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Germany
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New Puma
Rheinmetall Armoured Infantry Fighting Vehicle (AIFV) for the German
Army.
A
prototype of the new AIFV Puma for the German Army was today
presented to the contracting authority. PSM GmbH, Kassel,
responsible as prime contractor, has thus met an important
contractual milestone with the presentation of the so-called
system demonstrator on 20 December 2005. The Army is to
receive a total of 410 vehicles representing a total value
of approximately 3 billion euros. See more information,
read
this document.
20 December 2005 |
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North
Korea Back
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North Korean
troop exercise an anti-aircraft weapon in Pyongannam-do, north of Pyongyang
In
this photo released by the pro-North Korea agency Korea
Central News Agency in Tokyo Monday, Dec. 19, 2005, women
soldiers of a North Korean troop exercise an anti-aircraft
weapon ZU-23-4 in Pyongannam-do, north of Pyongyang, North
Korea, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2005.
19 December 2005 |
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Palestine
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Israeli warplane
fired missiles into key bridges in nothern Gaza.
Palestinian
security men inspect a damaged armoured personal carrier
BRDM-2 after an Israeli warplane fired missiles into key
bridges in northern Gaza December 18, 2005. Israeli aircraft
struck the Gaza Strip repeatedly early on Sunday and the
army said it had targeted sites used by militants firing
rockets into Israel and roads for transporting the makeshift
missiles.
18 December 2005 |
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Sri
Lanka Back
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Tamil Tiger
rebels have rejected a Sri Lankan offer to hold peace talks
Sri
Lankan soldiers stand on an armoured car Saladin as they
take part in a ceremony in Colombo. Tamil Tiger rebels have
rejected a Sri Lankan offer to hold peace talks at an Asian
venue and insisted that any negotiations must be in the
capital of the peacebroker Norway.
17 December 2005 |
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India
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Celebration
of victoria day " Vijay Diva ", to mark the victory of the
Indian Army during the war with pakistan in 1971.
Indian
army soldiers stand beside their displayed tanks T-55 during
'Vijay Divas', or victory day celebrations, at India Gate
in New Delhi December 16, 2005. Vijay Divas is celebrated
to mark the victory of the Indian army in the 1971 war with
Pakistan and to remember those who died, an Indian army
statement said.
16 December 2005 |
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Philippine
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Members of
the Philippine National Police Special Action Force keep guard in the
street of Manila.
Members
of the Philippine National Police Special Action Force keep
guard beside an Armored Personnel Carrier
V-150 inside Manila city police headquarters on Monday,
Dec. 12, 2005. Rumors of a coup attempt by disgruntled soldiers
on the weekend prompted authorities to beef up security
at key military and police installations, police officials
said.
12 December 2005 |
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Sri
Lanka Back
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Seven Sri
Lankan soldiers have been killed in a landmine attack in the northern
town of Jaffna
Tamil
town of Jaffna. Police-men from Sri Lanka's Special Task
Force checks a vechile in Colombo. Seven Sri Lankan soldiers
have been killed in a landmine attack in the northern town
of Jaffna, the second major attack blamed on Tamil Tiger
rebels in three days, as the new army chief vowed to take
on terrorism
05 December 2005 |
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Israel
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Elbit Systems
Ltd. (NASDAQ: ESLT) announced a contract for a helicopter upgrade program
for Bulgarian Mi-24 and Mi-17.
Elbit
Systems Ltd. (NASDAQ: ESLT) announced the December 2, 2005,
it signed a €57.3 million (approximately $70 million)
contract for a helicopter upgrade program with the Bulgarian
Ministry of Defense. The program includes upgrading 12 MI-24
combat helicopters and 6 MI-17 transport helicopters, to
comply with NATO standards. The program is expected to be
performed over a three-year period. It will be executed
with the participation of Bulgarian aerospace and defense
industries.
02 December 2005 |
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Canada
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Two missing
armoured personnel carriers M113 TOW.
A
police officer walks beside a flatbed truck showing one
of two missing armoured personnel carriers on a highway
near Toronto December 2, 2005. Police arrested the driver,
who was working for a company that had been hired to take
the surplus vehicles from a military base to Montreal. The
driver was stopped heading in the wrong direction.
