ALERT The Winds of War Blow in Korea and The Far East

jward

passin' thru
Global: Military-Info
@Global_Mil_Info

#BREAKING: South Korea and the United States have started the annual Freedom Shield exercise.

It is the first large exercise since North Korea scrapped the 2018 inter-Korean military accord and the number of field exercises will be doubled compared to previous years.

There is a possibility that the United States will deploy strategic assets like aircraft carriers or strategic bombers to the Korean Peninsula during the exercises.

There will be a focus on practical field maneuvers and live-firing exercises so there will be quite a bit of military movements on the KP during March.

South Korean officials have warned that there is a high possibility that North Korea will conduct aggressive provocations during the exercises and before the upcoming elections that will be held in April.
 

jward

passin' thru

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
never a dull moment out there eh.


Ian Ellis
@ianellisjones
Escalation in the South China Sea

Chinese maritime militia & coast guard ships engaged in “reckless, illegal, & dangerous” blocking maneuvers, resulting in a collision & damage to Philippines vessel. & for good measure—used the water cannon again.

Ray’s brilliant play-by-play:
View: https://twitter.com/ianellisjones/status/1764844616493224036?s=20
One of these days someone is going to break out a Ma Deuce and things will stop being one sided, then it will get more interesting than anyone wants.
 

jward

passin' thru
Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News
@IndoPac_Info
The #Maldives has signed a "military assistance" deal with #China after ordering #Indian troops to leave, officials say.

The Maldives says its "military assistance" deal with Beijing comes without payment or charge, but refuses to provide further details.

The Maldives has signed a "military assistance" deal with China after ordering Indian troops deployed in the small but strategically-placed archipelago to leave, officials said Tuesday.

Some 89 Indian military personnel in the country will be gone by May 10 after having been previously ordered out by pro-China President Mohamed Muizzu, who came to power last year on an anti-Indian platform.

The Maldivian defence ministry said they signed an "agreement on China's provision of military assistance" with Beijing late Monday, saying the agreement was "gratis", or without payment or charge, but giving no further details.

The defence ministry said the deal was to foster "stronger bilateral ties", in a post on social media platform X.

India is suspicious of China's growing presence in the Indian Ocean and its influence in the Maldives, a chain of 1,192 tiny coral islands stretching around 800 kilometres (500 miles) across the equator, as well as in neighbouring Sri Lanka.

Both South Asian island nations are strategically placed halfway along key east-west international shipping routes.

Relations between Male and New Delhi have chilled since Muizzu won elections in September.

New Delhi considers the Indian Ocean archipelago to be within its sphere of influence, but the Maldives has shifted into the orbit of China -- its largest external creditor.

Muizzu, who visited Beijing in January where he signed a raft of infrastructure, energy, marine and agricultural deals, has previously denied seeking to redraw the regional balance by bringing in Chinese forces to replace Indian troops.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning told reporters Tuesday that Beijing was doing "its utmost to jointly build a comprehensive strategic cooperative partnership" with the archipelago.

"Normal cooperation between China and the Maldives does not target any third party and does not undergo any interference by third parties," she added.

"Surveillance"

India last week said it was bolstering its naval forces on its "strategically important" Lakshadweep islands, about 130 kilometres (80 miles) north of the Maldives.

The Indian naval unit based on the island of Minicoy will boost "operational surveillance" of the area, the navy said.

Addressing a public rally north of the capital on Monday, Muizzu vowed there would be no Indian troops on Maldivian soil after May 10, when they are expected to complete a withdrawal.

The Indians had been deployed to operate three reconnaissance aircraft New Delhi had gifted Male to patrol its vast maritime boundary.

India is expected to replace the military personnel with civilian staff to operate the aircraft, and the Maldives defence ministry announced last month that Indian civilian crew had begun arriving in the atoll nation.

Last month, Male allowed a controversial Chinese research ship to enter its waters in a sign of the nation's diplomatic reorientation towards Beijing and away from its traditional benefactor India.

China's Xiang Yang Hong 3 arrived in Male after being refused permission to dock by Sri Lanka following objections from India, which has labelled it a spy ship.

China also gave 12 electric ambulances to the Maldives on Sunday, the health ministry said.

 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News
@IndoPac_Info
The #Maldives has signed a "military assistance" deal with #China after ordering #Indian troops to leave, officials say.

The Maldives says its "military assistance" deal with Beijing comes without payment or charge, but refuses to provide further details.

The Maldives has signed a "military assistance" deal with China after ordering Indian troops deployed in the small but strategically-placed archipelago to leave, officials said Tuesday.

Some 89 Indian military personnel in the country will be gone by May 10 after having been previously ordered out by pro-China President Mohamed Muizzu, who came to power last year on an anti-Indian platform.

The Maldivian defence ministry said they signed an "agreement on China's provision of military assistance" with Beijing late Monday, saying the agreement was "gratis", or without payment or charge, but giving no further details.

The defence ministry said the deal was to foster "stronger bilateral ties", in a post on social media platform X.

India is suspicious of China's growing presence in the Indian Ocean and its influence in the Maldives, a chain of 1,192 tiny coral islands stretching around 800 kilometres (500 miles) across the equator, as well as in neighbouring Sri Lanka.

Both South Asian island nations are strategically placed halfway along key east-west international shipping routes.

Relations between Male and New Delhi have chilled since Muizzu won elections in September.

New Delhi considers the Indian Ocean archipelago to be within its sphere of influence, but the Maldives has shifted into the orbit of China -- its largest external creditor.

Muizzu, who visited Beijing in January where he signed a raft of infrastructure, energy, marine and agricultural deals, has previously denied seeking to redraw the regional balance by bringing in Chinese forces to replace Indian troops.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning told reporters Tuesday that Beijing was doing "its utmost to jointly build a comprehensive strategic cooperative partnership" with the archipelago.

