Saturday, August 1, 2015

MARITIME : Maldives: Land Ownership Bill, New Cause For Indian Concern – Analysis

SOURCE:
http://www.eurasiareview.com/31072015-maldives-land-ownership-bill-new-cause-for-indian-concern-analysis/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+eurasiareview%2FVsnE+%28Eurasia+Review%29












Location of Maldives. Source: CIA World Factbook.
Location of Maldives. Source: CIA World Factbook



Maldives: Land Ownership Bill, New Cause For Indian Concern – Analysis

                                     By

                  N. Sathiya Moorthy*

By
Friday, July 31st, 2015

For a tiny Indian Ocean nation priding itself as the only one in the South Asian neighbourhood not to have been colonised by European powers, Maldives now has a fast-tracked constitutional amendment conferring land ownership on big-time foreign investors becoming an overnight cause for additional concern.


The constitutional amendment, only the second for the 2008 ‘democracy statute’ was passed by an overwhelming 70 members in the 85-seat People’s Majlis, or Parliament, voting in favour, just a day after the ruling Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM) of President Abdulla Yameen had moved the Bill in this regard.

The constitutional amendment came on the eve of the Golden Jubilee celebrations of Independence, falling on July 26.


Apart from 54 MPs belonging to the Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM)-led coalition, of which the Maldivian Democratic Alliance (MDA) party is a partner, a total of 19 opposition members, comprising 10 from the main opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) and nine of the Jumhooree Party (JP), also voted for the bill.


While 14 MDP parliamentarians, including ranking members like group leader Ibrahim ‘Ibu’ Solih, Mariya Didi and Eva Abdulla, voted against the bill, the lone member of the religious-centric Adhaalath Party (AP) under-scored the shortage of time available for any meaningful debate. Among the notable supporters for the amendment was former Speaker, Abdulla Shahid, now in the MDP, whose strong views on ‘sovereignty’ issues are otherwise well known. JP’s businessman-founder, Gasim Ibrahim, since coming out of increased government pressure on imminent repayment of $90 million in revenue dues, expectedly backed the bill, claiming that it would bring in a lot of benefits in an ‘inter-linked world’.


That the opposition was divided over the vote and could have been on the verge of a break-up became clear when the MDP in particular and the JP, desisted from issuing a whip for the vote. This contrasts with the more recent practice of the MDP issuing a three-line whip for party MPs to vote with the Government on the equally controversial First Amendment only days earlier, pertaining to the law on the impeachment of Vice-President Mohammed Jameel Ahmed.


The MDP and the JP also voted on the impeachment motion subsequently, which again was fast-tracked. However, unlike the surprise element attending on the new land law, rumours about Vice-President Jameel’s impeachment and his replacement by Tourism Minister Ahmed Adeeb had been doing the rounds for weeks now. Adeeb has since been sworn in, after parliament passed another motion in between, fixing a time-limit for debating his nomination, when made.

Gayoom Seeks Referendum

In a none-too-unexpected move, former president Gayoom, half-brother of President Yameen and founder-president of the ruling PPM, wrote to the latter and also tweeted ahead of the parliamentary vote, asking him to consider the public concern before giving his assent to the controversial law. While Yameen did not react to Gayoom’s suggestion – conveyed through a personal letter to the president, and also with the people through a tweet – a government spokesman clarified that it was the former’s decision, and it stood.


According to the Minivan News, Gayoom urged President Yameen to “hold a public referendum on the issue, noting the amendments were proposed without public debate. He also stated that previous governments did not sell any part of Maldivian territory to prevent foreign influence over the country’s independence, sovereignty, and resources”.


Incidentally, this is possibly for the first time that President Gayoom has come out in the open on an issue of controversy and concern to the nation as a whole. Only days earlier, he had denied rumours over differences with President Yameen on the decision to impeach Vice-President Jameel and also on the latter’s choice for replacement. At the time, Gayoom tweeted that the president should have freedom to choose a vice-president of his choice.


Though Gayoom was not more specific on what he thought was the cause for public concern over the current law, PPM members – all of whom taking a pro-government line — in Parliament confined mostly to putting his argument on its head, and submitting that despite 80-90 per cent of the 112 luxury resorts in the country being foreign-owned, there had been no such problem. Majority leader Ahmed Nihan assured the public that the ruling party would not compromise Islam or Maldivian traditions and sovereignty.

Nihan, the Minivan News reported, “stressed that the amendments only apply to newly-reclaimed land and that the government was not planning to sell existing natural islands or reclaimed land”. However, it remains to be seen how far would such promises hold, considering that China is also funding the prestigious Male-Hulumale sea-bridge project and a host of others, and President Yameen had already said that almost all Maldivians could be housed in Hulumale island, in the Maldivian suburb.


GMR Deal

Coming as it does on the footsteps of the earlier SEZ law, passed with equal force by the PPM-combine controlled parliament, the new land law confers ownership with transfer rights on foreign investors putting in a minimum of $1 billion on the purchase of land, of which 70 per cent should have also been reclaimed from the sea. This by itself should be a surprise in a nation, where the ownership of most, if not all lands rests in the state.


Suffice is to point out that in the case of Maldives, one of the strong arguments against the by-now-aborted ‘GMR deal’ with the Indian infrastructure major was that the contract put the possession, though not ownership, of the nation’s only international airport, with facilities for the possible landing of large air force transporters and the like, in the hands of a ‘foreign entity’. What went unmentioned in the process was the successful landing of wide-bodied, Indian Air Force (IAF) aircraft with armed personnel, at the height of the ‘Operation Cactus’ rescue operation, after mercenaries laid siege to the Maldivian capital of Male, in 1988, when president Gayoom was in power.


It is not unlikely that the current amendment is aimed at making FDI under the SEZ law more attractive than already. Months after the Yameen government, including then tourism minister Adeeb, now Vice-President, heading the SEZ clearance panel, had promised imminent big time investments, nothing much seems to be in the pipeline. It may have more to do with the inherent inadequacies of the Maldivian economy, where geography and demography have conspired against the nation having a strong manufacturing base.


It is anybody’s guess how and why the nation has not followed up on the currently felt limitations of resort tourism with a big time entry into the financial sector, like Singapore and Dubai, both not far away, but should be focussing on what seems to be non-financial services sector, if not outright manufacturing, for which, land, water, electricity and transportation and labour costs would all prove uneconomical. It is another matter that Maldives has yet to take labour law reforms, as prescribed under international codes, seriously and the state and status of low-end migrant labour continues to be appalling.
 


Chinese Military Base

According to local media reports, MPs opposed to the new law “expressed concern over possible Chinese military expansion in the Maldives, and the lack of time to review the amendments”. As they pointed out, the bill was pushed through parliament in such haste that the House committee evaluated the contents the day it was presented and cleared it instantly, for full House vote the very next day.


The critics may have a point. Not very long ago, the Maldivian government leased out an island in the Laamu Atoll to a Chinese player, for the development of a tourist resort for near-exclusive use by the large number of budget travellers from that country. Expanding the international practice of donor/creditor nations converting part of the aid into originating goods and services, Chinese investors, as has been the norm, also import infrastructure and casual labour from that country. This has ensured greater exclusivity in terms at project sites, with host nations at times feeling extremely uncomfortable about their real purpose and presence.


