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F-22 P Frigate manufacturing from today

December 10, 2009 Leave a comment

The News International

KARACHI: The manufacturing of the first F-22 P Frigate for the Pakistan Navy will begin at the Karachi Shipyard & Engineering Works here from today.

According to ISPR statement, the ship is the fourth of the series of Frigates being manufactured in collaboration with China, under the contract of Transfer of Technology.

The manufacturing of the Frigate is another milestone towards self-reliance for defence production. The new frigate would boost the country’s indigenous construction capabilities.

PAF Early Warning System Saab 2000

December 10, 2009 Leave a comment

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Air Force on Tuesday received first of its four Saab-2000 Airborne Early Warning and Control aircraft from Sweden.  According to an official announcement, the aircraft landed at one of main operating bases, marking a major milestone in PAF’s overall modernisation plan.

With the induction of the Swedish system, PAF has become one of the few air forces in the world to have Airborne Early Warning capability.  Besides detecting high- and medium-altitude aircraft, this state-of-the-art system is also capable of detecting low-level flying objects over land and sea at extended ranges. The system is capable of picking even the surface targets over the sea.  By virtue of these features, PAF would be able to boost its operational capability manifold by achieving requisite early warning for efficient and meaningful air defence of its airspace.

The Erieye AEW&C mission system radar is an active, phased-array, pulse-Doppler sensor that can feed an onboard operator architecture or downlink data (via an associated datalink subsystem) to a ground-based air defence network. The system employs a large aperture, dual-sided antenna array housed in a dorsal ‘plank’ fairing. The antenna is fixed, and the beam is electronically scanned, which provides for improved detection and significantly enhanced tracking performance compared with radar-dome antenna systems.Erieye detects and tracks air and sea targets out to the horizon (and beyond due to anomalous propagation)—instrumented range has been measured at 450 km.

Typical detection range against fighter-sized targets is approximately 350 km, in a 150° broadside sector, both sides of the aircraft. Outside these sectors, performance is reduced in forward and aft directions.Other system features include:Adaptive waveform generation (including digital, phase-coded pulse compression), signal processing and target trackingTrack While Scan (TWS)Low sidelobe values (throughout the system’s angular coverage)Low- and medium-pulse repetition frequency operating modesFrequency agilityAir-to-air and sea surveillance modesTarget radar cross-section displayThe radar operates as a medium- to high-PRF pulse-Doppler, solid-state radar, in E/F-band (3 GHz), incorporating 192 two-way transmit/receive modules that combine to produce a pencil beam, steered as required within the operating 150° sector each side of the aircraft (one side at a time). It is understood that Erieye has some ability to detect aircraft in the 30° sectors fore and aft of the aircraft heading, but has no track capability in this sector.

Turkey’s leadership in Muslim world irks US, EU & Israel

December 10, 2009 Leave a comment

By: RupeeNews

Turkey is warming up its relations with Syria, Palestine, Iran and Pakistan. Israel while still a friend is increasingly being given a cold shoulder. There are clear indications that Istanbul is not longer a Western oriented country. While publicly professing its desire to join the EU, privately the Turks want to build its old alliances with regions its owned and controlled. Turkey is the unofficially accepted successor of the Ottoman Empire. Pakistan as the successor to the Mughal Empire are closer than ever. With Iran being pushed by the West and being stabbed by Bharat (aka India), Tehran is rethinking its policies and trying to make amends with Iraq, Turkey and Pakistan

Amid growing speculation that NATO member Turkey is turning away from the West, the US administration has clearly voiced its appreciation of the role played by Turkey in contributing to the maintenance of global peace. Daily Zaman

The US considers Turkey a key ally in the war in Afghanistan. But a meeting between the two countries’ leaders comes at a time when Ankara has been reaching out to countries that Washington considers adversaries.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey’s prime minister, had talks at the White House on Monday with Barack Obama, the US president. The US considers Turkey a key ally in the war in Afghanistan.

But the meeting comes at a time when Turkey has been reaching out to countries which Washington considers adversaries like Iran, Syria and Sudan. Nonetheless when the two met in the Oval Office, President Obama talked up Turkey’s role on the international stage. He said:

“Given Turkey’s history as a secular democratic state that respects the rule of law but is also a majority Muslim nation, it plays a critical role I think in helping to shape mutual understanding and stability and peace not only in its neighbourhood but around the world.”

But Turkey is also getting increasingly close with Iran.

It has just signed gas and other business deals with Tehran worth millions of dollars.

It’s threatening to abstain in any future UN vote to punish Iran for building a secret uranium enrichment plant, and Ankara has offered a nuclear storage deal separate from one on offer from the Security Council that involves Russia and France.

