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@Viet

Why did VA choose Galil ACE with 7.62x39 variant? VA might as well could have choosen superior 5.56x45...

7.62x39 by design is precise until 300 meters with AK47 while 5.56x45 is 500 meters with M16...

I have to notify you that reliable sources that tried VHS2 has confirmed the rifle is twice as precise than NATO standard thus it has precision close to a sniper rifle...

will vietnam buy F 35?

What a waste of money... Just buy swedish cutting edge AESA radar and shot down an F35.
 
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@Viet

Why did VA choose Galil ACE with 7.62x39 variant? VA might as well could have choosen superior 5.56x45...

7.62x39 by design is precise until 300 meters with AK47 while 5.56x45 is 500 meters with M16...

I have to notify you that reliable sources that tried VHS2 has confirmed the rifle is twice as precise than NATO standard thus it has precision close to a sniper rifle...



What a waste of money... Just buy swedish cutting edge AESA radar and shot down an F35.

F35 is not meant for direct combat but rather an escort and defence.
 
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@Viet

Why did VA choose Galil ACE with 7.62x39 variant? VA might as well could have choosen superior 5.56x45...

7.62x39 by design is precise until 300 meters with AK47 while 5.56x45 is 500 meters with M16...

I have to notify you that reliable sources that tried VHS2 has confirmed the rifle is twice as precise than NATO standard thus it has precision close to a sniper rifle...
I have no clue. maybe the army´s standard rifle is AK-47, which uses 7.62×39mm calibre.

upload_2016-5-24_7-43-53.png
 
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India Minister of Defence will visit Vietnam in June. as both Russia and India have agreed in principle to supply Vietnam with BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles, I would expect he comes to negotiate the price and delivery of the missile system. hopefully with transfer of technology.

Su-30 with brahmos missile
airlaunch-complex.jpg




http://www.business-standard.com/ar...e-in-s-pore-visit-vietnam-116052301410_1.html

Press Trust of India | New Delhi May 23, 2016 Last Updated at 19:22 IST

Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar will next month travel to Singapore for the key Shangri-La Dialogue focussing on inter-governmental security and also undertake a two-day bilateral visit to Vietnam to deepen military ties.

Parrikar is expected to leave for Singapore on June 3 to attend the inter-governmental security forum on June 4, defence ministry sources said here today.

Last year, Minister of State for Defence Rao Inderjit Singh had represented India at the Shangri-La Dialogue which focusses on security in the Asia-Pacific region.

The Shangri-La Dialogue is an inter-governmental security forum held annually by an independent think-tank, the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and is attended by defence ministers and military chiefs of 28 Asia-Pacific countries.

Last year, US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter had attended the dialogue.

Among the issues that are likely to be discussed are freedom of navigation and security issues concerning the Asia-Pacific region.

Parrikar will then travel to Vietnam, which is involved in a territorial dispute with China in the South China Sea.

Last year, India and Vietnam had decided to enhance their bilateral defence cooperation and signed a joint vision statement for five years.

Vietnam, which is building a naval deterrent to China with Russian-made Kilo-class submarines, is keen on India training its submarine personnel. It also has expressed interest to acquire Indian-made BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, a deal for which India is open to.

Vietnam may become the first country to be supplied the 290 km-range BrahMos weapon system, a joint venture of India and Russia.
 
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The relationship between VN and US dont even come close to a F-15 deal, but F-35 ? Yeah right why dont we just demand some B2 Spirit and Trident ICBM with Ohio class for a change of pace :v And stantardlizing ammunition supply is the foremost choice of VN in purchasing weapon so no NATO round here..........well we may have a few uses for old US-made small arms but that is small compared to the rest of the army.

100mm T-54/55 ammunition.........which is now consist only vietnam war-era stocks

13230169_936899226433038_6903185278455658605_n.jpg
 
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will vietnam buy F 35?
I think we should.

a squadron of F-35B for our Marine Corps and a small carrier to accommodate the jets. sounds unrealistic yet, but in 5 or 10 years, given our economic progress and good relationship to America, thing could come true.
 
