WAR 09-10-2016-to-09-16-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.cnn.com/2016/09/16/asia/pakistan-suicide-attack/

Pakistan mosque: Suicide attack leaves 25 dead

By Zahir Shah, Sophia Saifi and Steve Visser, CNN
Updated 11:59 AM ET, Fri September 16, 2016

Peshawar, Pakistan (CNN) — A suicide attack at a Pakistani mosque in the country's tribal areas killed at least 25 people Friday, an official told CNN.

Jamaat-ul-Ahra, a splinter group of the Pakistani Taliban, has claimed responsibility for the bombing that also injured 34 people, according to the group's spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan.

The attack took place at one of the biggest mosques in Mohmand Agency, a district in Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas north of Peshawar, said Naveed Akbar, assistant administrator for the agency.

Two children under the age of 10 were killed in the blast while four children under the age of 10 are among the injured, Akbar said.

The official said the suicide bomber detonated his device inside the packed hall of the mosque, which has a capacity of 100 to 150 people.

Screams could be heard after the blast, and body parts were found scattered around the mosque, Akhbar said. He said the death toll is likely to grow.

Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif strongly condemned the attack in a statement.

"The cowardly attacks by terrorists cannot shatter the government's resolve to eliminate terrorism from the country," he said.

Jamaat-ul-Ahra has carried out several major attacks in Pakistan this year, including a bombing on August 8 that targeted lawyers and journalists and killed more than 72 people.

Journalist Zahir Shah reported from Peshawar, Sophia Saifi reported from Karachi and Steve Visser reported from Atlanta
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-37388159

Bratislava EU talks bring Merkel-Hollande pact for renewal

3 hours ago
From the section Europe

The leaders of France and Germany say the EU has agreed on priorities for reinvigorating the bloc despite the "critical situation" created by the UK Brexit vote.

They showed symbolic unity by holding a joint press conference after the summit talks in the Slovak capital Bratislava.

It was the EU's first major meeting as 27 - without the UK present.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande said the migrant crisis was a key issue.

"We didn't dodge anything," Mr Hollande said. "We decided that together we have to deal with the migration issue, while respecting the right to asylum."
◾Full text of Bratislava Declaration here

Tension over migrants

There is a deep rift over the influx of migrants - including many refugees from Syria - as Slovakia, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Poland refuse to accept EU quotas for housing asylum seekers.

They are under pressure to accept quotas so that 160,000 refugees at camps in Greece and Italy can be relocated.

"We talked very concretely about what we are going to do to tackle issues like immigration," Mrs Merkel said. She spoke of an emerging "Bratislava spirit" of co-operation to tackle the toughest issues facing Europe.

"We will all need to make compromises," she admitted.

"We agreed that Europe finds itself in a critical situation after Brexit but that there are also other issues which we need to tackle together."
◾Eastern leaders offer new menu at EU crisis talks
◾What has the EU learnt since Brexit?
◾All you need to know about the UK leaving the EU

They did not dwell on the thorny issue of Brexit, as they are waiting for the UK government to trigger the process of withdrawal from the EU.

The EU leaders agreed to step up joint efforts to strengthen the EU's external borders, integrate European defence, fight terrorism and boost economic growth.

The one-day Bratislava meeting launched a series of confidence-building meetings, where a new EU "roadmap" should be worked out.

They will culminate in a Rome summit in March, when the 60th anniversary of the EU's founding Treaty of Rome will be celebrated.

No longer toeing the line - Katya Adler, BBC News, Bratislava

Remember Greece last year, with its euro woes. Back then, Germany's powerful Chancellor was able to coax, or bully, other EU leaders to toe her line, giving the impression at least of a united EU.

But Mrs Merkel's credibility was damaged by the migrant crisis and her grip is weakened. Many EU leaders blame her for the hundreds of thousands of refugees who flooded across their borders. Groups of countries have begun to openly defy her.

None of the leaders here in Bratislava wants to see the EU collapse, however. With so many rifts and splits, they are concentrating on the small number of issues - youth unemployment and security, for example - that they can easily agree on.