"Normal cooperation between China and the Maldives does not target any third party and does not undergo any interference by third parties," she added.

"Surveillance"

India last week said it was bolstering its naval forces on its "strategically important" Lakshadweep islands, about 130 kilometres (80 miles) north of the Maldives.

The Indian naval unit based on the island of Minicoy will boost "operational surveillance" of the area, the navy said.

Addressing a public rally north of the capital on Monday, Muizzu vowed there would be no Indian troops on Maldivian soil after May 10, when they are expected to complete a withdrawal.

The Indians had been deployed to operate three reconnaissance aircraft New Delhi had gifted Male to patrol its vast maritime boundary.

India is expected to replace the military personnel with civilian staff to operate the aircraft, and the Maldives defence ministry announced last month that Indian civilian crew had begun arriving in the atoll nation.

Last month, Male allowed a controversial Chinese research ship to enter its waters in a sign of the nation's diplomatic reorientation towards Beijing and away from its traditional benefactor India.

China's Xiang Yang Hong 3 arrived in Male after being refused permission to dock by Sri Lanka following objections from India, which has labelled it a spy ship.

China also gave 12 electric ambulances to the Maldives on Sunday, the health ministry said.


Merde...
 

jward

passin' thru
One of these days someone is going to break out a Ma Deuce and things will stop being one sided, then it will get more interesting than anyone wants.
normally one sided strikes me as a sad state o' affairs, but at the rate tension is ratcheting up here, I imagine you're right that things are destined to become even more interesting than we can imagine


EndGameWW3
@EndGameWW3

The Philippines says it won't let China remove a Filipino military outpost on a disputed shoal

Washington issued a warning after Tuesday’s hostilities that it is obligated to defend the Philippines, its oldest treaty ally in Asia, if Filipino forces, ships or aircraft come under an armed attack anywhere in the South China Sea.

4:21 PM · Mar 6, 2024
23.2K
Views
 

jward

passin' thru

finance.yahoo.com
China's Xi urges preparation for military conflicts at sea



BEIJING, March 7 (Reuters) - China's President Xi Jinping on Thursday called on the armed forces to coordinate preparations for military conflicts at sea, protect the country's maritime rights and interests and the development of the maritime economy.

It was necessary to build cyberspace defence system and improve the ability to maintain national network security, Xi was quoted by state television as saying when he met a delegation of the People's Liberation Army and Armed Police Force at China's annual parliament meeting. (Reporting by Beijing Newsroom; Editing by Alex Richardson)

 

jward

passin' thru
Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News
@IndoPac_Info
#China announces ‘excessive’ baseline in Gulf of Tonkin

Another attempt to take Vietnamese waters?

Beijing releases a set of seven points forming a baseline defining its sovereignty in the waters shared with #Vietnam

China has announced the baseline that defines its territory in the northern part of the Gulf of Tonkin that it shares with Vietnam.

In a statement published on the foreign ministry’s website early this month, the Chinese government released a set of seven base points that, when connected, would form a new baseline for Beijing’s claims of sovereignty in the Gulf of Tonkin, known in China as Beibu Gulf.

This baseline did not exist before and it is unclear why China decided to announce it now. On May 15, 1996, Beijing released 49 base pointsfor the entire China’s coast from Hainan to Qingdao but not the northern Gulf of Tonkin.

“Some of the base points are too far from the coast and the baseline appears seriously incompliant with the U.N. law of the sea,” said Song Phan, a Vietnamese maritime analyst.

“Vietnam and China already signed an agreement on the demarcation of the Gulf of Tonkin in 2000 with a clear demarcation line, so the new baseline is not expected to hurt Vietnam’s economic interests very much as long as Beijing does not ask to re-negotiate,” he said, “But it would bring complications to other maritime activities in the area.”

Another maritime expert, Carl Thayer, emeritus professor at the Australian Defence Force Academy, said the straight baseline “appears excessive.”

“It would result in a bigger overlap of China’s exclusive economic zone with the agreed median line and joint fishing areas [between Vietnam and China] in the Gulf of Tonkin,” Thayer said.

What is a baseline?

A baseline under the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) is the line that runs along the coast of a country, from which the extent of the territorial sea and other maritime zones is measured. Different maritime zones give a coastal state different jurisdictional rights, and the closer the zone to the baseline the bigger its associated jurisdiction rights.

Landward inside the baseline are internal waters where states have the same sovereign jurisdiction as they do over their land territory. No foreign vessels or aircraft are allowed to make so-called innocent passage through a country’s internal waters.

The territorial sea, measured 12 nautical miles from the baseline, is where the coastal state has sovereignty and exclusive jurisdiction not only to the sea, but also to the seabed and subsoil, as well as vertically to the airspace. Foreign aircraft cannot fly through the airspace above the coastal state’s territorial sea without permission.

Some countries, such as China, Taiwan and Vietnam, also require permission or notification before a foreign warship can sail through their territorial seas. Beijing has repeatedly protested against U.S. warships’ sailing in waters near the Paracel and Spratly archipelagos, which Washington insists is conducted in accordance with international law.

“The new baseline would affect freedom of navigation activities, scientific research, cables or pipelines laying and island reclamation works,” said Song Phan.

“More importantly, the expansive internal waters mean there will be no access for any other country to a large area,” he added.

Hanoi has not reacted to the Chinese government’s announcement.

“To my mind the new line looks incompatible with the wording of UNCLOS,” said Bill Hayton, Associate Fellow at Chatham House think tank in London.

“However, since the median line with Vietnam is already defined, I don’t think it will have a major impact,” Hayton said.

“Hanoi could object and take China to a tribunal but I don’t think it would gain anything,” he added.

In 2016, in a landmark tribunal brought by the Philippines the Permanent Court of Arbitration ruled against all China’s claims in the South China Sea but Beijing has rejected the verdict, calling it “illegal, null and void.”

