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  • France wonders: Can we always count on American support?

    17 septembre 2018 | International, Aérospatial, Naval, Terrestre, C4ISR

    France wonders: Can we always count on American support?

    By: Pierre Tran PARIS — The U.S. is a close and valued ally to France, but the European country seeks continentwide strategic autonomy in defense and security, with a stronger and more cooperative industrial base, said French Armed Forces Minister Florence Parly. “The United States is our ally and our friend, and it will remain so,” she said Sept. 11 at the Summer defense university, a gathering of parliamentarians, officers and foreign guests. “Our cooperation in defense and security is intense and highly valued.” Parly had planned to pass on that message when she saw U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis in Washington on Thursday, but that trip to the U.S. — which included a presentation at the Atlantic Council — was canceled due to Hurricane Florence hitting the East Coast. “Can we always count, in every place and in every circumstance, on American support?" she said. “Listen to the statements of the U.S. president, read his tweets: The message sent is clear and without ambiguity,” she added. “We have to count on ourselves ... build a European strategic autonomy.” But Robbin Laird, an analyst with U.S.- and France-based consultancy ICSA, said the U.S. is very present in Europe. “Despite the president's comments on NATO and Article 5, his administration has committed significant resources in Europe,” he said, referring to the alliance's charter that calls for a united response should a member nation come under attack. Mattis was recently “very visible in Finland,” attending a trilateral meeting with Finnish and Swedish senior officials, Laird said, noting the upcoming NATO Trident Juncture exercise in Norway in October and November. “It is clear Trump would welcome a more European capability; a real defense capability is what he is looking for, not just words,” he said. On the industrial front, Parly said France and Germany have signed up for projects for a Future Combat Air System — centered on a new fighter jet— and a new tank. This is a “historic step for Europe, for the future of our equipment and the strength of our industry,” she said. These were long-term commitments, open to other nations, she added. Full article: https://www.defensenews.com/global/europe/2018/09/14/france-wonders-can-we-always-count-on-american-support/

  • Compte-rendu mensuel AP COIC

    14 septembre 2018 | Local, Aérospatial, Naval, Terrestre

    Compte-rendu mensuel AP COIC

    {Envoyé au nom du Lieutenant-colonel Stéphanie Godin, officier principal des affaires publiques, COIC} Nous avons publié le Compte-rendu mensuel AP COIC - septembre 2018. Il est conçu pour informer toutes les personnes qui jouent un rôle dans l'explication des engagements des Forces armées canadiennes au Canada, sur le continent et ailleurs dans le monde. Ce produit est partagé avec nos collègues ailleurs au MDN/dans les FAC et avec nos partenaires pangouvernementaux. Il est mis à jour et diffusé sur une base mensuelle, sauf indication contraire. Nouveau ce mois-ci: Le 2 août 2018, une petite équipe de soldats du 4e Régiment d'appui du génie de l'Armée canadienne a été déployée en Irak dans le cadre de l'opération IMPACT. Environ 300 membres des FAC ont participé à un exercice de défense et de sécurité du domaine maritime dans le cadre de l'opération NANOOK du 8 août au 4 septembre 2018. Le 13 août 2018, le gouvernement du Canada a accepté une demande d'aide de la part de la province de la Colombie-Britannique pour l'aider à lutter contre des feux de végétation. Le 7 septembre 2018, la province de la C.-B. a annoncé que la situation des feux de forêt s'était améliorée et que le soutien des FAC avait diminué. La majorité des ressources et membres des FAC ont commencé leur voyage de retour à leur unité d'appartenance respective. Il y a encore près de 100 membres qui contribuent à l'opération LENTUS. Le 15 août 2018, l'opération PRESENCE – Mali a atteint la capacité opérationnelle totale, ce qui signifie que le personnel et l'équipement sont prêts à mener des t'ches secondaires si les Nations Unies le demandent, telles que les suivantes : transport de troupes, d'équipement et d'approvisionnements, et soutien logistique. Environ 135 militaires et 5 CF 18 Hornet ont déployé à Constanta, en Roumanie dans le cadre de l'opération REASSURANCE pour prendre part aux activités renforcées de police aérienne de l'OTAN de septembre à décembre 2018. Un avion CC 177 Globemaster a effectué un vol de transport entre la région du Sahel en Afrique et la France dans le cadre de l'opération FREQUENCE. Plus de 29 000 kilogrammes de cargaison ont été livrés en France. Twitter: http://twitter.com/CFOperations Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CAFOperations

