not at all clear that Russia has that kind of leverage.”
The irony is, the very focus on reconstruction is tacit acknowledgment that Assad isn’t going anywhere. Russia’s and Iran’s continued support, the U.S. withdrawal of the majority of American forces, and the beginning of some rehabilitation among Arab countries give Assad few incentives to make political concessions. But even from this seemingly comfortable perch, Assad is in a bind. His supporters can’t afford to pay for reconstruction; his adversaries in the West can, but won’t. Iran, Assad’s other principal supporter, is suffering from reimposed U.S. sanctions and doesn’t have that much to spare.
Yet much needs to be rebuilt. About 11 million people have been displaced and lost their home. The fighting has devastated water, sanitation, and electrical systems in former rebel-held areas. Schools and hospitals have been razed. Large cities like Raqqa have been flattened. In rural areas, irrigation channels are no longer functioning; grain silos have been destroyed.
“The infrastructure needs in northeast Syria are a mess,” Made Ferguson, the deputy director for Syria at Mercy Corps, the humanitarian-aid agency, and who is based in northeast Syria, told me last month. “Basically, everything is needed.”
This puts the West in a quandary. On the one hand, it doesn’t want to reward Assad by rebuilding Syria and cementing his hold on power. On the other, it doesn’t want to ignore a humanitarian situation that will likely get worse without a massive infusion of funds. (On Thursday, international donors pledged almost $7 billion, including $397 million from the United States, for civilians affected by the conflict. The overall figure fell far short of what the EU said was needed.)
Syrian government officials say they welcome investment only from those “friendly countries” that supported the regime during the conflict. There aren’t many candidates: Some of Syria’s Arab neighbors, who broke with Assad over the conflict, are slowly warming to the regime, but they are also reluctant to pour billions into an effort that ultimately could strengthen Iran. Turkey, a regional economic power, is engaged in reconstruction in the parts of Syria that it controls, and has ambitions outside these areas as well. The Syrian regime wants China, a major actor in infrastructure projects worldwide, to get involved. But for any of these countries to participate, Syria first needs to be stable. That’s far from assured.
Syria’s civil war has metastasized into a conflict with Israel, Turkey, Iran, and the Kurds. The planned U.S. withdrawal compounds the uncertainty. Economic malaise has worsened since the conflict began, as have human indicators like life expectancy.
Political freedoms, the lack of which first sparked the protests against the regime, still do not exist. The Islamic State remains a threat, even if it’s about to lose all its territory. The impasse over reconstruction will only serve to widen these fissures.
“Either the international community has to accept that Assad won the war and begin to approach reconstruction from that framework,” Nicholas Heras, a Syria expert at the Center for a New American Security, a think tank in Washington, D.C., told me recently, “or they will have to live with the risk of endemic instability and governance gaps in large areas of the core Middle East.”
viernes, 9 de noviembre de 2018
Familias judías que huyeron del nazismo cambian pasaporte británico por alemán
Brexit: Jewish families in UK who fled Nazis seek German passports
As Brexit approaches, figures show that Germans who made Britain their home are increasingly applying for repatriation. The majority are the families of those who fled because they were persecuted by the Nazi regime.
An increasing number of people living in the UK have applied for repatriation to Germany since the June 2016 referendum result for Britain to leave the EU, according to government figures.
Individuals who were persecuted by the Nazis and their descendants made up the majority of those applying, a report on Friday said.
Of the 3,731 applications since 2016, 3,408 referred to the German Constitution's Article 116. Under the article, former German citizens who were deprived of citizenship on "political, racial, or religious grounds" — and their descendants — are entitled to have citizenship restored.
Tens of thousands of Jews fled Germany for the UK before and during World War II. They included some 10,000 children who were evacuated as part of the so-called "Kindertransport” between December 1938 and August 1939, most of whom never saw their families again.
Sharp rise in applications
The increase in those applying for repatriation increased significantly after the UK's Brexit referendum, according to figures published by the Funke Mediengruppe newspaper group.DW
miércoles, 31 de octubre de 2018
Tailandia recibe dos nuevos H225Ms
The Royal Thai Air Force Receives Two New H225Ms
RTAF H225M helicopter (photo : RTAF)
Thailand, The Royal Thai Air Force (RTAF) has taken delivery of its seventh and eighth H225M (previously known as EC725) multirole utility helicopters.
Since 2012, the RTAF has placed orders for a total of 12 H225Ms under its fleet modernisation programme. Belonging to a contract signed in 2016, these new additions will join the air force’s existing fleet of six H225Ms for combat search and rescue, search and rescue flights and troop transport missions.