 

jward

passin' thru
Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News
@IndoPac_Info
Army intelligence analyst charged with selling military secrets to contact in #China for $42,000


An active duty Army soldier and intelligence analyst spent over a year selling sensitive military documents related to the U.S. defense of Taiwan, weapons systems, and missile defense systems to China, federal prosecutors alleged in an indictment unsealed Thursday and obtained by CBS News.

Sergeant Korbein Schultz is accused of using his top secret security clearance to download classified U.S. government records at the behest of an unnamed individual who claimed to live in Hong Kong, allegedly amassing $42,000 in the process.

He was arrested Thursday and charged with six counts including conspiracy and bribery. According to court filings, Schultz was a sergeant and intelligence analyst and assigned to the 506th Infantry Battalion.

The charging documents don't name the Chinese government as the recipient of the information or as perpetrators of the scheme, but much of the military information Schutlz is accused to have passed on relates to that country.

Beginning in June 2022, prosecutors said Schultz and his co-conspirator began communicating online and via encrypted messaging applications. He was instructed to prioritize passing along "original and exclusive documents" to his handler, including information related to Russia's war in Ukraine and the "operabitly of sensitive U.S. military systems and their capabilities," court documents said.

The pair allegedly agreed to enter into a long-term partnership.

By July 2022, investigators alleged Schultz was sending information about High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, the type of systems the U.S. has been sending to Ukraine to use against Russia. He is also accused of transmitting sensitive documents about hypersonic equipment and summaries of U.S. military drills in August 2022.

Court documents detailed a months-long exchange in which the unnamed co-conspirator asked for specific documents and Schutlz complied, selling dozens of sensitive records for thousands of dollars at a time.

Money appeared to be his motivation. In one message, Schultz allegedly told his handler, "I need to get my other BMW back."

"I will just keep sending you an abundance of information," he wrote to the coconspirator, according to prosecutors, later expressing a desire to compare himself to Jason Bourne, the fictional spy created by author Robert Ludlum.

By August of 2023, Schultz — whose job was in part to instruct others on the proper handling of classified information — discussed with his Chinese handler the separate arrests that month of two U.S. Navy sailors accused of transmitting sensitive information to China.

Schultz's co conspirators advised him to be careful, court papers revealed.

And in November 2023, prosecutors alleged the handler asked Schultz to discuss work "for the next year."

The charges come days after Massachusetts Air National Guardsman Jack Texeira pleaded guilty to illegally posting classified military records on an online gaming platform in one of the military's most damaging leak campaigns.

And on Tuesday, an Air Force employee was charged with leaking classified information related to Russia's war in Ukraine to an individual over a foreign dating site.

It was not immediately clear if Schultz had an attorney. His first court appearance will be Friday.

 

jward

passin' thru
Global: Military-Info
@Global_Mil_Info
North Korea tried to jam U.S. and South Korean navigation systems during the ongoing joint drills.

So far, all attempts have been unsuccessful, but this is the first reported GPS jamming by North Korea in eight years.

Attempts could still be underway. This is likely one measure North Korea is deploying to disrupt exercises in South Korea.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Global: Military-Info
@Global_Mil_Info
North Korea tried to jam U.S. and South Korean navigation systems during the ongoing joint drills.

So far, all attempts have been unsuccessful, but this is the first reported GPS jamming by North Korea in eight years.

Attempts could still be underway. This is likely one measure North Korea is deploying to disrupt exercises in South Korea.
They need to start dropping South Korean MREs onto North Korean positions....
 

jward

passin' thru

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Mario Nawfal
@MarioNawfal

BREAKING: CAR RAMS INTO XI JINPING’S HOME

Footage shows the driver being carried away by Chinese security services after the car plowed into the main entrance to the Royal Palace, where Xi’s main office and residence are located.

It’s unknown if it was an intentional attack or an accident.

Source: JusticeLeague TG
View: https://twitter.com/MarioNawfal/status/1766739014453715208?s=20

WOW....Merde......
 

jward

passin' thru
hmm.


NK NEWS
@nknewsorg

NEW: North Korea has started building factories in all 20 cities and counties targeted for new construction under a sweeping rural development initiative, according to state media, after authorities held another 13 groundbreaking ceremonies.
 

jward

passin' thru
scmp.com
Amid Taiwan tensions, Beijing reveals it is building aircraft carrier No 4
4–5 minutes

China’s aircraft carrier No 4 on track with ‘no technical bottleneck’, admiral reveals in first official confirmation

China is building its fourth aircraft carrier, a naval admiral and political supervisor has confirmed, adding that the going has been smooth on the technical front.

The fresh update on China’s opaque warship development programme came during annual legislative meetings in Beijing where People’s Liberation Army (PLA) representatives make rare public appearances.

Asked whether China’s newest carrier would be nuclear-powered, PLA Navy political commissar Yuan Huazhi said this “will soon be announced”, according to a video interview posted by Hong Kong Commercial Daily on social media platform Weibo.

The admiral added that he had not heard of any “technical bottleneck” regarding the aircraft carrier, suggesting its progress was on track.

Yuan’s comments, coming on the sidelines as this year’s National People’s Congress (NPC) opened on Tuesday, represent the first official confirmation of Beijing’s efforts to build a fourth aircraft carrier, commonly known as the Type 004.

Illustrations of the warship, however, have long been circulating on the internet.

The artwork was purported to have come from the Jiangnan shipyard in Shanghai, where the carrier is believed to be under construction.

With the Fujian, its third and most advanced aircraft carrier to date, China achieved a breakthrough by equipping it with electromagnetic catapults and arresting devices that allow warplanes to be launched more frequently.

02:17

China airs footage of Fujian aircraft carrier featuring advanced catapult launch system

China airs footage of Fujian aircraft carrier featuring advanced catapult launch system

It has been widely discussed whether China’s latest warship could take another step up to become nuclear-powered, allowing it to generate sufficient power for catapult-launch take-offs and offer a longer range with a higher speed.

