Royal Thai Army Welcomes US Army Commander, Enhancing Military Cooperation Through Joint/Combined Exercises
On February 23, 2026, General Phana Klaewplodthuk, Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Thai Army, welcomed Lieutenant General Matthew McFarlane, Commander of the US Army 1st Army Corps, and his delegation at the Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy, Royal Thai Army Museum, to discuss military cooperation, enhancing joint/combined exercises such as Cobra Gold and Hanuman Guardian, and cooperation in the development of Stryker wheeled armored units.
During the discussion, the Royal Thai Army thanked the US Army for honoring the Royal Thai Army with their participation in the Cobra Gold joint/combined exercise, demonstrating the strong relationship and security cooperation. The intention to jointly develop the capabilities of personnel was emphasized, with a focus on integrating military technology in multidimensional combat operations, particularly cyber and space warfare. The successful Hanuman Guardian joint exercise, which achieved its objectives and helped develop personnel capabilities, especially in the use of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) systems, was also highlighted.
17 Stryker 8x8 under Excess Defense Articles program
Regarding the Stryker wheeled armored vehicles, the Royal Thai Army expressed gratitude to the U.S. Army for supporting the provision of 17 vehicles under the EDA (Excess Defense Articles) program. The official handover ceremony will take place during the closing ceremony of Hanuman Guardian 2026. The U.S. also provided a Stryker Brigade Combat Team to continuously assist in training on operational techniques, maintenance, and networked combat tactics, aligning with the Royal Thai Army's development of wheeled armored units.
The Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Thai Army expressed his stance on the Thai-Cambodian border conflict, reaffirming the Army's commitment to safeguarding national sovereignty according to international principles of self-defense. He requested the U.S.'s support and confidence in a peaceful resolution of the conflict.
Furthermore, the U.S. commended the Royal Thai Army's strict adherence to the rules of engagement and expressed pride in Thailand's long-standing ally, reflecting the strong military relationship and trust between the two countries.


Kha pun khap
BalasHapusWuì dapet lagi...gretong mantap haha!👍👍👍
Sial bagi negeri semenanjung sebelah, dapat hibah kapal CIPUT, lagi TUA bangka...😅😂🤣😛🤪
Hapuskata mreka makin tua, makin jimat kos om pedang, hepi haha!😉😁😉
HapusHoree pekan depan peswat kedua A400 sudah mendarat di indonesia
BalasHapusYuhuu
Pelajaran #1 saat terima Garibaldi : cek toiletnya...😁🤟
BalasHapushttps://www.airspace-review.com/2026/02/25/di-balik-kemegahannya-kapal-induk-uss-gerald-r-ford-menghadapi-masalah-limbah-kotor-toilet-mampet-pipa-sempit/
Jauh lebih bagus dari ANOA KARATAN....HAHAHAHAH
BalasHapusKLAIM CASH = 🦧GORILA HUTANG ASET MILITER
Hapus-
1. 🇹🇷 Turki (LMS Batch 2)
Model: G2G (Antar Pemerintah) via SSB.
Bunga: 4% – 6% (Fixed/OECD CIRR).
Tenor: 10 – 15 Tahun.
-
2. 🇰🇷 Korea Selatan (Pesawat FA-50)
Model: Hybrid (Kredit KEXIM & Barter CPO 50%).
Biaya: Management Fee sangat rendah (0,10% - 0,50%).
-
3. 🇬🇧 Inggris (Standar UKEF)
Syarat: Wajib DP 15% (Standar OECD).
Bunga: Stabil, mengikuti National Loans Fund.
-
4. 🇨🇳 China (LMS Batch 1)
Model: 100% Kredit Ekspor (China Eximbank).
Bunga: Sangat murah (3,5% Fixed).
Tenor: 10 Tahun.
-
5. 🇵🇱 Polandia (Tank PT-91M)
Model: DP 15% + Barter CPO (30-40%).
Tenor: 10 Tahun cicilan.
-
6. 🇩🇪 Jerman (Kedah-Class)
Model: Kredit Komersial dijamin negara (Euler Hermes).
Pendana: Deutsche Bank & Konsorsium.
-
7. Kredit Sindikasi (Proyek LCS)
Model: Konsorsium Bank Domestik/Intl (Skala Masif).
Bunga: 6% (Saldo Menurun).
Tenor: 15 Tahun (Akibat penundaan proyek)..
--------------
BUKTI HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
BUKTI PRANK 🦧GORILA ....
-
🦧GORILA KLAIM SHOPPING CASH = 2018-2026 .....
-
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
Daftar tren "Hutang Bayar Hutang" Malaydesh dari tahun 2018 hingga proyeksi 2025 berdasarkan data Kementerian Kewangan Malaydesh (MOF) dan Jabatan Audit Negara:
-
2018: FASE "OPEN DONASI"
Pemerintah meluncurkan Tabung Harapan Malaydesh untuk mengumpulkan sumbangan rakyat guna membantu membayar utang negara yang menembus angka RM1 triliun (80% dari PDB).
-
2019: 59% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Laporan Ketua Audit Negara mengungkapkan bahwa 59% dari pinjaman baru digunakan hanya untuk melunasi utang yang sudah ada (gali lubang tutup lubang).
-
2020: 60% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Ketergantungan meningkat; hampir 60% pinjaman baru dialokasikan untuk membayar utang lama, memicu kekhawatiran karena anggaran pembangunan semakin terhimpit.
-
2021: 50,4% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Dari total pinjaman baru sebesar RM194,55 miliar, sebanyak RM98,05 miliar digunakan untuk pembayaran kembali prinsipal utang yang telah matang.
-
2022: 52,4% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Realisasi pembayaran prinsipal mencapai RM113,7 miliar. Total pinjaman meningkat 11,6% dibandingkan tahun sebelumnya akibat pemulihan pascapandemi.
-
2023: 64,3% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Persentase tertinggi dalam periode ini. Dari total pinjaman kasar RM226,6 miliar, sebesar RM145,8 miliar lari ke pembayaran utang lama.
-
2024: 58,9% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Pemerintah mulai melakukan konsolidasi. Pinjaman digunakan untuk melunasi utang matang sebesar RM121,3 miliar dari total pinjaman RM206 miliar.
-
2025: 58% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Berdasarkan Tinjauan Fiskal 2025, pemerintah memproyeksikan pinjaman kasar sebesar RM184 miliar, di mana RM106,8 miliar disiapkan untuk membayar prinsipal utang matang.
-
2026 = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Dokumen Resmi Pemerintah (Kementerian Kewangan Malaydesh - MOF)
Data utama berasal dari laporan tahunan yang diterbitkan bersamaan dengan pembentangan anggaran negara:
Laporan Tinjauan Fiskal 2025 & 2026: Memuat angka proyeksi pinjaman kasar (gross borrowing) dan alokasi pembayaran kembali prinsipal utang yang matang.
FACT ..........
HapusBLASTING = MENGHILANGKAN KARAT LCS
PAINTING = MENUTUP BEKAS KARAT LCS
https://defense-studies.blogspot.com/2025/01/lcs-2-completed-blasting-and-first.html
----------------------------------
• Blasting
Proses pembersihan material pada kapal dengan cara menyemprotkan pasir steel grit atau pasir silika dengan tekanan tinggi. Tujuannya untuk menghilangkan kontaminan seperti karat, cat, garam, dan oli.
• Painting
Proses pelapisan material pada kapal menggunakan cat dengan metode roll, spray, dan kuas. Tujuannya untuk merawat dan melindungi lambung kapal dari kerusakan akibat korosi dan fouling.
----
Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) 2 has successfully completed the blasting and first level of painting process, marking a significant milestone in its construction journey. It will later transition to further surface preparation and coating applications to ensure all critical areas meet the required standards.
===================
The MALAYDESH Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) program has faced a number of issues, including:
• Delayed delivery
The original plan was to deliver the first ship, the LCS 1 Maharaja Lela, in 2019, and all six ships by 2023. However, the program was mangkrak in 2019 due to financial issues at Boustead Naval Shipbuilding. The program was restarted in 2023, with the first ship scheduled for delivery in 2026 and the remaining four by 2029.
• Design issues
The Royal MALAYDESH Navy (RMN) did not get to choose the design of the ship, and the detailed design was not completed until after 66.64% of the budget had been paid.
• Financial issues
Boustead Naval Shipbuilding was in a critical financial state, and a middleman increased the project cost by up to four times.
• Corruption
A declassified audit report highlighted irregularities in the execution of the program, including the abuse of power and the involvement of a Zainab Mohd Salleh.
• Aging fleet
The RMN's current fleet is outdated, with two-thirds of the ships dating back over 30 years
===================
FACT LCS 2025 - 2011 = 15 YEARS
LAUGHING STOCK TO THE WORLD
LAUGHING STOCK TO THE WORLD
LAUGHING STOCK TO THE WORLD
LAUGHING STOCK TO THE WORLD
Defence Minister DSU Mohamad Hasan - By building five ships, each vessel will cost around RM2.2 billion to RM2.4 billion, he said adding that he has no idea the amount needed to build the other three. “If we were to build only two ships, it will cost around RM4.5 billion each, making it the world’s most expensive ship for its class and make us a laughing-stock to the world”
===================
FACT NOT YET DELIVERED :
LCS RM12.4 BILLION /5 UNIT = RM2,48 PER UNIT
LCS RM12.4 BILLION /5 UNIT = RM2,48 PER UNIT
LCS RM12.4 BILLION /5 UNIT = RM2,48 PER UNIT
LCS RM12.4 BILLION /5 UNIT = RM2,48 PER UNIT
The cost of the project is now RM12.4 billion. This is because Ocean Sunshine Bhd (OSB) – the government owned company set up to take over BNS will be paying the BHIC and LTAT (the previous owner of BNS) some RM1.2 billion in liabilities and DEBT.
===================
17 KREDITUR LCS
17 KREDITUR LCS
17 KREDITUR LCS
Besides MTU Services, others include Contraves Sdn Bhd, Axima Concept SA, Contraves Advanced Devices Sdn Bhd, Contraves Electrodynamics Sdn Bhd and Tyco Fire, Security & Services MALAYDESH Sdn Bhd, as well as iXblue SAS, iXblue Sdn Bhd and Protank Mission Systems Sdn Bhd. Also included are Bank Pembangunan MALAYDESH Bhd, AmBank Islamic Bhd, AmBank (M) Bhd, MTU Services, Affin Hwang Investment Bank Bhd, Bank Muamalat MALAYDESH Bhd, Affin Bank Bhd, Bank Kerjasama Rakyat MALAYDESH Bhd, Malayan Banking Bhd (Maybank) and KUWAIT FINANCE HOUSE (MALAYDESH ) Bhd.
.
5x PM BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
Hapus6x MOD BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
PROCUREMENT = 2026 FREEZES : 2023 CANCELLED
-
5x GANTI PM = 84,3% TO GDP
5x GANTI MOF = KLAIM LUNAS 2053 = GAGAL (NAMBAH DEBT)
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
5x GANTI PM = TIDAK BAYAR HUTANG TERTUNGGAK
6x GANTI MOD = KEKANGAN KEWANGAN
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
----------------
MRCA 2025-2017= ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
LCS 2025-2011 = ZONK = MANGKRAK
5x GANTI PM
6x GANTI MOD
-
SPH 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
MRSS/LPD 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
----------------
GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% of GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% of GDP
Federal Government Debt
• End of 2024: RM 1.25 trillion
• End of June 2025: RM 1.3 trillion
• Projected Debt-to-GDP: 69% by the end of 2025
Household Debt
2025 : RM1.73 trillion, or 85.8% of GDP
==============
🦧GORILA IQ BOTOL = SEWA 28 HELI > 119 HELI BARU > ART : WAJIB LAPOR USA
SEWA 28 HELI RM 16.8BN = USD 3.7BN/USD 3.700 JT DOLAR
•HARGA HELI AW149 = USD 31 JUTA
•28 UNITK X USD 31 JT= USD 857 JUTA
•USD 3.700JT ÷ USD 31 JT = 119 HELI BARU
----
4x LEBIH MAHAL SEWA DARIPADA BELI BARU =
SEWA 15 TAHUN = RM16.8 BILION
BELI BARU = RM3.954 BILION
SEWAan selama 15 tahun dianggarkan mencecah RM16.8 bilion, jauh lebih tinggi berbanding kos pembelian helikopter serupa yang dianggarkan sekitar RM3.954 bilion.MALAYDESH (ATM)
-------------------------------------
CHEAPEST PLATFORM VARIANT :
-
HARGA CN 235 = USUSD 27,50 Juta
-
HARGA ATR 72 = USUSD24.7 Juta
-------------------------------------
DOWNGRADE HISAR
DOWNGRADE HISAR
DOWNGRADE HISAR
CHEAPEST VARIANT LMS
-
1. ADA CLASS PAKISTAN USD 1 MILYAR/4 = USD 250 JUTA PER UNIT
-
2. ADA CLASS UKRAINE USD 1 MILYAR/2 = USD 250 JUTA PER UNIT + UCAV SENILAI USD 500 JUTA
-
3. HISAR OPV CLASS (LMS B2) MALAYDESH USD 530 JUTA /3 = USD 176,7 JUTA PER UNIT
-
HISAR OPV = LMS B2 = NO ASW
HISAR OPV = LMS B2 = NO ASW
HISAR OPV = LMS B2 = NO ASW
TCG AKHISAR dan TCG KOÇHISAR merupakan kapal kelas HISAR yang dibangunkan dalam skop projek MILGEM.
Kapal ini dibangunkan dari model kovet kelas ADA, yang merupakan antara calon-calon yang disebut akan memenuhi program Littoral Mission Ship Batch 2 Tentera Laut Diraja MALAYDESH .
-------------------------------------
CHEAPEST VARIANT FA50
CHEAPEST VARIANT FA50
CHEAPEST VARIANT FA50
-
1. FA 50 GF (TA 50 BLOK II) 12 UNIT HARGA USD 705 JUTA ALIAS USD 58,75 JUTA/UNIT
-
2. FA 50 PL (BLOK 20) 36 UNIT HARGA USD 2300 JUTA ALIAS USD 63,89 JUTA/UNIT
-
3. FA 50M 18 UNIT HARGA USD 920 JUTA ALIAS USD 51,1 JUTA/UNIT
-
FA50 = UNSUITABLE FOR MILITARY OPERATIONS
FA50 = UNSUITABLE FOR MILITARY OPERATIONS
South Korea has delivered FA-50 combat trainer aircraft to Poland that are reportedly unsuitable for military operations, Polish Deputy Defence Minister Cezary Tomczyk said.
-------------------------------------
ANKA OMPONG = WILL NOT BE EQUIPPED WITH ANY WEAPONRY
While the specific equipment configuration of the Ankas is NOt currently kNOwn, they will be operated solely as a maritime surveillance platform in MALAYDESH service, and will NOt be equipped with any weaponry.
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED = DIPERAS KERAJAAN
HapusFEDERAL GOVERNMENT DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 36,139
HOUSEHOLD DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 45,859.
GOV + HOUSEHOLD = PER PEOPLE : RM 81,998
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang akhir 2024: RM 1.25 triliun
• Utang akhir Juni 2025: RM 1.30 triliun
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh 2025 (perkiraan pertengahan tahun): 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
1.30 triliun = 1,300,000,000,000
Per Orang = 1,300,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 36,139 per orang
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang rumah tangga (akhir Maret 2025): RM 1.65 triliun
• Persentase terhadap PDB: 84.3%
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh pertengahan 2025: 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
Utang per orang =1,650,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 45,859 per orang
-------------------
The MALAYDESH Armed Forces (MAF) has faced a number of weaknesses, including outdated equipment, financial constraints, and corruption.
Outdated equipment
• Most of the MAF's equipment was purchased between the 1970s and 1990s.
• Some of the navy's fleet and helicopters were commissioned in the 1960s.
• The government auditor-general found that half of the navy's ships were beyond their serviceable lifespan.
• The KD Rahman submarine had technical problems that prevented it from submerging.
Financial constraints
• The government's financial ability may limit the MAF's ability to develop and equip modern assets.
• The government's budget allocation may need to be spent prudently.
Corruption
• The MAF has been involved in several corruption scandals
======================
MALAYDESH 's military has faced a number of challenges in maintaining its equipment, including:
• Budgetary limitations
Successive governments have been unwilling to cut spending elsewhere or reduce the size of the armed forces.
• Corruption
Defence procurement has been characterized by corruption, budgetary uncertainty, and opaque decision making.
• Outdated equipment
The Royal MALAYDESH Air Force (RMAF) has a large fleet of aging aircraft that are difficult to maintain.
• Political interference
Political interference has undermined combat readiness.
• Logistics weaknesses
There are issues with the quality of logistics equipment and the delivery of spares to soldiers .