  • Here’s why Canada’s defence industry is such an innovation powerhouse

    14 septembre 2018 | Local, Aérospatial, Naval, Terrestre, C4ISR

    Here’s why Canada’s defence industry is such an innovation powerhouse

    Christyn (Chris) Cianfarani In late 2011, the Department of National Defence decided that the rafts it was using to carry out search and rescue operations in open water were due for an update. Part of DND's sea rescue kit, the new rafts needed to be compact and durable, but they also had to inflate reliably at temperatures as low as -50 C in the frozen expanses of Canada's North. If they didn't, lives could hang in the balance. Enter Benoit Corbeil and his team at Tulmar Safety Systems, who found a way to create a light, durable raft that could be safely airdropped, and would inflate manually on the ice or automatically in water. With a fully enclosed canopy, those rescued can now be immediately sheltered from the cold wind and freezing ocean spray. The responsibility to save lives is what drives people like Benoit and thousands of other Canadians working in the defence and security industries to continue creating innovative solutions to complex problems. In my role as the head of the Canadian Association of Defence and Security Industries (CADSI), I'm often struck by the sheer level of creativity and talent in our sector. But it shouldn't come as a surprise because we've been gathering evidence on this for a few years now. Flexible, collaborative and fruitful In May, CADSI – in partnership with Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED) and Statistics Canada – released the latest State of Canada's Defence Industry report. We found that defence and security companies were behind $400 million worth of research and development (R&D) in 2016, resulting in an R&D intensity close to 4.5 times higher than the Canadian manufacturing average. Our members – now more than 900 of them across Canada – aren't doing this work in a vacuum, of course. They are collaborating with partners in academia, government and supply chains to push boundaries and develop brand new technologies. DND's new Innovation for Defence Excellence and Security (IDEaS) Program will help encourage even more of this type of cooperation, allocating $1.6 -billion over two decades to innovative solutions that address Canada's defence and security challenges. Sixteen initial challenges have been identified, and start-ups, SMEs, corporations and academics have all been invited to apply. The first contracts were awarded in August, with more coming in fall 2018. But our industry's work is already having tangible, real-world impacts for average Canadians. In July, for instance, global satellite operator Telesat – a company headquartered right in Ottawa – launched the Telstar 19 VANTAGE. This powerful satellite will connect communities across Nunavut with faster and more reliable broadband, opening the territory to the world. We featured Telesat vice-president Michele Beck's contributions to this project in our My North, My Home campaign. Full article: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/heres-why-canadas-defence-industry-innovation-cianfarani/

  • Lockheed Martin tweet on Canadian Surface Combatant creates a stir

    14 septembre 2018 | Local, Naval

    Lockheed Martin tweet on Canadian Surface Combatant creates a stir

    DAVID PUGLIESE, OTTAWA CITIZEN The Lockheed Martin-BAE team pursuing the Canadian Surface Combatant created a stir on social media among defence observers when it suggested earlier this week that its bid had been qualified for the program. Three consortiums had submitted bids for the CSC program, with a winner expected to be announced by the end of the year. Industry is closely watching which firms might be qualified for the $60 billion project. So on Sept. 10 a tweet by the Lockheed Martin/BAE team raised more than a few eyebrows. “BAE System's Type 26 meets all requirements in the CSC proposal, including speed.” So was the team announcing their bid had been qualified? What was particularly intriguing is that some industry representatives have been for several months continuing to claim that the Type 26 can't meet speed requirements for the Royal Canadian Navy. It appeared that the Type 26 folks were confirming they had received the thumbs up from the CSC evaluating team. Or had they? A spokesman for Public Services and Procurement Canada gave Defence Watch a rundown on where the program was at. The CSC evaluation is still ongoing and none of the three bidders have received any details yet on whether their proposals have been deemed “compliant.” It turned out that the tweet was simply the view by the Lockheed Martin/BAE team that their bid would be deemed compliant. Here is what Lockheed Martin responded with when asked by Defence Watch about the tweet: “Based on our technical and professional expertise and analysis of the requirements established for CSC, we are confident that our entire solution meets or exceeds the technical requirements established in the RFP and it is based on that degree of certainty that we have communicated our message.” https://ottawacitizen.com/news/national/defence-watch/lockheed-martin-tweet-on-canadian-surface-combatant-creates-a-stir