The harder stuff, such as a future trade deal with the UK, will be left for another day.

Video

A note on terminology: The BBC uses the term migrant to refer to all people on the move who have yet to complete the legal process of claiming asylum. This group includes people fleeing war-torn countries such as Syria, who are likely to be granted refugee status, as well as people who are seeking jobs and better lives, who governments are likely to rule are economic migrants.


More on this story

Brexit: No substantive talks for 12 months, Herman Van Rompuy predicts
15 September 2016

Eastern leaders offer new menu at EU crisis talks
13 September 2016
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.latimes.com/world/asia/la-fg-north-korea-nuclear-snap-story.html

The Cold War saw decades of nuclear deterrence. What happens when a rogue state gets the bomb?

Ralph Vartabedian and W.J. Hennigan
September 16, 2016, 1:20 PM |Reporting from Washington

Barely a week after North Korea exploded the most powerful nuclear device it has ever tested, U.S. defense officials said the secretive country appears to be readying a tunnel for yet another, putting the country on an alarmingly fast-paced schedule to deploy nuclear warheads.

The preparations for what would be its third test this year reinforce growing concern that North Korea may soon have multi-stage ballistic missiles that could threaten much of Asia and, possibly within a decade, an intercontinental ballistic missile that could reach the U.S.

Pyongyang’s aggressive testing program, in defiance of tough international sanctions, has set off an urgent debate about the risks of a nuclear-armed North Korea and raised questions about whether the policies of deterrence honed over six decades of nuclear confrontation apply to a nation that operates outside international norms of behavior.

“In theory, deterrence works if your adversary is rational, but if it is a crazy person they won’t care,” said Philip Coyle, a U.S. nuclear weapons scientist who recently was a security advisor to the Obama administration. “It is the reason everybody is so worried about them getting weapons.”

Former Defense Secretary William Perry said he is concerned not that North Korea would start a nuclear war, but that having nuclear weapons could make the unpredictable nation more willing to launch a conventional war that could progress into a nuclear exchange.

“The danger is that they might blunder into a nuclear war by miscalculation, not a war by plan,” he said.

In the Cold War, the U.S. and the former Soviet Union each deployed tens of thousands of nuclear bombs that could level every major city and every critical industrial asset of both countries — a potential so devastating that it discredited the idea of victory or even survival after a nuclear war.

But while the two Cold War superpowers could be counted on to act rationally, North Korea exists in social isolation. Its economy is failing, and its most critical mission is the preservation of the government of Kim Jong Un and the several thousand privileged Communist Party officials who support him.

The U.S. should “absolutely” be worried that Kim could eventually launch an unprovoked attack on the U.S. if he ever gains ICBMs with enough range to reach across the Pacific, said Bruce Bennett, a Rand Corp. expert on North Korea.

“Regime survival is their top priority,” Bennett said. “Unless you threaten Kim directly, it will be difficult to deter them.”

As North Korea progresses in its nuclear program, it is fomenting political discussion in both Japan and South Korea about their own potential nuclear weapons development. If either nation develops a capability, it will likely lead the other to follow and encourage China to expand its own program, thereby setting off an Asian nuclear arms race.

With each passing year, there are fewer diplomatic levers available to pressure the government in Pyongyang.

The Washington-based Council on Foreign Relations in a report Friday found that the current U.S. policy of “strategic patience” with North Korea neither stops the nation’s provocative acts nor ensures the safety of its neighbors.

It describes a “deteriorating position” in which the U.S. must act quickly and pressure China to help.

“As North Korea’s nuclear capabilities have grown, multilateral negotiations aimed at securing a denuclearized peninsula have ground to a halt,” according to the report, led by Michael G. Mullen, retired Navy admiral and former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Sam Nunn, former chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Under three generations of Kim family leadership, North Korea has created an extraordinary militaristic culture, devoting an estimated 40% of its government spending on defense. It has built thousands of underground military installations, including an air base that has an underground runway with an opening for planes to fly out.