5x PM BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
Hapus6x MOD BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
PROCUREMENT = 2026 FREEZES : 2023 CANCELLED
-
5x GANTI PM = 84,3% TO GDP
5x GANTI MOF = KLAIM LUNAS 2053 = GAGAL (NAMBAH DEBT)
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
5x GANTI PM = TIDAK BAYAR HUTANG TERTUNGGAK
6x GANTI MOD = KEKANGAN KEWANGAN
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
----------------
MRCA 2025-2017= ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
LCS 2025-2011 = ZONK = MANGKRAK
5x GANTI PM
6x GANTI MOD
-
SPH 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
MRSS/LPD 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
----------------
GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% of GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% of GDP
Federal Government Debt
• End of 2024: RM 1.25 trillion
• End of June 2025: RM 1.3 trillion
• Projected Debt-to-GDP: 69% by the end of 2025
Household Debt
2025 : RM1.73 trillion, or 85.8% of GDP K
==============
SEWA VVSHORAD
SEWA TRUK CINA 3 TON
Three weeks ago, the Madani government announced that it had struck a deal with China to SEWA 62 new train sets for KTM Bhd. The estimated cost for the deal is RM10.7 billion and it will be covered in installments over a 30-year SEWA period. The approved leasing deal for KTMB may tip the scale in favour of the truck and VVSHORAD proposals.
SEWA PESAWAT
ITTC is currently providing Fighter Lead-In Training (FLIT) to the Royal MALAYDESH Air Force in London, Ontario. ITTC operates a fleet of Aero Vodochody L-39 featuring upgraded avionics for the FLIT programme
SEWA SIMULATOR MKM TAHUN
Five-year contract for Sukhoi’s simulators. Publicly listed HeiTech Padu Bhd has announced that it had been awarded a RM67 million, five-year contract to operate and maintain the Su-30MKM flight simulators at the RMAF airbase in Gong Kedak
SEWA HELI SEWA SIMULATOR
Kerajaan sebelum ini pernah menyewa Helikopter Latihan Airbus EC120B dan Flight Simulation Training Device (FSTD) Untuk Kegunaan Kursus Asas Juruterbang Helikopter TUDM. Selain itu, kerajaan turut pernah menyewa 5 unit Helikopter EC120B; 1 unit Sistem Simulator
SEWA HELI
4 buah Helikopter Leonardo AW 139 yang diperolehi secara SEWAan ini adalah untuk kegunaan Tentera Udara Diraja MALAYDESH (TUDM) yang akan ditempatkan di NO.3 Skuadron, Pangkalan Udara Butterworth
SEWA BOAT
SEWAan Bot Op Pasir merangkumi 10 unit Fast Interceptor Boat (FIB); 10 unit Utility Boat; 10 unit Rigid Hull Fender Boat (RHFB); 10 unit Rover Fiber Glass (Rover).
SEWA HIDROGRAFI
MV Aishah AIM 4, yang diperoleh menerusi kontrak SEWAan dari syarikat Breitlink Engineering Services Sdn Bhd (BESSB)
SEWA MOTOR
The Royal Military Police Corp (KPTD) celebrated the SEWA of 40 brand-new BMW R1250RT Superbikes for the Enforcement Motorcycle Squad on December 22nd, 2022
SEWA PATROL BOATS : SEWA OUTBOARD MOTORS : SEWA TRAILERS
Meanwhile, the division also published a tender for eleven glass reinforced plastic patrol boats together outboard motors, trailers and associated equipment. The tender was published on February 28 and closes on March 29. The estimated cost of the tender is RM4.6 million..
SEWA 28 HELI
The government signed an agreement with Weststar Aviation Sdn Bhd to SEWA 28 helicopters for use by ministries and other government agencies
OVERLIMITS DEBT = MELARAT SEKARAT = SEWA
HapusFEDERAL GOVERNMENT DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 36,139
HOUSEHOLD DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 45,859.
GOV + HOUSEHOLD = PER PEOPLE : RM 81,998
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang akhir 2024: RM 1.25 triliun
• Utang akhir Juni 2025: RM 1.30 triliun
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh 2025 (perkiraan pertengahan tahun): 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
1.30 triliun = 1,300,000,000,000
Per Orang = 1,300,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 36,139 per orang
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang rumah tangga (akhir Maret 2025): RM 1.65 triliun
• Persentase terhadap PDB: 84.3%
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh pertengahan 2025: 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
Utang per orang =1,650,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 45,859 per orang
-------------------
The MALAYDESH Armed Forces (MAF) has faced a number of problems with its assets, including outdated equipment, limited procurement budgets, and political interference.
Outdated equipment
• Many of the MAF's assets are outdated, with most of the equipment purchased between the 1970s and 1990s.
• The Royal MALAYDESH Navy (RMN) has many vessels that are past their intended service life.
• The Royal MALAYDESH Air Force (RMAF) needs to replace its Nuri helicopters, which were first commissioned in 1968.
Limited procurement budgets
• The MAF has had limited procurement budgets for the past quarter-century.
• The global financial crisis caused the MAF to postpone large purchases.
• The MAF has struggled to acquire modern military assets.
Political interference
• Political interference and corruption have undermined the MAF's combat readiness.
• The MAF has faced challenges in engaging with non-traditional security challenges.
=============
MALAYDESH military budget is allocated to protect the country's sovereignty and security. The budget includes the cost of military personnel, maintenance, procurement, research and development, and military aid.
• Budget constraints
Historical budget constraints and competing national priorities can limit the military budget.
• Economic limitations
Economic limitations can delay or cancel military modernization initiatives.
• Regional security challenges
The country's awareness of regional security challenges can impact the military budget.
What is the military budget for 2025?
• MALAYDESH 2025 defense allocation was RM21.2 billion (USD4.5 billion), a 7.08% increase from the previous year.
• The budget included USD1.3 billion for maintenance and repair work and the procurement of new military assets.
OVERLIMITS DEBT = MELARAT SEKARAT = SEWA
HapusFEDERAL GOVERNMENT DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 36,139
HOUSEHOLD DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 45,859.
GOV + HOUSEHOLD = PER PEOPLE : RM 81,998
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang akhir 2024: RM 1.25 triliun
• Utang akhir Juni 2025: RM 1.30 triliun
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh 2025 (perkiraan pertengahan tahun): 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
1.30 triliun = 1,300,000,000,000
Per Orang = 1,300,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 36,139 per orang
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang rumah tangga (akhir Maret 2025): RM 1.65 triliun
• Persentase terhadap PDB: 84.3%
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh pertengahan 2025: 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
Utang per orang =1,650,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 45,859 per orang
-------------------
The MALAYDESH armed forces face several problems with procurement, including:
• Cost: The cost of procurement is a major challenge.
• Corruption: Corruption is a recurring problem in the MALAYDESH military.
• Budgetary uncertainty: The MALAYDESH government has been unwilling to cut spending elsewhere to fund defense.
• Opaque decision making: The decision-making process is often opaque and vendor-driven.
• Political influence: Political influence is often used to circumvent established protocols.
• External influences: The procurement process is subject to external influences, such as political influence from suppliers.
• Weak external oversight: The external oversight of the procurement process is weak.
• Mixing and matching equipment: The MALAYDESH military sources equipment from many different sources, which can make it difficult to find personnel to manage the equipment.
• Outdated inventory: The MALAYDESH armed forces have outdated inventory stock.
==================
TIDAK BAYAR DEBT
TIDAK BAYAR DEBT
TIDAK BAYAR DEBT
“Kalau dikira daripada peratus, (DEBT) 82 peratus daripada KDNK (Keluaran Dalam Negara Kasar) dan untuk DEBT kerajaan persekutuan sudah mencecah 60.4 peratus. “Ini bermakna bayaran khidmat DEBT banyak…hanya membayar faedah bukan bayar DEBT tertunggak,” kata Anwar lagi
Stesss..😅
HapusIDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
🚫 1. No Long-Range Strike Systems
• Malaydesh does not possess ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, or standoff precision-guided munitions.
• Its air force lacks platforms capable of launching deep-strike missions. The Su-30MKM fighters have range and payload potential, but Malaydesh has not equipped them with long-range strike munitions like Kh-59 or BrahMos.
• Naval assets are similarly limited—no ship-launched cruise missiles or land-attack capabilities exist.
Impact: Malaydesh cannot credibly threaten retaliation against adversaries beyond its borders, reducing its strategic leverage.
🛡️ 2. Deterrence by Denial, Not Punishment
• Malaydesh defense doctrine emphasizes “concentric deterrence”, focusing on denial rather than punishment.
• This means the strategy is built around preventing aggression, not retaliating against it.
• While this suits peacetime stability, it’s increasingly inadequate in a region where China, Vietnam, and the Philippines are investing in deterrence-by-punishment capabilities.
Impact: Malaydesh lacks escalation control and cannot impose costs on adversaries, weakening its deterrent posture.
💸 3. Budget Priorities Undermine Capability Development
• Over 60–70% of Malaydesh defense budget goes to salaries, maintenance, and operations.
• This leaves minimal room for R&D, procurement of advanced weapons, or strategic force development.
• The Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) scandal and delays have further eroded trust and diverted resources from strategic programs.
Impact: Malaydesh is stuck in a cycle of maintaining legacy systems rather than investing in future capabilities.
🌐 4. No Indigenous Missile or Strategic Weapons Program
• Unlike regional peers such as Indonesia (which is co-developing missiles with Turkey) or Vietnam (which fields Russian cruise missiles), Malaydesh has no domestic missile development program.
• It also lacks partnerships for co-production or licensed manufacturing of strategic weapons.
Impact: Total dependence on foreign suppliers; no autonomy in strategic force planning.
Bukan BANGLA tapi ternyata INDIANESIA.....HAHAHAHHA
BalasHapus7,043 PATI ditahan imigresen, Indonesia, Myanmar paling tinggi
https://www.kosmo.com.my/2026/02/24/7043-pati-ditahan-imigresen-indonesia-myanmar-paling-tinggi/
5x PM BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
Hapus6x MOD BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
PROCUREMENT = 2026 FREEZES : 2023 CANCELLED
-
5x GANTI PM = 84,3% TO GDP
5x GANTI MOF = KLAIM LUNAS 2053 = GAGAL (NAMBAH DEBT)
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
5x GANTI PM = TIDAK BAYAR HUTANG TERTUNGGAK
6x GANTI MOD = KEKANGAN KEWANGAN
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
----------------
MRCA 2025-2017= ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
LCS 2025-2011 = ZONK = MANGKRAK
5x GANTI PM
6x GANTI MOD
-
SPH 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
MRSS/LPD 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
----------------
GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% of GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% of GDP
Federal Government Debt
• End of 2024: RM 1.25 trillion
• End of June 2025: RM 1.3 trillion
• Projected Debt-to-GDP: 69% by the end of 2025
Household Debt
2025 : RM1.73 trillion, or 85.8% of GDP
=============
The cost overrun for the LCS project in MALAYDESH was RM1 billion. This was part of a RM9.13 billion contract that the government paid RM6.08 billion for.
Explanation
• RM1.4 billion was not used for the project
• RM1 billion was considered a cost overrun
• RM400 million was used to pay off PSCI's DEBTs
Cost overruns are a common problem in the construction industry in MALAYDESH . In fact, most construction projects in MALAYDESH have cost overruns of 5–10% of the total contract price
===========
MALAYDESH shipyards face several key problems including: intense competition from neighboring countries like Singapore with more advanced infrastructure, limited techNOLogical capabilities, supply chain disruptions due to global factors like COVID-19, a shortage of skilled labor, inconsistent demand for shipbuilding, and sometimes issues with project management and cost overruns, particularly when building complex vessels; all of which can hinder their competitiveness in the international market.
Specific challenges:
• Infrastructure limitations:
MALAYDESH ports might not be as modern or well-equipped as those in Singapore, leading to inefficiencies and higher costs.
• Skill gap:
A lack of highly skilled workers in shipbuilding can impact quality and production timelines.
• Nological limitations:
MALAYDESH shipyards may not have access to the latest shipbuilding techNOLogies, hindering their ability to build complex vessels.
• Market volatility:
Depending heavily on the oil and gas industry for demand, fluctuations in the market can significantly impact orders for offshore vessels.
• Cost competitiveness:
Facing pressure to compete on price with other regional shipyards, which can sometimes lead to compromising quality.
• Project management issues:
Past instances of delays and cost overruns in major shipbuilding projects have raised concerns about project management capabilities.
Recent developments:
• Focus on green nology:
MALAYDESH shipyards are increasingly looking to build more environmentally friendly vessels like LNG-powered ships to stay competitive.
• Collaboration with international partners:
Some MALAYDESH shipyards are collaborating with foreign companies to access advanced techNOLogy and expertise.
• Government initiatives:
The MALAYDESH government is providing incentives to boost the shipbuilding industry and address some of these challenges
5x PM BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
Hapus6x MOD BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
PROCUREMENT = 2026 FREEZES : 2023 CANCELLED
-
5x GANTI PM = 84,3% TO GDP
5x GANTI MOF = KLAIM LUNAS 2053 = GAGAL (NAMBAH DEBT)
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
5x GANTI PM = TIDAK BAYAR HUTANG TERTUNGGAK
6x GANTI MOD = KEKANGAN KEWANGAN
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
----------------
MRCA 2025-2017= ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
LCS 2025-2011 = ZONK = MANGKRAK
5x GANTI PM
6x GANTI MOD
-
SPH 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
MRSS/LPD 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
----------------
GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% of GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% of GDP
Federal Government Debt
• End of 2024: RM 1.25 trillion
• End of June 2025: RM 1.3 trillion
• Projected Debt-to-GDP: 69% by the end of 2025
Household Debt
2025 : RM1.73 trillion, or 85.8% of GDP
=============
MALAYDESH Armed Forces (MAF) in terms of readiness, defense preparedness, and logistics.
Challenges
• Logistics: Outdated inventory can make it difficult to deliver the right supplies to soldiers at the right time. This can hinder operations and make it harder to mobilize soldiers in hostile environments.
• Defense preparedness: Outdated equipment can make it difficult for the MAF to keep up with evolving geopolitical and strategic threats.
• Fleet sustainment: A large fleet of aging aircraft can be expensive to maintain.
===========
The defense industry of MALAYDESH armed forces faces several weaknesses, including corruption, lack of human resources, and insufficient research and development.
Corruption
• Procurement
The procurement process is vulnerable to corruption due to foreign and domestic interests.
• Commanders
Commanders may not receive training on corruption issues, which can leave troops ill-equipped to respond to corruption risks.
Lack of human resources
• STEM specialists
There is a lack of STEM specialists, especially in the defense-industrial sector.
• Local companies
Local companies may not have the necessary capabilities to produce defense equipment.
Insufficient research and development
• Local universities and corporate sector
There is little use of the research and development capabilities in local universities and the corporate sector.
• Government guidance
The government may not have clear guidance for the future strategic direction of the industry.
Other weaknesses
• Limited parliamentary oversight: Parliamentary oversight of the defense sector is weak.
• Limited financial scrutiny: Financial scrutiny is limited by excessive secrecy.
• Reluctance of OEMs: Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) may be reluctant to share their techNOLogy.
• Reluctance of MAF: The MALAYDESH Armed Forces (MAF) may be reluctant to use locally produced products.
MALAYDESH armed forces face challenges in modernizing their budget due to economic limitations, historical budget constraints, and competing national priorities. However, the country has recently increased its military spending to address these challenges.
Challenges
Budget constraints: MALAYDESH defense spending is low compared to other regional powers, and the country has faced delays and cancellations of military modernization initiatives.
Aging aircraft: The country's fleet of aging aircraft is burdensome to maintain, which adds to fleet sustainment problems.
Leakage of funds: The pandemic and political uncertainty have limited defense spending
5x PM BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
Hapus6x MOD BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
PROCUREMENT = 2026 FREEZES : 2023 CANCELLED
-
5x GANTI PM = 84,3% TO GDP
5x GANTI MOF = KLAIM LUNAS 2053 = GAGAL (NAMBAH DEBT)
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
5x GANTI PM = TIDAK BAYAR HUTANG TERTUNGGAK
6x GANTI MOD = KEKANGAN KEWANGAN
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
----------------
MRCA 2025-2017= ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
LCS 2025-2011 = ZONK = MANGKRAK
5x GANTI PM
6x GANTI MOD
-
SPH 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
MRSS/LPD 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
----------------
GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% of GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% of GDP
Federal Government Debt
• End of 2024: RM 1.25 trillion
• End of June 2025: RM 1.3 trillion
• Projected Debt-to-GDP: 69% by the end of 2025
Household Debt
2025 : RM1.73 trillion, or 85.8% of GDP K
==============
SEWA VVSHORAD
SEWA TRUK CINA 3 TON
Three weeks ago, the Madani government announced that it had struck a deal with China to SEWA 62 new train sets for KTM Bhd. The estimated cost for the deal is RM10.7 billion and it will be covered in installments over a 30-year SEWA period. The approved leasing deal for KTMB may tip the scale in favour of the truck and VVSHORAD proposals.
SEWA PESAWAT
ITTC is currently providing Fighter Lead-In Training (FLIT) to the Royal MALAYDESH Air Force in London, Ontario. ITTC operates a fleet of Aero Vodochody L-39 featuring upgraded avionics for the FLIT programme
SEWA SIMULATOR MKM TAHUN
Five-year contract for Sukhoi’s simulators. Publicly listed HeiTech Padu Bhd has announced that it had been awarded a RM67 million, five-year contract to operate and maintain the Su-30MKM flight simulators at the RMAF airbase in Gong Kedak
SEWA HELI SEWA SIMULATOR
Kerajaan sebelum ini pernah menyewa Helikopter Latihan Airbus EC120B dan Flight Simulation Training Device (FSTD) Untuk Kegunaan Kursus Asas Juruterbang Helikopter TUDM. Selain itu, kerajaan turut pernah menyewa 5 unit Helikopter EC120B; 1 unit Sistem Simulator
SEWA HELI
4 buah Helikopter Leonardo AW 139 yang diperolehi secara SEWAan ini adalah untuk kegunaan Tentera Udara Diraja MALAYDESH (TUDM) yang akan ditempatkan di NO.3 Skuadron, Pangkalan Udara Butterworth
SEWA BOAT
SEWAan Bot Op Pasir merangkumi 10 unit Fast Interceptor Boat (FIB); 10 unit Utility Boat; 10 unit Rigid Hull Fender Boat (RHFB); 10 unit Rover Fiber Glass (Rover).
