Friday, December 31, 2021

Israel boosts long-range strike capability with US deal

31 Dec, 2021, By Russia's RT News
(FILE PHOTO) © REUTERS/Amir Cohen

Tel-Aviv has signed a deal with the US for new military kit, including two KC-46 tankers

Israel has penned a deal with its allies in Washington to buy 12 Lockheed Martin helicopters and two Boeing refueling planes, with the total cost estimated to be around $3.1 billion.

On Friday, Israel’s Ministry of Defense confirmed its deal with the US to enhance its military capabilities throughout the next decade. The 12 Lockheed Martin CH-53K helicopters are due to arrive in Israel from 2026, while the two Boeing KC-46 air-to-air refueling aircraft from 2025.

A ministry statement noted that there was an option to buy six additional helicopters, while Brigadier-General Shimon Tsentsiper, chief of materiel for the air force, told Israel's Army Radio on Thursday that he hoped there would be four KC-46s in total.

Tsentsiper said that Israel was hoping to bring forward the delivery of the KC-46s, which would be replacing an aging fleet of tanker aircraft.

The current fleet of air-to-air refueling assets is more than 50 years old and is based on the Boeing 707. While they’re still flightworthy, the new tankers would provide greater range and mobility.

Media have speculated that the new refueling assets would be vital for maintaining a credible strike capability when it comes to arch-foe Iran. However, Tsentsiper insisted that the current fleet is still sufficiently capable.

Nonetheless, a former Israeli Air Force commander last year warned the military “urgently” needed the new planes, saying “there is no country in the world that flies platforms that are this old.


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Defense News: BAE to Supply 33 Additional ACV Amphibious Combat Vehicles for USMC

 

BAE to Supply 33 Additional ACV Amphibious Combat Vehicles for USMC



The current contract is about $170 million, while the total value of the contract given to BAE Systems to supply ACVs to the US Marines is $ 3.354 billion

By Eyal Boguslavsky , Israel Defense,  30/12/2021

Photo from BAE Systems website

US DoD awarded last week BAE Systems Land & Armaments a $169,334,012 modification contract to produce 33 more Amphibious Combat Vehicles (ACV) for U.S. Marine Corps. The total value of the contract if all options are exercised is $3,354,159,920.

Armyrecognition.com reports that BAE Systems’ ACV 1.1 solution is an advanced 8x8 open ocean-capable vehicle that is based on a platform developed by the Italian company IVECO Defense Vehicles. It is equipped with a new 6-cylinder, 700HP power pack, which provides a significant power increase over the current Assault Amphibious Vehicle.


Marines: The New ACV - Amphibious Combat Vehicle


The ACV vehicle has a suspended interior seat structure for 13 embarked Marines, blast-mitigating positions for a crew of three, and improved survivability and force protection over currently fielded systems.

BAE Systems has developed four variants of the ACV including the ACV-30 fitted with a turret armed with one 30mm automatic cannon, ACV-P armored personnel carrier, ACV-C command post, and ACV-R armored recovery vehicle.

New Amphibious Combat Vehicle "ACV" - U.S. Marines and Navy




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Wednesday, December 29, 2021

ChiComs Replacing High-Altitude Troops Facing India with Robots

China 'replaces soldiers with machinegun-carrying robots in Tibet because its troops cannot cope with the freezing conditions and thin air'

  • China is deploying dozens of unmanned vehicles to its border with India 
  • Kill-bots fitted with machineguns and ammo transports have been moved 
  • Comes after Chinese troops struggled to operate in high-altitude conditions 
  • Chinese and Indian troops are locked into a standoff in the high Himalayas 

China is deploying machinegun-carrying robots to its western desert regions amid a standoff with India because troops are struggling with the high-altitude conditions, it has been claimed.

Dozens of unmanned vehicles capable of carrying both weapons and supplies are being sent to Tibet, Indian media reports, with the majority deployed in border regions where Chinese troops are locked into a standoff with Indian soldiers.

Vehicles include the Sharp Claw, which is mounted with a light machinegun and can be operated wirelessly, and the Mule-200, which is designed as an unmanned supply vehicle but can also be fitted with weapons.

