Jump to content

Defence news 11/24/2010


Recommended Posts

Posted

[quote author=BENZBABU link=topic=124862.msg1380269#msg1380269 date=1290614933]
thankyou thankyou
[/quote]
you rock you rock

  • Replies 42
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Deletedid1

    26

  • robo

    5

  • Saamy

    3

  • BommakantiNagalingam

    3

Popular Days

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted

[quote author=BENZBABU link=topic=124862.msg1380200#msg1380200 date=1290614092]
ma nannagaru retired NCO in airforce........
yeah RIMC, NDA, SSC............all fail  sSa_j@il
[/quote]

Mamagariki Hatsoff
n mari darunamgaa anni ela fail ayyav baa sFun_duh sFun_duh

Posted

[b]Saab receives order for coastal surveillance system in India
[/b]
Defence and security company Saab has received an order from the Indian Maritime Authority, DGLL (Directorate General of Lighthouses and Lightships) for supply of a system for coastal surveillance for the entire Indian coast. The order is worth approximately 116 MSEK.
The system that DGLL ordered comprises sensors to be installed along the Indian coast and equipment for regional and national control centers. Users of the system apart from DGLL will be the Indian navy, Coast Guard and DG Shipping.
Saab will implement the project which includes installation, commissioning, training and support together with their Indian partner, Elcome Marine Services.
The project will start immediately and will be completed within 18 months.
Our opinion is that Saab with this strategic order, which contains future options, will be able to develop further business in India within the marine domain.
"Our systems for monitoring sea traffic have been installed on several of the coasts in the world and also along inland waterways in Europe and in China. With this order we are strengthening our position further," says Gunilla Fransson, head of Saab´s business area Security and Defense Solutions.
"It is equally satisfying that we now deepen and enhance our relation with India. This project along with the co-operations we already have makes India an important long term market for Saab."
Saab serves the global market with world-leading products, services and solutions ranging from military defence to civil security. Saab has operations and employees on all continents and constantly develops, adopts and improves new technology to meet customers’ changing needs.

Posted

[quote author=BommakantiNagalingam link=topic=124862.msg1380277#msg1380277 date=1290615132]
Mamagariki Hatsoff
n mari darunamgaa anni ela fail ayyav baa sFun_duh sFun_duh
[/quote]

naaku ara chetulaki sweating ekkuva baa.......... and more over eye sight unndi

Posted

[b]Pak perception of Indian role in Afghan a matter of concern: US[/b]

Pakistan's negative perception of India's role in Afghanistan is a matter of "continuing concern," a Pentagon official has said, while appreciating the development assistance being offered by New Delhi to the war-torn country.

The comments came as Pentagon released a report on Afghanistan where US-led NATO forces are battling the Taliban amid efforts to rebuild the infrastructure torn down by years of war.

"We value very highly the developmental work that India's doing in Afghanistan. It's been a key, one of the major contributors, and the kind of developmental work that India has done in Afghanistan is really vital to the success of the effort there," the senior Defence Department official said.

"At the same time, Pakistani perceptions of that – and they're regularly voiced, both in formal and informal conversations by a wide range of people in Pakistan – is an area that is a continuing concern," the official said after the release of the Pentagon report.


The report said that India's presence in Afghanistan cannot be understood without considering the "tense, fragile" relationship between Pakistan and India.

The report cites President Hamid Karzai's visit to India in April this year in the beginning of the document's reporting period.

It says the visit was seen as successful from both sides, with India reaffirming its commitment to Afghanistan as a reliable partner.

It cites India's assistance in agriculture, its increased offers of degree scholarships and training programmes for the Afghans, as also the work on the Sal-ma hydroelectric dam in Herat Province.

India continues to be one of Afghanistan's largest assistance donors, providing 1.3 billion USD funding for major infrastructure projects like power transmission, power lines, roads, etc," it said.

But, at the same time Pakistan's perceptions of India's role also need to be taken into account, the official said.

Pakistan has several times raised concerns over India's role in Afghanistan, particularly its consulates in Kandahar and Jalalabad but India has maintained that its involvement in the country is for development purposes.