SEWA HIDROGRAFI
MV Aishah AIM 4, yang diperoleh menerusi kontrak SEWAan dari syarikat Breitlink Engineering Services Sdn Bhd (BESSB)
SEWA MOTOR
The Royal Military Police Corp (KPTD) celebrated the SEWA of 40 brand-new BMW R1250RT Superbikes for the Enforcement Motorcycle Squad on December 22nd, 2022
SEWA PATROL BOATS : SEWA OUTBOARD MOTORS : SEWA TRAILERS
Meanwhile, the division also published a tender for eleven glass reinforced plastic patrol boats together outboard motors, trailers and associated equipment. The tender was published on February 28 and closes on March 29. The estimated cost of the tender is RM4.6 million..
SEWA 28 HELI
The government signed an agreement with Weststar Aviation Sdn Bhd to SEWA 28 helicopters for use by ministries and other government agencies
OVERLIMITS DEBT = MELARAT SEKARAT = SEWA
HapusFEDERAL GOVERNMENT DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 36,139
HOUSEHOLD DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 45,859.
GOV + HOUSEHOLD = PER PEOPLE : RM 81,998
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang akhir 2024: RM 1.25 triliun
• Utang akhir Juni 2025: RM 1.30 triliun
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh 2025 (perkiraan pertengahan tahun): 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
1.30 triliun = 1,300,000,000,000
Per Orang = 1,300,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 36,139 per orang
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang rumah tangga (akhir Maret 2025): RM 1.65 triliun
• Persentase terhadap PDB: 84.3%
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh pertengahan 2025: 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
Utang per orang =1,650,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 45,859 per orang
-------------------
The MALAYDESH Armed Forces (MAF) faces several weaknesses in combat readiness, including a lack of modern assets, poor planning, and corruption. The MAF also faces challenges in managing cross-domain operations, which involve land, sea, air, cyber, and space forces.
Weaknesses
• Lack of modern assets: The MAF lacks modern military assets, which exposes it to internal and external threats.
• Poor planning: The MAF has been criticized for poor planning.
• Corruption: The MAF has been criticized for corruption.
• Political interference: Political leaders have been criticized for interfering in procurement.
• Cross-domain operations: The MAF faces challenges in managing cross-domain operations.
• Combat readiness measurement: The MAF's combat readiness measurement application is piecemeal.
Challenges
=============
MALAYDESH 's armed forces budget has faced challenges in the past, including limited funding and outdated equipment.
Limited funding
• Maintenance and repair
The budget for maintenance and repair often takes up a large portion of the defense budget.
• Procurement
The budget for procurement is often limited, making it difficult to buy new assets.
• Political will
Successive governments have been unwilling to cut government spending elsewhere to fund defense.
Outdated equipment
• Navy: The navy has struggled to acquire new vessels due to funding constraints.
• Air force: The air force has struggled to buy new assets for modernization.
Kan bangla SDH menyatu dgn rakyat malaydes🤪😅🤣
HapusIDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
🔧 1. Fragmented and Underdeveloped MRO Infrastructure
• Malaydesh defense MRO sector is technically shallow, with most local firms focused on commercial aviation, not military-grade systems.
• Despite having over 200 aerospace companies, only a handful are equipped to handle complex military platforms like fighter jets, naval combat systems, or armored vehicles.
• The defense MRO ecosystem lacks dedicated facilities for:
o Engine overhauls (especially for Su-30MKM and Hawk aircraft)
o Combat system integration
o Naval propulsion and sensor maintenance
Impact: Military platforms face long downtimes and must rely on foreign OEMs for critical servicing.
🧱 2. Slow Localization and Limited Technical Depth
• Malaydesh has made partial progress in localizing MRO for platforms like the F/A-18D Hornet, but most high-end servicing still requires foreign technical assistance.
• There is no national MRO roadmap aligned with defense modernization goals, unlike countries like Turkey or South Korea that have built robust domestic ecosystems through tech transfer and industrial offsets.
• Local firms lack access to classified schematics, proprietary software, and advanced diagnostic tools needed for full-spectrum support.
Impact: Strategic dependence persists, and Malaydesh cannot sustain its fleet autonomously during crises or embargoes.
🕵️ 3. Weak Vendor Oversight and Governance
• The 2025 Auditor-General’s Report flagged major lapses in vendor management:
o RM162.75 million in late penalties were not collected
o RM1.42 million in fines were never imposed for delayed maintenance
• Contracts are often awarded to politically connected firms without rigorous performance benchmarks or technical vetting.
• Oversight is fragmented across MINDEF, the Ministry of Finance, and service branches, leading to diffused accountability.
Impact: Maintenance quality is inconsistent, costs are inflated, and readiness suffers.
📉 4. Obsolete Platforms and Spare Part Bottlenecks
• Malaydesh inventory includes 171 platforms over 30 years old, many of which require parts that are:
o No longer manufactured
o Sourced from defunct suppliers
o Incompatible with newer systems
• RM384.5 million was lost due to 1.62 million unused spare parts that no longer matched operational needs.
Impact: Maintenance becomes reactive and inefficient, with high sunk costs and low operational returns.
📊 Summary Table: MRO Asset Weaknesses in Malaydesh n Military
Weakness Area Description Strategic Impact
Infrastructure gaps Few facilities for military-grade MRO Long downtimes, foreign dependency
Slow localization Limited tech transfer, no unified roadmap No autonomy in fleet sustainment
Vendor oversight Poor contract enforcement, inflated costs Inconsistent quality, low accountability
Spare part obsolescence Aging platforms, mismatched inventory Budget waste, reduced readiness
🧭 Strategic Consequences
• Malaydesh ability to sustain combat operations over time is compromised.
• Without robust MRO capabilities, even newly acquired platforms (e.g. FA-50 jets, LCS ships) risk becoming high-cost liabilities.
• Regional peers like Indonesia and Singapore are investing in integrated MRO hubs, giving them a long-term readiness advantage.
5x PM BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
BalasHapus6x MOD BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
PROCUREMENT = 2026 FREEZES : 2023 CANCELLED
-
5x GANTI PM = 84,3% TO GDP
5x GANTI MOF = KLAIM LUNAS 2053 = GAGAL (NAMBAH DEBT)
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
5x GANTI PM = TIDAK BAYAR HUTANG TERTUNGGAK
6x GANTI MOD = KEKANGAN KEWANGAN
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
----------------
MRCA 2025-2017= ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
LCS 2025-2011 = ZONK = MANGKRAK
5x GANTI PM
6x GANTI MOD
-
SPH 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
MRSS/LPD 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
----------------
GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% of GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% of GDP
Federal Government Debt
• End of 2024: RM 1.25 trillion
• End of June 2025: RM 1.3 trillion
• Projected Debt-to-GDP: 69% by the end of 2025
Household Debt
2025 : RM1.73 trillion, or 85.8% of GDP K
==============
SEWA VVSHORAD
SEWA TRUK CINA 3 TON
Three weeks ago, the Madani government announced that it had struck a deal with China to SEWA 62 new train sets for KTM Bhd. The estimated cost for the deal is RM10.7 billion and it will be covered in installments over a 30-year SEWA period. The approved leasing deal for KTMB may tip the scale in favour of the truck and VVSHORAD proposals.
SEWA PESAWAT
ITTC is currently providing Fighter Lead-In Training (FLIT) to the Royal MALAYDESH Air Force in London, Ontario. ITTC operates a fleet of Aero Vodochody L-39 featuring upgraded avionics for the FLIT programme
SEWA SIMULATOR MKM TAHUN
Five-year contract for Sukhoi’s simulators. Publicly listed HeiTech Padu Bhd has announced that it had been awarded a RM67 million, five-year contract to operate and maintain the Su-30MKM flight simulators at the RMAF airbase in Gong Kedak
SEWA HELI SEWA SIMULATOR
Kerajaan sebelum ini pernah menyewa Helikopter Latihan Airbus EC120B dan Flight Simulation Training Device (FSTD) Untuk Kegunaan Kursus Asas Juruterbang Helikopter TUDM. Selain itu, kerajaan turut pernah menyewa 5 unit Helikopter EC120B; 1 unit Sistem Simulator
SEWA HELI
4 buah Helikopter Leonardo AW 139 yang diperolehi secara SEWAan ini adalah untuk kegunaan Tentera Udara Diraja MALAYDESH (TUDM) yang akan ditempatkan di NO.3 Skuadron, Pangkalan Udara Butterworth
SEWA BOAT
SEWAan Bot Op Pasir merangkumi 10 unit Fast Interceptor Boat (FIB); 10 unit Utility Boat; 10 unit Rigid Hull Fender Boat (RHFB); 10 unit Rover Fiber Glass (Rover).
SEWA HIDROGRAFI
MV Aishah AIM 4, yang diperoleh menerusi kontrak SEWAan dari syarikat Breitlink Engineering Services Sdn Bhd (BESSB)
SEWA MOTOR
The Royal Military Police Corp (KPTD) celebrated the SEWA of 40 brand-new BMW R1250RT Superbikes for the Enforcement Motorcycle Squad on December 22nd, 2022
SEWA PATROL BOATS : SEWA OUTBOARD MOTORS : SEWA TRAILERS
Meanwhile, the division also published a tender for eleven glass reinforced plastic patrol boats together outboard motors, trailers and associated equipment. The tender was published on February 28 and closes on March 29. The estimated cost of the tender is RM4.6 million..
SEWA 28 HELI
The government signed an agreement with Weststar Aviation Sdn Bhd to SEWA 28 helicopters for use by ministries and other government agencies
PENGHINAAN....HAHAHHAAH
BalasHapusPrabowo Terkejut Ditunjuk Trump Pegang Dokumen Penting Board of Peace di Depan Pemimpin Dunia
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QMK9scwTu0
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
HapusGOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
HapusGOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OVERLIMIT DEBT = DEFISIT SEJAK 1998
OUTSTANDING BORDER PROBLEMS (OPB) TAMBAH WILAYAH .....
HapusINDONESIA 5.207 Hektar (52,07 Kilometer Persegi)
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
TAMBAH WILAYAH .....
MALAYDESH 780 Hektar (7,8 Kilometer Persegi)
-
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
DATA STATISTA 2029-2020 : INCREASE DEBT
DATA STATISTA 2029-2020 : INCREASE DEBT
2029 = 438,09 BILLION USD
2028 = 412,2 BILLION USD
2027 = 386,51 BILLION USD
2026 = 362,19 BILLION USD
2025 = 338,75 BILLION USD
2024 = 316,15 BILLION USD
2023 = 293,83 BILLION USD
2022 = 271,49 BILLION USD
2021 = 247,49 BILLION USD
2020 = 221,49 BILLION USD
-
DATA STATISTA 2029-2020 : DEBT PAY DEBT
DATA STATISTA 2029-2020 : OVERLIMIT DEBT
2029 = 69,54% DEBT RATIO TO GDP
2028 = 69,34% DEBT RATIO TO GDP
2027 = 68,8% DEBT RATIO TO GDP
2026 = 68,17% DEBT RATIO TO GDP
2025 = 68,07% DEBT RATIO TO GDP
2024 = 68,38% DEBT RATIO TO GDP
2023 = 69,76% DEBT RATIO TO GDP
2022 = 65,5% DEBT RATIO TO GDP
2021 = 69,16% DEBT RATIO TO GDP
2020 = 67,69% DEBT RATIO TO GDP
-
DEBT 2024 = RM 1.63 TRILLION
DEBT 2023 = RM 1,53 TRILLION
DEBT 2022 = RM 1,45 TRILLION
DEBT 2021 = RM 1,38 TRILLION
DEBT 2020 = RM 1,32 TRILLION
DEBT 2019 = RM 1,25 TRILLION
DEBT 2018 = RM 1,19 TRILLION
The Finance Ministry stated that the aggregate national household DEBT stood at RM1.53 trillion between 2018 and 2023. In aggregate, it said the household DEBT for 2022 was RM1.45 trillion, followed by RM1.38 trillion (2021,) RM1.32 trillion (2020), RM1.25 trillion (2019) and RM1.19 trillion (2018). “The ratio of household DEBT to gross domestic product (GDP) at the end of 2023 also slightly increased to 84.3% compared with 82% in 2018,” it said.
-
BNM = HOUSEHOLD DEBT IS ONE OF THE HIGHEST IN THE ASEAN ......
MALAYDESH household DEBT is one of the highest in the ASEAN region. Against this backdrop, Bank Negara MALAYDESH (BNM) safeguards financial stability by monitoring and regulating the lending activity of all financial institutions in MALAYDESH , among other things.
😝😝😝😝😝😝😝😝😝😝😝
PETA KEKUATAN DIPLOMASI EKONOMI DI ASIA TENGGARA PASCA-PENANDATANGANAN AGREEMENT ON RECIPROCAL TRADE (ART):
Hapus________________________________________
Asimetri Daya Tawar: Strategi "Prabowo Nomics" vs Dilema Malaysia
-
Perbedaan hasil negosiasi ini menunjukkan perbedaan fundamental dalam memandang aset nasional. Indonesia menggunakan "Downstreaming Leverage" (hilirisasi); dengan menguasai 63,23% saham PT Freeport Indonesia secara mandiri, RI memiliki posisi tawar atas mineral kritis yang sangat dibutuhkan industri teknologi AS. Hal ini memungkinkan Indonesia menekan biaya komitmen hanya di angka US$22,7 Miliar untuk akses pasar yang lebih luas.
-
Sebaliknya, Malaysia terjebak dalam "Transactional Trap". Dengan beban utang per kapita yang mencapai RM 81.998 (gabungan utang pemerintah dan rumah tangga), Malaysia tidak memiliki ruang fiskal untuk menolak syarat berat dari AS. Angka US$242 Miliar (11 kali lipat dari Indonesia) bukan sekadar investasi, melainkan "biaya perlindungan" agar produk manufaktur mereka tetap bisa masuk ke pasar AS meskipun harus mengorbankan otonomi energi nuklir dan geopolitik.
________________________________________
2. Kedaulatan Digital: Proteksionisme Data vs Imperialisme Regulasi
-
Perbandingan pengelolaan data menunjukkan kontras yang tajam antara kedua negara:
Indonesia: Berhasil menegakkan batasan yang jelas melalui UU No. 27 Tahun 2022 tentang Pelindungan Data Pribadi. Fokusnya adalah data komersial, sehingga negara tetap memegang kendali penuh atas data strategis dan kependudukan. Ini adalah kemenangan bagi kedaulatan digital nasional.
-
Malaysia: Pasal 3 ART Malaysia mewajibkan adopsi standar regulasi AS secara penuh. Ini berisiko mematikan inovasi teknologi lokal karena perusahaan rintisan Malaysia dipaksa berkompetisi dengan raksasa digital AS tanpa perlindungan regulasi yang memihak pada kepentingan domestik.
________________________________________
3. Geopolitik ASEAN: Munculnya Pemimpin Baru vs Fragmentasi Regional
-
Hasil ART ini mengubah peta pengaruh di Asia Tenggara:
Dominasi Indonesia: Keberhasilan menghapus klausul pembatasan pihak ketiga (China/Rusia) mengukuhkan Indonesia sebagai pemimpin ASEAN yang tetap independen. Indonesia membuktikan bahwa sebuah negara bisa berdagang secara intensif dengan AS tanpa menjadi "satelit" kepentingan politik mereka.
-
Krisis Identitas ASEAN-5: Vietnam yang terus dipantau terkait transshipment (pengiriman barang China lewat Vietnam) dan Thailand yang terburu-buru masuk ke CPTPP menunjukkan adanya kepanikan ekonomi. Malaysia, dengan "Klausul Pemutusan Sepihak", praktis kehilangan fleksibilitas dalam berdiplomasi dengan blok ekonomi Timur (BRICS atau RCEP) tanpa seizin Washington.
________________________________________
Kesimpulan Analisis:
Perjanjian ART ini adalah titik balik di mana Indonesia berhasil melakukan "Arsitektur Diplomasi Baru"—mengambil keuntungan ekonomi dari Barat tanpa menyerahkan kunci kedaulatan. Sementara itu, Malaysia mengalami "Rugi Banding"; membayar harga yang terlalu mahal untuk manfaat yang terbatas, yang pada akhirnya memperlebar jurang ekonomi dan kemandirian antara Jakarta dan Kuala Lumpur di masa depan.
BABU KAUM WANITA......
HapusMMW 21 April 2025 pukul 10.48
YUPP tahun 2025 kami negara MISKIN
Sementara pendapatan Isteri saya pula dua kali lipat pendapatan saya. Household income kami secara kasar sebulan tahun 2025 = RM25.000 sebulan..........
