Sujet: Armée Japonaise/Japan Self-Defense Forces Mer 25 Mar 2009 - 23:30
Rappel du premier message :
Seguleh I a écrit:
Salut La constitution japonaise interdit au japon d'avoir des porte-avions. Lorsque leur porte helico amontré un "signe" qu'il pouvait etre utilisé comme porte-aeronefs, cela a provoqué un tolle au parlement. A titre d'exemple, l'exercice de bombardement aerien n'est pas autorisé au japon, d'ou des F-2 qui se sont entrainait en douce a l'etranger... Cf DSI
il me semble que j'ai déjà posté une vidéo montrant un F-2 faire une démonstration de bombardement en public au japon
Dernière édition par Raptor le Lun 7 Déc 2009 - 15:23, édité 1 fois
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Message
oussama Adjudant-chef
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Sujet: Re: Armée Japonaise/Japan Self-Defense Forces Dim 12 Mai 2013 - 1:57
la suite
un peu et ca sera la suite
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Gémini Colonel-Major
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Sujet: Re: Armée Japonaise/Japan Self-Defense Forces Dim 12 Mai 2013 - 9:33
Excelent ,merci pour le partage.
oussama Adjudant-chef
messages : 464 Inscrit le : 31/03/2008 Localisation : JAPON Nationalité : Médailles de mérite :
les comondes de la OH controlent cette petite helicopter, de maniere comme si t es entrain de piloter le vrai.
et voila inshallah il y aura une surprise au mois d aout, si j ai de la chance far maroc sera presente au manpower of the self defense, mais a condition qu eux acceptent
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Fremo Administrateur
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Sujet: Re: Armée Japonaise/Japan Self-Defense Forces Jeu 16 Mai 2013 - 12:02
15-05-13 Pearl Harbor
JDS Hyuga ( DDH-181 )
JDS Atago ( DDG-177 )
JDS Shimokita ( LST-4002 )
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Gémini Colonel-Major
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Sujet: Re: Armée Japonaise/Japan Self-Defense Forces Jeu 16 Mai 2013 - 12:35
Ces Japonais construisent vraiment de magnifique Batiment. :balkom:
Fahed64 Administrateur
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Sujet: Re: Armée Japonaise/Japan Self-Defense Forces Jeu 16 Mai 2013 - 12:42
Le Hyuga est juste Sublima, merci fremo
_________________ Sois généreux avec nous, Ô toi Dieu et donne nous la Victoire
MAATAWI Modérateur
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Sujet: Re: Armée Japonaise/Japan Self-Defense Forces Jeu 16 Mai 2013 - 13:48
Citation :
Insitu Pacific Delivers ScanEagle UAS for the Japanese Ground Self Defense Force
BRISBANE, Australia, May 14, 2013 - Insitu Pacific, the Australia-based subsidiary of Insitu Inc., announced today that it has delivered a ScanEagle Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) to its partner Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) of Japan. This delivery means that the ScanEagle UAS is now ready for operational use by the Japanese Ground Self Defence Forces (JGSDF).
The system delivery follows a contract signing last year with MHI to deliver ScanEagle to JGSDF.
JGSDF identified the need for a UAS to assess damage and provide vital real-time information for first responders to natural and man-made disasters in the wake of the country's 2011 earthquake and tsunami crisis. This requirement has since become a top priority for the Japanese government, and Insitu Pacific has worked closely with Sojitz Corporation and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, its partners in Japan, to deliver the ScanEagle UAS in support of this requirement.
“The benefits ScanEagle brings to Japan are substantial and this well-proven UAS could help save many lives in the future by getting information into the right hands quickly,” said Insitu Pacific Director of Business Development, Dale McDowall. “The ScanEagle will enhance Japan's immediate response capability and we are very pleased to have developed such a great partnership with Sojitz Corporation and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries of Japan.”
Over the next twelve months, JGSDF will be operationally testing and evaluating the ScanEagle system to prepare for entry into service.
Insitu Pacific, located in Queensland, Australia, has provided UAS services to defence, civil and commercial interests in the Asia-Pacific region since June 2009. Insitu Pacific is a subsidiary of U.S.-based Insitu Inc.