Some in Washington wonder if Turkey’s freezing out of European Union membership has made it less willing to act as a mediator in the Middle East.

Bulent Aliriza from the Turkey Project at the Washington think tank the Center for Strategic International Studies told al Jazeera:

“Turkey’s been trying very much to facilitate a settlement between the United States and Iran but its difficult given the fact that, you know, the nuclear talks have not moved very far.

Erdogan was in Tehran at the end of October. In fact, he wanted to come immediately afterwards to convey a message from the Iranians. My understanding was that he wanted to give a special message from the Iranians this time. So it remains to be seen whether Turkey can play a role in that process.”

Back at the White House, Turkey’s prime minister stressed that Turkey IS dedicated to Middle East peace, and that it supports the US role in the region.

“We stand ready, as Turkey, to do whatever we can do with respect to relations between Israel and the Palestinians, and Israel and Syria, because I do believe that, first and foremost, the United States, too, has important responsibility in trying to achieve global peace.”

The thing is, Turkey is known for nurturing diplomatic relations with the East and the West.

Ankara recently mended its broken ties with Israel but it’s the recent warmth of its relationship with Iran and Syria that has some in the Obama administration wondering if the U.S. will be able to count on Turkey as an ally in the future in the wider Middle East peace process.

Turkey’s just taken over the rotating command of NATO forces in Afghanistan.

It’s the only Muslim nation taking part but – despite White House pressure to increase its role – Turkey has refused to commit more than the 1,750 troops which is says focus is on training Afghan forces and development rather than on combat as the US wants. Can the US count on Turkey? By John Terrett in  December 8th, 2009

Indian Air Force Flying Coffins

December 10, 2009 4 comments

by: PKKH

The Indian Air Force (IAF) has lost 265 MiG fighter jets in crashes during the last two decades leaving 140 people dead, Defence Minister A.K. Antony said Wednesday. “In the last two decades (since April 1989 and up to Nov 26, 2009), 265 MiG fighter aircraft of the IAF have crashed. A total of 96 service personnel and 44 civilians were killed in these cases,” Antony told the parliament in a written reply.

Dubbed “flying coffins” for their frequent crashes, only 150-160 of the over 450 single-engine MiG-21s with the IAF are still in service. A large number have been lost in accidents during peace time. Antony said that all precautions are being taken before flying the aircrafts. “Each aircraft accident in the IAF is investigated through a court of inquiry and remedial measures are undertaken accordingly to check their recurrence in future.

“Besides continuous and multi-faceted efforts are always underway in the IAF to enhance and upgrade flight safety,” Antony added. However, a senior IAF official said that because it faces a shortage of fighter squadrons, the IAF cannot afford to phase out the ageing MiG-21s. If it does that, it would diminish its force level drastically.

“The main problem with MiG-21s is that they are very old and the on-board systems have become obsolete,” a highly-placed IAF official, who has flown the combat aircraft, told IANS. The IAF, the world’s fourth largest air force, currently has a fighter squadron strength of 33.5 against the sanctioned 39.
The Indian government has issued tenders for acquisition of 126 medium multi-role combat aircrafts but the acquisition has been delayed due to time consuming procedures, which include submitting of bids, technical evaluation of proposals from global military suppliers and field trials.

The first aircraft would conservatively be inducted only by 2020, according to defence ministry sources. The assessment is that the retirement of the five squadrons of MiG-21s will diminish the IAF’s conventional edge over its adversaries. The current deadline for the retirement of MiG-21s is 2011. But this is likely to be pushed back further due to the slow pace of procurement and indigenisation process.

The latest crash took place Sep 11 when a MiG-21 went down in Bathinda in Punjab, killing the pilot.
The MiG-21s, inducted in 1964, proved their worth in the 1971 war with Pakistan and again in 1999 during the Kargil conflict, also with Pakistan. The IAF inducted its first MiG-21 from the erstwhile Soviet Union five years after their induction into the Soviet Air Force. Thereafter some 450 MiG-21 jets were inducted in the IAF to bolster its strength.

The indigenous LCA (light combat aircraft) project has been marred with delays because of the inability of military research bodies to provide engines with right configuration for the aircrafts.