The 11-ton-catergory twin-turbine H225M is relied upon as a force multiplier by many air forces worldwide thanks to its outstanding endurance and fast cruise speed. Featuring state-of-the-art electronic instruments and the renowned 4-axis autopilot system, the multirole helicopter may be fitted with various equipment to suit any role. Close to 90 units are currently in service in six countries across the globe, surpassing the 100,000 flight hour milestone.
Airbus Helicopters
martes, 23 de octubre de 2018
H145 para Filipinas
Philippine Government Orders First H145 Helicopter from Airbus
Airbus H145 helicopter
The Philippine government has ordered one H145 helicopter for Philippine Coast Guard (PCG), Airbus said September 26. Airbus noted that this is the first H145 helicopter that will serve in the Philippine government.
“Philippine Coast Guard has placed an order for one H145 helicopter, making it the first H145 parapublic operator in the Philippines,” Airbus said.
Airbus said that the new 4-tonne-class twin-engine helicopter is specially equipped with high frequency radios, emergency flotation gear, fast roping, cargo sling, search light, and electro-optical systems to perform critical missions including search and rescue, medical evacuation, maritime patrol and law enforcement.
“The latest contract will also encompass on-site technical support and continuing airworthiness management organisation services, fully supported by Airbus’ team in the country,” it noted.
“We are honoured by the Philippine Coast Guard’s decision to introduce the country’s first parapublic H145 into its fleet, as the perfect complement to the current workhorse BO105 which has served the agency well for the past 40 years. We have full confidence in the H145’s ability to support the agency’s work, coupled with our dedicated in-country customer centre which stays committed to supporting its operations in close proximity,” said Philippe Monteux, Head of Southeast Asia and Pacific of Airbus Helicopters.
Mintfo
lunes, 9 de julio de 2018
Fuerza de respuesta rápida en ciberdefensa para Lituania
EU states to form 'rapid response' cyber force: Lithuania
by Staff WritersVilnius (AFP) Space Daily
Nine European Union states are to create rapid response teams to counter cyber attacks within the framework of a new EU defence pact, project leader Lithuania announced on Thursday.
"Nine states have agreed to join. The goal is to create rotational EU cyber rapid response teams," Defence Minister Raimundas Karoblis told AFP.
He said his counterparts from Croatia, Estonia, the Netherlands and Romania will join him on Monday to sign the agreement in Luxembourg while Finland, France, Poland and Spain will join later this year.
Teams formed by pooling experts on a rotational basis will be ready to help national authorities to tackle cyber attacks, with the schedule to be approved next year, Karoblis said.
The minister said he expected the EU to allocate funds for software and other equipment, adding that talks with EU institutions will continue about legal and technical aspects.
The cyber force will be among the first joint projects launched under a landmark EU defence pact signed last year.
The EU's move to establish the Permanent Structured Cooperation on security and defence, known as PESCO, was driven in part by US President Donald Trump's questioning of NATO's relevance and Britain's departure from the bloc.
Lithuania, a lead nation of the cyber defence project, has boosted its cyber capabilities in recent years to tackle what it describes as "hostile cyber activities" from nearby Russia, mostly targeting state institutions and the energy sector.
miércoles, 4 de julio de 2018
Europa vuelve lentamente al Servicio Militar Obligatorio (SMO)
European countries are quietly bringing back the draft
QuartzMaking a comeback. (Reuters/Jean-Paul Pelissier)
Written by Aamna Mohdin
The draft is slowly coming back in vogue in Europe.
Last week, France joined the growing number of European countries reintroducing mandatory national service. Following through on president Emmanuel Macron’s election promises, the government introduced a national service requirement for all 16-year-olds that will be divided into two phases.
The first phase is mandatory, and involves a month-long placement that focuses on civil culture. Young French citizens can look into teaching or work with charities, or take part in traditional military training with the police, fire service or army. The second phase is an optional placement of between three months to a year, where young people can work defense and security, or in social care, the environment, or heritage.
By bringing back national service, the French government hopes to promote social cohesion and foster and sustain a more active sense of citizenship. The service program will begin in 2019 and is estimated to cost €1.6 billion ($1.8 billon)
There are good reasons to start a national service: France has one of the highest youth unemployment rates in Europe, with a quarter of French young people unemployed. And growing discontent may be driving those young people to support populism and the far right.
France follows a peculiar trend in Europe. Last year, Sweden announced it would reinstate the military draft—seven years after abolishing it. The government cited Russian military activity and low military recruitment as justification. In 2015, Lithuania reintroduced military conscription following Russia’s annexation of Crimea.