Kim Jong Un, despite his youth, has ruled with both brutal power and erratic behavior. In 2013, he ordered his uncle machine-gunned in front of hundreds of officials and then had the body incinerated with flamethrowers. Kim’s father, Kim Jong Il, once proclaimed that a military defeat of North Korea would merit the destruction of Earth.

The country has a long history of aggression that includes the bombing of a civilian airliner in 1987, the sinking of a South Korean warship in 2010 and an artillery barrage on South Korea just last year.

Earlier nuclear tests by North Korea were seen as attempts to leverage for more aid and sanctions relief. However, analysts inside and outside the government agree that Pyongyang’s nuclear strike capability has steadily improved to such an extent that it can no longer be ignored.

North Korean officials claim they have already developed miniaturized nuclear weapons that they can mass produce, a claim that has not been disproved or even disputed by U.S. experts.

U.S. spy satellites have detected some activity at North Korea’s Punggye-ri underground facilities, possibly indicating preparations for another test, U.S. officials said. South Korean media reported this week that Pyongyang is planning to conduct yet another test.

Experts said further tests would suggest that North Korea has an ample supply of plutonium, which when coupled with its unknown stockpile of highly enriched uranium is enough to make additional warheads, despite more than a decade’s worth of tightened international sanctions.

Several years ago, American intelligence agencies concluded that North Korea probably had enough plutonium for two or three bombs. Its current stockpile would be enough for about 20 nuclear weapons with more on the way, said Jeffrey Lewis, a nuclear weapons analyst with the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Monterey.

“There’s no deterring them,” he said. “Even if the U.S. got rid of all of their nuclear weapons tomorrow, it wouldn’t change a thing.”

On Tuesday, two U.S. B-1 supersonic bombers conducted a low-level flight with South Korean fighter jets near Osan, South Korea as a response to last week’s nuclear test. The U.S. is deploying a new missile defense system in South Korea. The U.S. has also deployed ballistic missile defense systems in Alaska and California, though their reliability is in dispute.

Meanwhile, South Korea has invested heavily in what it calls its “kill chain,” a system of conventional missiles designed to deny North Korea first use of nuclear weapons. And the U.S. no doubt has enough conventional weapons to destroy North Korea without ever resorting to nuclear bombs.

The vastly more advanced conventional military forces facing North Korea paradoxically could increase its incentives to use nuclear weapons first in a crisis or a conventional conflict, said Kingston Reif, an analyst with the Arms Control Assn. in Washington.

“Indeed, the trajectory of North Korea's nuclear and missile development suggests that Kim Jong Un seeks the capability to use nuclear weapons in this way in the hopes of preventing the United States and South Korea from pressing its conventional advantage,” he said. “So we have a very messy and difficult problem on our hands, and one that South Korea especially and understandably finds increasingly intolerable.”

Further complicating U.S. deterrence strategy with North Korea is a complete absence of diplomatic relations. Even amid the most contentious points in the Cold War, the U.S. and the Soviet Union maintained embassies.

The only outlet for the U.S. to communicate to Pyongyang is through China because North Korea is an impoverished country that relies on China for much of its food and foreign aid.

But North Korea harbors deep historic resentments toward China, said James Person, a North Korea expert at the Wilson Center. Exerting pressure on North Korea through China is unlikely to get the U.S. any results, he said. Person believes North Korea’s nuclear program is based on a single goal of defending the nation’s sovereignty against not only the U.S. but also China and Japan. It is a policy underpinned by deep insecurity, though it is not without logic, he said.

Perry, the former Defense secretary, is among those dismissing the idea that the country is suicidal. “I do not believe they are irrational,” he said. “They have a logic and a calculus that is different than ours.”

The increasing threat by North Korea could prompt calls for new weapons designs or renewed production in the U.S., said Coyle, the former nuclear weapons scientist. Rather than continuing negotiations with a coalition of five other nations, the U.S. should hold direct talks with the Kim regime that could more clearly set down U.S. strategy, he added.

Bennett, the Rand expert, said the most important immediate step is to stop the nuclear testing program, because it would deny North Korea the validation that its research is on the right track and deny Kim boasting power that he has made North Korea powerful.
 

almost ready

Inactive
HC, many thanks. So many times I've checked your threads - and really, really appreciate the wealth of information and commentary you share.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
HC, many thanks. So many times I've checked your threads - and really, really appreciate the wealth of information and commentary you share.