The Fujian, which has yet to conduct sea trials, was launched in June 2022.

PLA sources told the Post the same year that China’s naval nuclear reactor technology at the time was not sufficient to support nuclear carriers.

China has been looking to expand its carrier fleet as it aims to develop a modern “blue-water” navy within the next decade.

Aircraft carriers are also believed to be crucial to operations along the Taiwan Strait, where so-called freedom of navigation operations by the US and its allies have triggered protests from Beijing.

Beijing sees Taiwan as part of China to be reunited by force if necessary. Most countries, including the US, do not recognise the self-governed island as an independent state, but Washington is opposed to any attempt to take it by force and is committed to supplying it with weapons.

China is also developing new generation stealth fighters to increase its overall warfare capabilities – in line with its goal to develop a “world class” military power by 2049.

PLA’s Shandong aircraft carrier sails off south Taiwan in ‘show of force’

Tensions have risen as the US deploys more carriers in the western Pacific, which analysts say is a response to military manoeuvres from China and North Korea.

Yuan said China has the capability to deliver an “all-round response” to the US carrier fleet in the western Pacific. Three US aircraft carriers are already operating in the region, with two more reportedly on the way.

Asked to compare the Chinese aircraft carrier development with that of the US, he said the Chinese advancements in the field were not aimed at competition with the US.

“We are building aircraft carriers to protect our national sovereignty and to protect our territorial integrity,” he said.

China’s latest military budget announced on Tuesday raised funding for the armed forces by 7.2 per cent, the same rate as last year amid aims to ramp up combat readiness as well as defence research and development.

 

jward

passin' thru
Male, Maldives –

India has begun withdrawing military personnel operating surveillance aircraft in the Maldives after the new pro-China president ordered them to leave, local media reported Tuesday.

The Mihaaru newspaper reported that 25 Indian troops deployed in the southernmost atoll of Addu had left the archipelago ahead of the official start of the withdrawal agreed by both sides on Sunday.

President Mohamed Muizzu came to power in September on a pledge to kick out Indian security personnel deployed in the Maldives to patrol its vast maritime border.

Following talks with New Delhi, the two sides had agreed to complete a withdrawal of 89 Indian troops and their support staff from the nation of 1,192 tiny coral islands by May 10.

Mihaaru said the three Indian aircraft — two helicopters and one fixed-wing plane — will be operated by Indian civilian staff, who have already arrived.

There was no official confirmation from either the Maldivian or Indian authorities, but Mihaaru said the Maldivian National Defense Force confirmed the Indian withdrawal had begun.

Last week, the Maldives signed a "military assistance" deal with China as the Indians prepared to leave.

The Maldivian Defense Ministry said the deal was to foster "stronger bilateral ties" and that China would train its staff under the pact.

India is suspicious of China's growing presence in the Indian Ocean and its influence in the Maldives as well as in neighboring Sri Lanka.

Both South Asian island nations are strategically placed halfway along key east-west international shipping routes.

Relations between Male and New Delhi have chilled since Muizzu won elections in September.

New Delhi considers the Indian Ocean archipelago to be within its sphere of influence, but the Maldives has shifted into the orbit of China — its largest external creditor.

Muizzu, who visited Beijing in January where he signed a raft of infrastructure, energy, marine and agricultural deals, has previously denied seeking to redraw the regional balance by bringing in Chinese forces to replace Indian troops.

India last month said it was bolstering its naval forces on its "strategically important" Lakshadweep islands, about 130 kilometers (80 miles) north of the Maldives.

The Indian naval unit based on the island of Minicoy will boost "operational surveillance" of the area, the navy said.

 

jward

passin' thru
Collin Koh
@CollinSLKoh

New NORAD chief on PRC airpower projection capabilities beyond the First and Second Island Chains: "Fortunately, we haven’t seen Chinese aircraft operate near our air defense identification zones yet, but I think that that’s coming as early as this year."



airandspaceforces.com
NORAD Boss: Chinese Aircraft Could Start Operating Near US This Year
Unshin Harpley
5–6 minutes

Air Force Gen. Gregory M. Guillot, the new head of the North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command, warned lawmakers March 12 that Chinese warplanes could begin operating near the U.S. Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) as soon as this year.

“Fortunately, we haven’t seen Chinese aircraft operate near our air defense identification zones yet, but I think that that’s coming as early as this year,” Guillot told the House Armed Services Committee in his first congressional testimony since swearing in as NORAD and NORTHCOM commander in February. “That shows an overall concern I have about the growing capability of China not only with aircraft, but also with ships and even submarines being able to range further from China and closer to our shores.”

Air Defense Identification Zones are buffer regions that extend beyond territorial boundaries, covering airspace hundreds of miles from the coastline that nations use to track approaching aircraft. NORAD tracks aircraft using a network of satellites, ground-based and airborne radars, and fighter aircraft, and all aircraft entering or exiting U.S. airspace from abroad must be identified beforehand.

Russian fighters and bombers enter the U.S. ADIZ on a regular basis without entering U.S. or Canadian airspace. Occasionally, NORAD will scramble fighters to intercept those aircraft and escort them out of the ADIZ. In February, NORAD reported three instances of Russian aircraft operating in the Alaskan ADIZ.

Chinese aircraft entering the U.S. ADIZ, however, would mark an expansion of the People’s Liberation Army’s reach. In recent years, the PLA has entered the ADIZ around the island of Taiwan hundreds of times, sometimes sending dozens of planes in one day, in moves that observers warn could be probing Taiwanese defenses or lulling them into a sense of complacency.

U.S. and Chinese aircraft have dealt with each other in the Indo-Pacific—the Pentagon revealed in 2023 that Chinese aircraft conducted over 180 risky intercepts of U.S. planes in the past two years, surpassing the total incidents from the previous decade, heightening concerns about China’s unpredictable and increasingly provocative behavior.

