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Hanoi, May 23

Official Greeting to the President of a Superpower: Barack Obama


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Country massacre 2 million Vietnamese... Turned cities into brothels and today they sign deals with the same communists under the statue of Ho chi .. Politics..

Of course, actually, Vietnam is considered as a strategic partner in the region.

Not against the Chinese .. US is opening upto Vietnam against the Chinese.. Who are Russia's largest defence & strategic partners..
 
Eating Drinking like a local. Barack Obama and Anthony Bourdain meet up in Hanoi for some beer and bun cha. the episode will be featured on CNN later in September this year.

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AK-47 has nothing to do with it... Problem is that your goverment is being cheap on foot troopers... And you dont have jungles anymore for cover and traps...

Its has everything to do with it lol. VN is not only about the jungle. Humidity, mud, sand.v.v....Only the AK can pull thourgh that all. Even with new rifle in place, what are you going to do with 2 types of ammunition heh ? You know how many changes have to be implented to switch an main ammunition type ? That is a damn logicstic and training nightmare. Look back to Geogria, changed their entire armforce to M4 rifle just to switch back to AK-types when 2008 war broke out. You dont just go in the army and say "Hey, i like this ammunition type, let switch all of our army rifle to use them" . Its easy to say stuff when you dont have to pay a single coin out to make it real.

ASW from US and Russia. Still, Tu-142 is no longer in production so P-3 is on the high posistion

13248488_942164509239843_4284538981758229799_o.jpg
 
Country massacre 2 million Vietnamese... Turned cities into brothels and today they sign deals with the same communists under the statue of Ho chi .. Politics..



Not against the Chinese .. US is opening upto Vietnam against the Chinese.. Who are Russia's largest defence & strategic partners..

Do you even know the Vietnam war? I don't think you do.
 
Do you even know the Vietnam war? I don't think you do.
Yes, chineses helps Khmer Rouge to massacre 3 million Khmer people, now look at relationship between two country and why u dont ask "why"
 
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The White House
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
May 24, 2016


FACT SHEET: Trade and Investment with Vietnam


The United States is continuing to strengthen its commercial relationship with Vietnam, a rapidly-growing country that offers U.S. businesses and workers substantial opportunities for expanded trade and investment, promoting economic growth and development, and supporting jobs. U.S.-Vietnam goods trade totaled $451 million in 1995, the year the United States and Vietnam normalized diplomatic relations, and since then has increased nearly a hundredfold to $45 billion.

Our relationship is fast-growing: In 2015, U.S. exports to Vietnam grew by 23 percent, the largest year-on-year increase of exports to any of America’s top 50 export markets. Over the period 2010 to 2015, Vietnam was the second fastest growing of America’s top 50 export markets.

Our relationship is diversifying: U.S. export growth is high in sectors ranging from integrated circuits to civil aircraft, and cotton, dairy, tree/fruit nuts, and other agricultural products. In the last five years Vietnam has developed an important role as a supplier of high-tech consumer products to the United States.

Our relationship is inclusive: Trade included small and family businesses in both countries as well as large firms. As of 2014, 6,031 small- and medium-sized American firms exported to Vietnam while 5,895 small- and medium-sized U.S. businesses imported Vietnamese goods.

We are now taking the next step. In addition to witnessing over $16 billion in deal signings to advance aviation and energy sector development in Vietnam and support tens of thousands of U.S. jobs, President Obama’s visit highlights our commitment in the following areas:


Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)

TPP is central to our goal of deepening the U.S.-Vietnamese economic relationship. The Administration has made securing ratification of TPP a top priority and is working with Vietnam and other TPP partners to help them ensure timely and complete implementation of their TPP commitments. TPP will create new opportunities for American and Vietnamese workers and businesses, including small businesses; promote innovation and the digital economy; foster fair competition, transparency, and good governance; and promote workers’ rights, conservation, and sustainable growth. It also is a critical step toward our strategic goal of revitalizing the open, rules-based economic system that the United States has led since World War II.

The U.S. government will commit resources and technical expertise to support Vietnam and our other TPP partners to implement and effectively enforce the obligations of the agreement. To support Vietnam, the United States is providing more than $30 million in capacity building assistance, which will include work to ensure freedom of association, including independent unions, and other internationally recognized labor rights; protection and enforcement of intellectual property; and environmental protection and sustainable growth.