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang akhir 2024: RM 1.25 triliun
• Utang akhir Juni 2025: RM 1.30 triliun
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh 2025 (perkiraan pertengahan tahun): 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
1.30 triliun = 1,300,000,000,000
Per Orang = 1,300,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 36,139 per orang
3️⃣ Ringkasan dalam tabel
Periode Total Utang (RM Triliun) Penduduk (Jiwa) Utang per Orang (RM) Kenaikan per Orang (RM)
Akhir 2024 1.25 35,977,838 34,735 –
Juni 2025 1.30 35,977,838 36,139 +1,404
4️⃣ Analisis
• Dalam 6 bulan pertama 2025, utang per penduduk naik sekitar RM 1,404.
• Kenaikan ini setara dengan +4% dibanding akhir 2024.
• Artinya, setiap warga Malaydesh secara rata-rata “menanggung” tambahan utang sekitar RM 234 per bulan selama periode tersebut.
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang rumah tangga (akhir Maret 2025): RM 1.65 triliun
• Persentase terhadap PDB: 84.3%
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh pertengahan 2025: 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
Utang per orang =1,650,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 45,859 per orang
3️⃣ Ringkasan dalam tabel
Periode Total Utang Rumah Tangga (RM Triliun) Penduduk (Jiwa) Utang per Orang (RM)
Maret 2025 1.65 35,977,838 45,859
4️⃣ Analisis
• Setiap penduduk Malaydesh, secara rata-rata, “menanggung” utang rumah tangga sekitar RM 45,859.
• Angka ini lebih tinggi dibanding utang per kapita pemerintah federal yang kita hitung sebelumnya (sekitar RM 36 ribu per orang).
• Jika digabungkan (utang pemerintah + utang rumah tangga), beban utang total per kapita bisa mendekati RM 82 ribu.
Rasio 84.3% dari PDB menunjukkan bahwa utang rumah tangga Malaydesh relatif tinggi dibanding ukuran ekonominya, yang dapat memengaruhi daya beli dan risiko keuangan rumah tangga jika suku bunga
--------------------
GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% of GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% of GDP
Federal Government Debt
• End of 2024: RM 1.25 trillion
• End of June 2025: RM 1.3 trillion
• Projected Debt-to-GDP: 69% by the end of 2025
Household Debt
2025 : RM1.73 trillion, or 85.8% of GDP
--------------------------
MY = HUTANG > TAS, JET PRIBADI, FILM, PROPERTI, KOTA HANTU
SG = HUTANG > ASSET
TH = HUTANG > ASSET
PH = HUTANG > ASSET
VN = HUTANG > ASSET
ID = HUTANG > ASSET
============
SKANDAL 1MDB = USD 4,5 MILIAR
Skandal 1MDB dan kegagalan proyek Forest City menggambarkan dua sisi kelam dari pengelolaan dana besar di Malaydesh. Dana investasi 1MDB sebesar USD 4,5 miliar diselewengkan oleh pejabat tinggi dan rekanan mereka untuk membeli barang mewah, properti elit, karya seni, jet pribadi, dan bahkan mendanai film Hollywood. Tokoh-tokoh seperti Najib Razak, Jho Low, dan Riza Aziz terlibat dalam jaringan pencucian uang lintas negara yang menyebabkan kerugian besar dan memicu penyitaan aset oleh otoritas internasional. Skandal ini menjadi simbol korupsi global yang merusak kepercayaan publik dan reputasi negara.
--------------
FOREST CITY = KOTA HANTU USD 100 MILLIAR
Forest City yang digadang-gadang sebagai kota futuristik senilai USD 100 miliar berubah menjadi kota hantu akibat krisis keuangan pengembang, pandemi, dan minimnya minat pasar. Proyek ini gagal memenuhi janji pembangunan ekonomi dan sosial, menyebabkan kerugian investasi, infrastruktur terbengkalai, serta ketimpangan sosial di masyarakat lokal. Kedua kasus ini menunjukkan pentingnya transparansi, akuntabilitas, dan perencanaan yang realistis dalam pengelolaan mega proyek dan dana publik agar tidak berujung pada kegagalan dan penderitaan rakyat
TOP TEN ASIA
Hapus-
10 negara dengan ekonomi terbesar di Asia berdasarkan PDB (GDP) PPP (Purchasing Power Parity) untuk tahun 2025, merujuk pada data IMF World Economic Outlook dan Statista:
1. Tiongkok – US$ 37,07 triliun
(Ekonomi terbesar di dunia dan Asia dalam hal daya beli riil).
2. India – US$ 16,19 triliun
(Kekuatan raksasa Asia Selatan dengan pertumbuhan domestik yang masif).
3. Jepang – US$ 6,70 triliun
(Tetap kuat meski pertumbuhan melambat, didorong sektor industri canggih).
4. Indonesia – US$ 5,03 triliun
(Ekonomi terbesar di Asia Tenggara; berada di peringkat 4 Asia dan 7 dunia dalam versi PPP).
5. Turki – US$ 3,83 triliun
(Ekonomi lintas benua dengan basis manufaktur dan perdagangan yang kuat).
6. Korea Selatan – US$ 3,06 triliun
(Pusat inovasi teknologi dengan efisiensi produksi yang tinggi).
7. Arab Saudi – US$ 2,42 triliun
(Negara terkaya di Timur Tengah yang sedang melakukan diversifikasi ekonomi).
8. Iran – US$ 1,85 triliun
(Memiliki basis industri dan energi yang besar di wilayah Asia Barat).
9. Taiwan – US$ 1,81 triliun
(Sangat efisien dalam nilai ekonomi riil berkat dominasi semikonduktor global).
10. Pakistan – US$ 1,72 triliun
(Masuk 10 besar karena jumlah populasi besar yang mendorong volume ekonomi domestik).
-
10 negara dengan PDB (GDP) Nominal terbesar di Asia untuk tahun 2025 berdasarkan data proyeksi dari IMF World Economic Outlook dan analisis Forbes India:
1. Tiongkok – US$ 19,39 triliun
(Tetap menjadi pemimpin ekonomi di Asia dan pusat manufaktur global).
2. Jepang – US$ 4,28 triliun
(Ekonomi maju yang mengandalkan sektor otomotif dan teknologi presisi).
3. India – US$ 4,12 triliun
(Ekonomi dengan pertumbuhan tercepat, diprediksi segera melampaui Jepang).
4. Korea Selatan – US$ 1,86 triliun
(Raksasa teknologi dan ekspor semikonduktor global).
5. Indonesia – US$ 1,55 triliun
(Ekonomi terbesar di Asia Tenggara dan kekuatan baru di G20).
6. Turki – US$ 1,32 triliun
(Pusat industri yang menghubungkan pasar Asia dan Eropa).
7. Arab Saudi – US$ 1,14 triliun
(Pemimpin pasar energi yang sedang melakukan diversifikasi ekonomi masif).
8. Taiwan – US$ 884,39 miliar
(Pemain kunci dunia dalam industri chip dan sirkuit terpadu).
9. Uni Emirat Arab – US$ 548,51 miliar
(Pusat keuangan, perdagangan, dan logistik internasional).
10. Thailand – US$ 546,21 miliar
(Kuat di sektor pariwisata dan rantai pasok otomotif regional).
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
-
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
NAVAL GRUP = REWORK 4000 PIPA DAN KABEL LCS
HapusLCS REWORK (SALAH PASANG)
LCS REWORK (SALAH PASANG)
LCS REWORK (SALAH PASANG)
--
https://www.airtimes.my/2026/01/28/penyerahan-lcs-1-dan-2-rasmi-ditunda-kapal-pertama-lewat-4-bulan-ke-disember-2026/
Dalam penjelasan beliau, Mohamed Khaled mendedahkan bahawa kelewatan ini berpunca daripada dua faktor kritikal iaitu kelewatan penghantaran peralatan daripada Pengeluar Peralatan Asal (OEM) dan keperluan mendesak untuk melakukan kerja-kerja pemasangan semula (re-work) ke atas sistem perpaipan dan kabel kapal susulan teguran audit teknikal.
"Naval Group buat audit, lihat supaya semua kerja berjalan sebagaimana spesifikasi, dan mereka telah membuat teguran supaya ditambah baik ataupun re-work pemasangan perpaipan dan juga kabel. Untuk makluman ada 4,000 unit paip, jadi diminta supaya dikaji semula dan dipasang semula," jelas Menteri Pertahanan.
---------------------
PAC = TANPA PERSETUJUAN PENUH
LCS DESIGN ERROR (SALAH POTONG)
LCS DESIGN ERROR (SALAH POTONG)
LCS DESIGN ERROR (SALAH POTONG)
LCS DESIGN ERROR (SALAH POTONG)
LCS DESIGN ERROR (SALAH POTONG)
-
Masalah utama:
Reka bentuk bertukar daripada model MEKO A100 (Jerman) yang dipersetujui TLDM kepada Gowind (Perancis) tanpa persetujuan penuh.
Akibatnya, pemotongan besi dan komponen awal yang sudah dilakukan menjadi tidak relevan (“salah potong”).
Kelewatan besar: sepatutnya kapal pertama siap 2019, tetapi hanya berjaya diluncurkan pada Mei 2024
---------------------
2026 =
BUKTI LCS KARATAN
BUKTI LCS KARATAN
BUKTI LCS KARATAN
-
https://www.malaydeshndefence.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/618729088_122257611464152127_3846135779091436202_n-768x512.jpg
------------------
2026 =
BUKTI LCS OMPONG
BUKTI LCS OMPONG
BUKTI LCS OMPONG
-
https://www.malaydeshndefence.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/616602398_122257611656152127_3607545269913185334_n.jpg
------------------
2026 =
BUKTI LCS DELAY
BUKTI LCS DELAY
BUKTI LCS DELAY
-
Defence Minister DS Khaled Nordin told Parliament today that the sea trials for the ship has been rescheduled for April and its commissioning this December, a delay of four months of the original schedule. LCS 2 commissioning is postponed to August 27 while LCS 3 commissioning remained on schedule for December 2027. As with LCS 4 on August 2028 and LCS 5 April 2029.
------------------
LCS TO PANGKOR = TARIK TUGBOAT
LCS TO PANGKOR = TARIK TUGBOAT
LCS TO PANGKOR = TARIK TUGBOAT
-
https://www.malaydeshndefence.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/615891933_122257611716152127_8374116749521824848_n-768x512.jpg
-
https://www.malaydeshndefence.com/lcs-sea-trials-after-raya-and-commissioning-this-december/
-
😝NAVAL DAN PAC = REWORK 4000 KABEL PIPA = KARATAN OMPONG DELAY😝
Bangla penguasa Malon 🤣🤣
BalasHapusBukan BANGLA tapi ternyata INDIANESIA guys..... tapi GORILLA klaim mereka ahli G20 dan BRICK.............HAHAHAHHA
BalasHapus7,043 PATI ditahan imigresen, Indonesia, Myanmar paling tinggi
https://www.kosmo.com.my/2026/02/24/7043-pati-ditahan-imigresen-indonesia-myanmar-paling-tinggi/
MAHATHIR = MALAS MISKIN
Hapusmenyebut orang-orang suku Melayu terus-terusan miskin karena tak mau bekerja keras. Ia pun mengkritik sifat warga Melayu yang malah menyalahkan etnis lain karena kesuksesan mereka.
-
ANWAR IBRAHIM = MISKIN
“Tapi saya kata, sebagai contoh projek tebatan banjir…kerana banjir itu menyeksa rakyat dan yang jadi mangsa itu orang miskin dan majoriti yang miskin itu Melayu. "Sebab itu kalau kita nak belanjakan kita kena teliti. Ini soal tadbir urus, mengurus negara itu harus dengan ketertiban, peraturan dan ke arah yang betul.
-
KLAIM CASH = 🦧GORILA HUTANG ASET MILITER
-
1. 🇹🇷 Turki (LMS Batch 2)
Model: G2G (Antar Pemerintah) via SSB.
Bunga: 4% – 6% (Fixed/OECD CIRR).
Tenor: 10 – 15 Tahun.
-
2. 🇰🇷 Korea Selatan (Pesawat FA-50)
Model: Hybrid (Kredit KEXIM & Barter CPO 50%).
Biaya: Management Fee sangat rendah (0,10% - 0,50%).
-
3. 🇬🇧 Inggris (Standar UKEF)
Syarat: Wajib DP 15% (Standar OECD).
Bunga: Stabil, mengikuti National Loans Fund.
-
4. 🇨🇳 China (LMS Batch 1)
Model: 100% Kredit Ekspor (China Eximbank).
Bunga: Sangat murah (3,5% Fixed).
Tenor: 10 Tahun.
-
5. 🇵🇱 Polandia (Tank PT-91M)
Model: DP 15% + Barter CPO (30-40%).
Tenor: 10 Tahun cicilan.
-
6. 🇩🇪 Jerman (Kedah-Class)
Model: Kredit Komersial dijamin negara (Euler Hermes).
Pendana: Deutsche Bank & Konsorsium.
-
7. Kredit Sindikasi (Proyek LCS)
Model: Konsorsium Bank Domestik/Intl (Skala Masif).
Bunga: 6% (Saldo Menurun).
Tenor: 15 Tahun (Akibat penundaan proyek)..
MAHATHIR = MALAS MISKIN
Hapusmenyebut orang-orang suku Melayu terus-terusan miskin karena tak mau bekerja keras. Ia pun mengkritik sifat warga Melayu yang malah menyalahkan etnis lain karena kesuksesan mereka.
-
ANWAR IBRAHIM = MISKIN
“Tapi saya kata, sebagai contoh projek tebatan banjir…kerana banjir itu menyeksa rakyat dan yang jadi mangsa itu orang miskin dan majoriti yang miskin itu Melayu. "Sebab itu kalau kita nak belanjakan kita kena teliti. Ini soal tadbir urus, mengurus negara itu harus dengan ketertiban, peraturan dan ke arah yang betul.
-
BUKTI HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
BUKTI PRANK 🦧GORILA ....
-
🦧GORILA KLAIM SHOPPING CASH = 2018-2026 .....
-
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
Daftar tren "Hutang Bayar Hutang" Malaydesh dari tahun 2018 hingga proyeksi 2025 berdasarkan data Kementerian Kewangan Malaydesh (MOF) dan Jabatan Audit Negara:
-
2018: FASE "OPEN DONASI"
Pemerintah meluncurkan Tabung Harapan Malaydesh untuk mengumpulkan sumbangan rakyat guna membantu membayar utang negara yang menembus angka RM1 triliun (80% dari PDB).
-
2019: 59% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Laporan Ketua Audit Negara mengungkapkan bahwa 59% dari pinjaman baru digunakan hanya untuk melunasi utang yang sudah ada (gali lubang tutup lubang).
-
2020: 60% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Ketergantungan meningkat; hampir 60% pinjaman baru dialokasikan untuk membayar utang lama, memicu kekhawatiran karena anggaran pembangunan semakin terhimpit.
-
2021: 50,4% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Dari total pinjaman baru sebesar RM194,55 miliar, sebanyak RM98,05 miliar digunakan untuk pembayaran kembali prinsipal utang yang telah matang.
-
2022: 52,4% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Realisasi pembayaran prinsipal mencapai RM113,7 miliar. Total pinjaman meningkat 11,6% dibandingkan tahun sebelumnya akibat pemulihan pascapandemi.
-
2023: 64,3% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Persentase tertinggi dalam periode ini. Dari total pinjaman kasar RM226,6 miliar, sebesar RM145,8 miliar lari ke pembayaran utang lama.
-
2024: 58,9% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Pemerintah mulai melakukan konsolidasi. Pinjaman digunakan untuk melunasi utang matang sebesar RM121,3 miliar dari total pinjaman RM206 miliar.
-
2025: 58% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Berdasarkan Tinjauan Fiskal 2025, pemerintah memproyeksikan pinjaman kasar sebesar RM184 miliar, di mana RM106,8 miliar disiapkan untuk membayar prinsipal utang matang.
-
2026 = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Dokumen Resmi Pemerintah (Kementerian Kewangan Malaydesh - MOF)
Data utama berasal dari laporan tahunan yang diterbitkan bersamaan dengan pembentangan anggaran negara:
Laporan Tinjauan Fiskal 2025 & 2026: Memuat angka proyeksi pinjaman kasar (gross borrowing) dan alokasi pembayaran kembali prinsipal utang yang matang.
TERNYATA warga INDIANESIA guys bukan bangla.....HAHAHAHAH
BalasHapusWarga Indonesia paling ramai diusir keluar Malaysia – Menteri Dalam Negeri
https://www.airtimes.my/2025/02/18/warga-indonesia-paling-ramai-diusir-keluar-malaysia-menteri-dalam-negeri/
MAHATHIR = MALAS MISKIN
Hapusmenyebut orang-orang suku Melayu terus-terusan miskin karena tak mau bekerja keras. Ia pun mengkritik sifat warga Melayu yang malah menyalahkan etnis lain karena kesuksesan mereka.
-
ANWAR IBRAHIM = MISKIN
“Tapi saya kata, sebagai contoh projek tebatan banjir…kerana banjir itu menyeksa rakyat dan yang jadi mangsa itu orang miskin dan majoriti yang miskin itu Melayu. "Sebab itu kalau kita nak belanjakan kita kena teliti. Ini soal tadbir urus, mengurus negara itu harus dengan ketertiban, peraturan dan ke arah yang betul.