At the same time, Chinese surveillance balloons have entered U.S. airspace five times in recent years, with the Pentagon missing several at the time they occurred before one traversed the entire continental U.S. in January 2023, eventually being shot down after a few days.

Guillot told lawmakers that NORAD has taken steps to better identifying objects like spy balloons that may have gone unnoticed in the past, closing the “domain awareness gap” highlighted by his predecessor, Gen. Glen D. VanHerck.

“First and foremost, my predecessor … directed the radar sensitivities to be adjusted, which would allow better detection of low radar cross section slow moving and high altitude objects,” Guillot said, adding that the system however introduces some clutter due to receiving more data.

“Second, when our operators see intermittent hits that in the past would be passed off to most usually weather or other phenomena that would cause an inconsistent hit, they’re now continuing to track those more carefully and more consistently to ensure that it is not a balloon or some other phenomena,” Guillot said.

“And third is better Domain Awareness between the other combatant commands. As we get JADC2 … the ability to share data from one combatant command to another, instead of stopping at a black line on a map that divides the regions, now we can seamlessly share that information electronically to increase our awareness further away from our shores.”

Still, Guillot said NORAD and NORTHCOM’s surveillance systems need further investment, calling over-the-horizon radar (OTHR) and the Long-Range Discrimination Radar (LRDR) his “top priorities.”

The Missile Defense Agency said in January a LRDR missile defense system in Alaska is mostly complete and will begin operations late this year. Both the U.S. and Canadian militaries have invested in OTHR, with the U.S. Air Force planning to build four OTHRs for NORAD and NORTHCOM. Guillot added that Alaska will have one OTHR. As the process is still in its early stages, he stressed that keeping the program on track is pivotal.

“That would give us capability against cruise missiles, traditional air tracks, as well as the hypersonics,” Guillot said. “Keeping that program on track is the number one priority of from NORTHCOM, because of that great capability that it would bring.”

Guillot added that hypersonic weapons pose a greater threat than Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) due to their ability to fly at lower altitudes and their maneuverability.

“Hypersonics are probably the most destabilizing weapon that we face now,” Guillot said. “They shorten detection time and the fact that they don’t follow a traditional ballistic track means they’re very unpredictable and the area of uncertainty is huge, based on their speed and their maneuverability. That’s what makes them such a challenge to not only detect, but to track and eventually defeat.”
 

jward

passin' thru
Dan Nystedt
@dnystedt

South Korean conglomerates Samsung, LG, and SK, have suspended USA construction projects amid soaring costs and subsidy uncertainties ahead of the presidential election, media report, including Samsung’s US$17 billion chip fab in Taylor, Texas, which might require as much as $8 billion more for construction due to soaring labor and materials costs. LG and SK are both building battery factories in the US. #Samsung #semiconductors Samsung, LG, SK suspend US construction projects amid soaring costs

8:26 PM · Mar 12, 2024
18.2K
Views
 

jward

passin' thru
Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News
@IndoPac_Info
Are #China and #Vietnam on collision course over Beijing’s ‘creeping’ new demarcation in Gulf of Tonkin?


Analysts say China’s move to set a baseline may not comply with international maritime conventions, adding that Beijing’s “creeping” encroachment shows that it is aiming to assert greater control over an important body of water.

Beijing’s move to set a baseline in the Gulf of Tonkin is a sign of its aim to assert greater control in the strategically important area.

The demarcation could also be an ‘inevitable step’ towards the disputed Spratly Islands being the next area where Beijing wants to set its lines.

Vietnam’s inaction to China’s demarcation of its territory in the Gulf of Tonkin where the two countries have unresolved maritime boundaries could be a sign of Hanoi’s desire to discuss the issue behind closed doors.

View: https://twitter.com/IndoPac_Info/status/1768085898342941171?s=20
 

jward

passin' thru

jward

passin' thru
Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News
@IndoPac_Info
Territorial dispute brewing in Gulf of Tonkin


#Vietnam asks Beijing to abide by law while drawing baseline in Gulf of Tonkin.

The baseline is deemed as “excessive” by analysts, with one suggesting the U.S. should conduct a freedom of navigation operation to challenge it.

Analysts say China’s newly announced baseline is not in line with U.N. Law of the Sea.

Vietnam has requested that China respect international law and bilateral agreements with Hanoi after Beijing drew a new baseline in the Gulf of Tonkin.

Radio Free Asia was the first Western media to report the announcement earlier this month of a new baseline that defines China’s territory in the northern part of the area known in China as the Beibu Gulf.

This baseline, which Beijing said was set in accordance with Chinese law, did not exist before.

Vietnamese foreign ministry spokesperson Pham Thu Hang on Thursday said that “all coastal countries need to abide by the 1982 U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)” when drawing the territorial baseline, used to calculate the width of the territorial waters and other maritime zones.

She highlighted the necessity for these baselines to not affect the lawful rights and interests of other countries, including the freedom of navigation and the freedom of transit passage through straits used for international maritime activities.

The spokeswoman stopped short of rejecting the new Chinese baseline and instead called on Beijing to “respect and abide by the agreement on the delimitation of the territorial seas, exclusive economic zones and continental shelves of the two countries in the Gulf of Tonkin signed in 2000, as well as the 1982 UNCLOS.”

Beijing has yet to respond to Hanoi’s statement but the Chinese foreign ministry’s Department of Boundary and Ocean Affairs said on its official WeChat account earlier that the announcement of the baseline was a necessary act to exercise national sovereignty and jurisdiction.

Encroachment on shared waters

The Gulf of Tonkin, or Vinh Bac Bo in Vietnamese, is highly important to both Vietnam and China not only in terms of economic development but also defense and security.

After nine years of negotiation, in 2000 Hanoi and Beijing signed a Maritime Boundary Delimitation Agreement to clearly demarcate each other’s territorial seas, exclusive economic zones and continental shelves in the Gulf of Tonkin.