"Certainly the perceptions of Pakistan are important as well as the perceptions of India.

"And so that's what we're saying, that it has to be looked at in context, without trying to be judgemental that one side or the other's perceptions are wrong, but it's important to be aware of those perceptions," the Defense Department official said in response to a question.

Posted

[quote author=BommakantiNagalingam link=topic=124862.msg1380277#msg1380277 date=1290615132]
Mamagariki Hatsoff
n mari darunamgaa anni ela fail ayyav baa sFun_duh sFun_duh
[/quote]

Peddaga chaduvukoledhu.... F@!n F@!n [img]http://i49.tinypic.com/15do3cz.gif[/img]

Posted

[b]When soldiers tackle a corporate battlefield[/b]

Bangalore: Who wouldn't like to hire a man who is highly disciplined, professional in man management and effective in strategizing and planning? It's these positive attitudes and abilities that are seen in military personnel, make them favourable to the corporate world. The Indian corporate sector is witnessing a new trend in appointing former defence officers in middle and top level management positions. With the rigorous training with the forces, these officers bring with them a rich management experience, a focused approach and a natural discipline.


The organizational abilities of defence personnel especially in strategic planning make them a better choice for the top posts in the corporate sector. According to the details provided by the Indian Ministry of Defence, there are approximately 60,000 army personnel retiring every year out of which 3,000 are officers, most of them in their mid-50s. A good number of these retired defence officials are enrolling for MBA and other business related studies which would add more value to their skills obtained as military personnel in pursuit of a managerial job.

The retired defence personnel are appointed in diverse profiles like sales, marketing, supply chain, operations, logistics, human resource and administration. Corporate giants like Citigroup, ICICI Bank, L&T, Bajaj Auto, Mahindra Satyam, RIL, Bartronics and many others have hired defense personnel in many of their projects.

The most recent batch from Management Development Institute (MDI), Gurgaon have received over 85 percent placements. Officers were placed in attractive packages ranging between 14-24 lakhs.
Many ex-servicemen take up corporate executive protection as their career after retirement. Being a corporate bodyguard has great pay rates and good benefit packages.

There are many private institutions providing management courses for ex-servicemen. The Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Bangalore has also started a training program for officers of the armed forces in management skills to help them find employment in the private sector. The Confederation of Indian Industry has also come up with a number of programs to get this huge talent pool incorporated to the corporate sector.

The government also has various institutions such as the Directorate General of Resettlement to help ex-servicemen to find training and reemployment. As it is the joint responsibility of the central and state governments, they have set up different agencies like Ex-Servicemen Welfare Wing, Departments of Sainik Welfare and Zila Sainik Welfare Officers which introduce verity of schemes for the welfare of ex-servicemen. The resettlement programmes include degree/diploma course in business administration, personnel management, hotel management and tourism, human resource training and development etc. The other management courses include security management, export/import management, marketing/sales management, tourism and travel agency management course etc. Computer Courses such as C & Unix, MS Window, FoxPro, Oracle and HRD have been introduced.

Having said that, we should also understand the fact that all is not well with the low-ranking military personnel. The jawans who served the country with utmost loyalty and dedication are forced to guard the gates of the rich as watchmen. The government should take up more proactive steps to save the jawans from this pitiable condition and to enable them to secure a respectable career after the military life. At the same time, the corporate world should stretch their corporate social responsibility arm to include the low-category ex-servicemen, give them adequate training and to place them in decent roles so that their dignity is well preserved.

Posted

[quote author=Saamy link=topic=124862.msg1380292#msg1380292 date=1290615362]
Peddaga chaduvukoledhu.... F@!n F@!n [img]http://i49.tinypic.com/15do3cz.gif[/img]
[/quote]

nenu fail ayyindi medical fitness  test lo...........aptitude test  lo kaadu  *7*^ *7*^ *7*^

anduke madhyalo dooroddu anedi

Posted

[b]Nato asks for dialogue with India[/b]

Days after the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato) concluded a major summit in Lisbon intended to update its mission and methods to keep up with changing times, Nato Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen called for stepped-up contacts with India. In an exclusive interview with Business Standard, Rasmussen insisted that the military alliance’s relations with close ally Pakistan would not be developed at the expense of India, while lamenting the fact that despite an array of shared interests, there was virtually no formal contact between Nato and New Delhi.