-
🦧GORILA KLAIM KAYA : 97.000 EKSODUS =
2025-2015 : ALASAN EKONOMI
2025-2015 : ALASAN EKONOMI
2025-2015 : ALASAN EKONOMI
---------------------------
Sumber Berita Utama:
Laporan Resmi: Portal JPN Malaydesh (Update 9 Jan 2026).
Media : The Straits Times dan Harian Metro.Kompas Money dan CNBC Indonesia
The Straits Times (Singapore): "More than 57,000 Malaydeshns renounced their citizenship for Singapore's over last 5 years: Report".
New Straits Times (Malaydesh): "Economic factors, family main reasons 61,116 Malaydeshns gave up citizenship".
VnExpress International: "Nearly 94% of Malaydeshns who renounced citizenship moved to Singapore".
SAYS: "Why Thousands Of Malaydeshns Are Giving Up Their Citizenship".
RinggitPlus: "Economic And Family Factors Drive Malaydeshns To Renounce Citizenship
-------------------
pernyataan resmi Jabatan Pendaftaran Negara (JPN) Malaydesh melalui Direktur Jenderalnya, Badrul Hisham Alias.
-
Berikut adalah rincian detail mengenai tren pelepasan kewarganegaraan tersebut:
Statistik Utama (Periode 2020 – 17 Desember 2025)
Total Warga Melepas Kewarganegaraan: Sebanyak 61.116 orang resmi menanggalkan status warga negara Malaydesh dalam rentang waktu lima tahun terakhir.
Destinasi Utama:
1. Singapura (93,78%): Sekitar 57.315 orang memilih menjadi warga negara Singapura. Kedekatan geografis dan peluang ekonomi menjadi faktor penentu utama.
2. Australia (2,15%): Menempati posisi kedua sebagai tujuan migrasi.
3. Brunei Darussalam (0,97%): Berada di posisi ketiga.
Negara Lain (3,1%): Tersebar di berbagai negara di seluruh dunia.
-
Profil Demografis & Penyebab
Mayoritas Wanita: Sekitar 57,9% (35.356 orang) dari mereka yang pindah kewarganegaraan adalah perempuan.
Kelompok Usia: Kelompok usia produktif 31 hingga 40 tahun menjadi penyumbang terbesar, yakni sekitar 31,6% dari total pemohon.
-
Faktor Pendorong: Keputusan ini didorong oleh dua faktor utama: ekonomi (mencari standar hidup dan nilai tukar mata uang yang lebih baik) serta alasan keluarga (seperti pernikahan dengan warga negara asing).
-
MALAYDESH ........
GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT DEBT
• END OF 2024: RM 1.25 TRILLION
• END OF JUNE 2025: RM 1.3 TRILLION
• PROJECTED DEBT-TO-GDP: 69% BY THE END OF 2025
HOUSEHOLD DEBT
2025 : RM1.73 TRILLION, OR 85.8% OF GDP
------------------
MALAYDESH .........
DEBT 2025 = RM 1,73 TRILLION
DEBT 2024 = RM 1.63 TRILLION
DEBT 2023 = RM 1,53 TRILLION
DEBT 2022 = RM 1,45 TRILLION
DEBT 2021 = RM 1,38 TRILLION
DEBT 2020 = RM 1,32 TRILLION
The Finance Ministry stated that the aggregate national household DEBT stood at RM1.53 trillion between 2018 and 2023. In aggregate, it said the household DEBT for 2022 was RM1.45 trillion, followed by RM1.38 trillion (2021,) RM1.32 trillion (2020), RM1.25 trillion (2019) and RM1.19 trillion (2018). “The ratio of household DEBT to gross domestic product (GDP) at the end of 2023 also slightly increased to 84.3% compared with 82% in 2018,” it said.
------------------
MALAYDESH ........
BNM = HOUSEHOLD DEBT IS ONE OF THE HIGHEST IN THE ASEAN ......
MALAYDESH household DEBT is one of the highest in the ASEAN region. Against this backdrop, Bank Negara MALAYDESH (BNM) safeguards financial stability by monitoring and regulating the lending activity of all financial institutions in MALAYDESH
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
KLAIM KAYA CASH = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
1. Identification of Needs:
The Malaydeshn Armed Forces (MAF) first identifies its operational requirements and strategic defense needs. This involves assessments of current threats, technological advancements, and the lifespan of existing equipment. For example, the Royal Malaydeshn Navy might identify a need for new littoral mission ships (LMS) or the Royal Malaydeshn Air Force for multi-role combat aircraft.
-----------------
2. Budget Allocation and Approval:
Defense spending is a significant part of the national budget. The Ministry of Defence (MINDEF) prepares budget proposals, which are then subject to approval by the Malaydeshn Parliament. For major acquisitions, special allocations or supplementary budgets may be required.
-----------------
3. Procurement Methods:
Malaydesh employs various procurement methods, including:
* Direct Negotiation: For specialized equipment or where only a few suppliers exist, direct negotiation with manufacturers or foreign governments is common.
* International Tendering: For more competitive markets, international tenders are issued, allowing various global defense contractors to bid.
* Government-to-Government (G2G) Agreements: Sometimes, procurement is done directly between the Malaydeshn government and a foreign government, which can facilitate financing options.
-----------------
4. Financing Options – How Loans Come In:
When the outright purchase of military equipment is too costly for the immediate national budget, loans become a crucial financing mechanism. Here are the common sources and types of loans:
• Commercial Bank Loans:
a. Syndicated Loans: A group of banks might come together to provide a large loan to the Malaydeshn government or a specific government entity responsible for procurement. These are often arranged through international financial institutions.
b. Export Credit Agencies (ECAs): Many countries that export defense equipment have ECAs (e.g., UKEF in the UK, EXIM Bank in the US, Euler Hermes in Germany). These agencies provide loan guarantees, direct loans, or insurance to facilitate exports from their respective countries. If Malaydesh buys equipment from a French company, for instance, a French ECA might offer favorable financing terms to secure the deal for the French exporter. This is a very common source of financing for defense deals.
• Foreign Government Loans/Credits:
a. Soft Loans/Concessional Loans: Sometimes, a foreign government might offer loans with very favorable terms (low interest rates, long repayment periods) as part of a broader diplomatic or strategic partnership, or to stimulate their own defense industry's exports.
b. Defense Cooperation Agreements: These agreements can sometimes include provisions for financial assistance or credit lines for military purchases.
• Bonds/Sukuk:
a. The Malaydeshn government could issue sovereign bonds or Islamic bonds (Sukuk) in domestic or international markets to raise funds for general expenditure, which could include military procurement. While not direct "loans" for a specific piece of equipment, they are a way to raise capital.
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
KLAIM KAYA CASH = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
USE OF LOANS IN DEFENSE PROCUREMENT
1. Why Loans Are Used
a. Budget Limits: Malaydesh’s annual defense budget is relatively modest (about RM15–20 billion in recent years). Buying big-ticket items like submarines, frigates, or fighter jets in one year would swallow a large chunk of the budget.
b. Need for Modernization: To maintain regional balance (especially with neighbors like Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam), Malaydesh wants to modernize across all services (army, navy, air force) simultaneously.
c. Smoothing Expenditure: Loans allow Malaydesh to spread payments over 5–15 years, instead of paying everything upfront.
d. Political Optics: Loans make it easier for governments to announce “big” purchases without creating sudden budget spikes.
________________________________________
2. Where the Loans Come From
a. Foreign Export Credit Agencies (ECAs):
o Example: France’s COFACE, Germany’s Euler Hermes, South Korea’s KEXIM.
o These agencies guarantee loans tied to purchases from their industries.
b. International Banks / Syndicated Loans:
o Global banks provide financing secured by sovereign guarantees.
c. Domestic Financing:
o Malaydesh sometimes uses local banks or issues government bonds to support large contracts (especially if local shipyards are involved).
________________________________________
3. How the Loans Are Structured
a. Buyer’s Credit (Tied Loans):
Malaydesh borrows from the supplier’s country → money must be spent on that country’s defense products.
b. Supplier’s Credit:
The vendor arranges financing on Malaydesh’s behalf.
c. Mixed Financing:
Part loan, part direct allocation from Malaydesh’s budget.
d. Grace Periods:
Often 3–5 years before repayment begins, matching the delivery of ships/planes.
e. Repayment Terms:
Usually 5–15 years, in USD or EUR, sometimes with concessional interest if linked to government-to-government deals.
________________________________________
4. Examples of Loan-Financed Procurement
a. Scorpene Submarines (France, early 2000s):
Financed with loans from French banks, backed by the French government’s export credit agency. Payments stretched over many years.
b. PT-91M “Pendekar” Tanks (Poland):
Reports suggest export credit financing from Poland/Europe, since the total contract was too large for Malaydesh’s defense budget in one year.
c. Littoral Combat Ship (LCS):
Domestic + foreign financing mix. Malaydeshn banks supported Boustead Naval Shipyard with loans, while the government made progressive payments. Debt restructuring later became necessary due to delays.
d. FA-50M Fighter Jets (South Korea, 2023):
Likely tied to Korean financing packages (KEXIM export credit), though details not fully disclosed. A typical arrangement for aircraft sales from Korea.
e. NGPVs (Kedah-class Patrol Vessels, 1990s–2000s):
Built locally under a German license; financing reportedly included German export credit facilities.
________________________________________
5. Weaknesses & Risks
a. Debt Burden: Defense loans tie up future budgets for repayments.
b. Currency Risk: Loans often in USD/EUR; if the ringgit weakens, repayment costs rise.
c. Tied Procurement: Malaydesh is locked into buying from the lending country, limiting competition.
d. Project Delays: If assets (e.g., LCS) are delayed, Malaydesh is already servicing debt without receiving capability.
e. Transparency Issues: Loan terms and repayment schedules are often not publicly disclosed.
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
🕴️ 1. Entrenched Role of Middlemen
• Defense contracts are frequently brokered by agents or intermediaries, many of whom are retired military officers or politically connected individuals.
• These middlemen often act as gatekeepers between the Ministry of Defence and foreign suppliers, adding layers of cost and complexity.
• According to analysts, this system is deeply entrenched and has become an “open secret” in Malaydesh defense ecosystem.
Impact: Prices are inflated, procurement timelines are extended, and transparency is compromised.
🧱 2. Opaque Tendering and Limited Competition
• Fewer than one-third of major defense contracts are awarded through open competition.
• Most deals are conducted via single-source or limited tenders, which favor firms with insider access or political leverage.
• This environment allows deal structuring to be influenced by non-technical considerations, including patronage and lobbying.
Impact: Merit-based selection is sidelined, and cost-effectiveness suffers.
🏛️ 3. Politically Connected Firms Dominate
• Many defense contractors have ex-military figures on their boards, giving them privileged access to decision-makers.
• These firms often win contracts despite offering older platforms or substandard equipment—as seen in the attempted purchase of 30-year-old Black Hawk helicopters, which Malaydesh King publicly condemned as “flying coffins”2.
• The King also rebuked “agents” and “salesmen” in the Ministry of Defence, warning that inflated middleman pricing would render the defense budget perpetually insufficient.
Impact: Public funds are wasted, and the armed forces receive outdated or unsuitable equipment.
📉 4. Consequences for Readiness and Reform
• Inflated costs mean fewer assets can be acquired, and maintenance budgets are squeezed.
• The lack of transparency erodes public trust and makes it difficult for oversight bodies like the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) to hold officials accountable.
• While the King’s intervention led to the cancellation of the Black Hawk deal, systemic reform remains elusive.
MAHATHIR = MALAS MISKIN
BalasHapusmenyebut orang-orang suku Melayu terus-terusan miskin karena tak mau bekerja keras. Ia pun mengkritik sifat warga Melayu yang malah menyalahkan etnis lain karena kesuksesan mereka.
-
ANWAR IBRAHIM = MISKIN
“Tapi saya kata, sebagai contoh projek tebatan banjir…kerana banjir itu menyeksa rakyat dan yang jadi mangsa itu orang miskin dan majoriti yang miskin itu Melayu. "Sebab itu kalau kita nak belanjakan kita kena teliti. Ini soal tadbir urus, mengurus negara itu harus dengan ketertiban, peraturan dan ke arah yang betul.
-
🦧GORILA KLAIM KAYA : 97.000 EKSODUS =
2025-2015 : ALASAN EKONOMI
2025-2015 : ALASAN EKONOMI
2025-2015 : ALASAN EKONOMI
---------------------------
Sumber Berita Utama:
Laporan Resmi: Portal JPN Malaydesh (Update 9 Jan 2026).
Media : The Straits Times dan Harian Metro.Kompas Money dan CNBC Indonesia
The Straits Times (Singapore): "More than 57,000 Malaydeshns renounced their citizenship for Singapore's over last 5 years: Report".
New Straits Times (Malaydesh): "Economic factors, family main reasons 61,116 Malaydeshns gave up citizenship".
VnExpress International: "Nearly 94% of Malaydeshns who renounced citizenship moved to Singapore".
SAYS: "Why Thousands Of Malaydeshns Are Giving Up Their Citizenship".
RinggitPlus: "Economic And Family Factors Drive Malaydeshns To Renounce Citizenship
-------------------
pernyataan resmi Jabatan Pendaftaran Negara (JPN) Malaydesh melalui Direktur Jenderalnya, Badrul Hisham Alias.
-
Berikut adalah rincian detail mengenai tren pelepasan kewarganegaraan tersebut:
Statistik Utama (Periode 2020 – 17 Desember 2025)
Total Warga Melepas Kewarganegaraan: Sebanyak 61.116 orang resmi menanggalkan status warga negara Malaydesh dalam rentang waktu lima tahun terakhir.
Destinasi Utama:
1. Singapura (93,78%): Sekitar 57.315 orang memilih menjadi warga negara Singapura. Kedekatan geografis dan peluang ekonomi menjadi faktor penentu utama.
2. Australia (2,15%): Menempati posisi kedua sebagai tujuan migrasi.
3. Brunei Darussalam (0,97%): Berada di posisi ketiga.
Negara Lain (3,1%): Tersebar di berbagai negara di seluruh dunia.
-
Profil Demografis & Penyebab
Mayoritas Wanita: Sekitar 57,9% (35.356 orang) dari mereka yang pindah kewarganegaraan adalah perempuan.
Kelompok Usia: Kelompok usia produktif 31 hingga 40 tahun menjadi penyumbang terbesar, yakni sekitar 31,6% dari total pemohon.
-
Faktor Pendorong: Keputusan ini didorong oleh dua faktor utama: ekonomi (mencari standar hidup dan nilai tukar mata uang yang lebih baik) serta alasan keluarga (seperti pernikahan dengan warga negara asing).
-
MALAYDESH ........
GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT DEBT
• END OF 2024: RM 1.25 TRILLION
• END OF JUNE 2025: RM 1.3 TRILLION
• PROJECTED DEBT-TO-GDP: 69% BY THE END OF 2025
HOUSEHOLD DEBT
2025 : RM1.73 TRILLION, OR 85.8% OF GDP
------------------
MALAYDESH .........
DEBT 2025 = RM 1,73 TRILLION
DEBT 2024 = RM 1.63 TRILLION
DEBT 2023 = RM 1,53 TRILLION
DEBT 2022 = RM 1,45 TRILLION
DEBT 2021 = RM 1,38 TRILLION
DEBT 2020 = RM 1,32 TRILLION
The Finance Ministry stated that the aggregate national household DEBT stood at RM1.53 trillion between 2018 and 2023. In aggregate, it said the household DEBT for 2022 was RM1.45 trillion, followed by RM1.38 trillion (2021,) RM1.32 trillion (2020), RM1.25 trillion (2019) and RM1.19 trillion (2018). “The ratio of household DEBT to gross domestic product (GDP) at the end of 2023 also slightly increased to 84.3% compared with 82% in 2018,” it said.
------------------
MALAYDESH ........
BNM = HOUSEHOLD DEBT IS ONE OF THE HIGHEST IN THE ASEAN ......
MALAYDESH household DEBT is one of the highest in the ASEAN region. Against this backdrop, Bank Negara MALAYDESH (BNM) safeguards financial stability by monitoring and regulating the lending activity of all financial institutions in MALAYDESH
PATI dari Indonesia paling ramai dihantar pulang
BalasHapushttps://www.utusan.com.my/nasional/2025/02/pati-dari-indonesia-paling-ramai-dihantar-pulang/
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
HapusGOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69%
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3%
-
🦧GORILA KLAIM SHOPPING CASH = 2018-2026 .....
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
Daftar tren "Hutang Bayar Hutang" Malaydesh dari tahun 2018 hingga proyeksi 2025 berdasarkan data Kementerian Kewangan Malaydesh (MOF) dan Jabatan Audit Negara:
-
2018: FASE "OPEN DONASI"
Pemerintah meluncurkan Tabung Harapan Malaydesh untuk mengumpulkan sumbangan rakyat guna membantu membayar utang negara yang menembus angka RM1 triliun (80% dari PDB).
-
2019: 59% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Laporan Ketua Audit Negara mengungkapkan bahwa 59% dari pinjaman baru digunakan hanya untuk melunasi utang yang sudah ada (gali lubang tutup lubang).
-
2020: 60% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Ketergantungan meningkat; hampir 60% pinjaman baru dialokasikan untuk membayar utang lama, memicu kekhawatiran karena anggaran pembangunan semakin terhimpit.