U.S. Corporate Social Responsibility

U.S. foreign direct investment in Vietnam grew to $1.5 billion in 2014 and has been complemented by U.S. corporate citizenship investments in Vietnam’s communities and environment. U.S. firms in Vietnam uphold high standards of corporate citizenship by investing in the communities and environment in which they do business. For example, U.S. companies in Vietnam have trained hundreds of engineers on environmental protection and sustainable development, donated over $12 million in software and services to support hundreds of non-governmental organizations, and enhanced the skillset of tens of thousands of teachers and students in the use of information and communication technology. The U.S. government is committed to supporting public-private partnerships that encourage corporate social responsibility by U.S. firms:

A USAID partnership with Arizona State University and several U.S. companies is enabling university-private sector collaboration, and developing curriculum partnerships, mentorships, and industry-sponsored practical opportunities.

Numerous U.S. companies are collaborating on a new USAID alliance with Harvard Medical School and two Boston-area hospitals to improve the quality and effectiveness of medical education in Vietnam, including in areas relevant to the Global Health Security Agenda.

In 2016, Cargill Vietnam won the U.S. Secretary of State’s Award for Corporate Excellence for its long-term commitment to investing in its farmer-partners, supporting community health, and training over 12,000 farmers in sustainable production techniques. Cargill Vietnam’s Cargill Cares school building program has built and delivered 76 schools across rural communities, benefiting more than 13,000 children per year.


A Whole-of-Government Approach to Partnership

The United States employs a whole-of-government approach to support U.S. exports to and investment in Vietnam, including programs that promote sustainable and inclusive economic growth, encourage legitimate and accountable governance while addressing trade barriers, support corporate social responsibility, and strengthen the rule of law and business climate.


U.S.-ASEAN Connect Initiative

Through U.S.-ASEAN Connect, the U.S. government will work with Vietnam and other members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to foster the policy environments that promote ASEAN economic integration, increase trade and investment, assist the development of clean energy and energy connectivity, and spur sustainable, innovation-led economic growth.


U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)

USAID’s economic growth and governance programs will support Vietnam’s efforts to promote greater transparency and accountability, economic openness, competition, and the rule of law in economic affairs. USAID has contributed to over 150 laws and related regulations and decrees, and assisted more than 50 Vietnamese government agency counterparts in the legal and economic reform process.


U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)

Vietnam now ranks as the United States’ 11th-largest agricultural export market. To burgeon this relationship, USDA will assist Vietnam’s capacity building on a wide range of areas, including: food safety, climate-smart agriculture, biotechnology, animal health, plant health, modern retail/distribution, and other sector-specific topics.


U.S. Department of Commerce

The U.S. Department of Commerce will work alongside the U.S. private sector to assist Vietnam in developing the strong infrastructure the country requires to meet its goals of economic modernization by 2035. The Department commits to arranging annual private sector meetings with the appropriate ministries, in addition to continuing its infrastructure-focused conferences in areas such as healthcare, aviation, smart cities, and clean energy.

The Department plans on leading a Water Infrastructure Business Development Mission to Vietnam in July 2016, to introduce new technologies and internationally recognized codes and standards to strengthen Vietnam’s water sector. The Department also plans to organize a Civil Nuclear Trade Mission in 2017, supporting U.S.-Vietnamese industry cooperation in the development of Vietnam’s civil nuclear program.


U.S. Department of State

The U.S. Department of State has contributed to Vietnam’s development of a science-based regulatory system to address trade and food security issues including on agricultural biotechnology through activities that have reached hundreds of Vietnamese policymakers, scientists, academics, and journalists.


U.S. Department of the Treasury

To build a more transparent and accountable financial reporting infrastructure, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Technical Assistance (OTA) will continue to provide Vietnam’s Ministry of Finance technical assistance toward the creation of country-wide training programs on International Public Sector Accounting Standards; accounting resources and tools, including financial statement reports and templates; and user guide manuals that will document the Whole-of-Government consolidated financial statement preparation process.


U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM Bank)

Since 2009, EXIM Bank has authorized over $800 million in loans, guarantees and insurance to support U.S. exports – from businesses large and small – to Vietnam. These exports have supported U.S.-Vietnam economic engagement across multiple sectors including renewable energy, aviation, and manufacturing. These U.S. exports not only support thousands of jobs in the United States, but also create jobs and boost infrastructure investment in Vietnam.

