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Military Thread

Windsor

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Malaysia Becomes DCNS’ 1st Customer for Gowind Ships

Jan 17, 2012 19:27 EST

In October 2010, Malaysia’s Boustead received a letter of intent from their government for 6 “second-generation patrol vessels.” Now South Africa’s DefenceWeb reports that DCNS and its local submarine & surface ship partner, Boustead Naval Shipyard, have won a contract worth $2.8 billion to supply 6 Gowind family ships to Malaysia, which will be the type’s 1st paid order. Deliveries are expected to run from 2017-2020, if all goes well.

To win, DCNS reportedly beat Dutch firm Damen, whose scalable SIGMA ships have been purchased by neighboring Indonesia; as well as TKMS of Germany, who supplied Malaysia’s 6 existing MEKO 100 Kedah Class OPVs and its 2 Kasturi Class light frigates. What’s less certain so far is the Gowind ships’ exact configuration, and equipment set…

The Gowind family isn’t a single design. It’s a family of ships with some common systems and design elements, designed to scale from inshore patrol needs to heavy corvette/ light frigate designs. DCNS has been exploring partnerships with lower-cost foreign shipyards as part of its overall export strategy, and had been negotiating with Bulgaria along those lines. Memoranda now give it footholds in South Africa as well as Malaysia.

Gowind Control/120 Designs like FS L’Adroit, on loan to France for 3 years as a promotional exercise, are 1,100t offshore patrol vessels, with minimal armament. L’Adroit carries only a light autocannon and non-lethal weapons, for instance. Gowind Presence inshore patrol vessels are even smaller.

On the other hand, Bulgaria’s interest in Gowind ships involved fully-armed 2,250t Gowind Combat/200 corvettes, carrying 57mm guns, vertical-launch cells, anti-aircraft and anti-ship missiles, and a helicopter up to the 10-ton class.

The DefenceWeb report is very unclear concerning Malaysia’s choice, except to state that the shipbuilders wanted DCNS’ SETIS combat management system, while the Royal Malaysian Navy wants the Thales Tacticos systems already on one of Malaysia’s Kasturi Class light frigates. It did not state how this conflict was resolved.

http://www.defenseindustrydaily.com/Malaysia-Becomes-DCNS-1st-Customer-for-Gowind-Ships-07272/

 
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Windsor

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/indonesia-orders-six-su-30mk2s-366987/

Indonesia orders six Su-30MK2s

<label style="text-transform: none"> By: </label> Greg Waldron Singapore
06:58 17 Jan 2012

Indonesia has ordered six additional Sukhoi Su-30MK2 aircraft, with the first two to be delivered in 2012. Jakarta will receive two more in 2013 and the final pair in 2014, said Indonesian air force chief of staff Imam Sufaat. His comments were quoted in a report by official government news agency Antara.

The report added that the Indonesian air force currently has six Su-27SKMs and four Su-30MK2s in its inventory. The aircraft are based at Sultan Hasanuddin air base in Indonesia's South Sulawesi province.

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Separately, in the coming months Indonesia could issue a letter of acceptance for 24 used US Air National Guard Lockheed Martin F-16C/Ds. In late November, the US government outlined details of the proposed sale and upgrade of the Block 25-standard aircraft for Indonesia, valuing the Foreign Military Sale deal at $750 million.

If a letter of acceptance is issued in early 2012, it could clear the way for deliveries of the upgraded F-16s to commence in 2014.

Australia has also offered to donate four Lockheed C-130H Hercules transports to Jakarta, contingent on aircraft upgrading, but this deal has yet to be confirmed.
 
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