China has deployed dozens of Sharp Claw fighting vehicles to its border region with India, it is claimed, which are fitted with light machineguns

China has deployed dozens of Sharp Claw fighting vehicles to its border region with India, it is claimed, which are fitted with light machineguns

Beijing has also sent Mule-200 transport vehicles to the area, after Chinese troops struggled to operate in punishing high-altitude conditions

Beijing has also sent Mule-200 transport vehicles to the area, after Chinese troops struggled to operate in punishing high-altitude conditions

Beijing has sent 88 Sharp Claws to Tibet, which borders India high in the Himalayas, of which 38 are deployed to the border region, Times News Now has claimed.

Some 120 Mule-200s have also been sent to Tibet, News Now reports, with a majority of them deployed to the border area.

In addition to the unmanned vehicles, China has also bolstered its forces with 70 VP-22 armoured troop transports, 47 of which are in border zones.

Another 150 Lynx all-terrain vehicles have also been sent to the border.

The Lynx is hugely versatile, and can be used to transport small numbers of troops or mounted with various weapon systems including howitzers, heavy machine guns, mortars or missile launchers.

Beijing deployed the vehicles after state media previously reported that soldiers had been fitted with exoskeleton suits to help them cope with carrying supplies at punishing altitudes.

Soldiers were given carbon-fibre exoskeletons to relieve the pressure on their legs and ankles while carrying heavy equipment and supplies 16,000ft above sea level.

Troops had been struggling because a lack of oxygen at that altitude makes loads feel heavier while soldiers also tire more easily.

'This kind of suit is particularly helpful at high altitudes,' a military expert told the Global Times in December last year.

China and India have fought an on-off conflict in their border region for decades along what is known as the 'line of control'.

China and India have fought an on-off conflict over their Himalayan border for decades, but tensions ramped up last year after a series of clashes left dozens of solders dead

China and India have fought an on-off conflict over their Himalayan border for decades, but tensions ramped up last year after a series of clashes left dozens of solders dead 

The border region is very dry, remote, largely inhospitable and has little practical value, but control of it is a hugely symbolic issue for both sides

The border region is very dry, remote, largely inhospitable and has little practical value, but control of it is a hugely symbolic issue for both sides 

The region - which is extremely dry, remote, and largely inhospitable - has little practical value beyond a few trading routes that criss-cross its deserts, but holds symbolic meaning for both sides which are keen to display dominance.

Tensions ramped up in 2020 as hand-to-hand fighting broke out between Chinese and Indian troops, with dozens killed in skirmishes fought with melee weapons including nail-studded clubs.

China accused India of provoking its troops, while India accused Beijing of attempting to re-draw the border and encroaching on its territory.

Satellite images seemed to back India's claims, showing new Chinese constructions in disputed areas.

The clashes sparked a diplomatic back-and-forth between Beijing and Delhi, with India cutting some trade ties and banning Chinese phone apps.

In June last year China began dismantling some structures in disputed zones which eased tensions, though the region remains on high alert for further clashes.

It comes against the backdrop of a wider military buildup by China that has seen it take an increasingly belligerent stance with its neighbours, especially Taiwan.

Fears that Xi Jinping may order an invasion of the island has prompted America - a close ally of Taiwan's government - to forge new alliances in the region including with India to counter-balance Beijing's growing strength.

Japan and Australia have also deepened their military ties with Washington, fearing that they may be dragged into any conflict in the region. 

Defense News: US Air Force squadron becomes first operational unit to drop StormBreaker bomb

 

US Air Force squadron becomes first operational unit to drop StormBreaker bomb



https://www.defensenews.com/air/2021/12/28/us-air-force-squadron-becomes-first-operational-unit-to-drop-stormbreaker-bomb/



The F-15E Strike Eagle is the first aircraft to carry Raytheon's StormBreaker smart weapon. (Raytheon Technologies)


WASHINGTON — A squadron from Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho has became the first operational unit to use the GBU-53/B StormBreaker smart bomb — a major step forward for the long-delayed small diameter bomb.