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An Open Letter from Pakistani Patriots to the Indo-American TTP and Their Backers

December 10, 2009 Leave a comment

PKKH Exclusive

Sumayya Chawla | Team PKKH

Today is the day we look you in the eye and say “enough!”  As we bury our Shaheeds, our eyes are heavy from the tears that we have shed and our shoulders heave with the grief that we have carried upon them. But before you even begin to delude yourselves with the idea that you have defeated this nation, take a very close look at the hands that have carried the martyrs to their graves, look closely and you will notice that these hands do not shake, that the feet that walk our loved ones to their resting places do not falter. Look at our eyes, and behind the tears and the grief you will see the rage, you will see the storm that is brewing on the horizon and the lightning that will strike you dead. We know you are afraid as you should be, afraid of a people that do not know the meaning of defeat; a people who only know how to sacrifice their all for the love of RasulAllah (PBUH), for this Ummah and for Pak Sarzameen. For every single one of us you kill, a thousand more shall rise. As you attack us from behind, we hit you from the front; we hit you where it hurts. We are hunting you down, one by one, and you have nowhere to run, nowhere to hide. We want you to know that you will not break us. InshAllah. No matter how many of us you kill, Pak Sarzameen will always be protected by her sons and daughters, one hundred and seventy five million of us.

You thought that this nation was asleep; you thought that you could take us out in the dark of the night and we won’t resist. What you didn’t think was that this nation would finally wake up and understand your game, as we all do now. What you didn’t think or expect was that the little children whom you slaughter in our mosques would hurl your hand grenades back at you before they embraced shahadat. What you didn’t estimate when you were hatching your dirty plans was the power of Love that we have for Pakistan and Islam, the love that is shared by millions of Muslims all over the world. What you didn’t estimate or could even understand, was the spiritual awakening that is spreading like wild fire across this land. Thanks to your dirty game to sully the true spirit of Jihad, every child in Pakistan now knows the difference between true Mujahedeen, those blessed soldiers of Allah, and the child-killing monsters that you have bought for a few dollars and trained, to kill innocent Pakistanis. We are Muslims and we know what our religion stands for, you cannot fool us anymore. We have seen your real faces.

As our brave jawaans and officers strike terror in your hearts in Waziristan, the entire nation stands with them, shoulder to shoulder. You come to our cities, we will hunt you there. You come to our neighborhoods, we will hunt you there.  The Pakistani Nation will not sit and go down quietly. We know who you are and we know your game. We will resist you with the power of our faith, with our unity and without any fear in our hearts except for the fear of Allah. We are a nation that has been through rivers of fire and blood before, and we survived and rose from the ashes. You haven’t seen anything yet. The Lions of this Ummah live here, in Pakistan.  You have challenged the dignity of a nation whose hearts beat one to the sound of La Ilaha IllAllah, Muhammad Ur RasulAllah. With this Kalima in our hearts and the love of RasulAllah (PBUH) that runs in our veins, we will unleash a defeat so enormous that you will regret the day you were born. This is a promise and God willing, we will keep it.

Pakistan is the unfinished dream of this Ummah: we will take this dream to its Takmeel.

By God we will!

Pakistan Zindabaad | Pakistan Army Paindabaad.

East meets West Pakistan’s fighter Aircraft

December 10, 2009 Leave a comment

defpro.com

Not many modern armed forces unite in their inventory, and particularly among their key assets, technology from two – in political terms – entirely opposite origins. It is more common in the countries of the former Soviet bloc where, since the fall of the iron curtain, Western technology slowly but ever increasingly found its way into countries primarily equipped with Russian weapon systems. In the past two decades the Middle East and southern countries of the Asian continent have become areas in which Western state-of-the-art weapon systems competed next to weapon systems from Russia or other former antagonists to lead these countries’ armed forces into a new age – globalisation in the political and industrial defence world.

These countries – not only geographically in between history’s current major players – slowly revolve the old political and economic structures in a natural process and, with their growing political self-confidence, create a new link between the cumbersome super powers which, mostly from behind the scenes, will shape the next decades.

Pakistan is one of these interesting examples, however, with a very unique character. Just as its neighbour and long-lasting political antagonist, India, it develops an increasingly emancipated character in its choice of new weapon systems as well as in its desire to further develop its domestic R&D as well as production capabilities. India currently is in the process of extensive trials for its future fighter aircraft programme (MMRCA) in which aircraft from the US compete against European as well as Russian solutions of the latest generations (see http://www.defpro.com/daily/details/380/). The final choice in this particular race will be a forward-looking one for the face of the Indian Air Force.

On the other side of the Thar Desert, the Pakistani Air Force (PAF) brings together an interesting mix of aircraft from all over the world and, in particular, from the US and China. Due to its historical development, the first aircraft to be used by the Pakistani Air Force were US- and UK-built aircraft. However, in 1965 Pakistan received its first fighter aircraft of Chinese origin: the Shenyang J-6. Since, fighter aircraft of the US as well as from France (the PAF still strongly relies on its French Dassault Mirage IIIs and Mirage Vs) have been operating next to Chinese fighter aircraft. A clear political development can be deduced from the history of fighter aircraft of the PAF: from the post-colonial influences to a regional power at the mercy of the political gravities to a growing national identity and self-determination.