This marks a sharp shift from under a decade ago. When Sweden initially announced it would abolish the draft, it was apart of a Europe-wide trend to do so; France, Italy, Belgium and the Netherlands abolished the draft in the 1990s and Germany followed suit in 2011. But growing tensions in the region, and civil discord are putting national mobilization back on the agenda.
sábado, 24 de febrero de 2018
Tailandia operará SSK chinos con armas occidentales
Thailand’s Future Submarines to Have a Mix of Chinese, Western Weapons
The Royal Thai Navy’s (RTN’s) planned fleet of S26T submarines is likely to feature a mix of combat and platform systems from Chinese and western suppliers across all three boats, a senior RTN officer told a defence conference that took place in late-January 2018.
Speaking under the Chatham House Rule, the officer, who is involved directly in the procurement project, said this possible outcome is a result of export control restrictions that have been imposed by the respective governments of these western suppliers.
Jane's
domingo, 18 de febrero de 2018
Francia y Europa debaten el SMO
Debate: La restauración del servicio militar obligatorio pisa fuerte en Europa
El debate en torno a la reinstauración del servicio militar obligatorio está recorriendo Europa, amenazada por el terrorismo yihadista, entre otras. En Francia, Emmanuel Macron confirmó que lo restablecerá. Alemania lo está estudiando. Suecia lo recuperará este año. Es asunto de debate público en España, a pesar de que allí todavía no se han dado pasos en ese sentido. El tema impacta en Argentina, cuyo servicio militar obligatorio cayó en picada tras la muerte del soldado Omar Carrasco, hasta ser suspendido el 31/08/1994. En los últimos años, ante el fenómeno de los jóvenes que no estudian ni trabajan, los denominados "Ni-ni" -que según un estudio de Adecco de 2016, son más de 1 millón-, hubo quienes arrojaron la posibilidad de reinstaurar el servicio militar obligatorio como modo de fomentar la cohesión social, aunque la idea es rechazada por buena parte de la sociedad argentina.Por Urgente 24
Debate: La restauración del servicio militar obligatorio pisa fuerte en EuropaMacron confirmó el 19/1 que reestablecerá el servicio militar obligatorio. REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier
El Presidente de Francia, Emmanuel Macron, confirmó el 19/1 que restablecerá el servicio militar obligatorio, durante un discurso ante militares en la base naval de Tulón, en el sureste del país. Lo denominó "servicio nacional universal". La reinstauración había sido una de las propuestas más polémicas en la campaña electoral del Presidente francés.
"El servicio nacional universal no es exactamente la mili obligatoria tal como se entendía hasta que el presidente Jacques Chirac la abolió en 1997. El proyecto de Macron contempla un mes de servicio para hombres y mujeres de 18 a 21 años", escribió Marc Bassets del diario El País. El objetivo del programa de Macron, según expresó en campaña, es que los jóvenes “reciban una formación militar elemental: disciplina y autoridad, conocimiento de las prioridades estratégicas del país y de las grandes problemáticas de la seguridad, actividades físicas y deportivas”.
Francia no está sola en la iniciativa. Alemania la está estudiando, Suecia tiene previsto avanzar en esa dirección este año y Noruega incorporó a las mujeres en 2013. Ahora, el debate se ha instalado en los medios españoles. "La amenaza rusa, el terrorismo yihadista, el desembarco de Trump en la Casa Blanca y su enfrentamiento con Kim Jong-un, así como el ascenso de las opciones populistas en toda Europa, han rescatado la preocupación por la Defensa en todo el continente y reabierto la discusión sobre la necesidad o no de implicar a los ciudadanos en ella", escribió Rodrigo Terrasa del diario El Mundo.
En el caso sueco, la decisión responde a una "inestabilidad geoestratégica del país frente a la Rusia de Putin, por unos territorios en el norte de Europa", según Patricia Malagón del portal Mediterráneo Digital.
En España, la fake news más compartida en 2017 fue una cuyo titular decía "Vuelve el servicio militar obligatorio para menores de 25 años". Más de 300.000 personas la hicieron circular por redes sociales -la mayor parte de ellos millennials aterrados ante la posibilidad, relata Terrasa-. El servicio militar obligatorio desapareció en ese país el 31/12/2001, abolido por José María Aznar.
Pero más allá del episodio de la fake news, lo cierto es que el paso dado por Emmanuel Macron en Francia reavivó el debate en España. Aunque por el momento está lejos de ser una posibilidad real.