-
2021: 50,4% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Dari total pinjaman baru sebesar RM194,55 miliar, sebanyak RM98,05 miliar digunakan untuk pembayaran kembali prinsipal utang yang telah matang.
-
2022: 52,4% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Realisasi pembayaran prinsipal mencapai RM113,7 miliar. Total pinjaman meningkat 11,6% dibandingkan tahun sebelumnya akibat pemulihan pascapandemi.
-
2023: 64,3% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Persentase tertinggi dalam periode ini. Dari total pinjaman kasar RM226,6 miliar, sebesar RM145,8 miliar lari ke pembayaran utang lama.
-
2024: 58,9% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Pemerintah mulai melakukan konsolidasi. Pinjaman digunakan untuk melunasi utang matang sebesar RM121,3 miliar dari total pinjaman RM206 miliar.
-
2025: 58% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Berdasarkan Tinjauan Fiskal 2025, pemerintah memproyeksikan pinjaman kasar sebesar RM184 miliar, di mana RM106,8 miliar disiapkan untuk membayar prinsipal utang matang.
-
2026 = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Dokumen Resmi Pemerintah (Kementerian Kewangan Malaydesh - MOF)
Data utama berasal dari laporan tahunan yang diterbitkan bersamaan dengan pembentangan anggaran negara:
Laporan Tinjauan Fiskal 2025 & 2026: Memuat angka proyeksi pinjaman kasar (gross borrowing) dan alokasi pembayaran kembali prinsipal utang yang matang.
Belanjawan 2025 (Anggaran 2025): Menyebutkan target pengurangan pinjaman bersih (net borrowing) menjadi sekitar RM75 miliar.
Laporan Tinjauan Ekonomi: Memberikan data tentang rincian biaya layanan hutang (Debt Service Charges) yang diproyeksikan mencapai RM54,3 miliar pada 2025.
-
GEMPURWIRA2 Februari 2026 pukul 20.54
HAHAHAHAHHA..............HUTANG...HUTANG....HUTANG........... KESIANNYA
-
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69%
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3%
-
5x PM BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
6x MOD BUAL MRCA LCS SPH MRSS = 2025 ZONK
PROCUREMENT = 2026 FREEZES : 2023 CANCELLED
-
5x GANTI PM = 84,3% TO GDP
5x GANTI MOF = KLAIM LUNAS 2053 = GAGAL (NAMBAH DEBT)
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
5x GANTI PM = TIDAK BAYAR HUTANG TERTUNGGAK
6x GANTI MOD = KEKANGAN KEWANGAN
97.000 EKSODUS = 2018-2026 HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
--------------
MRCA 2025-2017= ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
LCS 2025-2011 = ZONK = MANGKRAK
5x GANTI PM
6x GANTI MOD
-
SPH 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
-
MRSS/LPD 2025-2016 = ZONK = NO PROCUREMENT
5x GANTI PM
5x GANTI MOD
2026 FREEZES PROCUREMENT - 2023 CANCELLED PROCUREMENT
HapusFEDERAL GOVERNMENT DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 36,139
HOUSEHOLD DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 45,859.
GOV + HOUSEHOLD = PER PEOPLE : RM 81,998
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang akhir 2024: RM 1.25 triliun
• Utang akhir Juni 2025: RM 1.30 triliun
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh 2025 (perkiraan pertengahan tahun): 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
1.30 triliun = 1,300,000,000,000
Per Orang = 1,300,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 36,139 per orang
--------------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang rumah tangga (akhir Maret 2025): RM 1.65 triliun
• Persentase terhadap PDB: 84.3%
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh pertengahan 2025: 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
Utang per orang =1,650,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 45,859 per orang
--------------------
1.RASIO HUTANG 84.3% DARI GDP
2. HUTANG NEGARA RM 1,65 TRLLIUN
3. HUTANG 1MDB RM 18,2 BILLION
4. TUNGGAKAN SEWA SABAH USD 15 BILLION
5. HUTANG KERAJAAN PERSEKUTUAN 60.4%
6. SEWA SIMULATOR MKM
7. PESAWAT MIG GROUNDED
8. SEWA MOTOR POLIS
9. PESAWAT MB339CM GROUNDED
10. NURI GROUNDED SEWA BLACKHAWK
11. FIVE PROCUREMENT CANCELLED
12. 48 PESAWAT SKYHAWK HILANG
13. MESIN JET 2 BUAH HILANG
14. NO MARINIR NO AMPHIBIOUS NAVAL PLATFORM
15. NO LST
16. NO LPD – NGEMIS LPD USA
17. NO TANKER
18. NO KCR
19. MONUMEN MIG29M UNTUK JIMAT KOS
20. NO SPH
21. SUBMARINE DEFACT MEMBUNUH WANITA HAMIL
22. NO HELLFIRE
23. NO MPA ATR72 DELAYED
24. NO HIDRO-OSEANOGRAFI SEWA KAPAL HIDRO
25. NO HELI HEAVY ATTACK NGEMIS AH1Z
26. NO M3 AMPHIBIUS RIG
27. LCS MANGKRAK KARATAN
28. OPV MANGKRAK
29. TANK MOGOK STOP SPARE PARTS
30. CN 235 MSA VERSI MSI USA
31. SEWA MOTOR MILITARY POLICE
32. RADAR GIFTED PAID USA
33. 84% NO SAVING EVERY MONTH
34. SEWA VVSHORAD
35. SEWA TRUK 3 TON
36. 4X4 SEWA 6X6 CANCELLED
37. C130H DIGANTI 2045
38. TEMBAK GRANAT BOM PASUKAN SEMDIRI
39. NO DRONE UCAV – ANKA ISR OMPONG
40. SEWA BLACKHAWK SEWA AW159
41. NO TRACKED SPH
42. SEWA SIMULATOR HELI
43. SPH CANCELLED
44. SCORPION V150 CONDOR SIMBAS RETIRED
45. NO PESAWAT COIN
46. PILATUS MK II KARATAN
47. PENCEROBOHAN 43X BTA 316 HARI
48. SEWA AW139 SEWA COLIBRI
49. MRSS LMS B2 UAV ANKA HELI MENUNGGU 2026-2030
50. OPV DIBAYAR 3 JADI 1 SEWA BOAT
51. LYNX GROUNDED
52. MRCA CANCELLED SEWA PESAWAT ITTC
53. MICA CANCELLED NSM CANCELLED
54. NO LRAD NO MRAD JUST VSHORAD
55. PRANK UN PRANK TURKEY PRANK PERANCIS PRANK SLOVAKIA
56. 4X NGEMIS F18 KUWAIT
57. MENUNGGU 2050 KAPAL SELAM
58. NO TANK AMPHIBI AV8 MOGOK BERASAP
59. 84% NO SAVING EVERY MONTH
60. OVER LIMIT DEBT 65,6% (LIMIT DEBT 65%)
61. MKM BARTER PALM OIL
62. MIG29N BARTER PALM OIL
63. A400M PEMBAYARAN BERPERINGKAT (HUTANG)
64. SCORPENE BARTER PALM OIL
65. PT91M BARTER PALM OIL RUBBER
67. FA50M BARTER PALM OIL
===================
SEWA = HUTANG 84.3% DARI GDP = NO SHOPPING
1. SEWA 28 HELI
2. SEWA L39 ITCC
3. SEWA EC120B
4. SEWA FLIGHT SIMULATION TRAINING DEVICE (FSTD)
5. SEWA 1 UNIT SISTEM SIMULATOR EC120B
6. SEWA HOVERCRAFT
7. SEWA AW139
8. SEWA FAST INTERCEPTOR BOAT (FIB)
9. SEWA UTILITY BOAT
10. SEWA RIGID HULL FENDER BOAT (RHFB)
11. SEWA ROVER FIBER GLASS (ROVER)
12. SEWA MV AISHAH AIM 4
13. SEWA BMW R1250RT
14. SEWA 4x4 VECHICLE
15. SEWA VSHORAD
16. SEWA TRUCK
17. SEWA HONDA CIVIC
18. SEWA PATROL BOATS
19. SEWA OUTBOARD MOTORS
20. SEWA TRAILERS
21. SEWA SUPERBIKES
22. SEWA SIMULATOR MKM
23. SEWA 12 AW149 TUDM
24. SEWA 4 AW139 TUDM
25. SEWA 5 EC120B TUDM
26. SEWA 2 AW159 TLDM
27. SEWA 4 UH-60A TDM
28. SEWA 12 AW149 TDM
29. SEWA 4 AW139 BOMBA
30. SEWA 2 AW159 MMEA
31. SEWA 7 BELL429 POLIS
32. SEWA MOTOR POLIS
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
KLAIM KAYA CASH = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Malaydesh's approach to financing large-scale defense acquisitions often involves the use of loan agreements :
1. The Need for Loan Agreements
• High Cost of Modern Defense Systems: Modern military equipment, such as fighter jets, naval vessels, submarines, air defense systems, and advanced armored vehicles, are extremely expensive. A single major acquisition can easily exceed Malaydesh's annual defense budget.
• Budgetary Constraints: While Malaydesh allocates a significant portion of its budget to defense, there are always competing demands from other sectors like education, healthcare, infrastructure, and social welfare. This limits the amount that can be immediately spent on defense acquisitions.
• Long-Term Modernization Goals: Malaydesh has a continuous need to modernize its armed forces to maintain regional security, protect its sovereignty, and respond to evolving threats. Loan agreements facilitate these long-term strategic objectives by spreading the financial burden over several years.
-----------------
2. Sources of Loans
Malaydesh can tap into various sources for these defense-related loans:
• Foreign Governments (Government-to-Government Loans):
o Direct Financing: Often, a selling country's government (e.g., France, the UK, Germany, South Korea) will offer direct government-backed loans or credit lines to Malaydesh to facilitate the purchase of their defense products. This can be part of a larger diplomatic or trade package.
o Export Credit Agencies (ECAs): Many countries have ECAs (e.g., UK Export Finance, COFACE in France, Euler Hermes in Germany) that provide guarantees or direct loans to support their national defense industries' exports. These loans often come with favorable terms.
o Advantages: These loans can sometimes offer lower interest rates, longer repayment periods, and more flexible terms than commercial loans, as they are often intertwined with strategic partnerships.
• International Banks/Financial Institutions:
o Commercial Loans: Malaydesh can secure loans from large international commercial banks or consortia of banks. These are typically market-rate loans, but for large sums, they might involve syndicated lending (multiple banks pooling resources).
o Multilateral Development Banks (Less Common for Direct Defense): While institutions like the World Bank or Asian Development Bank typically don't finance direct defense purchases, they might fund related infrastructure projects that indirectly support defense capabilities (e.g., port upgrades that could also be used by naval vessels). However, direct defense financing from these is rare.
o Advantages: Access to a broad pool of capital, competitive terms, and expertise in structuring complex financial deals.
• Domestic Financial Institutions:
o Local Banks/Bond Markets: For some acquisitions, especially those involving local content or smaller components, Malaydesh might secure loans from domestic banks or issue defense bonds in the local financial market.
o Advantages: Reduces exposure to foreign currency fluctuations, strengthens domestic financial markets, and can be politically more palatable.
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
🚀 1. Accelerated Modernization by Neighbors
• Singapore maintains one of the most technologically advanced militaries in Southeast Asia, with investments in F-15SG fighters, submarines, and integrated air defense systems.
• Indonesia has ramped up procurement of Rafale jets, frigates, and drones, aiming for a more balanced tri-service force.
• Vietnam has focused on asymmetric capabilities, acquiring Kilo-class submarines, coastal missile systems, and modernizing its air defense.
• Philippines is deepening defense ties with the US, Japan, and Australia, acquiring BrahMos missiles and upgrading its naval fleet.
Result: Malaydesh risks falling behind in both conventional and hybrid warfare capabilities2.
📉 2. Malaydesh Budget Bottleneck
• Malaydesh defense budget has stagnated at RM15–18 billion annually, with 60–70% spent on salaries and maintenance, leaving little for modernization.
• Major projects like the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) program have been plagued by delays and scandals, further eroding trust and capability.
Result: While neighbors invest in future-ready systems, Malaydesh struggles to maintain legacy platforms.
🌊 3. Strategic Exposure in the South China Sea
• China’s coast guard and maritime militia have repeatedly entered Malaydesh Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), testing its maritime sovereignty.
• Malaydesh aging naval fleet—28 of 34 vessels are over 40 years old—limits its ability to respond effectively.
Result: Malaydesh deterrence posture is weakened, especially in contested maritime zones.
🧭 4. Diplomatic vs. Hard Power Approach
• Malaydesh has traditionally relied on quiet diplomacy and ASEAN mechanisms to manage regional tensions.
• However, the geopolitical landscape is shifting toward hard power signaling, with countries like the Philippines and Vietnam adopting more assertive defense postures.
Result: Malaydesh soft approach is increasingly outpaced by neighbors who combine diplomacy with credible military strength.
Biar fakta berbicara...........HAHAHAHHA
BalasHapus355 warga Indonesia gagal menyelinap masuk Malaysia
https://www.kosmo.com.my/2025/01/05/355-warga-indonesia-gagal-menyelinap-masuk-malaysia/
🦧GORILA KLAIM SHOPPING CASH = 2018-2026 .....
HapusHUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
-
Daftar tren "Hutang Bayar Hutang" Malaydesh dari tahun 2018 hingga proyeksi 2025 berdasarkan data Kementerian Kewangan Malaydesh (MOF) dan Jabatan Audit Negara:
-
2018: FASE "OPEN DONASI"
Pemerintah meluncurkan Tabung Harapan Malaydesh untuk mengumpulkan sumbangan rakyat guna membantu membayar utang negara yang menembus angka RM1 triliun (80% dari PDB).
-
2019: 59% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Laporan Ketua Audit Negara mengungkapkan bahwa 59% dari pinjaman baru digunakan hanya untuk melunasi utang yang sudah ada (gali lubang tutup lubang).
-
2020: 60% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Ketergantungan meningkat; hampir 60% pinjaman baru dialokasikan untuk membayar utang lama, memicu kekhawatiran karena anggaran pembangunan semakin terhimpit.
-
2021: 50,4% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Dari total pinjaman baru sebesar RM194,55 miliar, sebanyak RM98,05 miliar digunakan untuk pembayaran kembali prinsipal utang yang telah matang.
-
2022: 52,4% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Realisasi pembayaran prinsipal mencapai RM113,7 miliar. Total pinjaman meningkat 11,6% dibandingkan tahun sebelumnya akibat pemulihan pascapandemi.
-
2023: 64,3% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Persentase tertinggi dalam periode ini. Dari total pinjaman kasar RM226,6 miliar, sebesar RM145,8 miliar lari ke pembayaran utang lama.
-
2024: 58,9% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Pemerintah mulai melakukan konsolidasi. Pinjaman digunakan untuk melunasi utang matang sebesar RM121,3 miliar dari total pinjaman RM206 miliar.
-
2025: 58% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Berdasarkan Tinjauan Fiskal 2025, pemerintah memproyeksikan pinjaman kasar sebesar RM184 miliar, di mana RM106,8 miliar disiapkan untuk membayar prinsipal utang matang.
-
2026 = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Dokumen Resmi Pemerintah (Kementerian Kewangan Malaydesh - MOF)
Data utama berasal dari laporan tahunan yang diterbitkan bersamaan dengan pembentangan anggaran negara:
Laporan Tinjauan Fiskal 2025 & 2026: Memuat angka proyeksi pinjaman kasar (gross borrowing) dan alokasi pembayaran kembali prinsipal utang yang matang.
Belanjawan 2025 (Anggaran 2025): Menyebutkan target pengurangan pinjaman bersih (net borrowing) menjadi sekitar RM75 miliar.
Laporan Tinjauan Ekonomi: Memberikan data tentang rincian biaya layanan hutang (Debt Service Charges) yang diproyeksikan mencapai RM54,3 miliar pada 2025.
-
GEMPURWIRA2 Februari 2026 pukul 20.54
HAHAHAHAHHA..............HUTANG...HUTANG....HUTANG........... KESIANNYA
-
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69%
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3%
-
2026 FREEZES PROCUREMENT - 2023 CANCELLED PROCUREMENT
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 36,139
HOUSEHOLD DEBT = PER PEOPLE : RM 45,859.
GOV + HOUSEHOLD = PER PEOPLE : RM 81,998
---------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang akhir 2024: RM 1.25 triliun
• Utang akhir Juni 2025: RM 1.30 triliun
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh 2025 (perkiraan pertengahan tahun): 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
1.30 triliun = 1,300,000,000,000
Per Orang = 1,300,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 36,139 per orang
--------------
1️⃣ DATA YANG DIGUNAKAN
• Utang rumah tangga (akhir Maret 2025): RM 1.65 triliun
• Persentase terhadap PDB: 84.3%
• Jumlah penduduk Malaydesh pertengahan 2025: 35,977,838 jiwa
2️⃣ Perhitungan utang per penduduk
Utang per orang =1,650,000,000,000/35,977,838 : RM 45,859 per orang
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
KLAIM KAYA CASH = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
1. SOURCES OF LOANS
• Foreign Governments / Export Credit Agencies (ECAs):
Example: when Malaydesh buys equipment from France, Germany, or South Korea, financing is often backed by the exporting country’s credit agency (e.g., COFACE in France, KEXIM in Korea).
o These loans reduce the upfront burden but tie Malaydesh to the supplier’s country.
