messages : 6351 Inscrit le : 13/07/2009 Localisation : France Nationalité : Médailles de mérite :
Sujet: Industrie militaire turque Sam 16 Fév 2013 - 15:20
Rappel du premier message :
Le SSM travaille sur un mécanisme de crédit de gouvernement à gouvernement pour les exportations.
En gros, un FMS Turc
De la bouche du SSM Murad Bayar :
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The strengths of the Turkish defence industry have been a high-level of cost effectivity, high quality, on time delivery and a very effective after-sales support in all of those regions. We are also working on a new export credit mechanism for Government to Government (G2G) sales of defence products. We believe that Turkish defence products will be also advantageous in terms of finance after establishing this credit mechanism.
La firme turque Baykar présente le drone TB3, une évolution du TB2 (connu pour ses succès pendant les campagnes en Syrie, Libye et Haut-Karabakh). Le TB3 sera doté d'un Satcom, ailes pliables pour l'aéronavale pour le nouveau concept de porte-drones.
Le Sat com est t'il intégrable ( upgrade) pour Tb2 ?
Je ne crois pas, cela diminuera la charge utile pour les munitions ou baissera l'autonomie, c'est pour cela qu'ils intègrent le moteur PD-170 de TEI pour le TB3.. Il faut aussi des modifications structurelles pour le Satcom.
Fahed64 Administrateur
messages : 25526 Inscrit le : 31/03/2008 Localisation : Pau-Marrakech Nationalité : Médailles de mérite :
Ça sera sûrement dans le anier, le temps que ce drone commence ça carrière opérationnelle et fais ses preuves. Une question, qu'elle est la durée de vie normale des tb2, et est ce que leur durée de vie est rallongée par les upgrade ?
Shugan188 Modérateur
messages : 5656 Inscrit le : 12/05/2015 Localisation : Maroc Nationalité : Médailles de mérite :
Chairman Menendez Announces NDAA Amendments to Hold Turkey and Azerbaijan Accountable | United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations November 04, 2021
WASHINGTON – Senator Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, today announced two of the foreign policy amendments he is filing to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). As the primary vehicle for authorizing defense spending for Fiscal Year 2022, Chairman Menendez’s proposed changes to the NDAA seek to significantly improve the U.S. government’s ability to track and assess the national security implications of the proliferation of Turkey’s unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) program, as well as to prevent further exceptions to bypass a 1992 law banning U.S. military assistance to the Government of Azerbaijan.
Amendment Ending 907 Waiver: Prohibits the continued use of an exemption waiver of Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act. Section 907, which has been law since 1992, bans most assistance to the Government of Azerbaijan until it takes demonstrable steps to cease all blockades and other offensive uses of force against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. The Government of Azerbaijan has clearly not taken these steps, yet assistance to that government has skyrocketed in recent years. “As the regime in Baku, with Turkey's support, continues choosing a path of violence instead of a peaceful, negotiated process between Armenia and Azerbaijan, it is long past time for this and all future administrations to halt this type of assistance and fully respect Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act,” said Menendez. “I look forward to working with my colleagues to make sure this year’s NDAA continues to advance U.S. national security and foreign policy interests all while representing a prudent use of U.S. taxpayer dollars.”
Amendment on Turkey’s Drone Program: Mandates the State Department and Pentagon report on Turkish drone exports since 2018 and whether those drones contain parts or technology manufactured by U.S. firms. The amendment also requires State to determine whether Turkey’s exports are a violation of the Arms Export Control Act or any other U.S. law or sanctions. Turkish drones played a decisive role in last year’s war between Armenian and Azerbaijan. Since then, Poland, Morocco, and Ukraine have purchased the Bayraktar TB2 and several other countries have expressed interest, including Angola, Ethiopia, Niger, Nigeria, and Rwanda. “Turkey’s drone sales are dangerous, destabilizing and a threat to peace and human rights,” added Menendez. “The U.S. should have no part of it, and this amendment is a recognition that we must prevent U.S. parts from being included in these Turkish weapons.”
Les exportations d'armements de la Turquie sont de 2.8 milliards $ de janvier à novembre 2021. Pourrait dépasser les 3 milliards $ d'exportations pour 2021.
jf16 General de Division
messages : 41481 Inscrit le : 20/10/2010 Localisation : france Nationalité : Médailles de mérite :
PUBLISHED: 23 DECEMBER 2021 LAST UPDATED: 23 DECEMBER 2021
Turkey's key export success
The Bayraktar TB2 (Tactical Block 2) is a Turkish-built Medium-Altitude Long-Endurance (MALE) Unmanned Combat Aerial System (UCAS) capable of remotely controlled or autonomous flight operations.
It is manufactured by the Turkish company Baykar Savunma (Baykar Defence), initially for the Turkish Armed Forces. The aircraft is monitored and controlled by an aircrew in the Ground Control Station (GCS), including weapons employment, via a Türksat satellite connection.
The name Bayraktar stems from the founder of Baykar Makina, the late Özdemir Bayraktar that passed away on 18 October. Bayraktar is a common surname in Turkish that means ensign or standard-bearer.
Baykar Defence started to develop a new combat tactical aerial vehicle system on request of the SSB - Savunma Sanayii Başkanlığı (Presidency of Defense Industries), after the experiences of its first tactical Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) Bayraktar Çaldıran in 2011. The Bayraktar TB2 conducted its maiden flight in August 2014. On 18 December 2015, a video was published for the missile test of Bayraktar TB2 as collaboration result with ROKETSAN.
The Bayraktar TB2S has become a key export success for Turkey and its Defence Industry. In September 2021, Baykar's Chief Technology Officer (CTO) Selçuk Bayraktar stated that new export agreements were signed with a large number of countries for the export of Bayraktar TB2. Baykar Defence currently generates more than 83 percent of its revenues from exports.
Scramble Magazine has knowledge of the following users within the Turkish Armed Forces and known export customers. Obviously, Turkey is the largest consumer of the product with five internal operators of the UCAS.
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Turkey Turkish Army: around 100 delivered from August 2016 Turkish Navy: 10 delivered from December 2018 Turkish Police: 16 delivered from 2016 Turkish Gendarmerie: around 40 delivered from March 2017 Turkish National Intelligence Organisation: unknown number delivered by 2020
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Known export customers for the Bayraktar TB2 (ISR) and Bayraktar TB2S (Silahlı or Armed) by 23 December 2021: Libya: around 36 ordered and delivered from November 2017 Qatar: 6 ordered in March 2018, delivered in 2019 Ukraine: 17 ordered from January 2019, delivered in 2020 Azerbaijan: around 12 ordered June in 2020, delivered in 2020 Morocco: 13 ordered in April 2021, delivered from September 2021, deliveries ongoing Ethiopia: around 4 ordered in August 2021, delivered in November 2021 Poland: 24 ordered in May 2021, deliveries pending for 2022 Turkmenistan: 6 ordered and delivered in 2021 Iraq: 8 ordered (plus 4 optional) in November 2021, deliveries pending for 2022 Kyrgyzstan: 3 ordered in October 2021, deliveries pending for 2022 Niger: 6 ordered in November 2021, deliveries pending for 2022