"Lo curioso es que se trata de un fenómeno universal: ante un italiano es mejor no decir naia, ni mencionar a un argentino la colimba. Pero ese es precisamente el problema. Pensar en el servicio militar obligatorio mirando al pasado y sus historias infumables de imaginarias, furrieles, chusqueros, abuelos y blanca pa mí. Eso no debe volver jamás. Pero tampoco podemos vivir en una sociedad donde el servicio —de cualquier tipo— a la comunidad se deje en manos de almas generosas mientras para los demás la solidaridad sea sinónimo de algunos likes en Facebook y, si acaso, una firma en change.org", escribió Jorge Marirrodriga del diario El País.
Consultado por El Mundo sobre la posibilidad de extrapolar el caso francés a España, Félix Arteaga, investigador principal de Seguridad del Real Instituto Elcano -quien presentó un informe para la reestructuración de la Defensa en España-, respondió: "Yo no conozco a nadie que se lo plantee seriamente, el debate en España murió cuando murió el servicio. Plantearlo aquí sería un suicidio político, primero porque no hay una necesidad militar que lo justifique, y segundo porque el concepto de obligatoriedad no gusta nada a la sociedad española. No hay mentalidad ni cultura de identidad nacional y, desde luego, nadie cree que se deba perder la vida por la defensa del país."
Más allá del debate, lo cierto es que el ministerio de Defensa descarta por el momento imitar el modelo de Macron, explica el portal InfoDefensa. Recientemente, tanto el secretario de Estado de Defensa, Agustín Conde, como la directora general de Política de Defensa, Elena Gómez Castro, marcaron distancias con la propuesta. Conde declaró a Efe que no considera factible actualmente la reinstauración del servicio militar en España durante un mes, como planteado por el mandatario francés. Lo dijo durante un congreso sobre el papel de los reservistas ante los nuevos desafíos estratégicas de la OTAN. Gómez Castro, por otro lado, comentó que el planteamiento del Presidente francés parece "un modelo ad hoc" basado en la movilización durante sólo 1 mes, que no tiene nada que ver con el servicio militar clásico.
Según Mediterráneo Digital, en España sólo un sector del Partido Popular (PP) gobernante aboga por reinstaurar la 'mili', tal como se conoce al servicio militar obligatorio en ese país. "La 'vieja guardia' popular optaba por una mili corta -de un mes de duración- y remunerada. Sería una manera de formar a los jóvenes en materia de defensa -con conocimientos muy básicos", escribió Malagón. "Incluso la 'malograda' República Catalana, consideraba instaurar una mili para formar el ejército catalán. En unos papeles que interceptó la Guardia Civil, se podía comprobar que el Gobierno de Puigdemont había cifrado en 18.000 soldados la cantidad necesaria para organizar su defensa."
"El retorno de la mili, augurado en Francia por Macron, no tendrá en España secuaces por puro populismo, y es una pena. El servicio militar obligatorio igualaba a todos, acabando con la antigua injuria social del soldado de cuota, que libraba pagando. Hoy es el contribuyente el que paga para que sólo vayan a la guerra, al mando de profesionales de vocación, los estamentos sociales más desfavorecidos", escribió Pedro da Silva en La Opinión de Tenerife.
sábado, 17 de febrero de 2018
Islamismo en Europa: Menos refugiados, menos atentados
El nuevo telón de acero / Europa occidental, llena de musulmanes y atentados
Parecen haber cambiado las tornas. El telón de acero ya no está en el Este sino en el Oeste. Europa occidental se ha llenado de musulmanes y sufre las consecuencias del yihadismo. Pero la del Este, contraria a la política de Welcome Refugees y con escasa inmigración musulmana, está a salvo de la amenaza.Pablo González de Castejón - Actuall
Número de muertos por atentados yihadistas en Europa
El islam es una religión de paz. Nadie puede discutir eso, a menos que quiera ser tachado de racista o islamófobo. Y es verdad que una parte del islam predica la paz, el amor, la limosna, etc. Pero no se puede obviar que en aquellos países donde más musulmanes hay, más atentados y muertos se registran.
Europa es un gran ejemplo de ello. Si se tiene en cuenta la diferencia que ha existido en estos años en la aceptación o en la negación de la acogida de refugiados por parte de los países del Este y del Oeste de Europa con respecto a los refugiados e inmigrantes musulmanes, se puede comprobar la gran diferencia de víctimas de atentados yihadistas: por lo menos 618 muertos en los países del Welcome Refugees frente a 0 en los países que rechazan esa política.
Actuall depende del apoyo de lectores como tú para seguir defendiendo la cultura de la vida, la familia y las libertades.