  • New Swedish government advocates for greater defense spending

    13 septembre 2018 | International, Aérospatial, Naval, Terrestre, C4ISR

    New Swedish government advocates for greater defense spending

    By: Gerard O'Dwyer STOCKHOLM — The Swedish military can expect to see a sizable increase in its annual budget regardless of the composition of the new government that will be formed in the wake of parliamentary elections. All of the mainstream parties, including the ruling Social Democrats (SDP), the Moderates, the Center, Liberals and the Sweden Democrats' right-wing nationalist party, campaigned on delivering a stronger national defense and channeling a much higher level of spending to the Swedish Armed Forces over the next 10 years. "Sweden needs a more resilient national defense capability that is better funded and resourced," said Stefan Löfven, the SDP's leader and Sweden's prime minister. The SDP is hoping to assemble a new government in partnership with the Leftist and Green parties. These three parties secured a 40.8 percent share of the popular vote in the recently concluded September 2018 election. Löfven's main challenge is the center-right Alliance group, which includes the Moderates, the Center, Liberals and Christian Democrats. Together, the four Alliance parties won 40.3 percent of the popular vote. The Alliance is looking to form a new government that excludes both the SDP and the Sweden Democrats. The Sweden Democrats raised its share of the popular vote to 17.6 percent. All mainstream parties have ruled out forming a coalition that includes the Sweden Democrats. Defense will be very much on the minds of Sweden's new government, against a backdrop of an unpredictable Russia and a domestic military that is unable to either fund major new procurement programs or work within the tight parameters of the current budgeting framework. By: Aaron Mehta “Sweden's national defense has been neglected for decades. What has happened is shameful. The budget allocated to the armed forces must reflect needs, operational realities and the requirement to replace outdated equipment. The goal should be to raise spending on defense to 2 percent of GDP, the recommended NATO level, inside 10 years,” said Ulf Kristersson, leader of the Moderates and someone being widely tipped to become Sweden's next prime minister. The Alliance supports a more ambitious spending plan for the military that would increase the armed forces' budget by $2.3 billion in the 2019-2021 budgetary period. “The [Swedish Armed Forces] needs to be able to afford to run essential equipment-replacement programs. We need more Army brigades, more fighter aircraft, and among other things an increased cyber defense capacity,” Kristersson said. Restoring the military's budget and finances to levels that actually reflect the force's capability requirements will take time. The organization's budget has been in decline since the Cold War era of 1963, when defense spending amounted to 3.68 percent of Sweden's gross domestic product. Spending as a ratio of GDP had dropped to 1.1 percent by 2015. It currently stands at about 1.03 percent, a historic low. A force development plan endorsed by the armed forces favors an increase in annual spending on defense to between $7.36 billion and $9 billion by 2025. In the longer term, and by the year 2035, the military would like to see defense spending rise to more than $12.1 billion. At the same time, the Swedish Armed Forces would be strengthened from the current 50,000 personnel of all ranks to 120,000 by the year 2035. This proposed new look, improved capability and reinforced organization would comprise at least four brigade-level units, a light infantry special forces regiment, a fleet of 24 surface combat naval vessels and six submarines, eight fighter squadrons, and 120 Gripen combat aircraft. Stefan Löfven's SDP-led government adopted new measures in 2017 to increase annual spending on the military from about $4.7 billion to $6.6 billion by 2019. Under the spending plan supported by the Alliance, defense expenditure would grow year on year after 2019, reaching $8 billion by 2024. Full article: https://www.defensenews.com/global/europe/2018/09/12/new-swedish-government-advocates-for-greater-defense-spending

  • French Naval Group and Germany’s ThyssenKrupp square off in Egyptian warship deal

    13 septembre 2018 | International, Naval

    French Naval Group and Germany’s ThyssenKrupp square off in Egyptian warship deal

    By: Pierre Tran PARIS – Naval Group finds itself in direct competition with German rival ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems in Egypt's acquisition of two more corvettes, Hervé Guillou, CEO of the French shipbuilder told Defense News. The contest comes after Egypt in 2014 placed an order for four Naval Group Gowind corvettes worth some €1 billion, with options for two more units. Winning that two-year option has since become anything but certain for the French company. “TKMS is not sitting on its hands,” Guillou said on Tuesday on the sidelines of the Summer Defense University event at the military staff college here. There already is a “permanent presence of the Germans” in Egypt, which operates a fleet of German submarines, Guillou explained. Egypt attracts strong international interest, with the Chinese, Koreans, Dutch shipbuilder Damen and French electronics company Thales very active, he added. The TKMS offer consists of two Meko 200 corvettes, worth €1 billion (US $1.2 billion) excluding weapons, business publication La Tribune reported Sept. 3. That is double the value of the two Gowind 2500 corvettes pitched by Naval Group, the report said. A spokesman for Naval Group declined to comment on the prices. If TKMS were to snatch the business in the end, the French interministerial committee overseeing arms export likely would approve a sale of MBDA-made Aster 15 missiles for the German ships, a French government official said. The company, a joint venture by Airbus, BAE Systems and Leonardo, is pursuing a “platform neutral” sales pitch, placing an emphasis on boosting foreign sales, according to an industry source. Guillou said he attended Egypt's launch on Sept. 6 of the first locally built Gowind, christened Port Said. “It all went well,” he said. The Egyptian Navy sails a FREMM multimission frigate and two Mistral-class helicopter carriers. The four Gowind corvettes will complement that fleet. The day before the Egyptian launch, Guillou was in Poland pitching three Scorpene diesel-electric submarines to the Polish authorities. “There is political support at the highest level,” he said, referring to the French government backing. That offer competes with TKMS offering its 212CD and Saab the A26 boat. Full article: https://www.defensenews.com/naval/2018/09/12/french-naval-group-and-germanys-thyssenkrupp-square-off-in-egyptian-warship-deal