Insitu Inc., located in Bingen, Wash., is a wholly owned subsidiary of The Boeing Company. Insitu designs, develops and manufactures UAS and provides associated services for commercial and military applications. With a small footprint and expeditionary focus for both land and sea, the company's family of UAS solutions serves the needs of the global defence community. To date, these systems have accumulated more than 711,000 operational hours and 76,000 sorties. For more information, visit www.insitupacific.com.[/b]
www.insitu.com
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jf16 General de Division
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Sujet: Re: Armée Japonaise/Japan Self-Defense Forces Mer 19 Juin 2013 - 12:10
Citation :
Northrop Grumman Delivers First AQS-24A Airborne Mine-hunting Vehicle to Japan
2013-06-18T16:00:00-0700
ANNAPOLIS, Md. – June 18, 2013 – Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC) has delivered the first of four AQS-24A airborne mine-hunting vehicles to the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) for deployment on Japan's new MCH-101 helicopter platform. "This first delivery is a major milestone in the development of Japan's airborne mine-hunting capability," said Tom Jones, vice president of Northrop Grumman's Undersea Systems business unit. "The effort marks the first complete build of an AQS-24A since eight were delivered to the U.S. Navy in 1995. It demonstrates that the configuration baseline is relevant to modern threats, can be rapidly produced, and is suitable for other international and domestic customers." The AQS-24A and its predecessors, the AQS-24 and the AQS-14 – all built by Northrop Grumman – are the only operational airborne mine-hunting search systems used by the U.S. Navy for the past 29 years. The AQS-24A is a high-speed mine-hunting system that is primarily towed from the MH-53E helicopter and has been adapted easily to the JMSDF version of the EH-101 aircraft. The AQS-24A contains a laser line scanner that provides precision optical identification of underwater mines and other objects of interest. The AQS-24A allows for simultaneous operation of the sonar and laser, which significantly improves area coverage rate, shortens the mine clearance timeline and alleviates unnecessary maintenance cycles. Advanced navigation controls and processing provide highly accurate target positioning. Later this summer, Northrop Grumman will deliver the first of four Airborne Laser Mine Detection Systems (ALMDS) to the JMSDF to operate in conjunction with the AQS-24A. ALMDS is a laser-based, light detection and ranging sensor system that detects, classifies and localizes near-surface mine-like objects from above the waterline and is complementary to the AQS-24A. "These two mine detection systems will provide Japan with an unprecedented, complete surface-to-bottom mine detection capability from a helicopter," Jones said. Northrop Grumman is a leading global security company providing innovative systems, products and solutions in unmanned systems, cyber, C4ISR, and logistics and modernization to government and commercial customers
www.northropgrumman.com for more information.
_________________ Le Prophéte (saw) a dit: Les Hommes Les meilleurs sont ceux qui sont les plus utiles aux autres
Fremo Administrateur
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Japan scrambles jets after China plane flies by southern islands
(Reuters) - Japan scrambled fighter jets on Wednesday after a Chinese military aircraft flew for the first time through international airspace near its southern islands out over the Pacific, in a move seen by Japan as underlining China's maritime expansion.
Ties between China and Japan have been strained by a territorial dispute over uninhabited East China Sea islets and hawkish Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe won a decisive victory in upper house elections on Sunday.
Japan's Defense Ministry said a Chinese Y-8 airborne early warning plane flew through airspace between Okinawa prefecture's main island and the smaller Miyako island in southern Japan out over the Pacific at around noon and later took the same route back over the East China Sea.
"I believe this indicates China's move toward further maritime expansion," Japanese Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera told reporters, in comments carried on public broadcaster NHK.
Chinese government spokesmen were not immediately available for comment.
The waters around the disputed islands, called the Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, and which are to the west of Okinawa's main island, are rich fishing grounds and the sea floor around them could hold big oil and gas reserves.
Tension between China and Japan escalated last September when Japan bought three of the disputed islands from a private Japanese owner.
Since then, patrol ships and aircraft from both countries have been shadowing each other in the sea and skies around the islets.
That has raised fears of an unintended collision leading to a broader clash.
Abe has pledged to take a firm stance in the territorial dispute, but said in his news conference following the upper house election win that Japan's door was open to dialogue.
(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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MAATAWI Modérateur
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Japan is set to unveil its biggest warship since World War II on Tuesday amid tensions with China following maritime skirmishes between the two nations over disputed islands.
Tokyo's military is holding a ceremony later in the day in the port city of Yokohama to show off its new 248-metre (810-feet) helicopter carrier, which will be a centrepiece of its naval power.
The vessel was announced several years ago but the ceremony comes as the conservative government mulls boosting military capabilities with debate swirling over a possible overhaul of Tokyo's pacifist constitution.
The Japanese-built carrier can accommodate nine helicopters and is expected to play a major role in disaster and rescue missions, as well as defending sea lanes and Japanese territory, according to the defence ministry. It is unclear when it will go into service.
The navy's biggest vessels currently are a pair of smaller helicopter carriers.
Less than two weeks ago, the Chinese coastguard entered waters disputed with Japan for the first time, upping the ante in a festering row over ownership of the Senkakus, which Beijing also claims and calls the Diaoyus.
The rocky islands are located in rich fishing grounds in the East China Sea and are believed to harbour vast natural resources below their seabed.
The incursion came as Japan's defence ministry recommended establishing amphibious units and acquiring surveillance drones, similar to the US Marines, to protect its claim on outlying islands.
Tokyo is also locked in a separate territorial dispute with Seoul.
Japan's well-funded and well-equipped military is referred to as the Self-Defense Forces, and barred from taking aggressive action.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been mulling a beefed-up military, which would require changing the constitution imposed on Japan by the US and its allies following WWII.
A possible overhaul of the constitution has stirred strong emotions among Japan's neighbours, which have long maintained that Tokyo has never come to terms with its militaristic past, including the brutal 1910-1945 occupation of the Korean peninsula.
Last year, China commissioned its first aircraft carrier as part of a military build-up that has alarmed its regional neighbours as Washington ramps up its focus on Asia.
The country's first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, went into service in September in a symbolic milestone for China's increasingly muscular military.
However, the vessel still requires a carrier group including destroyers, frigates and submarines while fighter jets need more training to be operational, according to navy officials.
China has also generated concern with double-digit rises in its annual defence budget - set at 10.7 percent for 2013 - with experts saying their actual military spending is substantially higher than the publicised totals.
- AFP
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