Es como si el telón de acero hubiera cambiado: el telón de la amenaza y el miedo está ahora en Occidente y no en muchos de los países que sufrieron la bota comunista. Con la excepción de Rusia, con la amenaza del terrorismo checheno.
También se podría hablar del Muro de Carlomagno (los francos fueron capaces de frenar el avance del islam en la Edad Media). Cada vez más países del Centro o del Este de Europa rechazan la política del Welcome Refugees, como el caso de Austria, con su recién nombrado gobierno conservador, de Sebastian Kurz.
Si miramos el mapa elaborado con los últimos atentados acontecidos en Europa por parte de yihadistas, una cosa queda clara: Sea o no el islam una religión de paz, a menos musulmanes en un país, menos atentados y menos muertos.
Por ejemplo, durante los últimos años, en Francia han muerto 251 personas por terrorismo yihadista, siendo así el país con mayor número de víctimas. Le sigue España, con 206, en especial por culpa del atentado del 11M que tuvo un total de 191 muertos.
Los países del este de Europa, contrarios a la inmigración musulmana, no han tenido ni un solo atentado yihadista en los últimos años
Después se encuentra Reino Unido con 90, muchos de los cuales han tenido lugar en los últimos dos años; le sigue Bélgica con 39; Alemania con 15; Suecia con 6; Dinamarca con 3 e Italia con 2 muertos.
Y la población de los países con más asesinatos por terrorismo yihadista coincide casi al completo (excepto España por la magnitud del 11M) con los índices de población musulmana.
En Francia casi el 9% de la población es musulmana, en Bélgica llega al 7,1%, en Gran Bretaña alcanza el 6,3%, Suecia tiene un 8,1% y España un 2,1%, y en todos ellos estos porcentajes crecerán en el futuro inmediato, según el Pew Research Center.
Sin embargo, en Polonia hay menos de un 0,1% de población musulmana, la República Checa tiene menos de un 0,2 y Hungría no alcanza el 0,4%.
Así, se puede comprobar que los países del Este no han sufrido ni un solo atentado yihadista en los últimos años, a excepción -repetimos- de Rusia que hace décadas convive con el problema del intento de independencia de Chechenia.
Ilustración Viktor Orban/ Actuall-AMB
Pero en el resto, entre los que se encuentra el grupo de Visegrado (República Checa, Polonia y Hungría) contrario a la política de los refugiados, el cero es el resultado de la búsqueda de víctimas del terrorismo yihadista.
Un futuro poco esperanzador
Este mismo estudio del Pew Research Center hace una predicción, según los datos actuales, sobre el futuro de la sociedad europea, que debido a esa política de puertas abiertas verá aumentar de forma considerable el porcentaje de población musulmana.El análisis contempla tres posibilidades para el 2050, según las decisiones políticas: un escenario con una inmigración cero, otra media y otra fuerte.
Si la inmigración fuese cero, en Gran Bretaña pasarían del 6.3 al 9,7% de población musulmana; en Alemania del 6.1 al 8,7%, en Suecia llegarían al 11,1% y Francia alcanzaría el 12,7%.
Sin embargo, los países del grupo de Visegrado seguirían por debajo del 1% de población musulmana.
En un escenario de inmigración media, Francia llegaría al 17,4%; Alemania al 10,8%, Reino Unido a un 16,7% y Suecia hasta el 20%. España se quedaría en un 6,8%.
En este mismo escenario, solo República Checa y Hungría pasarían del 1% de población musulmana, mientras que Polonia y otros países del este no llegarían a ese porcentaje.
Ya en un escenario de inmigración masiva las cifras aumentan, aunque menos. Francia llegaría al 18%, Reino Unido al 17,2%; Alemania al 19,2% y Suecia sería líder en inmigración musulmana con un 30%. La media europea sería de un 14%.
Sin embargo, Polonia se mantendría con un 0,2%, la República Checa obtendría un 1,2% y aquí sí, Hungría sufriría una fuerte subida con un 4,5%.
Musulmanes rezando en las calles de Clichy
La batalla por los refugiados
Este es uno de los principales argumentos del grupo de Visegrado para oponerse a la imposición de las tasas de refugiados que, desde Bruselas, buscan aprobar desde hace casi tres años.Pero el centro financiero de Europa no ha logrado imponer esa política por la aguerrida defensa de su soberanía por parte de Polonia, Chequia o Hungría. Una lucha a la que cada vez se adhieren más países, como Austria.
Por supuesto hay excepciones, ya que en países como Chipre, con un 25% de población musulmana, o Bulgaria, con un 11%, no se han registrado atentados yihadistas en los últimos años.
