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Aussie defense budget weathers cuts
by Staff Writers
Canberra, Australia (UPI) May 11, 2012

India agrees $560 mln US artillery deal: officials
New Delhi (AFP) May 12, 2012 - India has agreed a $560-million deal to buy 145 howitzer guns from BAE Systems of the United States as it upgrades its antiquated military hardware, an official said Saturday.

India is updating its military capabilities with hardware worth tens of billions of dollars in the face of long-standing tensions with regional rivals China and Pakistan.

"The contract for the ultra-light howitzers was awarded on Friday to BAE Systems Inc" of the United States, a unit of Britain-based BAE Systems Plc, a senior defence ministry official told AFP on condition of anonymity..

The government will spend 30 billion rupees ($560 million) on the field guns, the official said.

The howitzers, with a maximum range of 30 kilometres (17 miles), will be used by the army's mountain artillery divisions along India's high-altitude frontiers.

India has fought three wars with arch-rival Pakistan since independence in 1947, but China is increasingly seen as the main focus of its ambitious military modernisation and procurement policy.

The military is acquiring a slew of new equipment from combat aircraft to submarines and in March, the country announced military spending for the current financial year would total 1.93 trillion rupees ($40 billion).

Saturday's announced purchase marks the first time in more than a quarter of a century that India is buying howitzers.

India last purchased guns for the army in 1986 when it bought 410 howitzer field guns from the Swedish arms giant AB Bofors.

A year later, Swedish media alleged top Indian politicians and military officials had been bribed in connection with the deal.

Corruption accusations over the Bofors contract cost then Congress prime minister Rajiv Gandhi the 1989 national elections. His name was cleared by an India court in 2004, 13 years after he was killed by a Tamil suicide bomber.

But the scandal cast a long shadow. Analysts say concern over graft has made it difficult to get Indian defence deals cleared with bureaucrats unwilling to make decisions for fear of being accused of "procurement irregularities."

Finalisation of the howitzer deal could take up to at least a year, other defence officials said.


Australia's defense budget will be cut but some major projects including submarine procurement have been spared.

The national budget deficit stands at nearly $45.5 billion. But the country's treasurer, Deputy Prime Minister Wayne Swan, aims to move into a $1.5 billion surplus for fiscal year 2012-13, which starts July 1.

The Defense Department's effort to help the country's coffers move into surplus will be to shave nearly $5.45 billion off the defense budget over the next four years of which around $971 million will be cut in 2012-13.

The department said savings of $1.3 billion have been approved by rescheduling, re-scoping or canceling "a small number of projects." This includes saving around $900 million by delaying for two years the acquisition of 12 Joint Strike Fighters following delays to the project in the United States.

Facing cancellation is the purchase of the self-propelled howitzer and proceeding with additional towed artillery -- expected to save around $220 million.

About $438 million of savings has been targeted through reductions in administrative costs including travel, outsourcing and consumable items.

Another $360 million will be saved by cutting about 1,000 civilian defense employees. But "care will be taken in this program of reductions to not reduce standards of service in priority areas of defense including support to operations," the statement said.

Early retirement of the C-130H aircraft should save $250 million because of high maintenance costs for the aging fleet.

"Current activities undertaken by the C130H aircraft fleet will be redistributed across the remaining air force air-mobility fleet, including C-130Js, C-17s and the replacement for the Caribou aircraft," the Department of Defense said.

Minister for Defense Stephen Smith also said funding has been preserved "for essential new capabilities not envisaged in the 2009 Defense White Paper." This includes the new amphibious heavy lift ship Choules and the Interim Humanitarian and Disaster relief ship Skandi Bergen, two additional C-17 heavy-lift aircraft and 101 more Bushmaster vehicles.

However, procurement of Australia's 12 next-generation submarines will go ahead with an initial $214 million set aside for detailed design studies given the green light.

The studies for construction of the subs -- a $40 billion project in the next 30 years -- will include design, scientific and technological studies and a future submarine industry skills plan.

French naval shipyard DCNS, German firm Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft and Spanish shipyard Navantia will conduct military off-the-shelf design studies, initial design studies for an updated Collins-class submarine and analyze options and capability modeling by the United States.

The work will consider propulsion and energy storage, signatures and stealth performance, combat systems and hydrodynamics, propellers and pumpjets.

Next year the government likely will decide on combat systems, torpedoes, sensors and other weapons with first-pass approval set for late 2013 or early 2014.

Construction of the submarine will begin following the second pass approval in 2017.

But government critics are questioning the Labor government's commitment to build the entire submarine fleet in Adelaide, even if an off-the-shelf design is selected, a report in The Australian newspaper said.

Opposition treasury spokesman Joe Hockey said a $214 million commitment toward early design work should not rule out overseas construction of the submarines.

"Either that's $200 million that is going to be wasted or else the government is going to have a proper analysis of whether there are alternatives to having these submarines manufactured in Australia," he told ABC radio.

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Britain's defence budget 'black hole' sorted: minister
London (AFP) May 12, 2012 - Britain's defence secretary said he had finally balanced his department's books, in an interview out Sunday, following a week in which he made a U-turn on purchasing jets, to the annoyance of France.

Philip Hammond told The Sunday Times newspaper that he will be able to announce this week that he has fixed the �38 billion ($61 billion, 47 billion euro) so-called "black hole" in the Ministry of Defence (MoD) budget.

The Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government said it inherited a raft of unfunded spending commitments when it took over from Labour in May 2010.

"In the next few days we will be in a position to make the grand announcement that I've balanced the books," Hammond told the weekly broadsheet.

"In terms of reducing the size of the civil service, the army and the air force, we shouldn't have to do any more over and above what we've already announced."

Britain confirmed on Thursday that it has reversed its choice of fighter jets for future aircraft carriers, ditching the preferred conventional take-off version of the US-built F-35 for a jump-jet model.

The latest turnaround dealt a blow to a defence deal between Britain and France as it means that planned Royal Navy aircraft carriers will no longer be equipped to handle French aircraft.

The move risked being seen as yet another gaffe for the coalition, which has made a series of recent policy U-turns and faces growing pressure over its dogged adherence to austerity over growth.

Hammond termed the decision the "last big piece in the jigsaw" and future projects would not now be delayed or scrapped due to a lack of funds.

"For the first time in the defence budget we've got a reserve in each year, which means that if something comes up we'll be able to manage it," he said.

Britain is currently without a carrier strike capability following a strategic review unveiled by the coalition in 2010 as part of wide-ranging austerity measures aimed at cutting a record deficit.

"For a decade now the MoD has had a programme of spending that far exceeds the money available. It does it on a sort of institutionalised basis. Nobody here, until quite recently, has blinked," Hammond said.



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Panetta warns Congress against extra Pentagon funds
Washington (AFP) May 10, 2012
US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta scolded Republican lawmakers Thursday for adding what he deemed to be unnecessary expenses to the Pentagon's budget, warning it could lead to "gridlock." The Pentagon chief spoke after the Republican-led House Armed Services Committee approved a defense budget that added funds for a study on a possible East Coast missile defense site and for modernizing US N ... read more


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