Some analysts say the new baseline won’t affect Vietnam’s economic interests much as long as the signed agreement is observed but some are concerned that Beijing would use it as a pretext to push Hanoi to renegotiate the boundary agreement.

“China's announcement of its baseline in the Gulf of Tonkin is a step up the ladder of escalation in its strategy of ratcheting up assertiveness in the South China Sea,” said Alexander Vuving, a professor at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies in Hawaii.

“The new baseline puts Vietnam’s before a fait accompli,” he said, “It gives reasons for China to question the agreement that Beijing and Hanoi signed off in 2000 and push the boundary closer to the Vietnamese coast.”

UNCLOS stipulates that the drawing of straight baselines “must not depart to any appreciable extent from the general direction of the coast, and the sea areas lying within the lines must be sufficiently closely linked to the land domain to be subject to the regime of internal waters.”

The new Chinese baseline at some points encroaches about 50 nautical miles (93 kilometers) on international waters and on average, “it represents an encroachment of 20 to 30 nautical miles upon international waters,” according to Vuving.

“China's baseline in the Tonkin Gulf is not in line with UNCLOS and can be rejected by an international court,” the security expert said.

Challenging China’s excessive claims

“China’s unilateral creeping excessive claims in other countries’ maritime and territorial domains even while a border resolution instrument is in existence, are becoming a regular event,” said Pooja Bhatt, an independent maritime security analyst.

Vietnam, as well as other countries in the same situation, should protest against this move, raise the issue at bilateral level and also bring international attention to it, she said.

“Keeping silence to save immediate Chinese backlash will harm countries’ future territorial integrity and national interests.”

The new expansive baseline would affect freedom of navigation activities in the area as no foreign vessels or aircraft are allowed to make so-called innocent passage through a country’s internal waters inside the baseline.

China also requires permission or notification before a foreign warship can sail through its territorial sea, measured 12 nautical miles outward from the baseline. Beijing has repeatedly protested against U.S. warships’ sailing in waters near the Paracel and Spratly archipelagos, which Washington insists is conducted in accordance with international law.

Alexander Vuving @Alex_Vuving
from the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security suggested that several other countries may dispute China's new baseline and the U.S. “may conduct a freedom of navigation operation to physically challenge China's excessive claims.”

Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News
@IndoPac_Info
Are #China and #Vietnam on collision course over Beijing’s ‘creeping’ new demarcation in Gulf of Tonkin?


Analysts say China’s move to set a baseline may not comply with international maritime conventions, adding that Beijing’s “creeping” encroachment shows that it is aiming to assert greater control over an important body of water.

Beijing’s move to set a baseline in the Gulf of Tonkin is a sign of its aim to assert greater control in the strategically important area.

The demarcation could also be an ‘inevitable step’ towards the disputed Spratly Islands being the next area where Beijing wants to set its lines.

Vietnam’s inaction to China’s demarcation of its territory in the Gulf of Tonkin where the two countries have unresolved maritime boundaries could be a sign of Hanoi’s desire to discuss the issue behind closed doors.

View: https://twitter.com/IndoPac_Info/status/1768085898342941171?s=20
 

jward

passin' thru
Back
Back




North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile as Blinken Visits Seoul

2 min read 18 Mar 2024, 05:34 AM IST Join us Whatsapp
Bloomberg

North Korea fired at least one suspected ballistic missile in a defiant show of force that coincided with a visit to Seoul by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who is taking part in a Summit for Democracy being held in the capital.​

North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile as Blinken Visits Seoul
North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile as Blinken Visits Seoul








(Bloomberg) -- North Korea fired at least one suspected ballistic missile in a defiant show of force that coincided with a visit to Seoul by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who is taking part in a Summit for Democracy being held in the capital.

North Korea fired the missile toward waters off the east of the peninsula, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said. The missile appears to have already fallen, Japan’s Coast Guard said, adding later a second one may have also been launched and appears to have landed. National broadcaster NHK said both missiles likely splashed down outside of the country’s exclusive economic zone.

Further details were not immediately available. North Korea has often engaged in provocations designed to coincide with high-profile political events involving the US, South Korea and Japan.

This would be the second ballistic missile Kim Jong Un’s regime has fired this year after shooting off an intermediate-range rocket in mid-January designed to hit US bases in Asia. The state’s official media said that projectile was a “hypersonic" missile, indicating it deployed a reentry vehicle for carrying a nuclear warhead that can change its flight path at high speeds.

Kim and his official media have been lashing out frequently at the US and South Korea, with the North Korean leader saying the time for peaceful unification is over and striking the concept from the country’s constitution.

Prior to the launch, Kim had guided military drills that included fire from an artillery unit capable of hitting Seoul, overseeing training that simulated storming a South Korean border guard post and jumping in the country’s newest tank to take it for a spin. These stepped up threats against his neighbor to the south that coincided with it holding joint military training with the US.

Read more: Kim Jong Un Leads Drills by Artillery Unit That Can Strike Seoul

The US and South Korea concluded their annual Freedom Shield exercises on March 14, which included training on land, sea and in the air against contingencies posed by North Korea. Pyongyang has bristled for decades against joint drills, calling them a prelude to an invasion.

Kim said in February he has the legal right to annihilate South Korea. Kim has also shown no inclination that he wants to return to stalled nuclear disarmament talks and meanwhile has rolled out a series of new weapons designed to deliver nuclear strikes on the US and its allies in Asia.

This has led to some speculation that Kim has turned the corner on his bellicose outbursts and is readying for battle. US President Joe Biden has warned Kim that it would mean the end of his regime if he tried to launch a nuclear attack.

--With assistance from Seyoon Kim.