Speaking during the final debate on the amendment, Minivan News quoted MDP parliamentarian Eva Abdulla as saying that a Chinese Yuan class 335 submarine has passed through Maldivian waters and docked at the Karachi port on May 22, adding that Indian media called it “China’s deadliest attack submarine”. MP Eva has already submitted a demand for summoning Defence Minister, Maj Gen Moosa Ali Jaleel (retd) to the House, for seeking an explanation on the Chinese naval presence of the kind in Maldivian territorial waters.


Maldivian foreign and domestic policies should be based on ensuring Indian Ocean regional security as “Maldives is not in the South China Sea”, she said. Maldives is a “front line state” in the new Cold War and should not be a catalyst for conflict, Minivan News quoted the MP as saying further. The MDP as a “centre-right party” supports free market policies and the principle of private land ownership, but could not support “selling land for China to build military bases” in the country, Eva Abdulla added.


According to Minivan News, ruling PPM parliamentarian Ali Arif conceded that the Maldives as a small nation is always vulnerable to influence from powerful nations. He said the House committee addressed the concerns over sovereignty during its review process and added a clause to the bill stating that the Maldivian state will exercise complete authority over the territory designated for projects.


Be it as it may, it is anybody’s guess how a nation in near-eternal debt to its international creditors and successive political leaderships lacking the will to plug deliberate and organised leakage of government revenue and forex earnings could ever bring itself around to challenge foreign investors, state or non-state actors, on ‘sovereignty’ issues or ‘transfer rights’, if it were to be accompanied by instant repayment of massive dues, as is the case in the GMR arbitration case.


Larger Issues

China was known to have proposed a massive atoll-centric tourism facility for its budget travellers when MDP’s jailed president Mohammed Nasheed was in office. At the time, too, security concerns came to be expressed, given the possibilities and also the inevitability of such an exercise forcing Maldives into a geo-strategic situation where it would have little choice or say. The reference was possibly also to the US military base in Diego Garcia, not very far away, whose 50-year lease would come up for review and renewal in 2016.


The concerns of the larger Indian neighbour in this context should come not only from the increasing presence of adversarial China, whose controversial and at times suspicious ‘Maritime Silk Route’ (MSR) has attracted smaller neighbours like Maldives and Sri Lanka, for reasons that do not always justify the decision. India was equally perturbed when the US, near-unilaterally approached the government of then Maldivian president, Mohammed Waheed Hassan Manik, for upgrading the existing ACSA (Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement) to SOFA (Status of Forces Agreement), providing for US military personnel on foreign territory to carry weapons and be governed by American, and not local laws.


Any excessive presence of Chinese or other nationals in the Indian Ocean neighbourhood, especially of particular nations, could only add to the concerns of India, which is not known to have drafted any cohesive, comprehensive and decisive approach to handle situations of the kind. This time round, there is more credible information about increasing Chinese presence and interest in Maldives than during the days of president Gayoom, when unsubstantiated rumours – at times manufactured with an intent and motive – made ill-informed sections of the Indian strategic community, dizzy.


More importantly, the Indian policy maker and political leadership may need to confer greater and continuous attention to the immediate neighbourhood than already – including the imaginative initiative of Prime Minister Narendra Modi inviting all neighbourhood Heads of Government for his inauguration, and following it up with whistle-stop visits to most of their capitals. Maldives was excluded from PM Modi’s three-nation Indian Ocean neighbourhood tour, which covered Seychelles, Mauritius and Sri Lanka, thanks to the evolving, explosive situation nearer home, followed the arrest and trial of former president Nasheed in the ‘Judge Abdulla abduction case’.


*N. Sathiya Moorthy is Director, Chennai Chapter of the Observer Research Foundation. He can be reached at sathiyam54@gmail.com

Published by

South Asia Monitor

South Asia Monitor

South Asia Monitor is an independent web journal and online resource dealing with strategic, political, security, cultural and economic issues about, pertaining to and of consequence to South Asia and the whole Indo-Pacific region. Developed for South Asia watchers across the globe or those looking for in-depth knowledge, reliable resource and documentation on this region, the site features exclusive commentaries, insightful analyses, interviews and reviews contributed by strategic experts, diplomats, journalists, analysts, researchers and students from not only this region but all over the world. It also aggregates news and views content related to the region.
 
 



 



















 

OROP: OROP OUR (BATTLE OF) PLASSEY !!!!‏ OR सुग्रीव भेदी लंका गिराय

SOURCE: FWD E-MAIL


 OROP OUR (BATTLE OF) PLASSEY !!!! ‏

                                               OR

                सुग्रीव  भेदी  लंका गिराय 


Adjectives like treason, treachery, betrayal, disloyalty, perfidy, 'dhoka' and the closest and most comprehensible to a fauji 'thoka' (Yes we have been 'thokoed' by our Comrades and Govt) - Well all this and more by a bunch  famously replicating -  Judas( betrayed Jesus) , Cassius&Brutus (both betrayed Julius Ceaser), Guy Fawkes(turned Catholic and tried to blow up a Protestant  Britian's Parliament), Benedict Arnold(American turned traitor, when not given his due for Battles won  in the Civil War), Raja Jai Chand(let down Prithviraj Chauhan), Mir Jaffar ( Plassey fame), Sambhaji(Shivaji's eldest son  not annointed King by Shivaji, joined Mughals,only to return after 2 years), Ganoji Shirke(Sambhaji's brother-in -law), Gen Labh Singh (1st Anglo-Sikh War) and of course the BJP list(Nehru, Swami Agnivesh, Romila Thapar, Digvijay Singh, Shashi Tharoor, Rajender Sacchar, Mani Shanker Aiyar, Lalu Yadav,, Arundhati Roy, Rajdeep Sardesai, etc: to quote  Dr Babu Suseelan).

That said, I wonder what the motivation of the 'Gang of Four' Lt Gen Raj Kadyan, Lt Gen Balbir S Yadav, Brig Kartar Singh(known him, I'd rate him an excellent human being and extremely helpful) and Col Nain was, to have tried, to high-jack and subvert an absolutely genuine demand of OROP. I know human greed can be triggered for personal ambitions for varied  reasons like: political power, money, a perceived injustice done or not getting their due, feeling of a superiority complex, or just plain megalomania. For one or  more reasons. (Long list, but  short really as I lack the necessary qualifications to do a psychological analysis and pass judgement). Issue is the OROP demand does not affect both the Generals, so if they did not think it was right, they should have stayed neutral. I know a few who do not believe in the means employed but support the demand and have stayed neutral.