In the test last month, four F-15E Strike Eagles from the 391st Fighter Squadron, which is part of the 366th Fighter Wing, targeted and hit four moving vehicles on the ground with four Raytheon Technologies-made StormBreakers at the Utah Test and Training Range on Nov. 2, the Air Force said in a Dec. 13 release.


Alison Howlett, who serves as StormBreaker program director at Raytheon Missiles and Defense, said in the release that the tests were needed to pave the way for the weapon to be used in combat.


“By stress-testing the weapon in an operational environment, we are even more confident in the weapon’s ability to strike targets in difficult conditions,” Howlett said.

So far, the StormBreaker is only approved for integration on the F-15E, the Air Force said. But results from this test will eventually lead to its use on the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet and fifth-generation fighters like the F-35, the release said.

It’s a major step forward for a weapon that at one point was delayed for roughly a year by production problems. A key component had a technical problem, which in July 2019 caused a pause in production of the weapon. Raytheon redesigned the component and retrofit nearly 600 bombs that were already delivered. The Air Force resumed fielding the weapon in September 2020.


The 204-pound StormBreaker is a relatively small weapon measuring 69 inches long and about 7 inches in diameter, allowing the Strike Eagle to carry up to 28 of them. This would come in handy when an F-15E needs to strike multiple ground targets with a high level of accuracy, the Air Force said.


The weapon has a 105-pound warhead. It can strike stationary targets up to 69 miles away and moving targets up to 45 miles away using a combination of millimeter wave active radar homing, semi-active laser guidance, infrared homing, GPS-coupled inertial guidance and data link technology.


The Air Force said the bomb’s connectivity allows redirection to a new target midair after launch.


But these additional capabilities require more coordination and planning. Intelligence airmen are needed to load encrypted communication information into the bomb’s computer so it and the aircraft can communicate with one another, the release said.


This is a more extensive process than needed for typical F-15E bombs, 1st Lt. Estefania Ortiz-Santiago, the 391st’s fighter squadron officer in charge of intelligence, said in the release. But she expects squadrons will eventually streamline the process for preparing the StormBreaker until it takes about as long as other Strike Eagle bombs.


Raytheon also announced Nov. 30 that a Marine Corps F-35B had dropped the StormBreaker for the first time in a weapons test. Raytheon said developmental and operational testing on the F-35B will continue in order to ensure safe and capable use, and that the Navy will declare initial operational capability on the Super Hornet after its operational testing concludes.



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MIT Scientists Design a 'Flying Saucer' That Could Float Across The Moon

DAVID NIELD, 29 DECEMBER 2021

Artist's illustration of the levitating rover.
 (MIT)

Researchers have imagined a lightweight, flying saucer-style rover that can float across the surface of the Moon and other airless planetary surfaces such as asteroids.

The 'flying saucer' would be powered by the electric field that builds up due to direct exposure to the Sun and its surrounding plasma. In the absence of an atmosphere, this solar exposure creates a charge that's able to levitate dust more than a meter (more than three feet) above the lunar surface, and it could be possible to harness this energy.

The rover would be made of a material called Mylar, which naturally holds the same charge when hit by the Sun's rays. Tiny ion beams would be used to both charge up the vehicle and boost the natural surface charge, counteracting gravity.

How the rover might look. (MIT)

"With a levitating rover, you don't have to worry about wheels or moving parts," says aerospace engineer Paulo Lozano, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

"An asteroid's terrain could be totally uneven, and as long as you had a controlled mechanism to keep your rover floating, then you could go over very rough, unexplored terrain, without having to dodge the asteroid physically."

The ion thrusters, called ionic-liquid ion sources, are small nozzles that have previously been used to propel satellites through space. The actual fuel is molten salt, which when hit with an electric charge, shoots out of the nozzles as a beam.

Here, the charge is transferred to the surface below to supplement its own natural charge. Mathematical models confirmed the idea could work, and would provide enough of a thrust to get the gliding rover off the ground.

In a lab experiment using ionic-liquid ion sources to create an electrostatic force, the team was able to get a small, palm-sized vehicle weighing about 60 grams (2.1 ounces) to levitate. The amount of force required would depend on the size of the planetary body.



