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VPA marines are in the good way of modernization. But they still lack of 3 essential things to be a modern infantry force: Individual communication devices, night vision googles and bulletproof vest for each member. And I'm sure those babies will come very soon for all Élite VPA units, it just a normal progression for all modern infantry forces in the world
 
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Well the M203 use the same ammo as M79 so we dont need to produce 1 more type of ammo . But in another way , our crew-served weapon , in this case the AGS 17 , use 35mm grenade . If their operate together will surely create some logistics problem
 
VPA marines are in the good way of modernization. But they still lack of 3 essential things to be a modern infantry force: Individual communication devices, night vision googles and bulletproof vest for each member. And I'm sure those babies will come very soon for all Élite VPA units, it just a normal progression for all modern infantry forces in the world
Vietnam already produces different kinds of night vision googles and target finders.


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Kính ngắm bắn đêm cho súng đại liên PKMSN.



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Thiết bị ngắm bắn nhanh ngày đêm bằng laser bán dẫn.



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Kính ngắm bắn đêm cho pháo Zu23-2, bắn mục tiêu mặt đất.
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even one for AA gun night combat
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for standard rifles and machine guns

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Submarine


the #6: Kilo attack submarine 187 Bà Rịa - Vũng Tàu left St. Petersburg and has just arrived Kaliningrad for sea trails. Baltic sea.



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Phóng to
Tàu ngầm Bà Rịa – Vũng Tàu tại cảng Svetlyy của Hạm đội Baltic, gần thành phố Baltiysk, tỉnh Kaliningrad ngày 5/2/2016 - Ảnh: Diễn đàn Hải quân Nga




a video when the sub 187 Bà Rịa Vũng Tàu is launched at the shipyard in St. Petersburg.
 
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I like it. make old to new:

- mounting an AA gun on a truck
- for example: ZU-23-2 AA gun
- develop an automatic gun loader
- installing a target acquistion system of a laser distance meter, optical-electronic viewfinder, nigh vision device
- a joystick allows the gunner to fire in 360 degrees

voila, we have make in Vietnam mobile automatic AA gun.




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India Fleet Review 2016


Rear Admiral Pham Hoai Nam of Vietnam Navy Command pays a courtesy visit to his counterpart.
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watching the parade
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Frigate Đinh Tiên Hoàng
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sailors of Frigate Đinh Tiên Hoàng greeting the leading Destroyer with India president onboard
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have I appealed many times here and there we need destroyers, too? :(
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India warships
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a frigate of Thai Navy
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Vietnam already produces different kinds of night vision googles and target finders.


anhvideo-vn-che-tao-nhieu-khi-tai-quang-quangdien-tu-hien-dai.jpg


Kính ngắm bắn đêm cho súng đại liên PKMSN.



anhvideo-vn-che-tao-nhieu-khi-tai-quang-quangdien-tu-hien-dai.jpg



Thiết bị ngắm bắn nhanh ngày đêm bằng laser bán dẫn.



anhvideo-vn-che-tao-nhieu-khi-tai-quang-quangdien-tu-hien-dai.jpg




Kính ngắm bắn đêm cho pháo Zu23-2, bắn mục tiêu mặt đất.
anhvideo-vn-che-tao-nhieu-khi-tai-quang-quangdien-tu-hien-dai.jpg





1-060814hha06081822330-1407404944319-13-0-242-450-crop-1407405508148.jpg





even one for AA gun night combat
anhvideo-vn-che-tao-nhieu-khi-tai-quang-quangdien-tu-hien-dai.jpg




for standard rifles and machine guns

anhvideo-vn-che-tao-nhieu-khi-tai-quang-quangdien-tu-hien-dai.jpg
Yes Viet Nam produce all the items: personal communication devices, night vision and bullet proof vests. But they need to speed the selection (of which one they want) and start the production to make a standard issue for all major units. Because it take a certain time to train with those equipments and adapted those toys to the fighting tactics. PLA have already integrated those equipments into their best units for a while now. Night combat skills will be a great addition for VPA combat readiness and competent. And those equipments are pretty cheap to produce and will have a real impact in the battle. For a cost of a boat or plane, you could supply fully a lot of units
 
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AGS 17 automatic-Grenade launcher using 35mm grenades , oh yeah this thing can do some serious damage :3
 
Stop assuming craps, the truth doesn't lay in what you read in the newspapers and internet. Viet Nam is a hardcore communist country with a lot of secrets & close door dealings. Viet Nam also enjoy the longest and strongest military relationship with Russia (and URSS) among ASEAN . By the way 35% tech transfer is not a great % of success if you ask me but 100% is the success...