The conduct of the 'Gang of Four' on Kargil 'Vijay Divas' at Jantar Mantar on 26 July 15, would have made FM Sir Phillip Chetwode squirm (in his grave ofcourse),  of the  deliberate attempt to  create a rift amongst the Officers/JCO's/ NCO's and our stoic brave soldiers under the United Front  of Ex Servicemen(UFESM) banner, spearheaded by Maj Gen Satbir Singh, Gp Capt Gandhi and others, by putting up a separate stage and seating(all new) for 2000 people (must have cost a pile - where was the money from?? I will leave the guessing to you) to hijack Anna Hazare. They sought to project themselves as the real UFESM, their ploy was  exposed when Anna Hazare realised he had been commandeered to the wrong venue  and decided to walk across to the one organised by Gen Satbir after a while. Both Gen Balbir Singh and Gen Kadian, scooted  and left a bumbling Brig Kartar (I have got Anna Hazare here as promised) and Col Nain to shovel the shit and face the music. Brig Kartar's attempt to nuzzle upto Anna and perch himself on the stage met with  angry protests and he thought it wiser to abandon his foray. I must commend  Gen Satbir Singh's conduct right through the entire proceedings, including when the other party before the arrival of Anna Hazare, resorted to cheap and unsoldierly gimmickry of turning on blaring music to drown out the proceedings this end. Gen Satbir stuck to the script of OROP and no bad mouthing. Great restrain.  Well done Sir.!!!





The cause has to be seen in its larger context of, the ESM and widows,in terms of dignity, living with honour, subsistence, survival and impact on the immediate family, ability to raise children with the necessary educational skills, social and moral standing in the  community. This is what impinges on morale and  motivation, whether to send the son to join the services or give it a pass. Statistics indicate anyone with the qualifications and opportunity opts out. I am not going to repeat the issue of pay fixations, commencing 1973 and the injustices and disparities created after Third Pay Commission. Suffice to say, the Govt decided to cut off a very vital limb of the national bulwark, disinheriting virtually a very proud and tradition bound organisation, of its proud officer cadre and men (partially), which over the past few  years is surviving on band aid  dressing, affecting both the human  factor and the war fighting capabilities in terms of morale,equipment and weaponry.





The  policies manipulated and presented to their Political Masters by a jaded Bureaucracy, to inure their unquestioned authority in a power structure, protected by a shield of unaccountability, actually entails the manipulation a largely disinterested Politician. He  has neither the time, nor the attention span or interest to understand the time consuming but serious needs of national defence and security, except superficially as it does not impact his vote bank. This treachery has  affected  especially the officer intake, where we had second, third and fourth generation people joining  out of tradition and loyalty to the Regiment/unit or for the traditions of discipline, honour, adventure(like me) with a misplaced understanding of valour and bravery in battle(we were only 14 plus years old and made this decision then, perhaps on introspection, some later concluded, not the right one). One of the reasons a lot of young people are wanting out very early. I am not talking of Short Service Commissioned Officers.




 
The burning question is why did the 'Gang of Four" indulge in this devious treachery, selling themselves out to the current Govt. All involved have served the Army, I am sure for 30 to 40 years, and they have stabbed the very men and their subordinate comrade-in- arms, in the back, by virtue of whom they attained their rank. They have sullied, through subterfuge and dishonoured the fine traditions of soldiering. They are turning the cold steel blade in an assisted hara-kiri, in which only the assistants(them) seem to be in a hurry to get over and done with the killing, so they don't have too long to answer to their tormented conscience (???) for  their treacherous act. Was the all consuming  fire in their belly  of personal ambition so intense that they rather,  that their deserving comrades  burnt to cinders, and the issue was buried once and for all, and the Judas(s) were heaped with political and other forms of gratitude, by a relieved  Govt.





But they still have a conscience to live with. I know the service gave us all one, and tied it in a Gordian knot with honour (of self, to unit, and the uniform), service(to the men, unit and Nation) and welfare of our men and burned it into our DNA. What went wrong with the 'Gang of Four"???? What pushed or compelled them to break the code of conduct of an Officer and a Gentleman. Did the Honour code fail them or did they fail the cause of their command?????





 The  PM had promised the implementation of OROP in his pre-election  Ex- Servicemen Rally in Rewari, in the presence Of Ex-COAS Gen V K Singh. Not only that, when addressing the troops at Siachen on a visit, told them OROP had been granted. Even going so far as to say if the Atal Vajyapai Govt had been reelected the OROP issue would have been settled then and not come up. So why the change of heart and the blurring of issues, like varied definitions of OROP. The plain truth is like all politicians, PM is also in election mode, where he needs to promise the 'all the gold Fort Knox', ( which he knows he has no access to) to buy votes. Money is limited. Soldiers don't count much for votes. Above all human memory is short, is how the PM and his coterie see it. They think they will wear out the ESM. The story going around in Amritsar I believe is, that Arun Jaitely feels the Fauji's turned the the cold steel blade in his gut decapitating him, by electing Capt Amarinder Singh. The man should realise, oratory in Parliament and fighting big money cases in the cool environs of the Supreme Court or running the Delhi Cricket Association, does not give you a mass following. So how can you fault the fauji who saw Jaitely in that mode and as a disrupter of Parliament in Rajya Sabha. 





An issue that has been rankling me is,  as to why Gen V K Singh and Col R S Rathore both Ministers in Govt, did not come to the commencement of the Relay Hunger Strike (RHS) on 14 June, to have just showed their solidarity with the cause and pointed out, that by virtue of their position in Govt, they could not actively support the demand, and given their Best Wishes.  I think it would have had a massive impact on the cause.





The unstinting contribution by their  presence, of two very senior citizens, both wheel chair bound, Mrs.Balbir Singh  (95 years) widow of late Col Balbir Singh of the GRENADIERS and CO of Col Inderjit Singh,  (the initiator of OROP) and  Mrs.Sujatha, daughter of late Gen Umrao Singh, who is there daily and is here from the US for 3 months, specifically to support the RHS and in case it is prolonged she will be relieved by her Mother, currently in the USA. That is the steel soldiers and their kin are made from and their spirit and their will cannot be destroyed till justice is given. But above all the determination of Maj Gen Satbir Singh and his team and the large No of our ESM who sit there everyday uncomplainingly, living in Hope of Justice, for their genuine right. A shame on the Govt, that the soldier is out on the street demanding his Right.





So 'Brave hearts',  where to you figure your chances are  with the OROP-- with a bruised and seething FM,  a marauding BJP in election mode lead by NaMo out to conquer India over the next 3 years and treachery of 'The Gang of Four' So is it a case of Finance availability or Just plain ego ??!!     After all this, the charade is nothing short of treachery, -- we might have to prolong our wait-   but 'Get we will our Right'.. '



Jai HO



Sanjiv


P.S. My humble request is, to limit circulation to service personnel only, as we should not be seen exposing our unfortunate warts to outsiders. But I leave it to your discretion.