The test setup. (MIT)

"This kind of ionic design uses very little power to generate a lot of voltage," says Lozano. "The power needed is so small, you could do this almost for free."

When you're packing for a trip to the Moon (or anywhere else in space), it's important to pack as light as possible – heavier loads need more fuel and cost more money to launch. In this case, the proposed probe would be sourcing a lot of its power naturally.

The current analysis only proves that levitation is possible. In order to get the rover up to a respectable height, further modeling is going to be required, the researchers say – but the underlying calculations check out.

Large asteroids like Psyche could also be explored by this kind of rover, giving experts a way of examining these rocky bodies up close with a vehicle that isn't fazed by uneven surfaces and which can draw some of its power from natural electric fields.

"We think of using this like the Hayabusa missions that were launched by the Japanese space agency," says Oliver Jia-Richards, a NASA Space Technology Research Fellow from MIT.

"That spacecraft operated around a small asteroid and deployed small rovers to its surface. Similarly, we think a future mission could send out small hovering rovers to explore the surface of the Moon and other asteroids."


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Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Russia stages 'successful' third launch of new rocket

DECEMBER 28, 2021

Russia has conducted a third launch of its new heavy-class Angara rocket, the first developed after the fall of the Soviet Union 30 years ago this month.

Space agency Roscosmos announced late Monday that the next-generation Angara-A5 rocket had been launched with a mock payload from Plesetsk in northern Russia.

It was the third launch of the new rocket after its maiden voyage in 2014.

"Roscosmos congratulates the military-space forces and the entire Russian space industry," the agency said in a statement, calling the launch "successful".

Agency head Dmitry Rogozin welcomed the news on Telegram, writing: "Come on, baby!"

The defence ministry added: "All prelaunch operations and the launch of the Angara-A5 rocket took place properly."

The last launch of the heavy-class Angara rocket took place in December 2020.

Angara rockets—named after a Siberian river flowing out of Lake Baikal—are the first new family of launchers to be built after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

They are designed to replace the Proton rockets that date back to the 1960s and have suffered a series of failures in recent years.

President Vladimir Putin hopes the new launchers will revive Russia's space industry and reduce reliance on other former Soviet countries.

Officials say the heavy-class Angara rocket is more environmentally friendly than its predecessors because it is fuelled by oxygen and kerosene rather than hugely toxic heptyl.


The Russian space programme sent the first man into space in 1961 and launched the first satellite four years earlier.

But since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, it has been plagued by corruption scandals and a series of other setbacks, losing expensive spacecraft and satellites in recent years.


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Sunday, December 26, 2021

Defense News: Javelin missile weapon systems to Lithuanian army

 

Javelin missile weapon systems to Lithuanian army


The Lithuanian Army will receive 230 Javelin FGM-148F anti-tank Missiles and 20 Javelin Command Launch Units for an estimated cost of $125 million


by Eyal Boguslavsky, Israel Defense,  26/12/2021


A U.S. Army soldier fires a Javelin antitank missile during Exercise Saber Guardian near Várpalota, Hungary, June 5, 2019. Photo By: Army Sgt. LaShic Patterson

The U.S. State Department approved the sale of 230 Javelin FGM-148F anti-tank Missiles and 20 Javelin Command Launch Units (CLUs) to the Lithuanaian Army for an estimated cost of $125 million.

The original Foreign Military Sale (FMS), valued at $28.23 million, included one
hundred eleven (111) Javelin FGM-148F missiles and ten (10) Javelin CLUs. Therefore, this notification is for a total of three hundred forty-one (341) Javelin FGM-148F missiles and thirty (30) Javelin CLUs.


Lithuania Triples Purchase Of US Javelin Anti-Tank Missiles




The Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA( announced that the proposed sale will help Lithuania build its long-term defense capacity to defend its sovereignty and


territorial integrity in order to meet its national defense requirements. It is vital to the U.S. national interest to assist Lithuania in developing and maintaining a strong and ready self-defense capability. Lithuania will have no difficulty absorbing these weapons into its armed forces.



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