35% is great considering we only buy 10. Indonesia isn't a new player in aircraft industry. 35% tech from Russia can be a valuable addition to our fighter development with SK.
 
35% is great considering we only buy 10. Indonesia isn't a new player in aircraft industry. 35% tech from Russia can be a valuable addition to our fighter development with SK.
Like I said earlier, we don't have the details of that 35% tech transfer and it probably the lesser important stuffs of the aircraft they will transfer (that 35% for sure won't include engine, weapons and high tech stuffs). Indonesians already have a good aviation industry, that's why the Russian won't mind to have a 35% tech transfer (because the Indonesians will find out how to make them anyway). It like someone build you a car and show you only how to make 4 doors and the trunk door, windshield, rear mirror (basically the shitty stuffs...)...By the way, those Vietnamese communist leaders are sneaky as hell, who went through 5 wars (the actual prime minister Dung was a soldier and was wounded 3 times during the American war, crazy eh?!!!) and know how to beg for free weapons to every nations during wars and today use their dollars like a cheap prick
 
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Analysis

Laos, Vietnam: New Leaders Reflect Struggle To Stay the Course
February 5, 2016 | 09:32 GMT

Stratfor



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Military delegates at the closing ceremony of the Vietnam Communist Party's 12th National Congress in Hanoi on Jan. 28. (KHAM/AFP/Getty Images)


Analysis

Southeast Asia is a region in transition. China's rise as the premier regional power has spurred growth but also competition, forcing governments to recalculate. However, in the eastern half of mainland Southeast Asia, the prevalence of one-party governments means that political change is usually slow and subtle — and rarely transparent. The past few weeks illustrated this trend in Vietnam and Laos, with the long-ruling Communist parties in each undergoing contentious leadership transitions.

In both countries, the debate among party leaders has centered on how best to take advantage of Asia's growth and engage internationally. Chief among their concerns, of course, is managing relations with China. In neither country, however, does the leadership change herald a fundamental shift in strategic or economic orientation. Instead, high-profile shake-ups in each capital were prompted largely by the desire to preserve the legitimacy of one-party rule amid a rapidly changing domestic and regional landscape.


The Vietnam Debate: More Than East vs. West


In Vietnam, a rare degree of political intrigue surrounded January's semi-decennial Communist Party National Congress, normally a scripted unveiling of the country's top leaders and policy priorities for the next five years. The next president, prime minister and National Assembly leader were confirmed without public drama. (They will be formally elected in a rubber-stamp vote by the National Assembly in May.) The Politburo, Vietnam's top policymaking body, was expanded by three members to broaden representation among various regional and sectoral factions. But the contest for the general secretary position, the most powerful in the country, threatened to spark political crisis in Hanoi. In the end, General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong unexpectedly outmaneuvered the powerful Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung to win at least a two-year extension as Party chief. Mainstream narratives portray the outcome as a win for pro-China conservatives over pro-U.S. reformers.

Hanoi is indeed divided on how to live in China's growing economic and security shadow, but the political controversy surrounding the transition had little to do with specific policy positions. After all, both Trong and Dung have had mixed ties with Beijing, and Trong signed off on a number of pro-West moves, some that angered Beijing. As Stratfor has explained previously, geopolitical imperatives, namely Vietnam's need to defend itself against China's push into the South China Sea and to reduce its economic dependence on Chinese trade and investment would compel any Vietnamese leader to pursue economic and security engagement with a range of outside powers. Among the new leadership, the top four have all visited the United States in the past year. Two others in the Politburo were educated in the United States.

Meanwhile, consensus on the need for Western economic integration was emphasized repeatedly in policy documents and in statements throughout the Party congress. Notably, the 200-member Central Committee, the country's second-most powerful body, endorsed Vietnam's participation in the Trans-Pacific Partnership. And since the end of the plenum, Hanoi has gone to great lengths to counter mainstream narratives that Dung's ouster will threaten the country's slow but steady move toward a market economy, which picked up steam under the outgoing prime minister.

Instead, the power struggle stemmed more from Party elders' desire to preserve Vietnam's consensus-oriented decision-making model, centered around the conservative-dominated Politburo — a model Dung was effectively undermining with his bid to stay in power. More broadly, the focus was on reclaiming control over the pace of Vietnam's international engagement and economic liberalization to prevent it from subverting Party interests.