EXIM will remain actively engaged on future opportunities to finance U.S. exports to Vietnam, particularly those that also support Vietnam’s infrastructure development needs. EXIM Bank reaffirms its interest in supporting U.S. exports for civil nuclear power projects in Vietnam.


U.S. Trade and Development Agency (USTDA)

USTDA will continue to connect U.S. businesses to priority projects in Vietnam’s clean energy, information technology, transportation, and water sectors. By building mutually beneficial partnerships that leverage capital for Vietnam’s infrastructure development, the Agency will expand upon the $3 billion in U.S. exports that it has already helped facilitate to Vietnam.

USTDA is committed to helping strengthen Vietnam's aviation safety oversight. In the energy sector the Agency is facilitating the development of 470 megawatts of wind power generation, which could leverage over $1 billion in investment. In urban transportation, USTDA is supporting a $100 million information and communication technology deployment for the Ho Chi Minh City metro rail system.

To support Vietnam’s shift from coal-fired power generation, USTDA will sponsor a natural gas reverse trade mission to the United States in fall 2016. The visit will highlight the United States’ experience in the construction, operation, maintenance, and refurbishment of gas-fired power plants and related infrastructure.

Through its Global Procurement Initiative: Understanding Best Value (GPI), USTDA will partner with the Ministry of Planning and Investment to design a database to track and monitor the performance of contractors who provide billions of dollars in goods and services to the Government of Vietnam each year.


Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC)

As the U.S. government’s development finance institution, OPIC will leverage its newly opened office in Southeast Asia to unlock opportunities that support Vietnam's economic development through private sector investment in all sectors, with particular attention to renewable energy and aviation infrastructure.

Since 2003, OPIC has provided more than $40 million in financing and insurance support to seven projects in Vietnam. OPIC’s investments have cut across sectors, including communications, manufacturing, consulting and economic development services, aquaculture, and power generation.




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this news is nice too.

https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-pres...ietnam-civil-nuclear-clean-energy-cooperation

the U.S. supports Vietnam’s civil nuclear program. With first step of establishing "Technical Support Center for Nuclear Security and Safeguards". It is important to note, that although Vietnam is party to most relevant nonproliferation treaties and agreements, including:

- Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)
- Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT)
- Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC)
- Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BTWC)

but Vietnam is not a member of any of the major export control regimes.

That gives a hint to any country that threatens the use of nuclear weapons.

Vietnam First Nuclear Power Plant Ninh Thuan I

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AK-47 has nothing to do with it... Problem is that your goverment is being cheap on foot troopers... And you dont have jungles anymore for cover and traps...
you troller. AKs with 7.62×39mm calibre are in battles, wars proven. as Galil rifles use the same calibre, it saves costs, too in respect to production, maintenance, etc. 300m effective distance is good enough. for longer distance, infantryman can use Galil Negev machine gun (used by the Marines). Effective firing range: up to 1000 m.

b217008ffb08456e2fc06e3a23750dda-Galil---Luyen-tap-ban-Bai-1-o-Lu-doan-101.jpg
 
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asiapacific/japan-looking-into-new/2759778.html


I believe this news was probably missed: Japan wants "swiftly" provide Vietnam with more second-hand vessels for sea patrol, in addition to 6 boats already provided last year. Plus Japan examines Vietnam government´s request for delivering of new patrol vessels. timing, method of delivery, costs and quantity of vessels not yet been decided.

"Japan is a maritime country with a lot of know-how, so it's perfectly understandable that countries like Vietnam come to Japan for help. We're doing our best".

so Japan's foreign ministry deputy spokesman Masato Otaka. He told reporters vessel delivery is not related to the tension in the SC Sea :D .though it is not revealed what vessels Vietnam wants, but I would guess, we seek some sort of patrol vessels that have experience in protecting the Senkaku islands against a certain foreign intruder.


1,000 ton Hateruma class
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2,000 ton Hida class
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http://sputniknews.com/military/20160525/1040200430/vietnam-us-fighter-jets.html

25.05.2016

Littoral Combat Ships and F-18 Super-Hornet jets will probably top Vietnam’s shopping list for US-made weapons now that President Barack Obama has lifted Washington’s 50-year-old arms embargo on Hanoi, former US diplomat Jim Jatras told Sputnik.



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F-18 fighter



WASHINGTON (Sputnik) — Obama announced in Hanoi on Monday the lifting of the US embargo on Vietnam during his three-day visit.