(Updates with background, details.)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

Unlock a world of Benefits! From insightful newsletters to real-time stock tracking, breaking news and a personalized newsfeed – it's all here, just a click away! Login Now!
 

jward

passin' thru
Nathan J Hunt reposted
Colin Zwirko
@ColinZwirko

ROK defense minister cryptically told reporters they detected something different about North Korea's short-range ballistic missile test today from Sangwon area but declined to detail it. Maybe new launch platform after recent year train/silo/etc?

North Korea fires first suspected ballistic missiles in two months | NK News

Japan’s defense ministry says DPRK fired at least three missiles on Monday morning, likely short-range

North Korea fired at least three suspected ballistic missiles Monday morning toward the East Sea (Sea of Japan), according to South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) and Japan’s defense ministry, the North’s first such launches in over two months.

The JCS said North Korea launched “multiple” short-range ballistic missiles (SRBM) “some 300 km (186 miles)” between 7:44 and 8:22 a.m. from an unspecified location in Sangwon, North Hwanghae Province, just to the southeast of Pyongyang.

Japan’s defense ministry said it detected the first launch of two SRBMs at 7:44 a.m. KST and that they splashed down off the DPRK east coast by 7:54 a.m. after flying around 217 miles (350 km) at a maximum altitude of around 31 miles (50 km).

Tokyo announced it detected a third missile at 8:24 a.m. and that it splashed down by 8:31 a.m. after flying the same distance and altitude as the first two.

The flight times of around 10 minutes or less suggest they were short-range missiles.

The JCS called the launches “a blatant provocation that severely threatens peace and stability of the Korean Peninsula,” while Tokyo also said the “threat” extends to “the region and international community.”

Pyongyang typically publishes reports on its missile tests on the day after a launch. State media has characterized recent launches as “normal” military activities that have “nothing to do with the regional situation.”

North Korea last launched a ballistic missile on Jan. 14, an intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM).

Since then, the country has conducted at least five cruise missile tests and claimed to fire a new surface-to-air missile (SAM) and multiple launch rocket system (MLRS).

Monday morning’s missile test comes on the heels of DPRK leader Kim Jong Un attending four large-scale military drills in the last two weeks, mostly simulating scenarios of war with South Korea.

These coincided with two weeks of large-scale joint U.S.-ROK military exercises, which wrapped up last Friday.

Edited by Arius Derr

Last updated on March 18 at 10:32 a.m. KST with additional details from JCS

Back
Back




North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile as Blinken Visits Seoul

2 min read 18 Mar 2024, 05:34 AM IST Join us Whatsapp
Bloomberg

North Korea fired at least one suspected ballistic missile in a defiant show of force that coincided with a visit to Seoul by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who is taking part in a Summit for Democracy being held in the capital.​

North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile as Blinken Visits Seoul
North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile as Blinken Visits Seoul








(Bloomberg) -- North Korea fired at least one suspected ballistic missile in a defiant show of force that coincided with a visit to Seoul by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who is taking part in a Summit for Democracy being held in the capital.

North Korea fired the missile toward waters off the east of the peninsula, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said. The missile appears to have already fallen, Japan’s Coast Guard said, adding later a second one may have also been launched and appears to have landed. National broadcaster NHK said both missiles likely splashed down outside of the country’s exclusive economic zone.

Further details were not immediately available. North Korea has often engaged in provocations designed to coincide with high-profile political events involving the US, South Korea and Japan.

This would be the second ballistic missile Kim Jong Un’s regime has fired this year after shooting off an intermediate-range rocket in mid-January designed to hit US bases in Asia. The state’s official media said that projectile was a “hypersonic" missile, indicating it deployed a reentry vehicle for carrying a nuclear warhead that can change its flight path at high speeds.

Kim and his official media have been lashing out frequently at the US and South Korea, with the North Korean leader saying the time for peaceful unification is over and striking the concept from the country’s constitution.

Prior to the launch, Kim had guided military drills that included fire from an artillery unit capable of hitting Seoul, overseeing training that simulated storming a South Korean border guard post and jumping in the country’s newest tank to take it for a spin. These stepped up threats against his neighbor to the south that coincided with it holding joint military training with the US.

Read more: Kim Jong Un Leads Drills by Artillery Unit That Can Strike Seoul

The US and South Korea concluded their annual Freedom Shield exercises on March 14, which included training on land, sea and in the air against contingencies posed by North Korea. Pyongyang has bristled for decades against joint drills, calling them a prelude to an invasion.

Kim said in February he has the legal right to annihilate South Korea. Kim has also shown no inclination that he wants to return to stalled nuclear disarmament talks and meanwhile has rolled out a series of new weapons designed to deliver nuclear strikes on the US and its allies in Asia.

This has led to some speculation that Kim has turned the corner on his bellicose outbursts and is readying for battle. US President Joe Biden has warned Kim that it would mean the end of his regime if he tried to launch a nuclear attack.

--With assistance from Seyoon Kim.

(Updates with background, details.)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

Unlock a world of Benefits! From insightful newsletters to real-time stock tracking, breaking news and a personalized newsfeed – it's all here, just a click away! Login Now!
 

jward

passin' thru

Daughter of North Korea's Kim might be heir apparent: Seoul​





Seoul’s Unification Ministry on Monday added its voice to growing speculation around Kim Jong Un’s succession plans, saying they have not “ruled out” that his daughter could be next in line to lead North Korea.
Pyongyang state media on Saturday referred to Kim’s teenage daughter as a “great person of guidance” — “hyangdo” in Korean — a term typically reserved exclusively for top leaders and their successors.

Analysts said it was the first time Kim’s daughter — never named by Pyongyang, but identified as Ju Ae by South Korean intelligence — had been described as such by the North.
It has redoubled speculation that the teen, who often appears next to her father at key public events, could have been chosen as the next leader of the nuclear-armed North, for a third hereditary succession.
“Usually the term ‘hyangdo’ is only used to refer to the highest-ranking official,” Koo Byoung-sam, a spokesman for Seoul’s Unification Ministry, said at a briefing Monday.