Sin embargo no se puede negar la correlación entre población islamica e inseguridad, y no solo por el caso de Europa del Este, sino por el incansable mantra de que la mayoría de las víctimas del terrorismo yihadista son musulmanes.
La mayoría de los muertos por terrorismo yihadista se encuentran en países musulmanes como Irak, Afganistán o Nigeria
Si se sale fuera de Europa se comprueba, evidentemente, que la mayoría de las víctimas de estos grupos armados (suníes) son musulmanes (principalmente chiíes), con países especialmente golpeados como Afganistán o Irak (especialmente inestables desde la intervención de EEUU), Nigeria, Siria o Yemen.
Es cierto que la mayoría de los asesinados por este terrorismo son musulmanes, pero es igual de cierto que la causa de esta lacra tiene la misma raíz: el islam.
Los datos no se pueden manipular, y si alguien busca seguridad con respecto el terrorismo yihadista en Europa, el destino está claro: tendría que salir del telón de acero del Oeste y viajar al otro lado del muro de Carlomagno…. en el Este.
lunes, 25 de septiembre de 2017
Filipinas sigue interesada en helicópteros europeos
Coast Guard Looking into Getting 5 Airbus Helicopters, 2 AW139 Helicopters
According to a senior Coast Guard officer, the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) is looking into getting five (5) Airbus Helicopters H145 and two (2) Leonardo (AgustaWestland) AW139, Pinoy Aviators said in its official social networking page.
The acquisition will be through the maritime disaster response helicopters acquisition project approved by National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) Investment Coordination Committee (ICC)-Cabinet Committee last month.
The approval of NEDA Board chaired by President Rodrigo Duterte is still needed before the said project could be finally implemented.
The project has a budget of PHP5.887 billion for seven helicopters which will include training of pilots and technical crew; purchase of mission equipment, maintenance tools and spare parts; construction of hangars; and project management.
The project aims to strengthen and expand the PCG’s capability to respond to maritime incidents during natural calamities.
Update
jueves, 26 de enero de 2017
Empresas europeas mantienen los KC-30A australianos
SYDNEY, Australia – Northrop Grumman Integrated Defence Services (IDS), a fully-owned Australian subsidiary of Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC), has signed an agreement with Air France Industries KLM Engineering & Maintenance (AFI KLM E&M) for the provision of services in support of the Royal Australian Air Force’s fleet of KC-30A Multi-Role Tanker Transport (MRTT) aircraft. Northrop Grumman IDS is the prime contractor for MRTT Through-Life Support (TLS).
“We are excited to have reached this agreement with AFI KLM E&M,” said Ian Irving, chief executive, Northrop Grumman Australia. “Partnerships such as this are an important way for Northrop Grumman to support the Australian Department of Defence’s ‘smart buyer’ philosophy. By leveraging huge commercial supply chains and expertise in order to provide competitive pricing for MRTT maintenance, this agreement will increase the program’s value and effectiveness.”
The agreement will provide the Australian MRTT program with improved access to an experienced, world-class aftermarket organisation. As a result, Northrop Grumman will also have increased access to a worldwide network and a more streamlined process of materiel management solutions leveraging AFI KLM E&M’s global expertise and footprint.
“We are thrilled to enter into this partnership,” said John Parker, vice president and general manager, global logistics and modernization division, Northrop Grumman Technology Services. “With the support of AFI KLM E&M, Northrop Grumman will be even more equipped to execute unparalleled program performance and quality for the Royal Australian Air Force’s KC-30A MRTT fleet.”
“The opportunity to work with Northrop Grumman on the Australian MRTT program is very significant for AFI KLM E&M,” said Fabrice Defrance, senior vice president Commercial, AFI KLM E&M. “We are looking forward to providing the Australian MRTT program with access to our expertise in maintaining new generation and wide-body aircraft including the Airbus A330, the airframe on which the MRTT is based. Our acknowledged expertise on aircraft components and engine support, which combined with Northrop Grumman’s experience in maintenance and systems engineering will provide the Australian government with excellent value in support of the MRTT program.”
The agreement will see AFI KLM E&M provide services to Northrop Grumman, including aircraft component, auxiliary power unit and CF6 80-E1 engine test, repair and overhaul services; ready access to line replaceable unit loans and exchanges; and global line station logistics solutions. It also allows for future extension of support services and general maintenance of other aircraft types.
Air France Industries KLM Engineering & Maintenance is a major multi-product MRO (Maintenance, Repair, Overhaul) provider. With a workforce of over 14,000, AFI KLM E&M offers comprehensive technical support for airlines, ranging from engineering and line maintenance to engine overhaul, aero structure and thrust reverser support, as well as the management, repair and supply of aircraft components, structured around a powerful logistics network. AFI KLM E&M supports almost 1,500 aircraft operated by 200 major international and domestic airlines.www.afiklmem.com.