You're welcome. I've got to also thank all of the other contributors here as well....

Yeah this below (V) is going to work out real well....NOT.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/09/turkey-iraq-syria-isis-raqqa-mosul.html

Turkey demands role in Mosul battle, but coalition unconvinced

With US-led operations against the Islamic State’s strongholds of Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq looming, Ankara and Washington are engaged in intense talks to determine Turkey’s involvement in them.

Author: Semih Idiz
Posted: September 15, 2016
Comments 100

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has indicated that Turkey wants in on both operations, declaring that US President Barack Obama called for Turkish cooperation in Raqqa during their recent meeting at the G-20 summit in Hangzhou, China. Turkish and American suspicions about each other’s ultimate motives, however, continue to make cooperation difficult.

The US alliance in Syria with the People's Protection Units (YPG), the armed wing of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), remains the main obstacle. Turkey says the Kurdish YPG and PYD are terrorist groups linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

Meanwhile, Baghdad’s insistence that Turkish forces in Iraq be withdrawn, a position supported by Washington, remains an obstacle to Turkey’s participation in the liberation of Mosul.

Other issues such as the possible extradition from the United States of Fethullah Gulen, the alleged mastermind of the failed coup attempt in Turkey in July and US criticism of undemocratic developments in Turkey after the coup are also causing friction between the two “strategic partners” and could undermine cooperation in Syria and Iraq.

"Raqqa is one of the issues the United States and Turkey are currently discussing,” Erdogan told reporters while flying back from Hangzhou. “We need to demonstrate our presence in the region. If not, terrorist groups such as [IS], the PKK and its Syrian offshoot the YPG will fill the vacuum," he said.

The problem for Washington, however, was embedded in these remarks. The United States does not see the PYD or YPG as terrorist groups and says it will continue to work with them against IS in Syria.

US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter warned Turkey at the end of August, after the Turkish army wrested the Syrian town of Jarablus from IS and started moving south against YPG forces, to stay clear of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, largely made up of YPG fighters.

"The United States was very supportive, and is very supportive of [Turkey's] general counter-[IS] activities and everything they did to secure the area between the border and Jarablus and then westward, but not south of Jarablus," Carter told reporters at the Pentagon.

US State Department spokesman John Kirby repeated Washington’s position after the latest US-Russian-brokered cease-fire in Syria came into force. “We don’t want to see violence or clashes between Turkish forces and Kurdish forces,” Kirby said Sept. 12 during his daily news briefing, adding that fighting IS was where the United States wanted energies to be applied.

A Western diplomat in Ankara who wished to remain anonymous due to his sensitive position said Turkish and US expectations regarding Raqqa were ultimately discordant. “The Americans suspect that Turkey only wants to join the Raqqa operation to prevent the PYD from gaining a foothold there,” the diplomat told Al-Monitor.

Retired Brig. Gen. Naim Baburoglu spelled out Turkey’s strong suspicions about US intentions regarding the Kurds in Syria and Iraq. “The basic reason why [Washington] gives importance to the PYD is that it wants a Kurdistan in the north that will be under the tutelage of the United States, and which will be a second Israel for it. The US’ unchanging strategic aim in the Middle East is for a united and independent Kurdistan,” Baburoglu argued in his column for Gercek Gundem, an online news outlet.

Burhanettin Duran, the general coordinator for the pro-government Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research in Ankara, says Turkey’s aim is to develop a comprehensive approach not to just fight IS, but also to block PKK and PYD aspirations in Iraq and Syria.

“Right now, central governments are losing power to sub-state actors and terrorist groups in Syria and Iraq alike. At the same time, [IS'] self-proclaimed caliphate and the armed, PKK-affiliated Syrian [YPG's] pan-Kurdism blurs the border between the two countries,” Duran wrote in his column for Sabah.

“Despite the risk of overstretching its resources, Turkey believes that the right move is to develop a comprehensive strategy to fight both groups,” he added.