• International Banks / Syndicated Loans:
Commercial banks may finance large contracts, usually guaranteed by government sovereign commitments.
• Domestic Financial Institutions:
In some cases, Malaydesh uses state-owned banks or domestic bonds to raise funds for major defense projects.
________________________________________
2. Loan Structures
• Export Credit Facilities:
Structured specifically for defense acquisitions, with repayment terms of 5–15 years.
• Tied Loans / Buyer’s Credit:
Funds must be spent on equipment or services from the lending country. This is common in deals with European or Asian suppliers.
• Mixed Financing:
A combination of loans + government budget allocations (often for training, infrastructure, or local offsets).
• Grace Periods:
Many defense loans have grace periods (e.g., 3–5 years before repayment starts), matching delivery and commissioning timelines.
________________________________________
3. Why Malaydesh Uses Loans
• Budget Constraints: Annual defense budget (about RM 15–20 billion in recent years) is too small for multi-billion ringgit projects like submarines, fighters, or frigates.
• Modernization Goals: Loans allow simultaneous modernization (air, sea, land) instead of waiting decades.
• Political Timing: Loans make it easier for governments to announce big procurements without overwhelming a single year’s budget.
• Industry Development: Loans tied to offsets/technology transfers can support local shipyards (e.g., Boustead for LCS, local assembly of vehicles).
________________________________________
4. Risks & Weaknesses
• Debt Burden: Repayments commit future defense budgets, limiting flexibility.
• Currency Risks: If loans are in USD/EUR, fluctuations in the ringgit increase costs.
• Tied Procurement: Loans often force Malaydesh to buy from specific suppliers, limiting competition.
• Cost Overruns: If a project is delayed (e.g., LCS), Malaydesh is repaying loans even before receiving the full capability.
• Opaque Terms: Some loan agreements are not fully transparent to the public, raising concerns about governance.
________________________________________
5. Examples in Malaydeshn Context
• Scorpene Submarines (France): Financed partly through French bank loans + Malaydeshn government allocation.
• LCS Program: Involves complex financing structures, including domestic borrowings to support Boustead Naval Shipyard.
• FA-50M Fighter Jets (South Korea): Reports suggest possible involvement of export credit arrangements from KEXIM or Korean banks, though details aren’t fully disclosed.
• PT-91M Tanks (Poland): Likely used export credit from Polish/European financial institutions at the time of purchase
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
KLAIM KAYA CASH = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
LOAN-BASED DEFENSE PROCUREMENT: A STRATEGIC FINANCIAL MODEL
🔹 Why Loans Are Used
Malaydesh’s annual defense budget is limited and must cover personnel, operations, maintenance, and development. When major acquisitions—such as submarines, fighter jets, or armored vehicles—exceed available funds, the government turns to loan agreements to:
• Spread payments over multiple years.
• Avoid sudden budget shocks.
• Enable long-term modernization without compromising operational readiness.
-----------------
🔸 Sources of Loans
Source Type Description
Foreign Governments Bilateral defense deals often include soft loans or export credits. Example: Poland for PT-91M tanks.
Export Credit Agencies Institutions like Korea Eximbank or France’s Coface offer financing tied to defense exports.
International Banks Commercial banks may offer syndicated loans for large naval or aerospace projects.
Domestic Institutions Malaydeshn banks or government-linked investment entities may co-finance local components.
-----------------
🔸 Structure of Loan Agreements
Component Details
Tenor Typically 5–15 years depending on asset lifespan and delivery schedule.
Grace Period Often 1–3 years during manufacturing phase before repayment begins.
Interest Rate Negotiated based on bilateral ties; may be fixed or floating.
Repayment Terms Milestone-based: payments tied to delivery, testing, or commissioning.
Currency Usually USD or EUR; hedging used to manage forex risk.
Guarantees Sovereign guarantees or performance bonds to secure repayment.
-----------------
🔸 Offset & Industrial Participation
Loan-based deals often include offset clauses, which benefit Malaydesh’s local defense industry:
• Technology Transfer: Training, simulators, or assembly know-how.
• Local Manufacturing: Involvement of Boustead Naval Shipyard, SME Ordnance, or AIROD.
• Maintenance Contracts: Long-term MRO (Maintenance, Repair, Overhaul) agreements with Malaydeshn firms.
-----------------
🔸 Examples of Loan-Based Defense Deals
Program Supplier Country Loan Type & Offset
Scorpene Submarines France Export credit + training + infrastructure development
PT-91M Tanks Poland Bilateral loan + crew training + spare parts support
FA-50M Fighter Jets South Korea Export credit + pilot training + simulator systems
NGPV Patrol Vessels Germany Structured financing + local shipbuilding capacity
⚠️ Risks & Safeguards
Risk Mitigation Strategy
Exchange Rate Volatility Use of currency hedging and multi-currency reserves.
Delivery Delays Penalty clauses and performance guarantees in contract.
Budget Overruns Parliamentary oversight and audit mechanisms.
Political Sensitivity Transparency initiatives and public reporting (e.g., LCS scandal).
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
🧓 1. Aging Components Beyond Service Life
• As of 2024, 171 military assets across the Army, Navy, and Air Force have exceeded 30 years of service2.
• Many platforms—like the Royal Malaydesh n Navy’s Fast Attack Craft (FAC)—are over 40 years old, with some approaching 50 years.
• These assets were designed for past-era threats and technologies, and their mechanical systems are now prone to fatigue, corrosion, and failure.
Result: Even routine operations carry elevated risk of malfunction, requiring constant patchwork maintenance.
🌴 2. Tropical Climate Accelerates Wear
• Malaydesh ’s hot, humid, and saline environment is particularly harsh on military hardware:
o Metal fatigue and corrosion are accelerated, especially in naval vessels and aircraft.
o Rubber seals, electronics, and hydraulics degrade faster under tropical heat and moisture.
• The Navy has acknowledged that many vessels no longer meet modern standards due to environmental degradation.
Result: Maintenance cycles shorten, costs rise, and reliability drops.
🔧 3. Obsolete Systems and Spare Parts Shortage
• Many legacy platforms rely on foreign OEMs that have ceased production or support.
• Spare parts must be sourced internationally, often at inflated prices and long lead times.
• In some cases, technicians resort to cannibalizing other units or fabricating parts locally—neither of which guarantees reliability.
Result: Delays in repairs, reduced fleet availability, and compromised safety.
⚠️ 4. Operational Incidents and Safety Risks
• A tragic example: In July 2025, a Malaydesh n commando died during a maritime exercise due to suspected failure of aging diving equipment.
• The Army Chief confirmed that the gear was “rather old,” prompting a full audit of equipment lifecycle and maintenance protocols.
Result: Legacy systems not only reduce readiness—they pose direct risks to personnel.
📊 Summary Table: Breakdown Drivers in Malaydesh n Military
Factor Description Operational Impact
Aging components Platforms >30–50 years old, beyond design limits Frequent failures, low reliability
Tropical wear Heat, humidity, salt accelerate degradation Shorter maintenance cycles
Obsolete systems Legacy tech, no OEM support Spare part shortages, delays
Safety incidents Equipment failures linked to fatal accidents Personnel risk, public scrutiny
KESIAN...Tapi pemerintahnya lebih memikir mau NGUTANG KAPAL INDUK TUA RONGSOK....HAHHAHAH
BalasHapus397 Warga Indonesia Diusir Melalui Program Pemindahan Tahanan PATI
https://malaysiabangkit.com/397-warga-indonesia-diusir-melalui-program-pemindahan-tahanan-pati/
KLAIM CASH = 🦧GORILA HUTANG ASET MILITER
Hapus-
1. 🇹🇷 Turki (LMS Batch 2)
Model: G2G (Antar Pemerintah) via SSB.
Bunga: 4% – 6% (Fixed/OECD CIRR).
Tenor: 10 – 15 Tahun.
-
2. 🇰🇷 Korea Selatan (Pesawat FA-50)
Model: Hybrid (Kredit KEXIM & Barter CPO 50%).
Biaya: Management Fee sangat rendah (0,10% - 0,50%).
-
3. 🇬🇧 Inggris (Standar UKEF)
Syarat: Wajib DP 15% (Standar OECD).
Bunga: Stabil, mengikuti National Loans Fund.
-
4. 🇨🇳 China (LMS Batch 1)
Model: 100% Kredit Ekspor (China Eximbank).
Bunga: Sangat murah (3,5% Fixed).
Tenor: 10 Tahun.
-
5. 🇵🇱 Polandia (Tank PT-91M)
Model: DP 15% + Barter CPO (30-40%).
Tenor: 10 Tahun cicilan.
-
6. 🇩🇪 Jerman (Kedah-Class)
Model: Kredit Komersial dijamin negara (Euler Hermes).
Pendana: Deutsche Bank & Konsorsium.
-
7. Kredit Sindikasi (Proyek LCS)
Model: Konsorsium Bank Domestik/Intl (Skala Masif).
Bunga: 6% (Saldo Menurun).
Tenor: 15 Tahun (Akibat penundaan proyek).
-----------------
The Sukhoi Su-30MKM has some weaknesses, including engine problems, integration with Western systems, and fatigue failure.
Engine problems
• In 2018, MALAYDESH grounded 14 out of 18 Su-30MKM aircraft due to engine problems and a lack of spare parts.
• The AL-31FP engine in the Su-30MKA has experienced numerous failures, including bearing failures due to metal fatigue and low oil pressure.
Integration with Western systems
• The Su-30MKM's Russian origin may limit its integration with Western systems.
• This could make it difficult to fully integrate with NATO standards, such as Link 16, which is important for modern network-centric warfare.
Fatigue failure
• Aircraft structures and components are prone to fatigue failure due to fluctuating stress.
• Fatigue failure is a gradual form of local damage that can lead to defects or cracks.
Other considerations
• The Su-30MKM is a larger aircraft, which means it may be seen earlier by radar and visual combat.
----------------
The The MALAYDESH Armed Forces (MAF) face a number of challenges, including:
Limited funding: The government has been unwilling to reduce spending elsewhere or cut the size of the armed forces.
Outdated equipment: The MAF's equipment is outdated and behind that of neighboring countries.
Logistics problems: The MAF's logistics system may not be able to support combat operations.
Political interference: Political interference and corruption may undermine the MAF's combat readiness.
Lack of government guidance: The government may not have a clear strategic direction for the defense industry. MALAYDESH Armed Forces (MAF) face a number of challenges, including:
Limited funding: The government has been unwilling to reduce spending elsewhere or cut the size of the armed forces.
Outdated equipment: The MAF's equipment is outdated and behind that of neighboring countries.
Logistics problems: The MAF's logistics system may not be able to support combat operations.
Political interference: Political interference and corruption may undermine the MAF's combat readiness.
Lack of government guidance: The government may not have a clear strategic direction for the defense industry
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
KLAIM KAYA CASH = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
LOAN-BASED PROCUREMENT IN MALAYDESH’S MILITARY
Malaydesh often uses loan agreements to finance large-scale defense acquisitions, especially when the cost exceeds annual defense budgets. These loans can be sourced from foreign governments, international banks, or domestic financial institutions, and are structured to support long-term modernization goals.
🔑 Key Features of Loan Procurement
Feature Description
Source of Loan Foreign governments (e.g., Poland, France, Korea), export credit agencies, or domestic banks.
Tenor & Terms Typically 5–15 years, with grace periods and interest rates negotiated based on bilateral ties.
Repayment Structure Paid in installments tied to delivery milestones or operational readiness.
Currency Often denominated in USD, EUR, or local currency depending on supplier.
Guarantees May involve sovereign guarantees or performance bonds.
Offset Clauses Includes industrial participation, technology transfer, or local assembly.
🛡️ Examples of Loan-Based Military Procurement
1. Scorpene Submarines (France)
• Loan Type: Foreign loan via French financial institutions.
• Value: RM3.4 billion.
• Offset: Training, infrastructure, and technology transfer to Boustead Naval Shipyard.
2. PT-91M Pendekar Tanks (Poland)
• Loan Type: Bilateral loan agreement with Poland.
• Value: USD 370 million.
• Offset: Crew training and maintenance support.
3. FA-50M Fighter Jets (South Korea)
• Loan Type: Export credit facility from Korean financial institutions.
• Value: RM4.08 billion.
• Offset: Pilot training, simulator systems, and potential local maintenance hub.
4. NGPV Patrol Vessels (Germany)
• Loan Type: Structured financing with German partners.
• Value: RM5.35 billion.
• Offset: Local shipbuilding capacity and technology transfer.
-------------------
FA-50M FIGHTER JET PROCUREMENT: FINANCIAL BREAKDOWN
🔹 Overview
• Contract Value: USD 920 million (≈ RM4.08 billion)
• Quantity: 18 FA-50M Block 20 light combat aircraft
• Supplier: Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI)
• Contract Signed: May 2023 at LIMA (Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace Exhibition)
• Delivery Timeline: First batch expected in 20262
💰 Financial Structure
Component Description
Loan Source Export credit facility from South Korean financial institutions, likely backed by KEXIM (Korea Export-Import Bank).
Loan Type Government-to-government structured loan with sovereign guarantee.
Tenor Estimated 10–15 years, with grace period during manufacturing phase.
Interest Rate Preferential rate negotiated under bilateral defense cooperation.
Repayment Schedule Milestone-based: tied to aircraft delivery and acceptance testing.
Currency USD-denominated, with hedging options to mitigate forex risk.
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
🧓 1. Obsolete Systems and Aging Platforms
• As of 2024, 171 military assets across the Army, Navy, and Air Force have exceeded 30 years of service.
• Many platforms—like the Royal Malaydesh n Navy’s Fast Attack Craft (FAC) and older patrol vessels—are over 40 years old, far beyond their optimal lifespan.
• These systems were designed decades ago and now lack compatibility with modern sensors, weapons, and communications.
Impact: Upgrades are either impossible or prohibitively expensive, forcing reliance on outdated capabilities.
🔧 2. Dependence on Foreign Spare Parts
• Malaydesh military inventory is highly diversified, sourced from the US, UK, France, Russia, and others. This creates logistical complexity:
o Spare parts must be imported from multiple countries.
o Some OEMs have ceased production, making parts scarce or unavailable.
o Political or economic shifts can disrupt supply chains.
Example: The Army’s Condor APCs and Scorpion light tanks require parts from legacy suppliers that no longer support them.
Impact: Long lead times, inflated costs, and cannibalization of other units for parts.
🔁 3. Frequent Breakdowns and Repair Cycles
• Older platforms experience higher failure rates, especially under tropical conditions and extended use.
• Maintenance crews often resort to patchwork fixes, which are temporary and unreliable.
• The Navy reported that 28 of its 34 aging vessels have exceeded 40 years of service, with many no longer meeting operational standards.
Impact: Reduced availability, increased downtime, and lower mission success rates.
📉 4. Budget Drain and Opportunity Cost
• Between 60–70% of Malaydesh defense budget goes to salaries, maintenance, and operations, leaving little for modernization.
• Funds spent on keeping obsolete systems running could be redirected toward acquiring new platforms or investing in indigenous maintenance capabilities.
Impact: Strategic stagnation—Malaydesh spends heavily but gains little in terms of capability.
📊 Summary Table: Why Maintenance Costs Are So High
Factor Description Consequence
Obsolete systems Platforms >30–40 years old, incompatible with modern tech Expensive to maintain, low utility
Foreign parts dependency Diverse suppliers, legacy systems, political risk Long delays, inflated costs
Frequent breakdowns High failure rates, tropical wear, aging components Reduced readiness, more downtime
Budget imbalance Majority spent on upkeep, not modernization Strategic stagnation
Bukan BANGLA tapi paling ramai jelas warga INDIANESIA....HAHAHAHHA
BalasHapusPATI dari Indonesia paling ramai dihantar pulang
https://www.utusan.com.my/nasional/2025/02/pati-dari-indonesia-paling-ramai-dihantar-pulang/
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
HapusGOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
--------------
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69%
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3%
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = OVERLIMITS DEBT = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP = HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% OF GDP
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
KARENA BANGLA SUDAH JADI SAUDARA SAMA BUMIBUTERA BOTOL KASTA SUBSIDI 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
HapusIDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
KLAIM KAYA CASH = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
1. DENDA= USUSD83,8 juta
Seperti dikutip The Edge Malaydesh (19/9/2025), Kontraktor pertahanan Aerotree Defence and Services Sdn Bhd telah mengajukan gugatan sebesar RM353 juta (USUSD83,8 juta) terhadap pemerintah dan Kementerian Pertahanan Malaydesh atas pembatalan perjanjian sewa lima tahun
-------------
2. SKANDAL KAPAL TEMPUR PESISIR (LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP/LCS)
Ini adalah salah satu skandal pengadaan militer terbesar dan paling kontroversial di Malaydesh.
• Proyek: Pengadaan enam kapal tempur pesisir untuk Angkatan Laut Kerajaan Malaydesh (Royal Malaydeshn Navy/RMN).
• Nilai Proyek: Kontrak senilai RM9 miliar (sekitar USUSD2 miliar) ditandatangani pada tahun 2011.