++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
                                    

OROP OUR (BATTLE OF) PLASSEY !!!! ‏

                                               OR

                सुग्रीव  भेदी  लंका गिराय 






INDEED SHAMEFUL ON THE PART OF CERTAIN SENIOR DIGNITARIES TO BEHAVE LIKE SCHOOL KIDS . FOR EGOTIST  PROBLEMS THEY HAVE LOST THE SIGHT OF 

                          " THE AIM- OROP "

  MY SOBER ADVICE TO THEM IS PLEASE STAND IN FRONT OF MIRROR & LOOK AT YOUR FACE. I  BET YOU WILL NOT RECOGNISE THE  OLDIE  HOGGISH  FACE YOU WILL SEE IN THE MIRROR STARING AT YOU & REMINDING THAT A VERY LITTLE TIME IS LEFT BEFORE ADHERING TO THAT FINAL CALL OF THE ALMIGHTY. PLEASE DO NOT WASTE YOUR TIME CHASING A SELF CREATED IMAGINED MIRAGE. AT THIS STAGE IF YOU CANNOT CONTRIBUTE TO THE CAUSE PLEASE BUZZ OFF &  GO  and READ MAHABHARTA. 

         GURU DRONACHARYA ON FINAL EXAMINATION OF
 HIS DICIPLES ON

                         "THE ART OF WAR FARE "
 
Guruji :-          Samne kia dekha ?

Drodhyan:-       Guruji " MURGHA"

Bhim;-              Guruji  " MURGHE  KI 
                           FLESHY LEGs"

Arjun :-             Guruji    "AANKH" mera                             nishana

THOSE WHO HAVE FORGOTTEN THE    'BASIC  MOTTO'  OF  FM CHETWODE  HAS NO BUSINESS TO BE AT JANTAR MANTAR & JEOPARDISE THE FUTURE OF LAKHS OF VETERANS, WOULD BE VETERANS, VETERAN's WIDOWS & LAKHS OF THEIR  DEPENDENTS


                                      अभ इन्ही को देखिये 

                                   now read  on the

                       "DISTRACTIONs"
                                        &
                   FORM YOUR OWN OPINION






Dear Veterans,

This is in response to a mail from Cdr Pathak and Wg Cdr C K Sharma that Lt Gen B S Yadav and Brig Kartar Singh have left UFESM.

Time has come to first sort out internal issues of UFESM before the OROP.

    देखिए  जनाब  AIM (इरादा ) ही भुल  गए  और अपनी ही  व्रेटलिंग (WRESTLING) में  ही उलझ  गए।  इनका इरादा 
  
   

UFESM was created after various bodies which got together at the Constitution Club meeting on 06 Jun 15. Purpose to coordinate OROP effort.

 IESL agreed to whole hearted support to the joint effort. ( नो बिग टेक ,रिजल्ट्स टिल डेट  NIL )

 1.  WHAT IS IESL. Indian Ex-Services League was formed by amalgamation of All India Ex-Services Federation and the Indian Ex-Services Association, headed respectively by Late Field Marshal K M Cariappa OBE and Late K S Thimayya DSO. The league was registered under Societies Registration Act of 1860 (Punjab amendment) Act 1957 as extended to the Union Territory of Delhi vide letter No 52495 of 1964-65.
Indian Ex-Services League is recognized by the Govt. of India vide letter No2(2) RECGN/IESL/KSB/A2000 dt 04 Jan 2001 as the Apex body of ESM and this Apex status has also been recorded in a resolution of the 7th Lok Sabha on 20 April 1982. 

 
The first and the second Presidents were Late Gen K S Thimayya DSO and Late Field Marshal K M Cariappa OBE. The President of Indian is the Grand Patron-in-Chief of IESL. The Defence Minister is the Patron-in-Chief, and three service Chief's are Patrons. The present membership of IESL is approximately 4 lakhs.

 
2.  WHAT IS THE LAXMAN REKHA THAT IS BEING TALKED ABOUT. To the uninformed this is to convey that IESL is a Govt body and will not take any action that will displease the Govt. Readers please judge for yourself what action of IESL has been seen in towing the govt line.

 It was IESM under MG Satbir who gave a call to support BJP in the last elections. Who are the govt stooges today? Who goes to Gen V K Singh to arrange meetings with RM. It Is Hon' Satbir Singh.

Who leads the rally in front of Bhatinda Military Station. It is IESL. PLEASE JUDGE FROM THIS WHO IS GOVT KA CHAMCHA. Not only ESM, even the serving voters of Amritsar constituency supported Capt Amarinder Singh in his fight against Mr Jetley. Why is Gen V K Singh not called to support OROP struggle. It is IESM who does not want this because it will hurt the Govt.

 Have enough ammo to blast your theory of LAXMAN REKHA. Everyone knows who wanted BJP ticket/Rajya Sabha nomination from the IESM leadership and who will quietly slip away even if offered so now. 

 
3.  IT'S ALL ABOUT MONEY HONEY. The mistake made by all ESM bodies coming under UFESM was not to open a new account for subscription after formation of UFESM. All money, cheques and cash is in the hands of IESM. Now the 30 odd bodies are  asking IESM to make the accounts transparent. Till a few days back the collection was over Rs 60 lacs and it was told that Rs 40 lacs have been spent. Rs 40 lacs spent in about 45 days when so much of assistance is coming from volunteers for the RHS. Since all bodies are very small compared to IESL they are asking Lt Gen B S Yadav to seek details of accounts from IESM.

IESM HAVE REFUSED TO BRING ABOUT TRANSPARENCY IN ACCOUNTS WHICH IS WHAT EVERY ONE IS DEMANDING. HENCE THEY FEEL BY TARGETTING LT GEN YADAV AND BRIG KARTAR THEY CAN SILENCE/WIN OVER OTHERS. 

 
WE WILL NOW LEAD THE DEMAND TO MAKE ACCOUNTS TRANSPARENT. VETERANS SHOULD KNOW THAT APART FROM OFFICERS, JCOS/OR HAVE ALSO SENT CONTRIBUTIONS FROM ALL OVER. IESM HIERARCHY SPENDS MONEY ON THEMSELVES WHEREAS JCOS/OR TRAVEL AND STAY ON OWN EXPENSES. THIS IS WHAT THEY LEARNT FROM LONG YEARS IN SERVICE.

 
4. INTERNET WARRIORS. Is there any doubt that the IESM  are the best internet and media warriors. Else why would they say Lt Gen Yadav and Brig Kartar have left UFESM but the IESL from Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and UP are with UFESM. This because if not for JCOs/OR who will sit on RHS. And they have to come from these states only. Don't try to be too clever Pathak and Sharma. 

 
5. INFIGHTING IN IESM. Whilst Cdr Pathak and WC Sharma are talking of internet warriors and some being persona non grata, can they tell us what happened when Signalman Sheoran defeated their officer hierarchy in the elections for President/Chairman. The world should know that the humiliated leaders of todays IESM have not reconciled to this and are fighting battles in the court. IESM thereafter held elections in far away Pune where JCOs/OR could not travel whereas officers went by air to keep their chairs intact. We DONT have this in IESL. We have JCOs/NCO as State Presidents and Dist Presidents.  