Northrop Grumman
sábado, 31 de diciembre de 2016
USA: Brigada de Hierro para disuadir a Rusia
Estados Unidos prepara su mayor despliegue en Europa desde la Guerra Fría para mostrar su compromiso con la OTAN
Varios soldados preparan un vehículo militar para transportarlo a Europa en Fort Carson (Colorado), el 2 de diciembre. FOTO ANGE DESINOR / VÍDEO NATO CHANNEL Y EL PAÍS
MARÍA R. SAHUQUILLO - El País
Una veintena de vehículos Bradley de combate, demasiado limpios para haber circulado recientemente, aguarda bajo el frío sol de Colorado. A pocos metros, en una enorme explanada casi al pie de Cheyenne, una de las Montañas Rocosas, el capitán Musk revisa un grupo de coloridos contenedores con material militar. En un par de semanas, los blindados y los inmensos depósitos metálicos estarán en suelo europeo. Como los casi 4.500 soldados estadounidenses procedentes de la base de Fort Carson que se posicionarán desde enero en los países del Este y los bálticos. El despliegue, el mayor de tropas norteamericanas y armamento pesado en Europa desde la Guerra Fría, busca reforzar la región frente al expansionismo ruso y mostrar el compromiso de Washington con sus aliados de la OTAN.
El inicio de su misión coincidirá con la llegada a la Casa Blanca del nuevo presidente, Donald Trump, quien no sólo ha cuestionado la responsabilidad de EEUU hacia la Alianza Atlántica, sino que ha inquietado enormemente a sus socios que lindan con Rusia por su afinidad con el presidente Vladímir Putin. Pero en Fort Carson —donde EL PAÍS ha viajado invitado por la misión estadounidense en la OTAN— ni Musk, con su luminosa sonrisa de muchacho americano, ni sus mandos tuercen el gesto por la postura del republicano. “Nada ha cambiado, el compromiso y el espíritu de las tropas es exactamente el mismo”, afirma, serio, el sargento mayor David Gunn. Su objetivo, apunta el teniente coronel Stephen Capehart, es triple: verificar su competencia para lanzar en Europa una brigada blindada, reforzar la capacidad de trabajar con fuerzas aliadas y “contribuir a la defensa colectiva frente a toda amenaza”.
Y esa amenaza es Rusia. En la jerga militar y de la OTAN dicen que su propósito es “reasegurar” a los socios de la Alianza en la zona, antiguos miembros de la Unión Soviética o países satélites: Polonia, Estonia, Letonia, Lituania, Rumania, Bulgaria. Pero ‘reasegurar’ quiere decir, básicamente, disuadir al Kremlin de las tentaciones de vulnerar la integridad de cualquiera de esos Estados tras la anexión rusa de Crimea y la guerra en el este de Ucrania, que en febrero cumplirá su tercer aniversario. La misión es también una demostración de fuerza del Ejército estadounidense, que llevará a territorio europeo además de a sus soldados, más de 2.800 vehículos militares —incluidos los ahora adormecidos Bradley, más de 80 tanques y numerosos trailers— y miles de armas de fuego.
En Fort Carson, al tercer batallón de combate de la 4ª brigada de infantería —el asignado a Europa— le toca entrenamiento interior. Y los soldados de la conocida como Brigada de Hierro probablemente lo agradezcan. Son las seis de la mañana y el termómetro no sube de los 12 grados negativos. En el gimnasio, a ritmo de música maquinera, el teniente David Hart levanta pesas. Aun así, su camiseta del Ejército americano está impoluta. “La seguridad europea es nuestra seguridad”, afirma. Espigado y con el pelo muy corto, este especialista en ingeniería de 29 años explica que todo el batallón viajará a Polonia para después desplegarse, por compañías, en el resto de países de la región donde entrenarán junto a las tropas aliadas en los que serán los mayores ejercicios de la historia reciente de la OTAN.