Erdogan said in a public address this week that Turkey is also keen to participate in the operation to free Mosul. Lauding the success of the Turkish military’s Operation Euphrates Shield against IS in northern Syria, he said there was a need for a similar action in Iraq. “The solution to the Mosul problem passes through lending an ear to Turkey’s rational perspective and suggestions,” Erdogan said.

“Our hope is that the central government in Iraq will see this,” he added, thus revealing that differences between Turkey and the Iraqi government persist.

According to Duran, Turkey is “objecting to a power grab by the PKK and Shiite militants in Mosul at the expense of local Turkmens and the peshmerga.”

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi called on all Turkish troops in Iraq to be withdrawn after Turkey deployed troops and tanks in Bashiqa, a town north of Mosul, in December 2015. Ankara says these forces are necessary to fight IS.

Abadi also got backing from Washington. “The US does not support military deployments inside Iraq absent the consent of the Iraqi government,” Brett McGurk, Washington’s envoy for the US-led anti-IS coalition, tweeted at the time.

In a subsequent phone call, Obama asked Erdogan “to take additional steps to de-escalate tensions with Iraq,” including removing more troops.

During the Arab League summit in Mauritania in July, Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari said, “We have called on the Turkish government many times via diplomats to return their forces to Turkey.” He went on to call on Arab countries to apply pressure on Turkey to make it comply with the Iraqi demand.

Ankara has not heeded these calls, but it is not clear how it hopes to join any operation against Mosul under these conditions. Turkey’s difficulty with regard to the Syrian Kurds is not restricted to the United States, either.

Although Russia has ostensibly distanced itself military from the YPG, it continues to argue that the Syrian Kurds must take part in negotiations aimed at ending the Syrian crisis. While Ankara welcomed the US-Russian-brokered cease-fire in Syria, Turkish officials are aware that if it holds, current lines on the ground drawn by all the sides in Syria will hold, too.

This means the PYD will remain in places Turkey does not want to see them. Pro-government analysts such as Duran declare that this effect could leave Turkey no choice but to take unilateral military steps against the PYD and YPG, but the odds are against Ankara.

Al-Monitor's Western diplomatic source suggested that Turkey may have overreached with Operation Euphrates Shield. “By declaring the aim of this operation to be both IS and the YPG, and moving against YPG positions, Turkey might have painted itself into another corner in Syria, because this seems to have only strengthened US and European resolve to back the Syrian Kurds,” the diplomat said.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.janes.com/article/63891/...pakistan-building-uranium-enrichment-facility

CBRN Assessment

Satellite imagery suggests Pakistan building uranium enrichment facility

Karl Dewey, London and Charlie Cartwright, London - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
16 September 2016

Airbus Defence and Space imagery captured on 28 September 2015 and on 18 April 2016 shows new construction at Pakistan's Khan Research Laboratories (KRL) site in Kahuta that is consistent with that of a uranium enrichment facility.

The area is approximately 1.2 ha in size and is located within the secure area of the KRL in the southwestern part of the complex, which is situated in Pakistan's northeastern Punjab Province.

Roughly rectangular in shape and approximately 140 x 80 m, the new structure is surrounded by scrubland and trees that provide an additional measure of security on the ground.

In addition to being located near to the KRL, a known centrifuge facility, the new building shares similarities with known centrifuge facility structures built by the URENCO enrichment consortium at Capenhurst (in the UK), Almelo (in the Netherlands), and Gronau (in Germany). This may be more than coincidence as Abdul Qadeer Khan, considered by many to be the founder of Pakistan's nuclear programme, worked at URENCO before stealing centrifuge designs and returning to Pakistan to work on the country's centrifuge programme.

As Pakistan continues to refine and enhance its nuclear capability, the country's officials insist that such modernisation efforts are the result of indigenous production and that, since the dismantling of the Abdul Qadeer Khan nuclear smuggling network in the early 2000s, the country has had a strong non-proliferation record.

However, a wider investigation by Project Alpha, a research group based at King's College London, suggests that Pakistan remains reliant on obtaining dual-use goods through a global network of front companies and covert overseas agents for at least some dual-use items. The detailed report of that investigation is forthcoming.