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A self-styled champion of economic reform, the charismatic Dung used his control over sources of state lending and patronage to build a vast power base, along with strong ties with foreign investors, during his 10 years as prime minister. But Vietnam is effectively ruled by committee, a model designed to prevent its historical regional divides from reopening. And the rapid rise of a political maverick like Dung (who hails from the disproportionally wealthy south), along with the growing power of southern factions in the Central Committee, was seen as destabilizing to the Party's carefully cultivated internal balance.

Furthermore, the strengthening of the prime ministerial office and other state institutions under Dung stoked fears that the state would evolve into a parallel power structure rivaling the Party. On economic liberalization, senior conservatives viewed Dung as an overzealous purveyor of crony capitalism who risked becoming captive to his own patronage network — and whose role in some high-profile economic failures and corruption allegations damaged public trust in the Party. On relations with China, he was seen as reckless, too willing to act out of step with the consensus in Hanoi.

Thus, Trong and his conservative allies forged a compromise arrangement that will push Dung into retirement but preserve broad regional and factional representation, avoiding a crisis with Central Committee factions that initially balked at Trong's procedural maneuvers to block Dung's ascendance. In the near term, this arrangement bodes well for stability and policy continuity, preventing an interfactional scramble to fill the vacuum left behind by the 12 retiring Politburo members.

But Vietnam's collective decision-making model makes Hanoi vulnerable to paralysis and policy incoherence, and makes it slow to adapt to the demands of a demographically young, rapidly modernizing populace. Even under Dung, economic reform tended to limp forward. For example, the government reportedly fell far short of its goal of privatizing nearly 300 state-owned firms in 2015 (and in those that have been opened, only minimal private shares have been offered).

This struggle stems in part from Hanoi's rule-by-committee model, where a relatively small number of Party elites — themselves benefiting from a patronage-heavy system in which power and wealth are typically gained by protecting entrenched interests — have the power to block contentious policies. And the model will continue to slow the push for modernization in Vietnam, despite encouraging consensus on the broad direction the country is headed.


Laos: Looking for Leverage


In Laos, meanwhile, the leadership transition has been portrayed as an attempt to shift away from the country's growing reliance on China and back toward Vietnam, which backed the Lao Communist takeover in 1975 and has remained its primary patron ever since. Laos is still run largely by an aging generation of former Pathet Lao independence fighters who, with Vietnamese backing, fought off the Americans from a network of secret cave headquarters in the eastern mountains.


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Bounnhang Vorachith


But President Choummaly Sayasone and, more unexpectedly, Prime Minister Thongsing Thammavong are both stepping down, at least in part due to unease among Party elders about the country's tilt toward the Chinese over the past decade. Their replacements — Bounnhang Vorachit as president and Thongloun Sisoulith as prime minister — are seen as more wary of Beijing's influence. Also ousted was Deputy Prime Minister Somsavat Lengsavad, an ethnic Chinese credited with attracting Chinese corporate investment to the country. He was also a main driver of efforts to break ground on a Chinese-backed high-speed rail line, despite mounting concerns about unfavorable financial terms and long-term debt obligations (and the train's limited utility to the Lao people). Notably, over the past two months, a former finance minister and a central bank governor were arrested on corruption charges related to business ties with the Chinese.

A turn back toward Vietnam would be notable, considering that Laos' hearty embrace of Chinese investment over the past decade was driven, in part, by the need to reduce an over-reliance on Vietnam. But the competition over Laos is hardly a zero-sum game. And as a landlocked, underdeveloped nation (its gross domestic product in 2014 was just $12 billion), Laos has little choice but to seek greater cooperation with all of its more powerful neighbors — even those to which it historically has been subordinate.

To capitalize on Southeast Asia's robust growth and overcome its geographic limitations, Laos has been recasting itself as a corridor country capable of unlocking new trade routes sorely needed in a geographically fragmented region. This endeavor requires substantial foreign assistance, which — combined with the strategic and economic value China sees in the landlocked state — will prevent a major break with the Chinese.

Ultimately, Laos is seeking to use competition among outside powers to better dictate the terms of its international engagement, however little leverage it has. Vientiane may seek to renegotiate certain controversial infrastructure and mining projects in the coming years. (China, for example, needs the north-south high-speed railway far more than Laos does.) But it will have limited success in areas where outside powers are not directly competing.