Hart se desplegará en Rumania. La soldado Abrianna Archuleta lo hará en Polonia. Es, a sus 18 años, la más joven de la brigada. Pequeña pero compacta, Archuleta fue campeona de lucha libre en su estado, Nuevo México, antes de alistarse, nada más terminar el instituto. Es especialista en sistemas de datos tácticos y una de las primeras mujeres en el equipo de artillería de primera línea. Quiere ser enfermera. Como sus compañeros, permanecerá nueve meses en su destino, rotatorio. La rotación son la fórmula que ha encontrado la OTAN para sortear la prohibición pactada con Rusia de establecer bases aliadas permanentes en los países del antiguo Pacto de Varsovia. La de Europa del Este es la primera misión de Archuleta. También la primera vez que sale de Estados Unidos. “Estoy muy emocionada”, reconoce con una pequeña sonrisa. No puede dar detalles técnicos de su papel en Polonia, pero apunta que la misión de la Brigada de Hierro, casi centenaria, es “ayudar a mantener la paz”
ampliar fotoUn soldado asegura el equipamiento para viajar a Europa en Fort Carson. A. DESINOR
El despliegue —dotado con un presupuesto de 3.400 millones de dólares (unos 3.250 millones de euros)— es hasta cierto punto controvertidos. Y no sólo por la postura del presidente electo hacia los países de destino, a quienes amenaza con dejar de defender —como marca el artículo 5 de la Alianza— si no aumentan su presupuesto para Defensa. También hay quien, como el ministro de Exteriores alemán, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, ve en el las maniobras una cierta provocación a Rusia. El experto en seguridad Paul R. Gebhard, analista del think tank Atlantic Council, no es de la misma opinión. “¿Cuántos países tiene que invadir Rusia —que ha cambiado sus fronteras varias veces en los últimos años— para ser considerada una amenaza ”, plantea con algo de ironía.
Abrianna Archuleta. M. R. S.,
En Washington, en el Pentágono, el subsecretario de Defensa de EEUU, James Townsend, ya de salida de la Administración, reconoce que tras la invasión de Georgia (en 2008) se subestimó a Rusia. Algo que, incide, no puede volver a pasar. Ante un reducido grupo de periodistas europeos, explica que la nueva misión —como las otras emprendidas en la región— pretende asegurar que “Rusia o cualquier otro” percibe, sin ambages, que los socios de la OTAN se defienden entre sí.
El Pentágono, sin embargo, no tiene datos sobre la opinión de los estadounidenses acerca de una misión en países que muchos no han oído nombrar, en los que no hay guerra y frente a una amenaza que quizá no perciban. En Colorado Springs, una pequeña encuesta a los pocos ciudadanos que caminan bajo la nieve muestra un apoyo abrumador. Aunque la ciudad, una de las más conservadoras del país, reducto fervientemente republicano en un Estado que apoyó a Clinton en las elecciones de noviembre y capital de las iglesias evangélicas, es también sede de cuatro bases militares clave. No por casualidad fue escenario de la película Juegos de guerra.
En Fort Carson, el sargento Matthew Venn, de 31 años, ultima los preparativos para su despliegue. Será la cuarta misión para este pelirrojo de Kansas, después de haber estado en Irak —dos veces—, Afganistán y Kuwait como comandante de tanques. “Nada que ver… Esta vez que no va a una zona de conflicto estoy muy confiada y muchísimo más tranquila. Incluso algo celosa”, bromea a su lado Theresa, su esposa, veterana y ahora profesora de educación especial. La pareja tiene tres hijos, que se afanan en redecorar uno de los árboles de Navidad de la base. Aunque, como los Venn, las familias de los soldados no están inquietas por el despliegue en Europa, el teniente coronel Capehart incide en que no hay diferencia entre las distintas misiones. Como Townsend, para quien ninguna misión es rutinaria: “No están allí para un desfile militar, no son una guarnición, no se han ido de vacaciones. Están allí para combatir si deben, aunque esperamos que no tengan que hacerlo”.
EL SOLDADO DE LA SUERTE VUELVE A CASA
Dimitar Dzherikarov con sus dos hijos. M. R. S.,Dimitar Dzherikarov ganó la ‘green card’ en la lotería. Sí, este búlgaro de 32 años participó en 2014 en el sorteo organizado por el Gobierno de EEUU para obtener la tarjeta de residencia permanente y triunfó. Hoy es ciudadano estadounidense y uno de los soldados que participará en el despliegue de tropas en Europa del Este.
Casado y con dos hijos, Dzherikarov estuvo en el Ejército búlgaro. De hecho, en 2005 se desplegó en Irak con el 5º batallón de infantería. Después, fue policía hasta que viajó a Estados Unidos. Se alistó en la Armada nada más llegar. “Tuve el sentimiento de que quería devolver algo, que quería hacer algo para merecer estar aquí”, remarca.
De alguna manera, vuelve a casa, aunque su destino principal será Rumania. “Estoy feliz de regresar a Europa, porque sé quién es quién allí. Necesitamos visibilizar nuestras fuerzas y demostrar quienes son nuestros amigos y que estamos allí por ellos”, dice.