 
5. HUNGER STRIKE. This was Gandhi's 'gift' to us. You know why? It was easier for the British Govt to handle someone like Gandhi on hunger strikes than to tackle the likes of Bhagat Singh, Netaji Subhash Chander Bose and their brave compatriots. Support Gandhi and eliminate Bhagat Singh and Netaji. Our politicians have learnt from them. Hunger Strikes, which was the idea of MG Satbir and his IESM was opposed by a majority in  the Jun 06 meeting. IESM knew that their RHS would not last for even a week without support from other organisations. So RHS support from JCOs/OR in which IESL of neighbouring states has been in the forefront and money from officers made a win-win situation for IESM. Now they are scared to make the accounts transparent and fear if they dont keep other ESM organisations, especially IESL from neighbouring states with them, their RHS will come to an end. You are the traitors who have failed officers and men alike. You know in Delhi every thing is available with money. No one sees the I Cards of ESM in RHS. You can hire people from the money you have collected and show them as ESM on RHS. You will come down to this when you will be exposed. This has just started.

 
You know what is written in Gurbani regarding fasting and suicides. 
" Chade Ann Kare Pakhand, Na suhagan na uh rand " - Fasting is a drama, a person on fast is neither married nor widow/widower.
" Atamghati Jagat Kasai" - A person who commits suicide is a butcher of the world. 

 
FIRING NOW : OROP ALREADY ACHIEVED. The hierarchy of IESM by collecting over Rs 60 lacs (thats what they say, God knows what is the truth) and showing a fictitious expense of Rs 40 lacs have already got in 45 days what they would have got in the balance of their life time month after month with OROP.  (ONE BIRD IN HAND IS BETTER THAN TWO IN THE BUSH  बट  जनाब अभी तक तो  एक भी नही )

 
APPEAL TO ALL VETERANS.
Please seek the account details and demand that the funds be put under joint supervision of UFSEM which IESM is not allowing.Please expose the IESM doings on all forms of social media.

 
Brig Inder Mohan Singh (Retd)
President IESL Punjab


  नोट :   किआ  "IESL"  डिक्लेयर  करे   MOD  से कितना  GRANT  मिलता है और उसका डिस्पोजल 










 

GEO-POLTICS :The Power Of Geopolitical Discourse – Analysis

SOURCE:
http://www.eurasiareview.com/31072015-the-power-of-geopolitical-discourse-analysis/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+eurasiareview%2FVsnE+%28Eurasia+Review%29










Earth. Photo Credit: NASA
Earth. Photo Credit: NASA

The Power Of Geopolitical Discourse – Analysis

By
Friday, July 31st, 2015



Geopolitics, as a discursive practice, should be taken seriously. Unfortunately, sometimes we are so busy with our daily activities and work that we tend to ignore the fact that the media can, indeed, spatialize and geopoliticize a conflict by ‘labeling’ and ‘identifying’, thus creating a sense of ‘pertinence’ amongst us, the ‘audience’; in other words, creating a binary world between ‘us’ and ‘them, the ‘other.’ This said, in order to understand the power of words and images in geopolitics, we must look back and understand how geopolitical knowledge was originally produced and thought of.


Although at first glance, while difficult to prove, the true origin of geopolitical theory may revolve around Darwinism and the rules of nature—I will not delineate the rules of nature according to Darwin but rather I will keep my argument in line with that of geopolitics and discourse. For instance, Friedrich Ratzel (a notable geographer, ethnographer and biologist), the creator of Lebensraum (the need of living space), theorized and compared the state to that of a living organism, in search of augmenting its space to support the carrying capacity of its species under its physical environment. By the same token, Rudolf Kjellen—who was actually the first political scientist to coin the term ‘geopolitics’—viewed the state in a similar manner as Ratzel: as an organic living being, with its own limbs and personality, drawing his metaphors from poetry and prose.



Friedrich Ratzel (1844-1904) and Rudolf Kjellen (1864-1922), who were the creators of the German geopolitical school of thought, had something in common: they grew up between the transition of a pre-industrial society (1750-1850) and the beginning of a new industrial society in continental Europe. Eventually, the story is widely known: their theories, alongside Mackinder’s, influenced the aggressive expansionist policies of the Nazis, pushed by Major General Karl Haushofer. (from Machtpolitik to Weltpolitik).


Likewise, another important player and influencer (Sir Halford Mackinder) was born in the 19th century, and meanwhile in 1904 published the most famous geopolitical theory of all, The Geographical Pivot of History; a theory that was taken particularly serious by the Nazi political and military elite and diffused via Haushofer’s understanding of the world. And a theory that, to this day, has been explained and argued in modern-day world affairs books, such as Robert D. Kaplan’s The Revenge of Geography and the likes. Without further expanding into academic theoretical grounds, we can conclude as so: Geopolitics had a common European heritage, pioneered by Mackinder, Ratzel and Kjellen, through their biological, geographical, and civilization interpretations of European power-relations of their time.


In that sense, how was geopolitical thought diffused and brought into the Western hemisphere, specifically into the United States, the world latest superpower?


In 1890, Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan, while stationed in Lima, Peru, published one of the most influential books in the American Naval military psyche: The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660-1783. It advocated why it was imperative for the American navy to reach total hegemony and control over the seas and oceans of the world. Another important American geographer and advisor to Woodrow Wilson was Isaiah Bowman, whose push for free trade policies vis-a-vis the creation of international institutions, would also become influential in the American neoliberalism and exceptionalism ethos.


Nevertheless, although Bowman and Rear Admiral Mahan were important figures in the American geopolitical mindset, if there was any truly prominent figure in the realm of American foreign policy, it would be Yale’s Nicholas J. Spykman. His influence in shaping the American foreign policy attitude continues to maintain a foothold in the political and military establishments to this day. Amongst many of Spykman’s arguments, he claimed that geography was a leading influencer in international politics—i.e. country size and region location, climate, topography, resources, population, frontiers, and so forth—and that the exertion of power should be the true goal of the American foreign policy apparatus, whose best example is his Rimland concept of the Eurasian landmass; and needless to add, George Kennan’s The Sources of Soviet Conduct and the impact it had on US containment policy.


But under which geographical and political parameters and assumptions did Spykman, Mahan, Bowman, and Kennan view geopolitics? The answer is simple: from a European perception and understanding. All from the continent which, by a vivid expression of the MD Board Chairman prof. Bajrektarevic, “…exhorts its well-off status quo by notoriously exporting its transformative powers of free trade dogma and human rights stigma–a modified continuation of colonial legacy when the European conquerors, with fire and sword, spread commerce, Christianity and civilization overseas.”


Let’s connect the dots. Mahan’s ideas and analogies aroused from the British Royal Navy’s control of maritime commerce, which catapulted them to become one of the most powerful empires in the world; Bowman’s American exceptionalism—egalitarianism, republicanism, democracy, and individualism—ideals, can be traced in the form of Franco-British (e.g. Alexis de Tocqueville and Adam Smith) political and economic thinking; Spykman, whose origin was Dutch, based his Rimland theory out of Sir. Halford Mackinder’s, hence, we could say that, overall, he had a British influence on his geopolitical thinking; and Kennan, who prior to embarking on his Soviet adventure, was trained and educated in a pre-World War II setting, which at the time often involved the diffusion of the German geopolitical school of thought at the University of Berlin Oriental Institute, perhaps influencing the ideas of Kennan concerning the Soviet Union’s territorial expansionism. Henceforth, something is clear: modern-day geopolitical discourse, vision, and imagination was gradually diffused and transferred into the American foreign policy and military elite by European-clouted scholars. Nevertheless, the American geopolitical rationale would evolve rather drastically as opposed to their European counterparts because of their location and place in the world.