Today, Pakistan is expecting to take delivery of its first of 18 ordered Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Block 52+ very soon (older versions of the F-16 have already been operating in Pakistan since 1982), bringing the total number of Pakistani F-16s to 54 when the last aircraft will be delivered as scheduled in December 2010. Furthermore, as various press sources have reported mid-November 2009, Pakistan has signed an agreement with China for the procurement of 36 Chengdu FC-20 (J-10 export version) to be delivered by 2015. Finally, Pakistan is also in the process of introducing a growing number of FC-1/JF-17 fighter aircraft, jointly developed by China’s Chengdu and the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC) Kamra. With the first two small batch production aircraft having been delivered in 2007, Pakistan has since received a good dozen of these aircraft and, as reports Flight International, is expecting to introduce at least 150 domestically produced fighters into service (the number has increased to an estimated 200-250 aircraft).

This development would not only provide Pakistan with a significant number of state-of-the-art air combat assets but also brings together technology from the Far East and the West in an interesting unity. Many eyes of these two political and industrial camps will be glued to the PAF to gather information on this process and the other’s craftsmanship.
F-16 … FC-20 … JF-17

As outlined above the PAF has been combining Western and Chinese aircraft since the 1960s, including bombers and trainer aircraft and is, furthermore, expecting to receive four Chinese Shaanxi Y-8W airborne early warning & control (AEW&C) aircraft equipped with AESA radar by 2011 that will be operating next to Pakistan’s brand-new Saab 2000 Erieye AEW&C aircraft. But let’s take a look at the three state-of-the-art fighter aircraft that will be racing Pakistan’s skies in the near future.

Pakistan’s newest member of the F-16 family, a two seat F-16D Block 52, has been unveiled on October 2009 at Lockheed Martin’s Fort Worth, Texas, facility. The ceremony was attended by the PAF Chief of the Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal Rao Quamar Suleman. The current order, dubbed “Peace Drive I”, is for 12 F-16Cs and six F-16Ds, powered by the Pratt & Whitney F100-PW-229 engine, with an option for another 18 aircraft.
“The Pakistani and U.S. leadership has worked very hard to develop a strategic partnership between the two countries in order to achieve our common strategic interests,” said Rao Qamar. “If this relationship is to succeed, it has to be built on a solid foundation of trust between the two allies. This F-16 is not just an aircraft, but a capability for Pakistan. It is a symbol of trust and the relationship between Pakistan and the U.S.”

As the PAF explains on its homepage, “the PAF had originally planned its force structure to include than a hundred F-16s by the end of the century, but these plans could not be implemented because of the US embargo [of the 1990s due to Pakistan’s testing of a nuclear bomb]. The service is, thus, currently in the process of evaluating other high-tech fighter aircraft for procurement.”

The outcome of this process is quite clear: a stronger co-operation with China which obviously offers Pakistan not only to possibility to acquire new combat aircraft but also of jointly improving its domestic industrial capabilities. The Chengdu FC-20s to enter service in 2015 will replace the aging fleet of combat aircraft such as the Chinese F-7s (a version of the MiG-21 which has been recently upgraded) as well as the extensive fleet of Mirage IIIs and Vs. As the PAF explains, “Chinese systems such as the F-7s provide the staying power to absorb losses and to take punishment in the face of a much bigger adversary. Planned upgrades to equip these less capable fighters with modern radars, better missiles and ECM equipment will help enhance the PAF’s combat capability.”

The FC-20 is not among these less capable fighters. It is the export version, modified to Pakistan’s requirements, of one of China’s most capable multi-role fighter aircraft with a delta-wing and canard design. It was introduced into the People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) in 2005 and in April 2006 the Pakistani cabinet approved the procurement of 36 of these aircraft which can be compared to the aircraft generation of the F-16, the Gripen or the Rafale.

Although a greater challenge for the Pakistani Air Force than the mere purchase of new assets, the development and introduction of the JF-17 (Pakistani designation for “Joint Fighter”) has continuously and obviously successfully proceeded. The first aircraft of this type took to the skies in 2003. The first small batch of pre-production aircraft was delivered to Pakistan for operational evaluation purposes in March 2007. The first Pakistani-manufactured JF-17 was rolled out and handed over to the PAF on 23 November 2009. On the occasion of the hand-over ceremony Rao Qamar said that 40 JF-17 would be produced by PAC Kamra within next three years and would be inducted in PAF replacing the existing aircraft. Furthermore, he confirmed that the first JF 17 Squadron would be established shortly. The JF-17 is a lightweight and low-cost multi-role fighter aircraft with a high manoeuvrability and beyond visual range (BVR) capability. It has advanced aerodynamics configuration and high thrust.



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