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India Minister of Defence will visit Vietnam in June. as both Russia and India have agreed in principle to supply Vietnam with BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles, I would expect he comes to negotiate the price and delivery of the missile system. hopefully with transfer of technology.

Su-30 with brahmos missile
airlaunch-complex.jpg




http://www.business-standard.com/ar...e-in-s-pore-visit-vietnam-116052301410_1.html

Press Trust of India | New Delhi May 23, 2016 Last Updated at 19:22 IST

Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar will next month travel to Singapore for the key Shangri-La Dialogue focussing on inter-governmental security and also undertake a two-day bilateral visit to Vietnam to deepen military ties.

Parrikar is expected to leave for Singapore on June 3 to attend the inter-governmental security forum on June 4, defence ministry sources said here today.

Last year, Minister of State for Defence Rao Inderjit Singh had represented India at the Shangri-La Dialogue which focusses on security in the Asia-Pacific region.

The Shangri-La Dialogue is an inter-governmental security forum held annually by an independent think-tank, the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and is attended by defence ministers and military chiefs of 28 Asia-Pacific countries.

Last year, US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter had attended the dialogue.

Among the issues that are likely to be discussed are freedom of navigation and security issues concerning the Asia-Pacific region.

Parrikar will then travel to Vietnam, which is involved in a territorial dispute with China in the South China Sea.

Last year, India and Vietnam had decided to enhance their bilateral defence cooperation and signed a joint vision statement for five years.

Vietnam, which is building a naval deterrent to China with Russian-made Kilo-class submarines, is keen on India training its submarine personnel. It also has expressed interest to acquire Indian-made BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, a deal for which India is open to.

Vietnam may become the first country to be supplied the 290 km-range BrahMos weapon system, a joint venture of India and Russia.

Why it takes so long for India to sell the Brahmos? I thought they agreed to sell Brahmos to Vietnam back in 2012.

I think we should.

a squadron of F-35B for our Marine Corps and a small carrier to accommodate the jets. sounds unrealistic yet, but in 5 or 10 years, given our economic progress and good relationship to America, thing could come true.

The best offense is the best defense and I believe that having the most sophisticated and high tech radar and Ground to Air missiles is the most effective. When it comes to defense, Range is the biggest factor.
 
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Why it takes so long for India to sell the Brahmos? I thought they agreed to sell Brahmos to Vietnam back in 2012..
No. India has approved the sale recently, while Russia long ago.
The best offense is the best defense and I believe that having the most sophisticated and high tech radar and Ground to Air missiles is the most effective. When it comes to defense, Range is the biggest factor.
our advantage is proximity. we need some thing to take all enemy ships, planes and islands under our long range artilleries, while our opponent needs to travel far from home.
 
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Vietnam will Buy Early Warning Aircraft C-295 AEW&C

24 Mei 2016


Airbus DS C-295 AEW&C (photo : Airbus)

Vietnam will buy at least two early-warning aircraft C-295 AEW&C to enhance the ability to control the South China Sea airspace.
World media simultaneously reported that Vietnam will buy at least 2 aircraft early warning and control air C-295 AEW&C to enhance the ability to control airspace East Sea and provide information reconnaissance, early warning control service of the sky, ready to fight.
This is not without basis when multiple signals recently that Vietnam will likely favor buying the aircraft.
C-295 AEW&C necessary for Vietnam
Military experts said that the C-295 AEW&C is now very necessary for Vietnam.
Accordingly, Vietnam Army was initially formed diverse combat capability with modern weapons such as the Su-30MK2 aircraft, high-speed vessels Molniya rocket, rocket ship Gepard 3.9 Guardians, submarine Kilo 636, missile shore Bastion-P.
However, we still lack a means of linking the modern weapon systems as well as an extended arm to operate, it's early warning aircraft.