"Among the systems Hanoi reportedly is interested in are Lockheed Martin’s F-16 jets, Boeing’s F/A-18 Super Hornet jets, competing littoral combat ship designs from Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics, and precision-guidance munitions from Raytheon and Boeing," Jatras said on Tuesday.

Jatras dismissed Obama’s assurance on Monday that his decision to lift the arms embargo was not based on China or any other considerations as unworthy of serious consideration.

"News reports indicate that Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon and General Dynamics are already lining up, with some major announcements expected before the end of this year," Jatras, a former foreign policy adviser to Republican members of the US Senate, noted.

However, while such arms sales might prove profitable for major US defense contractors, they would also propel the United States further down the road toward a potential confrontation with China, Jatras warned.

"President Obama’s decision to lift bans to weapons sales to Vietnam is another step along the road to a major confrontation between the United States and China."

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© REUTERS/ Carlos Barria


Obama’s remark was "a transparent falsehood, and one could almost see his nose growing as he said it," the former US diplomat said.

If Vietnam does buy large quantities of US weapons, it will boost its influence on US foreign policy and feed pressures for Washington to step up its confrontations with China, Jatras warned.

"Vietnam is the world’s eighth-largest arms importer with purchases virtually all aimed at China, and therefore it is set to become another Saudi Arabia in terms of the influence it exercises over US policy."

Washington was needlessly provoking clashes with China just as it was against Russia on the other side of the world, Jatras emphasized.

"The Obama administration has treated China’s territorial claims in the South China Sea with the same recklessness evident in NATO’s beefed-up presence in the Baltic and Black seas with respect to Russia."

Both regions were areas where US interests were next to nil, yet Washington regarded them as vital to the major power it was challenging, supposedly to protect allies and partners whose contribution to American security was nonexistent, Jatras elaborated.

However, the growing US ties with Vietnam would threaten Russian interests in the region as well, Jatras claimed.

"But a budding US-Vietnam axis does not directly threaten Russia in its own neighborhood: It is likely something Moscow can find a way to adjust to."

Also, unlike the United States, Russia had proven capable of seeing other countries’ relationships with third parties in other than simple binary terms, Jatras concluded.
 
http://sputniknews.com/military/20160525/1040200430/vietnam-us-fighter-jets.html

25.05.2016

Littoral Combat Ships and F-18 Super-Hornet jets will probably top Vietnam’s shopping list for US-made weapons now that President Barack Obama has lifted Washington’s 50-year-old arms embargo on Hanoi, former US diplomat Jim Jatras told Sputnik.



1028870916.jpg

F-18 fighter



WASHINGTON (Sputnik) — Obama announced in Hanoi on Monday the lifting of the US embargo on Vietnam during his three-day visit.

"Among the systems Hanoi reportedly is interested in are Lockheed Martin’s F-16 jets, Boeing’s F/A-18 Super Hornet jets, competing littoral combat ship designs from Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics, and precision-guidance munitions from Raytheon and Boeing," Jatras said on Tuesday.

Jatras dismissed Obama’s assurance on Monday that his decision to lift the arms embargo was not based on China or any other considerations as unworthy of serious consideration.

"News reports indicate that Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon and General Dynamics are already lining up, with some major announcements expected before the end of this year," Jatras, a former foreign policy adviser to Republican members of the US Senate, noted.

However, while such arms sales might prove profitable for major US defense contractors, they would also propel the United States further down the road toward a potential confrontation with China, Jatras warned.

"President Obama’s decision to lift bans to weapons sales to Vietnam is another step along the road to a major confrontation between the United States and China."

1040195280.jpg

© REUTERS/ Carlos Barria


Obama’s remark was "a transparent falsehood, and one could almost see his nose growing as he said it," the former US diplomat said.

If Vietnam does buy large quantities of US weapons, it will boost its influence on US foreign policy and feed pressures for Washington to step up its confrontations with China, Jatras warned.

"Vietnam is the world’s eighth-largest arms importer with purchases virtually all aimed at China, and therefore it is set to become another Saudi Arabia in terms of the influence it exercises over US policy."

Washington was needlessly provoking clashes with China just as it was against Russia on the other side of the world, Jatras emphasized.

"The Obama administration has treated China’s territorial claims in the South China Sea with the same recklessness evident in NATO’s beefed-up presence in the Baltic and Black seas with respect to Russia."