“We are not ruling out the possibility of Ju Ae’s succession,” he said, adding that Seoul was “monitoring the situation and remaining open to possibilities.”
However, he warned that if Ju Ae were to take her father’s place as the fourth leader of the reclusive state, “North Korean people will bear the brunt of the fallout,” he said.
Ju Ae was first introduced to the world by state media in 2022, when she accompanied her father to the launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile.

Since then, the North’s official outlets have referred to her in various ways, including the “morning star of Korea” and “beloved child.”
She has been seen at many of her father’s official engagements, including military drills, a visit to a weapons factory, and a stop at a new chicken farm.
In an image released by Pyongyang on Saturday, Ju Ae was seen using binoculars to observe recent paratroop drills, standing beside her father and senior military officials.

Before 2022, the only confirmation of her existence had come from former NBA star Dennis Rodman, who made a visit to the North in 2013 and claimed he’d met a baby daughter of Kim’s called Ju Ae.
Seoul had initially indicated that Kim and his wife, Ri Sol Ju, had their first child, a boy, in 2010, and that Ju Ae was their second child.

But last year, Seoul’s unification minister said that the government was “unable to confirm for sure” the existence of Kim’s son.
Kim Jong Un inherited the regime after his father’s death in late 2011 and has overseen four nuclear tests under his watch, with the latest one conducted in 2017.
 

jward

passin' thru
scmp.com


Chinese scientists create swarming drones that can rapidly multiply mid-air​





Chinese scientists say they have developed a new type of war drone unlike any ever seen on the battlefield.
At first glance, it resembles a consumer-grade Chinese DJI multirotor. However, once it reaches the target airspace it can split in the blink of an eye into two, three or even six smaller drones, depending on what is needed in battle.
Each of these drones has only one blade but can hover and move freely like a regular drone. They can communicate with each other and each could play a specific role – such as command, reconnaissance, tracking and even launching an attack – while collaborating to complete a mission.
008baede-15f5-41bf-8328-bb592f37b4b8_451d173d.jpg

The new drone in action. Photo: Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics
The research, led by Professor Shi Zhiwei from Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, is a breakthrough in air separation technology.
For years, teams around the world have attempted to devise a practical and efficient method for the controlled separation of drones mid-air.
The technology could change the battlefield. When a drone swarm appears on enemy radar screens, air-defence systems allocate anti-drone weapon resources and means based on the number of drones.
clean-thumb_5.jpg

01:34
Crimea bridge 'emergency' caused by Ukrainian surface drones, Russia says

Crimea bridge 'emergency' caused by Ukrainian surface drones, Russia says
However, if the drone swarm suddenly increases in size, not only will the defence system be overwhelmed, but it poses a psychological shock that could hamper effective resistance from enemy commanders and soldiers.

Progress in this technology has been slow because flight efficiency is significantly decreased when traditional drones are combined.

In a peer-reviewed paper published in Acta Aeronautica et Astronautica Sinica journal last month, Shi’s team said it had overcome this challenge. The drone combination, it said, boasted a flight efficiency nearly twice that of a similar sized multirotor drone.


When these small drones were united, they could fly faster and further than they could alone. Even after separation, their flight efficiency remained more than 40 per cent higher than that of traditional small drones – the first demonstration that combined drones could outperform single drones in any flight state.

China is the world’s leading designer and producer of drones, showing excellent price and energy efficiency. However, “combined design and air-separation technology provide the possibility to further enhance the effectiveness of drone use”, Shi and his colleagues wrote in the paper.

The inspiration for Shi’s team came from an unlikely source: the maple seed. Long admired by botanists for its ability to be carried vast distances by the wind, the maple seed’s unique structure – a wing-like cotyledon that rotates around the seed – provides lift and allows it to hover or even ascend in windy conditions.

China’s new hypersonic drone beats F-22 in aerodynamic efficiency: study

In 2012, researchers at Lockheed Martin, a leading US arms manufacturer, drew inspiration from the maple seed to develop a drone with a constantly rotating lens capable of stable target tracking and high-definition imaging.

However, limited by its energy and payload capacity, it could not fly for extended periods or tackle complex tasks alone. The US team envisioned large aircraft delivering these drones, but the cost and risk of being shot down proved prohibitive.

While other Western teams have since developed similar machines, none have reported large-scale practical applications.

Shi’s team says maple seed-inspired drones could be taken from the laboratory to production lines in China to revolutionise future warfare. However, the key is to assemble them to achieve efficient long-distance flight.

To this end and after numerous failures, they conducted extensive and detailed wind tunnel tests and finally found a blade shape that supported both combined flight and single flight efficiency.

The amalgamation of several single-blade drones introduces a distinct set of physical characteristics and flight control logic, departing radically from the familiar multi-rotor designs. Therefore, the team needed to build a physical model almost from scratch and design unique flight control software.

High-speed communication between the small drones is also a challenge, according to Shi.

Clean.jpg

02:56
Drones allegedly from Ukraine hit high-rise buildings in Moscow central districts

Drones allegedly from Ukraine hit high-rise buildings in Moscow central districts
In flight tests, both the combined body and individual drones were stable. Although the maximum flight speed of the combined body could not match that of some high-performance military drones, it could launch small drones so rapidly once it reached the target airspace the opponent might not even have time to determine what was happening.
The scientists said a soldier could carry several such modules and assemble different functions and quantities of drones on-site to complete missions as needed, affording China’s People’s Liberation Army a greater tactical advantage over its opponents.

How Ukraine uses lethal sea drones to target Russia’s Black Sea fleet

Since the Russia-Ukraine war began, China has doubled down on its drone research and production efforts, striving for technological breakthroughs and unparalleled cost-effectiveness to be ready for future conflicts.
Nonetheless, some military pundits caution that China’s drone systems remain untested in large-scale wars, casting a shadow over the efficacy of the strategy.


 
Top