A more telling gauge of outside influence in Vientiane will be Laos' ambitious drive to build a number of dams in the Mekong River Basin, where the interests of littoral states (particularly Vietnam and Cambodia, which are working to stop the plans) are more diametrically opposed — and where Laos itself is trying to balance its need for the power and income the dams would generate with domestic opposition to their environmental impact. Notably, Vientiane announced Feb. 3 that it would increase Vietnam's share of Lao electricity exports.

In Laos, as in Vietnam, the change in leadership also appears driven by a need to prevent the country's headlong pursuit of commercialization from undermining the Communist Party's hold on power or warping its regional priorities. A flood of investment has evidently brought with it abundant opportunities for corruption on a scale beyond levels of patronage otherwise considered appropriate. As has become increasingly evident across the globe over the past year, but particularly in China, anti-corruption probes can serve as both tools to eliminate political challengers and a means to preserve one-party rule. And Laos — a country already facing enough difficulties carving out a semblance of geopolitical independence — can ill afford to have individual interests dictate its path forward.



Laos, Vietnam: New Leaders Reflect Struggle To Stay the Course
 
Does VPA use any weapon with 5.56x45 mm NATO round?

M885A1 has better penetration than 7.62x39 due to more focused kinetic impact.
 
Yes Viet Nam produce all the items: personal communication devices, night vision and bullet proof vests. But they need to speed the selection (of which one they want) and start the production to make a standard issue for all major units. Because it take a certain time to train with those equipments and adapted those toys to the fighting tactics. PLA have already integrated those equipments into their best units for a while now. Night combat skills will be a great addition for VPA combat readiness and competent. And those equipments are pretty cheap to produce and will have a real impact in the battle. For a cost of a boat or plane, you could supply fully a lot of units
actually I hope we soon begin to build big warships and establish avionic/aircraft industry. ha ha ha ...

sure, if we have a defence budget of Singapore or Japan, and not some $3-4 billion yearly, many expensive toys such as destroyer, cruiser and aircraft carrier, or at cheaper cost, nice suits for the VPA ground fighting force are within reach. in the meanwhile, to bring a smile on one´s face, one positive thing as mentioned in the latest global fire ranking just comes out : we have 4.4 billion barrels as crude oil reserves, just behind China and India in Asia in terms of crude oil reserves. given our actual oil consumption, the reserves are good for 37 years.


Vietnam Military Strength



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Vietnam
Ranked as 21 of 126
GFP Power Index rating of 0.7033


the southeast Asian nation of Vietnam has consistently fielded a large fighting force numbering in the hundreds of thousands.


Total Population: 94,348,835
Available Manpower: 50,650,000
Fit for Service: 41,505,000
Reaching Military Age Annually: 1,640,000
Active Frontline Personnel: 415,000
Active Reserve Personnel: 5,040,000


Tanks: 1,470
Armored Fighting Vehicles (AFVs): 3,150
Self-Propelled Guns (SPGs): 524
Towed-Artillery: 2,200
Multiple-Launch Rocket Systems (MLRSs): 1,100


Total Aircraft: 289
Fighters/Interceptors: 73
Fixed-Wing Attack Aircraft: 73
Transport Aircraft: 161
Trainer Aircraft: 26
Helicopters: 150
Attack Helicopters: 25


Total Naval Strength: 65
Aircraft Carriers: 0
Frigates: 7
Destroyers: 0
Corvettes: 11
Submarines: 5
Coastal Defense Craft: 23
Mine Warfare: 8


Oil Production: 298,400 bbl/day
Oil Consumption: 325,000 bbl/day
Proven Oil Reserves: 4,400,000,000 bbl/day
 
Vietnam´s National Satellite Center

...just coming in the news: Vu Anh Tuan, Deputy Director of the National Satellite Center, announces two new satellites, worth US$ 600 million, will be launched into space in 2019. no further details given, just satellites will help boost agricultural production and minimize natural disaster impact. I assume they are earth observation satellites, with high resolution camera and radars on-board, not only good for civil but also for military purposes. one of them can be Japan X-band satellite, a variant of ASNARO, with optical sensors capable to make/recognise images/objects of resolution of 0.5 m across.


Japan’s NEC Looks To Expand Commercial Market Footprint - SpaceNews.com


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Does VPA use any weapon with 5.56x45 mm NATO round?

M885A1 has better penetration than 7.62x39 due to more focused kinetic impact.
maybe other viet members can answer, as far as in the news, the Z113 factory produces 7.62 mm NATO standard bullet. why your question? do you think the VPA intends to join the NATO? :-)


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