The delegation visiting Vietnam Army C-295 aircraft AEW&C (photo : Soha)
The early warning aircraft act in coordination with aircraft, warships help remote target detection, homing missiles, expanding the range of weapons combat. Besides early warning aircraft are also intermediate link, as well as help coordinate the activities of different weapons.
Also according to analysts, this aircraft uses the chassis of the transport aircraft C-295 should help to reduce maintenance costs as well as trained pilots, mechanics.
ELTA radar could be linked to the arms of the Russian system, which Vietnam is owned by Israel have a lot of experience in improving weapons as well as providing radar early warning aircraft to India (the country use Russian aircraft system), C-295 AEW&C is considered the optimal solution for the needs of Vietnam.
Many positive signs
In particular, local and international media also published photographs delegations visiting Vietnam Military C-295 aircraft AEW&C.
This is considered a good signal to accelerate the process of negotiation and transfer between Vietnam and the defense industrial company Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), Israel.



C-295 AEW&C (photo : Jiri Zedka)
In a statement to the media in February month 6/2014, Mr. Antonio Rodríguez Barberan, Director of Airbus DS (subsidiary of Airbus Group European aviation) officially revealed, Ecuador and Vietnam is two of the many new customers have ordered 3 transport aircraft C-295 Airbus DS for each country.
Meanwhile, Russia's Independent newspaper, said that the modernization requires the Air Force in the near future, Vietnam will buy at least two aircraft airborne early warning, in which CASA C-295 is one of the leading candidate.
Because this will be the aircraft is equipped with the electronic system can be compatible with 6 seaplane DHC-6 Twin Otter Navy Air Force Vietnam and create a network of surveillance and early warning area for both air and sea, thereby enhancing the combat readiness capability for our Army.
(Soha)

http://defense-studies.blogspot.co.id/2016/05/vietnam-will-buy-early-warning-aircraft.html

http://soha.vn/tin-hieu-viet-nam-mua-may-bay-canh-bao-som-c-295-aewc-20160523022938662.htm
 
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http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-N...mplement-North-Korea-sanctions/8751464047220/

White House: U.S., Vietnam to implement North Korea sanctions
By Elizabeth Shim
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| May 23, 2016 at 9:42 PM
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White-House-US-Vietnam-to-implement-North-Korea-sanctions.jpg

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WASHINGTON, May 23 (UPI) -- Security cooperation is key between the United States and Vietnam, and the two are coordinating on implementing North Korea sanctions, according to the White House.

In a fact sheet released Monday, the White House stated the United States and Vietnam are "working together to prevent North Korea's proliferation activities and to fully implement [United Nations Security Council Resolution] 2270."

The sanctions resolution that passed in early March includes the strictest bans on weapons of mass destruction that could be exported from North Korea.

Vietnam has been implementing the sanctions.

In late April, Vietnam expelled a North Korean diplomat blacklisted under U.S. and U.N. Security Council sanctions.

Choe Sung Il, who was reportedly in charge of North Korean arms sales in Southeast Asia, was deported April 23. He was added to a blacklist of North Korean individuals maintained by the U.S. Treasury Department last December, and subsequently added to the U.N. sanctions list in March, which allows U.N. member countries to expel him or bar him from entry.

Ahead of the summit between President Obama and Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang, Washington and Seoul had pushed on with diplomatic efforts in Southeast Asia, in order to encourage cooperation with the sanctions, South Korean news agency Yonhap reported.

The White House also said in the statement that Washington has provided more than $45.7 million since fiscal year 2014 for Vietnam to build its maritime security capabilities.

The United States is also looking into supplying 18 MetalShark 450-foot patrol boats, training and maritime law enforcement equipment to Vietnam's Coast Guard.

Both the United States and Vietnam have criticized China's island-building activities in the South China Sea on reefs claimed by multiple countries.
 
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http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-N...mplement-North-Korea-sanctions/8751464047220/

White House: U.S., Vietnam to implement North Korea sanctions
By Elizabeth Shim
clear.gif
| May 23, 2016 at 9:42 PM
clear.gif

clear.gif




White-House-US-Vietnam-to-implement-North-Korea-sanctions.jpg

clear.gif



WASHINGTON, May 23 (UPI) -- Security cooperation is key between the United States and Vietnam, and the two are coordinating on implementing North Korea sanctions, according to the White House.

In a fact sheet released Monday, the White House stated the United States and Vietnam are "working together to prevent North Korea's proliferation activities and to fully implement [United Nations Security Council Resolution] 2270."