Both regions were areas where US interests were next to nil, yet Washington regarded them as vital to the major power it was challenging, supposedly to protect allies and partners whose contribution to American security was nonexistent, Jatras elaborated.

However, the growing US ties with Vietnam would threaten Russian interests in the region as well, Jatras claimed.

"But a budding US-Vietnam axis does not directly threaten Russia in its own neighborhood: It is likely something Moscow can find a way to adjust to."

Also, unlike the United States, Russia had proven capable of seeing other countries’ relationships with third parties in other than simple binary terms, Jatras concluded.

Vietnam interested in Littoral Combat Ships? I don't believe that for a moment.
 
you troller. AKs with 7.62×39mm calibre are in battles, wars proven. as Galil rifles use the same calibre, it saves costs, too in respect to production, maintenance, etc. 300m effective distance is good enough. for longer distance, infantryman can use Galil Negev machine gun (used by the Marines). Effective firing range: up to 1000 m.

b217008ffb08456e2fc06e3a23750dda-Galil---Luyen-tap-ban-Bai-1-o-Lu-doan-101.jpg

You admit that your goverment is being cheap on your foot troopers by sticking with inferior more expensive to produce round while chinese are going for 5.8mm with bullpups also converting and making new their AKs that chamber 5.8mm.

300 meters is simply not good enough when a Chinese foot trooper will able to engage your comrades at 500-600 meters effectively with precision and penetration power to penetrate a helmet due to its more focused kinetic energy.

Screw machine gunners... They are considerably less more and far machine guns than assault rifles... And it uses the same round as Galil ACE?

How does it save costs? It does not in the long run. Screw reducing costs by half in terms of cost of ammunition used in training and war...
 
Its has everything to do with it lol. VN is not only about the jungle. Humidity, mud, sand.v.v....Only the AK can pull thourgh that all. Even with new rifle in place, what are you going to do with 2 types of ammunition heh ? You know how many changes have to be implented to switch an main ammunition type ? That is a damn logicstic and training nightmare. Look back to Geogria, changed their entire armforce to M4 rifle just to switch back to AK-types when 2008 war broke out. You dont just go in the army and say "Hey, i like this ammunition type, let switch all of our army rifle to use them" . Its easy to say stuff when you dont have to pay a single coin out to make it real.

ASW from US and Russia. Still, Tu-142 is no longer in production so P-3 is on the high posistion

13248488_942164509239843_4284538981758229799_o.jpg

Actually, L-188 Electra (The P-3 Hull) were also out of production 40 years ago. If Vietnam gone for P-3, the only way Vietnam can get them is 2nd hand. If you want brand new, you need P-8........
 
Vietnam May Request F-16s, P-3 Orions From US
http://www.defensenews.com/story/de...nam-may-request-f-16s-p-3-orions-us/84904786/

TAIPEI, Taiwan — With the lifting of the US arms embargo to Vietnam, a US defense industry source indicates Hanoi is seeking to improve its air defense and maritime security capabilities with the procurement of F-16 fighter aircraft from the US Pentagon’s excess defense articles (EDA) program and refurbished P-3C Orion maritime patrol aircraft, armed with torpedoes.

The source also said Vietnam could seek US-made UAVs for maritime intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) missions.

Torpedoes were banned under the embargo, but now the Vietnamese want the same P-3 program the US sold to Taiwan, the source said. On the F-16 EDA, they want the same deal the Obama administration gave Indonesia.

Defense News has also acquired an unclassified defense industry briefing prepared by the US Pacific Command. According to the report, “Socialist Republic of Vietnam — Country Security Cooperation Plan,” the US Embassy in Hanoi “possesses a robust security cooperating program operating in accordance with US policy goals and interests to promote integration and access focused on key areas within the Vietnamese security architecture.”

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Defense News has acquired an unclassified defense industry briefing prepared by the US Pacific Command. According to the report, the US Embassy in Hanoi “possesses a robust security cooperating program operating in accordance with US policy goals and interests to promote integration and access focused on key areas within the Vietnamese security architecture.” (Photo: US Pacific Command)

These include achieving air and maritime domain awareness, providing maritime security against traditional and nontraditional security threats, delivering all-hazards response and support to civil authorities, participating in regional contingency response and international peacekeeping operations, and addressing the impact of Vietnam War legacy issues on civil society.