02 December 2005 |
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United
Kingdom Back
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A total of
449 Warriors are to be upgraded with two-person turret armed with the
40 mm Case Telescoped Weapon System.
Under
current plans it is expected that a total of 449 Warriors
are to be upgraded under the WLIP with another 125/150 being
converted into Armoured Battlegroup Support Vehicles (ABSVs).
The DPA has already awarded CTA International (a joint venture
between the now BAE Systems Land System of the UK and Giat
Industries of France) a contract to supply a complete two-person
turret armed with the 40 mm Case Telescoped Weapon System
(CTWS) under the Manned Turret Integration Programme (MTIP).
This will culminate in a live crew clearance and user evaluation
on a Warrior chassis in late 2006.
02 December 2005 |
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Turkey
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Turkish military
exercise 'Toros' near the divided Cypriot capital of Nicosia.
U.S.-made
M48 tanks take part in a Turkish military exercise 'Toros'
near the divided Cypriot capital of Nicosia, on Friday,
Nov. 25, 2005. The Turkish military launched a three-day
exercise Wednesday in the northern part of this divided
Mediterranean island in clear retaliation to last month's
drills by Greek Cypriots.
02 December 2005 |
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Turkey
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Two new vehicles,
the Armoured Recovery Vehicle (ARV) and the Armoured Engineer Vehicle
(AEV) - based on surplus M48T5 chassis
Recently,
two new vehicles, the Armoured Recovery Vehicle (ARV) and
the Armoured Engineer Vehicle (AEV) - based on surplus M48T5
chassis, have been developed and placed in production at
the Kayseri facilities of the TLFC. This two vehicles was
show during the laste Defence Exhibition IDEF 2005 to Ankara,
Turkey. The first, is the M48 ARV who has a combat weight
of 51 tonnes and is fitted with a hydraulically operated
winch with a maximum rated capacity of 70 tonnes and an
auxiliary winch with a capacity of two tonnes. Both winches
are located to the front of the vehicle. The second, the
M48 AEV is very similar to the ARV and has the same two
winches and a front-mounted stabiliser/dozer blade. The
boom is still mounted on the right side of the hull at the
front but has an extendable jib that can be rapidly fitted
with various attachments to meet specific engineer requirements.
The boom can be traversed through 195º but when being
used as a crane can lift only seven tonnes.
02 December 2005 |
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Russia
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New Russian
vehicle, MT-LBM receives gun/missile armament.
A
new self-propelled short-range hybrid gun/missile system
has been developed by the OAO Muromteplovoz military factory
joint-stock company from the Russian city of Murom, writes
Miroslav Gyurosi. The 6M1B5 air-defence vehicle is based
on an improved version of the MT-LBM light tracked chassis
and is armed with a 6MB5 combined gun/missile system intended
to provide all-aspect defence against low-flying air targets.
This is mounted on a turret that is electromechanically
stabilised in two planes.
01 December 2005 |
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Germany
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KZO drone
system delivered to Bundeswehr – Unmanned aerial reconnaissance
keeps soldiers out of harm’s way
By
the end of 2007, the German Army will have six KZO systems
in its inventory, comprising sixty drones and twelve ground
systems. As the Bundeswehr’s new “eye in the
sky”, the drone provides the ground station with precise,
comprehensive information in real time. Apart from its obvious
role as a source of battlefield intelligence, the KZO can
also be deployed to monitor ceasefires or sanctions. This
drone system is a product of Rheinmetall Defence Electronics
– a subsidiary of the Düsseldorf-based Rheinmetall
Group – as a global leader in the domain of drone
technology. The KZO drone operates at altitudes of 300 to
3,500 metres. The KZO drone operates at altitudes of 300
to 3,500 metres. It is deployable in virtually all weathers.
Even under conditions of heavy electromagnetic interference,
it can transmit target information back to base at ranges
of over 100 kilometres. The KZO can detect stationary and
moving targets alike, including their speed and direction
of travel; it can remain aloft for over 3.5 hours.
01 December 2005 |
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