  • French joint chief calls for coordinated European force

    12 septembre 2018 | International, Aérospatial, Naval, Terrestre, C4ISR

    French joint chief calls for coordinated European force

    By: Pierre Tran SATORY ARMY BASE, France — Nations in Europe need to forge a more coordinated forceacross the continent, with each ready to step up to play a leadership role during conflict, said the French joint chief of staff. “The future of the defense of nations on the continent cannot be considered outside the European framework,” Army Gen. François Lecointre told the Summer Defense University, a two-day gathering of senior officers, parliamentarians and industry chiefs. “In the context of doubt over multilateralism, greater fragility of alliances and America's refocus of attention to the Indo-Pacific region, the European continent must confront — increasingly on its own — all kinds of threats: might, terrorism, hybrid, cyber and migration,” he said. That use of the term “might” referred to unspecified nations perceived to pose a threat to Western allies. That calls for a common vision in strategy and capability, with a country ready to take the role of a “leader nation,” he said. The aim is to build a “European strategic autonomy,” he added. The French armed forces minister, Florence Parly, came to the army base, just outside Versailles, west of the capital, and watched a dynamic display staged by the Army. The service fielded a Jaguar combat and reconnaissance vehicle, a VBCI infantry fighting vehicle carrying a squad of troops, a robotic vehicle carrying a wounded soldier, and a Leclerc main battle tank carried by a tank transport. France invites foreign officers and political leaders to the high-level annual gathering, organized by CEIS, a think tank and consultancy. https://www.defensenews.com/global/europe/2018/09/11/french-joint-chief-calls-for-coordinated-european-force

  • THALES CANADA OUVRE UN NOUVEAU BUREAU DANS LES MARITIMES POUR APPUYER DES PROGRAMMES NAVALS CLÉS

    12 septembre 2018 | Local, Naval

    THALES CANADA OUVRE UN NOUVEAU BUREAU DANS LES MARITIMES POUR APPUYER DES PROGRAMMES NAVALS CLÉS

    Le 10 septembre, Thales Canada a célébré l'ouverture officielle de sa huitième succursale canadienne à Halifax, en Nouvelle-Écosse. Le bureau accueillera jusqu'à 20 nouveaux employés de Thales qui se consacreront à la Marine royale canadienne, à la Garde côtière canadienne et à nos partenaires et fournisseurs maritimes. Aujourd'hui, le bureau de Halifax va appuyer le programme AJISS de la Marine royale canadienne, le contrat de soutien en service, complet et à long terme, pour les navires de patrouille extracôtiers et de l'Arctique (NPEA) et les navires de soutien interarmées (NSI) attribué en 2017. Thales, à titre d'entrepreneur principal du programme AJISS, supervisera le radoub, la réparation et l'entretien de ces navires pendant leur durée de service, et collaborera avec la Marine royale canadienne et les installations de maintenance de la flotte pour assurer la disponibilité opérationnelle des navires à l'endroit et au moment désirés, d'un bout à l'autre du pays. « Aujourd'hui notre équipe se concentre sur la disponibilité opérationnelle – elle est prête à soutenir le premier navire dans le cadre du programme AJISS. L'ouverture de notre nouvel établissement dans les Maritimes représente une étape importante dans notre programme de soutien en service qui permettra de créer des emplois dans l'industrie maritime partout au Canada », a déclaré Mark Halinaty, président-directeur général de Thales Canada. « À mesure que nous irons de l'avant, nous continuerons de travailler en étroite collaboration avec la Marine royale canadienne, nos clients et nos partenaires, en les aidant à maîtriser chaque moment décisif. » Contact Cara Salci, Thales Canada Media Relations +1-613 894 4592 cara.salci@ca.thalesgroup.com https://www.thalesgroup.com/fr/canada/press-release/thales-canada-ouvre-nouveau-bureau-maritimes-appuyer-des-programmes-navals

  • Where do the US Navy’s top priorities stand in the CNO’s eyes?

    11 septembre 2018 | International, Naval

    Where do the US Navy’s top priorities stand in the CNO’s eyes?

    Where do the US Navy's top priorities stand in the CNO's eyes? https://www.defensenews.com/newsletters/tv-next-episode/2018/09/10/where-do-the-us-navys-top-priorities-stand-in-the-cnos-eyes

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