“The SCO [Security Cooperation Organization] is manned and capable of providing in-country support and coordination for programs to expand US defense article procurement ... and assist Vietnam in developing and sustaining professional armed forces,” the report said.

According to the report, Vietnam’s strategic outlook involves the survival of the Communist Party by maintaining sovereignty and independence, achieving freedom of maneuver, and ensuring sovereignty over its exclusive economic zone (EEZ) and unfettered access to natural resources and the global economic market.

China has been testing Vietnam’s EEZ claims with incursions by maritime patrol vessels, aggressive commercial fishing vessels and the stationing of an oil drilling test platform in 2014, dubbed the Haiyang Shiyou 981 standoff.

Vietnam’s goals, according to the report, are to enhance its presence in the South China Sea with upgrades for submarine warfare, maritime air-ground interdiction, anti-surface warfare (ASUW), anti-submarine warfare (ASW), maritime domain awareness (MDA), early warning, and command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (C4ISR).

In the past, Vietnam has procured defense articles from sources within the former Soviet Union and former East Bloc nations, but it has “begun reaching out to the European Union, Israel, and others.”

On radar issues, the Vietnamese are procuring a high-frequency surface wave radar from the US for $30 million, according to the report. This is part of their overall effort to improve early warning and ISR.

The report breaks down each service requirement.

For the Army, it must transition from a territorial defense structure, retain a central role as defender of national sovereignty and improve capacity to respond to natural disasters.

The Air Force must improve early warning and airborne ISR, enhance maritime interdiction, develop anti-access/area-denial capabilities, and revamp pilot training.

The Navy must improve MDA, electronic countermeasures/electronic counter-countermeasures, electronic intelligence, expand maritime law enforcement capabilities, develop a naval aviation arm, and enhance ASW and ASUW.

The US Embassy’s primary cooperation vision is to promote the United States as a “reliable partner to address complex, forward looking security issues.” It also hopes to establish military relationships outside the traditional theater support command that include defense sales, cross-servicing, voyage repairs, and science and technology cooperation.

The report said that priorities include the “establishment” of sustainable lines of effort (LOE) and “synchronize” operations, actions and activities (OAA); instill a programmatic, regularized approach to security cooperation; and focus on nontraditional security approaches and humanitarian activities.

According to Carl Thayer, emeritus professor at the Australian Defence Force Academy, big-ticket sales may be a long way off: “Vietnam does not have the defense budget for that. It is fully committed to integrating six advanced Kilo-class submarines into its fleet,” and all maintenance, repair and logistics network and workforce are geared to work with Soviet/Russian technology.

Another hurdle for Vietnam is that Hanoi will continue to face the same restrictions that all other countries face when trying to procure US arms, Thayer said, including human rights issues and the authoritarian nature of the government in power.
 
Eating Drinking like a local. Barack Obama and Anthony Bourdain meet up in Hanoi for some beer and bun cha. the episode will be featured on CNN later in September this year.

CjJLe8DVAAUvEnE.jpg:large



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2016-05-23t143443z808753194d1aetfsfhzabrtrmadp3vietnam-obama_1_guxy.jpg


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I look forward to watching that episode. I really like Anthony Bourdain in general. The one problem is, I almost always get hungry while watching his show.

I like the way he samples the cuisine from various different countries.
 
You admit that your goverment is being cheap on your foot troopers by sticking with inferior more expensive to produce round while chinese are going for 5.8mm with bullpups also converting and making new their AKs that chamber 5.8mm.

300 meters is simply not good enough when a Chinese foot trooper will able to engage your comrades at 500-600 meters effectively with precision and penetration power to penetrate a helmet due to its more focused kinetic energy.

Screw machine gunners... They are considerably less more and far machine guns than assault rifles... And it uses the same round as Galil ACE?

How does it save costs? It does not in the long run. Screw reducing costs by half in terms of cost of ammunition used in training and war...
ha ha ha ...cheap or not cheap is not only the question you need to consider here. The other factor you should have in mind too is destruction power. A salvo of great caliber bullets on enemy soldiers make more fun, creating more impression on them than one of smaller caliber. Hiding behind vests and helmets won't help much.

Like everything in life you need to make compromise.

Negev machine gun uses the same 7.62 caliber.

How about the Croatian Army?

Why does the Army of Finland use the same caliber as Vietnam?
 
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