An extended article covering these developments was published online by IHS Jane's Intelligence Review on 15 September and will appear in the November edition of that title.

Want to read more? For analysis on this article and access to all our insight content, please enquire about our subscription options�@ihs.com/contact

To read the full article, Client Login

(328 of 366 words)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
And the PRC's drive for influence in Africa continues.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.janes.com/article/63821/aad-2016-nigerian-jf-17-deal-close-to-finalisation

Asia Pacific

AAD 2016: Nigerian JF-17 deal close to finalisation

Jeremy Binnie, Pretoria - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
16 September 2016

Nigeria has signed a memorandum of understanding covering the sale of the joint Pakistani-Chinese PAC/CAC JF-17 Thunder multirole fighter and a contract is expected to be finalised by November, a senior official from the Pakistan's Defence Export Promotion Organization (DEPO) told IHS Jane's during the Africa Aerospace and Defence (AAD) show held in South Africa from 14-18 September.

The official declined to say how many JF-17s Nigeria would order, but said the announcement was expected during the IDEAS show that will be held in Karachi in November.

He also declined to confirm that Nigeria will be the first export operator of the JF-17 as Myanmar has ordered the aircraft from China.

Nigeria's intention to acquire the fighter was revealed in the federal budget document that was released in January, which included NGN5 billion (USD25 million) for three JF-17s as well NGN2.06 billion for 10 PAC Super Mushshak basic trainers.

The DEPO official said that discussions were still continuing with both the Nigerian Air Force and the army's new aviation wing regarding the acquisition of the Super Mushshak trainers.

Want to read more? For analysis on this article and access to all our insight content, please enquire about our subscription options�@ihs.com/contact

To read the full article, Client Login

(201 of 277 words)

------

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.janes.com/article/63820/aad-2016-zambian-l-15s-make-first-public-appearance

Middle East/Africa

AAD 2016: Zambian L-15s make first public appearance

Jeremy Binnie, Pretoria - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
16 September 2016

1691503_-_main.jpg

http://www.janes.com/images/assets/820/63820/1691503_-_main.jpg

The delivery of the first of Zambia's new HAIC L-15 multirole jet fighters was confirmed during the Africa Aerospace & Defence (AAD) exhibition held in South Africa from 14-18 September, when two were displayed at the show.

An official from the China National Aero-Technology Import & Export Corporation (CATIC), which promoted the aircraft at the show, was reluctant to discuss the numbers involved, but told IHS Jane's that the first batch of "more than two" L-15s arrived in Zambia in July and the rest are expected to be delivered by early 2017. A CATIC official told IHS Jane's in 2014 that Zambia had ordered six L-15s.

It was confirmed during the event that Zambia is receiving the L-15AFT attack/fighter/trainer version as opposed to the L-15AJT advanced jet trainer that recently entered service with the People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) as the JL-10.

Major Paul Besa, one of the first Zambian L-15 pilots, told IHS Jane's that the delivery of the L-15s marked a milestone for the ZAF as it now has a third-generation multirole fighter with fly-by-wire avionics. He said the aircraft are being flown by the Air Defence Command's Lusaka-based Squadron 15.

Despite the name of the command, he stressed that the ZAF's L-15AFTs would be used in both the air defence and attack roles, saying that Zambia has ordered the full-range of weapons.

In the air-to-air role these include PL-5E short-range air-to-air missiles on the two outermost hardpoints. The air-to-ground weapons include a 23 mm PC-2AI gun pod on the centreline hardpoint and a combination of HF-18D pods for 57 mm rockets, 250 kg or 500 kg bombs, and air-to-surface missiles on the remaining four hardpoints.

Maj Besa said that the ZAF had ordered both LS-6 GPS/INS guided bombs and YJ-9E air-to-surface missiles. The latter is the export version of China's TL-10.

Want to read more? For analysis on this article and access to all our insight content, please enquire about our subscription options�@ihs.com/contact


To read the full article, Client Login

(328 of 438 words)
 
Top