Let’s bring it back to the 21st century now. It was the year 2002, a year after one of the most devastating terrorist attacks on US soil. But also, it was the year when then-president George W. Bush, during his famous State of the Union Address, would label and identify the new “axis of evil” according to America’s world view; simply put, America’s new enemies—Iraq, Iran and North Korea. Was this speech a true act of geopolitical spatialization and the creation of a more rigid and tougher, binary world, resembling to the US—vs—Soviet Union days? “What we have found in Afghanistan confirms that, far from ending there, our war against terror is only beginning,” George W. Bush said as he addressed the entire world. Indeed, we have noticed that during the last decade—and the beginning of this decade—the war against terror has been substantially expanded from Pakistan to the Sahel and from the Sahel to Somalia. Going back to the 2002 State of the Union address, we have observed the urge to spatialize, label, and create a ‘sense of belonging’ amongst different civilizations in the world, which leads to the question: How often does the media spatialize an ongoing conflict, more precisely by further polarizing and transforming the world into an are-you-with-us-or-against-us type of discourse? Is Samuel Huntington’s Clash of Civilizations more valid than ever before? How often are we indirectly influenced by popular culture, regardless of our nationalities (i.e. television series, books, images, media channels)? Moreover, what are the foundational geographical and political assumptions behind our elites? This the main reason why critical geopolitics is so important in today’s multipolar world.



Leading geographers and critical geopolitics scholars, John Agnew and Gerard Toal, in their superstar essay Practical Geopolitical Reasoning in American Foreign Policy, suggested that the definition of geopolitics should be ‘re-conceptualized’ as a “ discursive practice by which intellectuals of statecraft ‘spatialize’ in such a way as to represent it as a ‘world’ characterized by particular types of places, peoples, and dramas.” Also, according to Agnew and Toal’s understanding, “geopolitics is the spatialization of international politics by core powers and hegemonic states.” As a result, when we think of the George W. Bush’s ‘Axis of Evil’ classification, the definition by Agnew and Toal seems more relevant than ever before.



Furthermore, what about the movies and television series we often see for entertainment purposes? For instance, if we take note of the evolution of Liam Neeson’s hit movie Taken, we can remark that he is always fighting an enemy from the Eastern hemisphere. During the first two films, the ex-CIA SAD (Special Activity Division) retired operations officer, Bryan Mills, was fighting the Tropoja-native, northern Albanian criminal organization in Paris, which is a ‘Western’ city. And, who ends up fighting some sort of rich Arab Sheikh—an enemy from the East, moreover, the Islamic world. Also, in the second movie, Bryan Mills, once again, ends up fighting the patriarch’s northern Albanian criminal organization, however, the landscape changes when he is fighting them in an Islamic city: Istanbul. Even if there are many ways to interpret this, in my personal view, I would interpret it as how the Albanian criminal organizations will be the new antagonist stereotype across mainstream Hollywood-made action movies, replacing the Italian criminal organization, and the brave and tough ‘Western’ action hero beating the ‘unknown’ enemies from the ‘East.’ It seems that in accordance to Hollywood’s geographic imagination, the Italian criminal organizations, have been replaced by tougher groups originating in the ‘East’—in this case, more precisely from the Balkans and of Islamic affiliation (at the beginning of Taken 2, we notice an Islamic burial, somewhere around the Albanian alps-type of setting).


As a last observation, what type of antagonist does Bryan Mills battle in his latest movie, Taken 3? Again, an enemy from the Eastern hemisphere: The Russians, though this time, battling a domestic enemy as well (for those that have not seen the movie, I shall stop here). Whatever our personal interpretations might be, we all can conclude with the following statement: The media plays a bigger role in geopolitics than we can imagine, purely by labeling, identifying, and creating the ‘other’.



How much influence does popular culture (e.g. books, televisions series, movies, newspapers, news channels) hold in our geographic imagination and the creation of the ‘other’? When we think of popular American televisions series, such as Homeland, House of Cards, or movies depicting ‘anti-Western’ dictators like The Last King of Scotland and The Interview, in addition to your typical war movies (e.g. Black Hawk Down, We Were Soldiers, American Sniper, Lone Survivor), to what extent can these movies and series further geopoliticize a group of people, moreover, an entire nation? For instance, in the case of Somalia, when we see movies like Captain Phillips, how much do we associate a whole country or diaspora as a group of either pirates or Al-Shaabab supporters? And as a last example, jumping to the other end of the spectrum, in the case of Venezuela’s media networks which are supportive of government repression like Noticias 24, Telesur and Venezolana de Television (VTV), by constantly creating stories about the big, bad and distrustful ‘American Empire’ who is, apparently, plotting a coup d’état against the Maduro regime. In reality, the pro-government Venezuelan media networks are failing to inform the population about the economic crisis and rampant insecurity common Venezuelans are experimenting in the streets of cities like Caracas, Maracaibo and Valencia, thereby just like Hollywood creates the ‘other,’ the same can be said about Venezuela and other authoritarian regimes. No matter what ideological principles a pro-Western or anti-Western government holds, each elite will abide by the same process: to label a group, to identify with a similar group, and to create an ‘us’ and ‘them’ discourse.


As a final remark, in order to geopoliticize through words and images, there must be a radically different entity (the ‘other’); put precisely, the creation of an ‘enemy’; an entity, that does not think the same way or hold the same values and ideals like ‘us.’ For the Romans, the ‘others’ were the barbarians; For the Persians, it was the Arabs; for the British medieval kingdoms, it was the Vikings; For the Chinese, it was the Xiognu nomadic tribes; for the Austro-Hungarian empire it was the Ottomans; for the European colonial empires it was the Native Amerindians and African tribes; for the Americans, it was the Soviets; and nowadays the new Mongolian hordes of the 21st century are non-state actors like ISIS and similar groups for the rest of the civilized world. The whole point of this article was to show, how in actuality, words and images can be powerful weapons to geopoliticize entire nations, whilst additionally grasping how the political and geographical assumptions, aroused from a European mindset; when, in turn, geopolitical thinking and reasoning was nothing other than the ‘vision’ that scholars like Mackinder, Kjellen and Haushofer had in mind for the securing vital strategic resources in accordance to their countries’ needs at the time. Consequently, we can firmly state that Western identity and geopolitical discourse have a European legacy.


In his last book, World Order, one of the most influential Europeans in the US, Henry Kissinger quotes an old excerpt of French Travel-writer, Marquis de Custine, who describes Czarist Russia as, “a monstrous compound of the petty refinements of Byzantium, and the ferocity of the desert horde, a struggle between the etiquette of the Lower Byzantine Empire, and the savage virtues of Asia, have produced the mighty state which Europe now beholds, and the influence of which she will probably feel hereafter, without being able to understand its operation.” Now, dear reader, it is up to you to be the judge of Marquis de Custine’s words. Or in popular geopolitical terms, as rapper Eminem would say, “My words are my weapons…”


*Diego Solis, Global South Advocate, Founder and chair of Geopolitical Explorers Consulting Group.