The secretary general identified three main arguments for a “stronger relationship” with India. To begin with, he reasoned that as a fast emerging economy, India had a stake in ensuring free access to trade routes, sea lanes and communications networks and consequently shared in Nato’s global security interests. Rasmussen pointed to counter piracy and cyber security as concrete examples, where the concerns of both entities overlapped in this context.

He added that both India and Nato shared the same foundational values of democracy. Finally, he pointed to the “crucial role” played by India in the Afghanistan region, saying that he believed India could “contribute to the development of Afghanistan and help bring stability in the region.”
But at the same time, Rasmussen talked about the need for India and Pakistan to ease tensions, since it was Nato’s view that a “positive engagement of Pakistan” was needed in Afghanistan for any final solution. When asked about India’s concerns that Nato’s ally Pakistan was in fact hand-in-glove with the Taliban and waiting to stake its claim on Afghanistan once Nato troops withdrew from the region, Rasmussen admitted that these were “legitimate concerns.”

“But this is yet another argument in favour of having a concrete dialogue with India.” He said Nato’s relationship with Pakistan “will not be developed at the expense of India,” but asked, “how can we explain this to India without a dialogue?”

Rasmussen revealed that while he had met with the Indian ambassador to Belgium and the European Union, on “few occasions”, his attempts at initiating deeper contacts with India had not met with much success as yet.

At the Nato summit in Lisbon, the alliance had spelled out its plans for a phased exit strategy for Nato troops from Afghanistan starting next year and ending by 2014. “We will not leave a security vacuum in the region that may lead to instability or terrorism,” he said, clarifying that the 2014 deadline was a “goal” rather than a deadline. “This (the planned withdrawal) is something else we’d like to discuss further with India,” Rasmussen smiled.

Talking about the other main take away from the Lisbon summit, the “historic” new start to Russia-Nato relations, the secretary general once again brought in an Indian angle. In Lisbon, Nato and its former arch nemesis Russia agreed to bury the hatchet and stated that neither saw the other as a threat.

They went further and agreed to initiate a joint feasibility study into the possibility of Moscow cooperating with the 28 members of Nato in setting up a ballistic missile defence shield over Europe, a project that Russia was opposed to in the past. “I hope that the improved relationship with Russia will make it politically easier for India to engage with Nato,” concluded Rasmussen. “It’s clear now that we are not a cold war Nato. Nato is engaging with the wider world and it’s in India’s interest to be an integrated part of that.”

Posted

[size=36pt]ee Idea mari worst gaa undhi bava.... separate threads veste atleast aa thread name chusi ayina emi undhoo teluskovachuu.... ila vestee ela telustundhi...[/size]

Posted

[quote author=KINGMAKERS link=topic=124862.msg1380313#msg1380313 date=1290615815]
[size=36pt]ee Idea mari worst gaa undhi bava.... separate threads veste atleast aa thread name chusi ayina emi undhoo teluskovachuu.... ila vestee ela telustundhi...[/size]
[/quote]



andaru spamming ani sava dobbutunnaru bava  sFun_duh sFun_duh sFun_duh

Posted

[quote author=BENZBABU link=topic=124862.msg1380320#msg1380320 date=1290615927]


andaru spamming ani sava dobbutunnaru bava  sFun_duh sFun_duh sFun_duh
[/quote]evaru annaru ne posts anni baguntay  you rock you rock you rock

Posted

[quote author=BENZBABU link=topic=124862.msg1380320#msg1380320 date=1290615927]


andaru spamming ani sava dobbutunnaru bava  sFun_duh sFun_duh sFun_duh
[/quote]


evadi kosamoo nuvvu change avaslaina avasram ledu bavaa  sFi_boink3 sFi_boink3

×
×
  • Create New...