The sanctions resolution that passed in early March includes the strictest bans on weapons of mass destruction that could be exported from North Korea.

Vietnam has been implementing the sanctions.

In late April, Vietnam expelled a North Korean diplomat blacklisted under U.S. and U.N. Security Council sanctions.

Choe Sung Il, who was reportedly in charge of North Korean arms sales in Southeast Asia, was deported April 23. He was added to a blacklist of North Korean individuals maintained by the U.S. Treasury Department last December, and subsequently added to the U.N. sanctions list in March, which allows U.N. member countries to expel him or bar him from entry.

Ahead of the summit between President Obama and Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang, Washington and Seoul had pushed on with diplomatic efforts in Southeast Asia, in order to encourage cooperation with the sanctions, South Korean news agency Yonhap reported.

The White House also said in the statement that Washington has provided more than $45.7 million since fiscal year 2014 for Vietnam to build its maritime security capabilities.

The United States is also looking into supplying 18 MetalShark 450-foot patrol boats, training and maritime law enforcement equipment to Vietnam's Coast Guard.

Both the United States and Vietnam have criticized China's island-building activities in the South China Sea on reefs claimed by multiple countries.

There is an error in: "supplying 18 MetalShark 450-foot patrol boats". Its not 450 foot, but 45 foot=15 meters.
 
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Why Obama’s Lifting of the Vietnam Arms Embargo Matters
http://thediplomat.com/2016/05/why-obamas-lifting-of-the-vietnam-arms-embargo-matters/

In a historic move, U.S. President Barack Obama announced Monday that Washington was fully lifting a decades-old embargo on the sale of arms to Vietnam during his first visit to the Southeast Asian country, ending weeks of speculation about the move (See: “Exclusive: US May Lift Vietnam Arms Embargo for Obama Visit”). The step is a significant one not just for U.S.-Vietnam relations, but also for Obama’s foreign policy legacy and broader regional dynamics in the Asia-Pacific (See: “The Case for Lifting the US Vietnam Arms Embargo”).

The significance of the move is clearest for the U.S.-Vietnam bilateral relationship, which began the process of normalization under former president Bill Clinton in 1995. Symbolically, the lifting of the embargo – following a partial lift in October 2014 – represents a removal of an obstacle from the past – a “lingering vestige of the Cold War,” as Obama put it in his remarks in Hanoi – that paves the way for improved relations in the future (See: “Obama Fully Lifts Vietnam Arms Embargo on Visit”). Vietnamese officials have long said that a lifting would be a sign that relations have been fully normalized. The step is also in line with the narrative both sides have embraced of putting aside the past and looking toward the future in the relationship.

Substantively, this is a big step for U.S.-Vietnam defense cooperation, even if the payoff may not be as quickly realized as some might hope. Following the signing of the 2015 Joint Vision Statement on Defense Relations between the two sides last June, a full lifting removes remaining restrictions on Washington’s latitude to provide Hanoi with weapons for its defense, even though any actual sales would still have to meet strict requirements and will be approved on a case-by-case basis (See: “US, Vietnam Deepen Defense Ties”). Sales will also be contingent on other factors, including growing Vietnam’s familiarization with U.S. procurement procedures relative to its other traditional defense partners like Russia. That said, both sides have taken recent steps to address this that could pave the way for future deals – including the holding of a defense industry symposium earlier this month to facilitate interactions between Vietnamese officials and U.S. defense firms.

But the move has significance beyond the bilateral relationship as well. The president’s advisers, as well as Obama himself, view the positive trajectory of U.S.-Vietnam relations as a boost for the administration’s focus on engagement as well as its cultivation of new partners in the U.S. rebalance to the Asia-Pacific. On the former, a major aspect of Obama’s foreign policy has been pursuing previously untapped opportunities to make progress in important but previously problematic relationships – as can be seen in the cases of the Iran nuclear deal, the normalization of ties with Cuba, and greater engagement with Myanmar. Though relations with Vietnam were already normalized back in 1995, the lifting of the embargo, a realization of one such untapped opportunity, is read to be part of a deliberate effort to boost the U.S.-Vietnam comprehensive partnership first inked in 2013 even further, in spite of traditional concerns over human rights and democracy.