 
 

RUSSO-NATO MILITARY POLITICS :Refund Deal Reached For Undelivered Mistral Warships

SOURCE:






Kremlin Aide Says Refund Deal Reached For Undelivered Mistral Warships

 
July 31, 2015

A top Kremlin aide says Russia and France have reached an agreement on reimbursement for two Mistral warships that Russia purchased for $1.3 billion but whose delivery is on hold to protest Moscow's actions in Ukraine.

Vladimir Kozhin, President Vladimir Putin's adviser for military and technical cooperation, confirmed on July 31 that a refund deal was reached. However, he did not reveal the figure, saying only that the amount will be announced when the contract is cancelled.

'The negotiations are completely finished, everything has already been decided, both the time frame and the amount,' Kozhin told state news agency RIA Novosti.

There was no immediate response from Paris.

Russia's Kommersant newspaper reported earlier this week that France had offered to terminate the contract and pay back about $794 million provided France can re-export the warships.

French President Fancois Hollande said on July 27 that he would decide 'in the coming weeks' whether or not to scrap the contract to supply the two Mistral-class amphibious assault ships to Russia.

Russia's state-owned TASS news agency reports that Russian technical specialists will visit the French port of Nantes-St. Nazaire to remove Russian military equipment from the helicopter-carrying ships. The news agency said the equipment was mainly communications equipment that would have been used for directing helicopter operations.

The delivery of the two warships was put on hold by Paris in September 2014 in response to Russia's illegal annexation of Crimea and its support for pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.


The contract, which was signed in 2011 was meant to be the biggest arms sale ever to Russia by a NATO country, with the first of the ships had been due to be delivered to Moscow in 2014, the second in 2015.


Extra Expenses

However, Moscow announced in May that it had decided not to take the ships in response to France's putting the deal on hold. TASS quoted Oleg Bochkaryov, the deputy head of the Military-Industrial Commission, as saying on May 26 'Russia won't take them, that's an accomplished fact.'


'Now there is only one discussion -- about the sum of money that should be returned to Russia.'
Bochkaryov added that Russia planned to construct its own similar vessels but not copy the Mistral, adding that Moscow had a 'slightly different ideology for the endeavor of amphibious assault.'


In April, Putin insisted that the French side reimburse Moscow 'all expenses' if the contract were to be terminated. He said that included not just the purchase price also expenses for training, the building of a new dock for the ships, and even transportation and housing of the crew.


He also downplayed the importance of the warships, saying that Russia had ordered them mostly to help the French shipyard which produces them.

However, the loss may be felt keenly by the Russian navy because the original deal not only was to provide two Mistral ships built in France but also gave Moscow the option to build two more Mistral carriers in Russian naval shipyards. In this way the deal could have helped to modernize Russia's own naval construction industry.

Paris had set as its conditions for delivering the ships a cease-fire and a political settlement in Ukraine. When Hollande announced delivery had been put on hold in September, he said the contract to supply the vessels was neither cancelled nor suspended but that the conditions for delivering the first ship, due to be handed over the following month, did not exist.

France had come under strong public pressure from its European partners and the United States to abandon the deal, which was signed under former President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2011.
With reporting by AP, AFP, Bloomberg, TASS, and RIA Novosti


Source: http://www.rferl.org/content/kremlin-aide-says-refund- deal-reached-for-undelivered-mistral/27162439.html

Copyright (c) 2015. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.




Further Reading



Mistral Class Amphibious Assault Ship

Moscow finally gave up on the Mistral deal. Now Russia and France will dicuss only the sum that Paris should pay Russia for the failed contract. During the negotiations on the Mistral deal Russia and France have discussed only one question — the sum of the compensation. "We switch the conversation to business — give us our money back… We're now discussing just one thing — the exact sum of money France owes Russia," Oleg Bochkaryov, a deputy chairman of the Russian Military Industrial Complex said 26 May 2015.

Bochkaryov told journalists that Russia plans to build its own Mistral-class helicopter carriers to replace the ones not delivered by France. “We have these types of ships planned…but we will build them a bit differently. We’re not going to blatantly copy the [French] Mistral [design] right out,” Bochkaryov said.

According to Kommersant, Bochkaryov was rebuked by Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin because Russia has never officially given up on buying the two warships from France and Bochkaryov had never taken part in the negotiations on their delivery.

Russia is capable of building its own equivalent of Mistral-class helicopter carrier equipped with nuclear power engines as Moscow is aware of the design of the French-made ship, deputy chairman of the Russian State Duma's Committee on Industry Vladimir Gutenev told RIA Novosti 27 May 2015. "It will not be difficult from a technical point of view to build something like Mistral especially since we have gained access to the drawing list of the [French] helicopter carriers as a number of our weapons systems are adapted to the military characteristics of these ships," Gutenev said.


Should the Russian Armed Forces need to build a ship similar to the French-made Mistral, it will be a "ship similar in size, but with a nuclear power engine," which will be equipped with "air defense and anti-submarine defense systems."


France suspended “until further notice” the delivery of a warship to Russia because of the Ukraine crisis. The office of French President Francois Hollande said in a statement 25 November 2014 that the "current situation in eastern Ukraine still does not allow for the delivery” of the first Mistral-class helicopter carrier built for Russia.

French defence minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said 01 January 2015 that his country would deliver two warships ordered by Russia only if there were concrete signs of lasting peace in Ukraine. "There needs to be ... a process of ceasefire that is respected and a political roadmap that would lead to the return of peace and calm," Jean-Yves Le Drian told Europe 1 radio station. "I see that efforts are being made, but as long as they are neither tangible nor verifiable, we cannot make a decision," he added.


Moscow initially had no plans to file claims against France over Hollande's decision to put the Mistral warship deal on hold, Russian Deputy Defense Minister Yuri Borisov said. “No, we are not planning to file any [claims] at the moment,” he said. “Everything is specified in the contract, and we will act under that contract, just like all civilized people do.”


The defense capability of Russia and the Russian Navy will not suffer as a result of France’s decision to put the delivery of the first Mistral-class helicopter carrier on hold, Adm. Vladimir Komoedov, chairman of the defense committee of the State Duma, Russia’s lower house of parliament, said 03 September 2014. “This will not undermine our combat readiness because this ‘tin can’ will require a lot of getting used to, and will most likely come without a control system; and we don’t really need a helicopter carrier vessel,” Adm. Komoedov told RIA Novosti. Adm. Komoedov noted that the ship was actually not crucial for the Russian Navy, since Russia had all the necessary technology to build vessels not in any way inferior to their foreign equivalents, especially French ones.


Vladivostok was floated out in October 2013. The second Mistral-class amphibious assault ship built in France under contract with Russia was floated out 20 November 2014. The helicopter carrier, named the Sevastopol, left its dry dock in the French port city of Saint-Nazaire before just a few onlookers.