In terms of the U.S. pivot or rebalance to the Asia-Pacific, the lifting of the embargo is testament to the significance that Washington has placed in Southeast Asia on emerging partnerships with Vietnam along with other countries like Malaysia (in addition to traditional treaty alliances in Thailand and the Philippines). The move – which took some heavy lifting domestically and is already sparking outcry among activists, rights groups and some lawmakers – was taken in spite of this in part as an acknowledgement by Washington of Vietnam’s own rising strategic importance within U.S. Asia policy, as well as its role in the region and world.

Hanoi’s involvement in a range of key U.S.-led initiatives – from the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal to the new Maritime Security Initiative – along with its increasing contributions to the region and the world in fields like peacekeeping, has meant that its value to the United States has risen significantly relative to even just a few years ago (See: “America’s New Maritime Security Initiative for Southeast Asia”). Indeed, in spite of limits such as human rights, administration officials often seem to be running out of adjectives to describe the upward trajectory of the relationship over the past two decades – from “impressive” to “remarkable” to “breathtaking”. And the lifting opens the door to even more opportunities on the defense side that could see Hanoi’s place in the regional picture grow even further into the future.

Finally, the impact of the lifting, along with its timing, means that it will have important implications for regional dynamics as well. Most obviously, the fact that it comes on the heels of the much-awaited Philippine South China Sea case against China at the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) sends a powerful message to China and the region (See: “Does the Philippines’ South China Sea Case Against China Really Matter?”). Contrary to some interpretations – including some coming out of Beijing – the message is not about containing China. Rather, it is that China’s own destabilizing acts, as evidenced in the South China Sea with moves such as positioning an oil rig in Vietnam’s waters in 2014, are causing countries to move closer to the United States and leading Beijing to contain itself. The Philippines’s signing of a new defense pact with the United States in 2014 is yet another example of this trend, along with other access agreements Washington has concluded with Southeast Asian states (See: “A Big Deal? US, Philippines Agree First ‘Bases’ Under New Defense Pact”).

So while the impact of the lifting of the U.S. arms embargo to Vietnam will largely be viewed through the lens of the bilateral relationship, in reality its significance extends far beyond that. As we head into the last remaining months of this administration as well as what is likely to be a busy summer in the South China Sea, that is a point worth remembering.
 
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There is an error in: "supplying 18 MetalShark 450-foot patrol boats". Its not 450 foot, but 45 foot=15 meters.
you are right. the official release of the White House. it tells 18 Metal Shark 45-foot patrol boats with equipment's.

https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2016/05/23/fact-sheet-united-states-vietnam-relations

bilateral trade $45 billion in 2015

U.S. exports to Vietnam increased by 23 percent year-on-year

Vietnam exports to the US increased by 24 percent year-on-year

U.S. investment in Vietnam $1.5 billion

Vietnam receives $45.7 million (Foreign Military Financing and law enforcement capacity building programs), 18 Metal Shark 45-foot patrol boats with equipments (Reduction Program and Maritime Security Initiative)

19,000 Vietnamese now study in the United States -- 40 percent more than in 2009

80,000 Vietnamese visited the United States in 2015

Fulbright University Vietnam (FUV) will open in Saigon later this year

13,000 Vietnamese are members of the Young Southeast Asia Leaders Initiative (YSEALI)

Vietnam allows the US Peace Corps

the US provides $92 million since 1993 to address the threats posed by unexploded ordnances (UXO), $90 million in dioxin remediation efforts, also funding an environmental assessment at Bien Hoa airbase

Vietnam receives $40 million since 2011 to help mitigate the impacts of climate change

the US provides assistance in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from the agriculture, forestry, and energy sectors and building resilience for communities in the Mekong River and Red River Deltas and along the coast of Vietnam

America is partnering with Vietnam to build capacity to prevent, detect, and respond to biological threats, including through Vietnam’s five-year roadmap to achieve the targets of the Global Health Security Agenda and our joint effort to undertake and share external assessments of capability.

Vietnam receives $50,000 drought assistance, $5 million to counter wildlife trafficking

the USAID supports economic engagement strengthening the rule of law
 
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