An article in Le Point weekly magazine in May 2015 stated that if Paris falls back on its promise to give the two vessels to Moscow, the French government could end up having to pay an overall cost of up to €5 billion ($5.7 billion), if it does not fulfill its contractual obligations. “Instead of bringing the French ship building cooperation DCNS a profit of €1.2 billion and those involved in the construction €980 million, the cancellation of the deal could cost France between €2 billion and €5 billion,” the article stated.

The magazine said that talks are ongoing between the respective French and Russian parties, although, “significant differences in regards to the amount of compensation exist.” The publication adds that “France is now looking to return Russia less than the €890 million that Moscow has already paid” for the vessels.

Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin ruled out allowing Paris to sell the Mistral warships to a third party without Moscow’s go-ahead. “Without our permission they can’t sell anything,” he said. Rogozin added he had already explained the situation to the French, while Russia has an end-user certificate for the stern parts of the vessels.

The stern parts of the helicopter carriers were built at a shipyard in St. Petersburg before being moved to France for further assembly, he explained. France will also be unable to use the Mistral vessels as part of their fleet because the warships were built to meet the Russian Navy’s specifications, Rogozin also stressed.


CHINA MILITARY POWER : Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China 2015

SOURCE:

http://www.defense.gov/pubs/2015_China_Military_Power_Report.pdf









Preparation of this report cost the Department of Defense a total of approximately $92,000 in Fiscal Years 2014-2015. This includes $3,000 in expenses and $89,000 in DoD labor.



ANNUAL REPORT

TO CONGRESS
 
Military and Security Developments

Involving the People’s Republic of China 2015
 
Office of the Secretary of Defense



Annual Report to Congress:
 
Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China 2015
 
A Report to Congress Pursuant to the National Defense Authorization Act for

Fiscal Year 2000
 
Section 1246, "Annual Report on Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China," of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010, Public Law 111-84, which amends the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000, Section 1202, Public Law 106-65, provides that the Secretary of Defense shall submit a report "in both classified and unclassified form, on military and security developments involving the People’s Republic of China. The report shall address the current and probable future course of military-technological development of the People’s Liberation Army and the tenets and probable development of Chinese security strategy and military strategy, and of the military organizations and operational concepts supporting such development over the next 20 years. The report shall also address United States-China engagement and cooperation on security matters during the period covered by the report, including through United States-China military-to-military contacts, and the United States strategy for such engagement and cooperation in the future."


                               
        Executive Summary

The People’s Republic of China (PRC) continues to pursue a long-term, comprehensive military modernization program designed to improve its armed forces’ capacity to fight short-duration, high-intensity regional conflicts. Preparing for potential conflict in the Taiwan Strait remains the focus and primary driver of China’s military investment; however, the PRC is increasing its emphasis on preparations for contingencies other than Taiwan, such as contingencies in the East China Sea and South China Sea. Additionally, as China’s global footprint and international interests grow, its military modernization program has become progressively more focused on investments for a range of missions beyond China’s periphery, including power projection, sea lane security, counter-piracy, peacekeeping, and humanitarian assistance/disaster relief (HA/DR).

China views modernization of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) as essential to achieving great power status and what Chinese President Xi Jinping calls the "China Dream" of national rejuvenation. Chinese leaders see a strong military as critical to prevent other countries from taking steps that would damage China’s interests and to ensure China can defend itself, should deterrence fail. China seeks to ensure basic stability along its periphery and avoid direct confrontation with the United States in order to focus on domestic development and smooth China’s rise. Despite this, Chinese leaders in 2014 demonstrated a willingness to tolerate a higher level of regional tension as China sought to advance its interests, such as in competing territorial claims in the East China Sea and South China Sea.

China’s military modernization has the potential to reduce core U.S. military technological advantages. China’s officially-disclosed military budget grew at an average of 9.5 percent per year in inflation-adjusted terms from 2005 through 2014, and China will probably sustain defense spending growth at comparable levels for the foreseeable future. Moreover, China is investing in capabilities designed to defeat adversary power projection and counter third-party —including U.S.—intervention during a crisis or conflict.

During 2014, the PLA continued to improve its capabilities for theater contingencies, including: cruise missiles; short- and medium-range ballistic missiles; high performance aircraft; integrated air defense; information operations; and amphibious and airborne assault. The PLA is developing and testing new intermediate- and medium-range conventional ballistic missiles, as well as long-range, land-attack, and anti-ship cruise missiles that extend China’s operational reach, attempting to push adversary forces—including the United States—farther from potential regional conflicts. China is also focusing on counter-space, offensive cyber operations, and electronic warfare capabilities meant to deny adversaries the advantages
 
modern, informationized warfare. In 2014, China also started reclaiming land and building infrastructure at its outposts in the Spratly Islands. China will be able to use them as persistent civil-military bases of operation to enhance its presence significantly in disputed areas.




PLA global operations in 2014 included counter-piracy patrols, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, exercises and sea lane security. Highlights include the deployments of the 17th and 18th Naval Escort Task Forces to the Gulf of Aden, PLA Navy frigates escorting cargo ships carrying chemical weapons materials out of Syria, search and rescue support for Malaysia Airlines MH370, participation in UN peacekeeping missions, circumnavigation of the African continent, and the first-ever deployment of a SHANG-class nuclear powered submarine (SSN) and SONG-class diesel electric submarine (SS) to the Indian Ocean.


The Department of Defense (DoD) approach to China is part of a broader U.S. strategy for the Asia-Pacific region that is focused on building a stable and diversified security order, an open and transparent economic order, and a liberal political order. U.S. policy toward China is based on the premise that it is in both countries’ interests to expand practical cooperation in areas where both countries’ interests overlap, and to constructively manage differences.

Sustaining the positive momentum in the military-to-military relationship supports U.S. policy objectives to encourage China to uphold international rules and norms to contribute to regional and global problem-solving. DoD seeks to continue building a military-to-military relationship with China that is sustained and substantive, while encouraging China to contribute constructively to efforts to maintain peace and stability with the United States, our allies and partners, and the greater international community.

As the United States builds a stronger foundation for a military-to-military relationship with China, it must also continue to monitor China’s evolving military strategy, doctrine, and force development, and encourage China to be more transparent about its military modernization program. In concert with its allies and partners, the United States will continue adapting its forces, posture, and operational concepts to maintain a stable and secure Asia-Pacific security environment
.
 


 
 



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There are two highlights in the 2015 Pentagon Report on Chinese Military Power.

Firstly, the Pentagon has finally acknowledged that China's DF-5B ICBM is armed with MIRVs.

Secondly, the Pentagon report mentions that China's Gaofen-2 satellite has sub-meter resolution.

Reference:
Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China 2015 | Department of Defense

[​IMG]
This is page 8 of the Pentagon Report on Chinese Military Power. Please ignore the part about 50-60 Chinese ICBMs. The Pentagon has not changed China's ICBM count for 30 years. No one believes the ridiculously low estimate of Chinese ICBMs.
[​IMG]