• Masalah Utama:
a. Tidak ada kapal yang selesai: Meskipun pemerintah telah membayar lebih dari RM6 miliar, hingga kini belum ada satu pun dari enam kapal yang selesai dan dikirimkan.
b. Penyalahgunaan dana: Laporan investigasi menemukan adanya dugaan penyalahgunaan dana, pembayaran yang tidak semestinya, dan penggelembungan harga (mark-up). Dana yang seharusnya digunakan untuk proyek justru digunakan untuk tujuan lain.
c. Politik dan korupsi: Skandal ini menyeret sejumlah nama pejabat tinggi, termasuk mantan menteri pertahanan, yang diduga terlibat dalam praktik korupsi dan nepotisme.
-------------
3. SKANDAL KAPAL SELAM SCORPENE
Skandal ini telah menjadi berita utama selama bertahun-tahun, bahkan melibatkan pengadilan di Prancis.
• Proyek: Pembelian dua kapal selam kelas Scorpene dari perusahaan Prancis, DCNS (sekarang Naval Group), pada tahun 2002.
• Nilai Proyek: Sekitar RM5,4 miliar.
• Masalah Utama:
a. Komisi besar-besaran: Terdapat dugaan pembayaran komisi sebesar 114 juta Euro kepada sebuah perusahaan yang terkait dengan pejabat senior Malaydesh.
b. Kasus pembunuhan: Skandal ini juga terkait dengan pembunuhan seorang penerjemah wanita asal Mongolia, Altantuya Shaariibuu, yang diduga memiliki informasi terkait kontrak tersebut. Kasus ini telah menjadi salah satu babak tergelap dalam sejarah politik Malaydesh.
-------------
4. KONTROVERSI PENGADAAN JET TEMPUR A-4 SKYHAWK
Kasus ini sering diangkat kembali, termasuk oleh Raja Malaydesh sendiri, sebagai contoh kegagalan pengadaan di masa lalu.
• Proyek: Pembelian 88 unit jet tempur A-4 Skyhawk bekas dari Amerika Serikat pada tahun 1980-an.
• Masalah Utama:
a. Kondisi buruk: Dari 88 unit yang dibeli, hanya sekitar 40 unit yang bisa digunakan dan sisanya dianggap tidak layak terbang.
b. Tingkat kecelakaan tinggi: Jet-jet yang dioperasikan mengalami tingkat kecelakaan yang tinggi, membahayakan nyawa pilot, dan akhirnya dipensiunkan. Raja Malaydesh menyebutnya sebagai "peti mati terbang" (flying coffin), istilah yang juga digunakan untuk mengkritik rencana pengadaan helikopter Black Hawk yang usianya sudah tua.
-------------
5. SKANDAL PENCURIAN MESIN PESAWAT TEMPUR F-5E
Kasus ini adalah salah satu contoh nyata kelemahan dalam pengawasan aset militer.
• Kasus: Hilangnya dua mesin pesawat tempur Northrop F-5E milik Angkatan Udara Kerajaan Malaydesh (RMAF) senilai sekitar USUSD29 juta.
• Masalah Utama: Investigasi mengungkapkan bahwa mesin-mesin tersebut telah dicuri dari pangkalan militer dan kemudian dijual kepada perusahaan di Amerika Selatan. Insiden ini tidak hanya menunjukkan adanya pencurian internal, tetapi juga dugaan keterlibatan oknum pejabat militer. Mantan Kepala Angkatan Bersenjata Malaydesh bahkan mengakui bahwa kasus ini hanyalah puncak dari skandal korupsi yang lebih besar terkait peralatan militer.
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
HapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
-
INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
=============
=============
MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
-
🧓 1. Scale of the Aging Inventory
• As of late 2024, 171 military assets across all three branches of the Malaydesh n Armed Forces (ATM) have exceeded 30 years of service:
o Army: 108 units
o Air Force (RMAF): 29 units
o Navy (RMN): 34 vessels
• Many of these platforms—like the Fast Attack Craft (FAC) in the Navy—are over 40 years old, with some approaching half a century in service2.
Implication: These assets suffer from outdated systems, reduced operational capability, and high maintenance costs, making them increasingly unfit for modern warfare.
📉 2. No Structured Replacement Plan
• Malaydesh lacks a multi-year force modernization roadmap. Instead, procurement is often ad hoc, reactive, and politically driven.
• The budgeting process does not clearly indicate what assets will be replaced, when, or how funding will be allocated over time.
• For example, the Army is still waiting for approval to replace its aging Condor APC fleet with 136 High Mobility Armoured Vehicles (HMAV), despite urgent operational needs.
Implication: Without a structured plan, aging platforms remain in service far beyond their intended lifespan, and capability gaps widen.
🔄 3. Maintenance Burden and Capability Decay
• Older assets require frequent repairs, often with obsolete parts or foreign OEM support, which drives up costs and delays readiness.
• Technological obsolescence means these platforms cannot integrate with newer systems or meet interoperability standards with allies.
Example: The RMN’s older vessels no longer meet modern naval standards in terms of sensors, weapons, or endurance2.
🧭 4. Strategic Consequences
• Malaydesh ’s ability to project force, defend its maritime zones, and respond to regional threats is diminished.
• Neighboring countries like Indonesia, Vietnam, and Singapore have clear modernization trajectories, leaving Malaydesh at risk of falling behind in regional deterrence.
📊 Summary Table: Aging Inventory vs. Lack of Replacement Strategy
Problem Area Description Strategic Impact
Aging platforms 171 assets >30 years old across Army, Navy, Air Force Reduced combat effectiveness
No replacement roadmap No long-term plan for phased recapitalization Procurement delays, capability gaps
High maintenance costs Obsolete systems, foreign parts, frequent breakdowns Budget strain, low readiness
Regional disadvantage Neighbors modernizing faster Loss of deterrence, strategic lag
gempi gembrot katanya amfibi, kok digendong ponton, kocak gaesz haha!🤣🤣🤣
BalasHapusgempi tatut kelelep aer...haha!😁🤭😁
gempi
https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-2-mrD2134Uc/YS1wXl5rZEI/AAAAAAABXss/YZnYgXWmtDE36Nv8_GCvbHvk_CLOmdrXgCLcBGAsYHQ/s960/239468224_4353560881347690_3683580711836841888_n.jpg
1. MAHATHIR MOHAMAD: "MELAYU MALAS & MISKIN"
BalasHapusPernyataan Mahathir ini sering muncul dalam berbagai kesempatan, namun yang paling signifikan terdengar saat peluncuran buku atau pidato politiknya (seperti di Kongres Maruah Melayu).
-
South China Morning Post (SCMP)
Judul Artikel: "‘Malays are lazy’: Dr Mahathir’s greatest hits of stinging criticism against his own race"
Konteks: Artikel ini merangkum sejarah kritik Mahathir terhadap etnis Melayu yang dianggap kurang kompetitif dibanding etnis Tionghoa.
-
The Straits Times (Singapore)
Judul Artikel: "Malays are lazy, do not want to work: Mahathir"
Konteks: Melaporkan pernyataan Mahathir pada tahun 2018 dan 2019 yang menyebut orang Melayu cenderung memilih subsidi daripada bekerja keras.
-
Reuters
Judul Artikel: "Malaysian PM Mahathir says Malays must work harder to avoid being left behind"
Konteks: Menyoroti pandangan Mahathir bahwa ketergantungan pada bantuan pemerintah membuat masyarakat kehilangan daya saing.
________________________________________
2. ANWAR IBRAHIM: "KEMISKINAN & PROYEK BANJIR"
Pernyataan Anwar Ibrahim ini berkaitan dengan keputusannya meninjau ulang proyek-proyek besar (seperti tebatan banjir) untuk memastikan tidak ada kebocoran dana/korupsi, karena korupsi tersebut merugikan rakyat miskin (mayoritas Melayu).
-
Free Malaysia Today (FMT) - English Edition
Judul Artikel: "Flood projects priority as poor Malays are the victims, says Anwar"
Konteks: Anwar menjelaskan bahwa ketertiban dalam manajemen keuangan (tata kelola) sangat penting karena kegagalan proyek tersebut berdampak langsung pada mayoritas warga Melayu yang miskin.
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CNA (Channel News Asia)
Judul Artikel: "PM Anwar says good governance key to lifting majority Malay poor out of poverty"
Konteks: Menekankan bahwa kemiskinan Melayu tidak akan selesai hanya dengan slogan "Ketuanan Melayu", melainkan dengan menghentikan penjarahan uang negara melalui proyek yang tidak transparan.
-
The Star (Malaysia)
Judul Artikel: "Anwar: Proper governance needed in flood mitigation projects to help the poor"
Konteks: Fokus pada argumen Anwar bahwa transparansi pengadaan barang dan jasa adalah bentuk nyata pembelaan terhadap kaum miskin.
________________________________________
2018: FASE "OPEN DONASI"
Pemerintah meluncurkan Tabung Harapan Malaydesh untuk mengumpulkan sumbangan rakyat guna membantu membayar utang negara yang menembus angka RM1 triliun (80% dari PDB).
-
2019: 59% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Laporan Ketua Audit Negara mengungkapkan bahwa 59% dari pinjaman baru digunakan hanya untuk melunasi utang yang sudah ada (gali lubang tutup lubang).
-
2020: 60% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Ketergantungan meningkat; hampir 60% pinjaman baru dialokasikan untuk membayar utang lama, memicu kekhawatiran karena anggaran pembangunan semakin terhimpit.
-
2021: 50,4% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Dari total pinjaman baru sebesar RM194,55 miliar, sebanyak RM98,05 miliar digunakan untuk pembayaran kembali prinsipal utang yang telah matang.
-
2022: 52,4% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Realisasi pembayaran prinsipal mencapai RM113,7 miliar. Total pinjaman meningkat 11,6% dibandingkan tahun sebelumnya akibat pemulihan pascapandemi.
-
2023: 64,3% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Persentase tertinggi dalam periode ini. Dari total pinjaman kasar RM226,6 miliar, sebesar RM145,8 miliar lari ke pembayaran utang lama.
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2024: 58,9% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Pemerintah mulai melakukan konsolidasi. Pinjaman digunakan untuk melunasi utang matang sebesar RM121,3 miliar dari total pinjaman RM206 miliar.
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2025: 58% HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Berdasarkan Tinjauan Fiskal 2025, pemerintah memproyeksikan pinjaman kasar sebesar RM184 miliar, di mana RM106,8 miliar disiapkan untuk membayar prinsipal utang matang.
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2026 = HUTANG BAYAR HUTANG
Dokumen Resmi Pemerintah (Kementerian Kewangan Malaydesh - MOF)
Data utama berasal dari laporan tahunan yang diterbitkan bersamaan dengan pembentangan anggaran negara:
Laporan Tinjauan Fiskal 2025 & 2026: Memuat angka proyeksi pinjaman kasar (gross borrowing) dan alokasi pembayaran kembali prinsipal utang yang matang.
Gempi NO Komander sight, pantesan nabrak CRV sama Proton Wira haha!🤭😬🤭
BalasHapushttps://3.bp.blogspot.com/-7VgReqrIGdM/XNg-mkBhu1I/AAAAAAABBK8/HYovJE_U3zg6296GJI3e4tP7snRglIYbgCLcBGAs/s1600/18485727_10154899522741886_5941317492195038485_n.jpg
https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-kMeyOlOWilo/XNaZSMX851I/AAAAAAABBIc/WOcztGHXI-YIMpvNgZfIu52eLdDED6T2ACLcBGAs/s1600/20449178_1511406598882351_6674456583891561080_o.jpg
SIRUP RUP RUP .....
BalasHapus100 MILIAR = RPG
RPG 7 = 1.600 PELUNCUR 8.000 ROKET
PSRL-1 = 500 PELUNCUR 5.000 ROKET
DART MK-2 MULTIPURPOSE ROCKET = 5.000 ROKET
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pengadaan RPG TNI dengan anggaran Rp100 miliar, dengan asumsi pembagian anggaran: 40% Peluncur, 40% Amunisi, dan 20% Logistik/Pelatihan.
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Opsi A: RPG-7 Standar (Varian Kloning/Eropa Timur)
Varian ini lebih ekonomis dan umum digunakan untuk mobilisasi massa atau pasukan cadangan dalam jumlah besar.
Harga Peluncur: ± Rp25.000.000 per unit.
Harga Amunisi: ± Rp5.000.000 per butir roket.
Total Unit Peluncur: ± 1.600 Unit.
Total Stok Amunisi: ± 8.000 Butir Roket.
Rasio Operasional: Setiap 1 peluncur dibekali dengan 5 roket cadangan.
Kapasitas Tempur: Dapat melengkapi hingga 10-12 Batalyon Infanteri (dengan asumsi setiap kompi memiliki regu bantuan senjata).
Opsi B: PSRL-1 (Varian Modern AS / AirTronic)
Varian ini adalah standar yang mulai diadopsi TNI (khususnya satuan elit/infanteri modern) karena materialnya lebih ringan, akurasi tinggi, dan bisa dipasangi berbagai aksesoris picatinny rail.
Harga Peluncur: ± Rp80.000.000 per unit.
Harga Amunisi: ± Rp8.000.000 per butir roket (menggunakan hulu ledak yang lebih presisi).
Total Unit Peluncur: ± 500 Unit.
Total Stok Amunisi: ± 5.000 Butir Roket.
Rasio Operasional: Setiap 1 peluncur dibekali dengan 10 roket cadangan (fokus pada kualitas tembakan).
Kapasitas Tempur: Dapat melengkapi sekitar 3-4 Batalyon Infanteri dengan standar persenjataan modern.
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Rincian Biaya Pendukung (Alokasi 20% / Rp20 Miliar)
Apapun varian yang dipilih, anggaran Rp20 miliar sisanya akan dialokasikan untuk:
Biaya Pelatihan: Pelatihan intensif untuk operator senjata (gunner) dan asistennya mengenai pemeliharaan dan teknik menembak efektif.
Suku Cadang (Spare Parts): Penyediaan cadangan pin pemukul (firing pin), pegas, dan pembersihan laras.
Sistem Optik: Pembelian teropong bidik siang/malam (PGO-7V atau sejenisnya) untuk meningkatkan akurasi jarak jauh.
Logistik Distribusi: Biaya pengiriman dari produsen ke gudang pusat (Puspalad) hingga distribusi ke tingkat daerah (Kodam).
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5000 DART MK-2 MULTIPURPOSE ROCKET
To ensure sustainable supply and regional growth, E-System has partnered with PT Republikorp, an emerging defense industrial player in Indonesia. Together, we are establishing a dedicated production facility capable of manufacturing up to 5,000 DART rockets annually, supporting not only the Indonesian Armed Forces’ long-term requirements, but also positioning Indonesia as a regional hub for exports across Southeast Asia and beyond.
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5000/TAHUN PRODUKSI FFAR PT DI
Sejak tahun 1985, PTDI telah berhasil memproduksi dan mengirimkan lebih dari 43.000 unit roket FFAR dan WAFAR 2,75 inch (70 mm) yang kapasitas produksinya mampu mencapai 5.000unit/tahun
AGREEMENT ON RECIPROCAL TRADE (ART):
BalasHapus-
🇮🇩 Indonesia
Jumlah Item (Tarif 0%): 1.819 Item.
Komitmen Nilai ke AS: USD 38,4 Miliar.
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🇲🇾 Malaydesh
Jumlah Item (Tarif 0%): 1.711 Item.
Komitmen Nilai ke AS: USD 242 Miliar.
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🇻🇳 Vietnam
Jumlah Item (Tarif 0%): ± 1.550 - 1.600 Item.
Komitmen Nilai ke AS: USD 180 - 210 Miliar.
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🇹🇭 Thailand
Jumlah Item (Tarif 0%): 1.425 Item.
Komitmen Nilai ke AS: USD 85 - 110 Miliar.
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🇵🇭 Filipina
Jumlah Item (Tarif 0%): 1.200 - 1.350 Item.
Komitmen Nilai ke AS: USD 35 - 55 Miliar.
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Transformasi Tata Kelola Data Digital
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Strategi Indonesia (Proteksionisme Berbasis Regulasi):
Pemisahan Data: Indonesia menerapkan pendekatan dikotomis dengan memisahkan secara tajam antara "Data Kependudukan" (Sovereign Data) dan "Data Komersial". Ini bertujuan melindungi privasi warga negara sambil tetap menjaga keran perdagangan tetap terbuka.
Supremasi Hukum Domestik: Penggunaan UU PDP No. 27/2022 sebagai insting utama menunjukkan bahwa Indonesia ingin standar global mengikuti aturan internalnya. Ini memberikan posisi tawar bagi Indonesia untuk menolak transfer data jika tidak memenuhi standar keamanan nasional.
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Strategi Malaysia (Integrasi Digital Global):
Liberalisasi Data: Melalui klausul "Facilitation of Digital Trade", Malaysia memilih jalur integrasi penuh. Dengan melarang diskriminasi produk digital AS, Malaysia memposisikan diri sebagai hub regional bagi perusahaan teknologi Amerika.
Komitmen Internasional: Dukungan terhadap moratorium permanen bea masuk transmisi elektronik di WTO
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2. Rekonstruksi Kompensasi Ekonomi dan Investasi
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Model Indonesia (Keuntungan Aset Statis):
Inisiatif Divestasi: Keberhasilan mendapatkan 12% saham Freeport secara gratis adalah kemenangan politik-ekonomi yang besar. Indonesia fokus pada kepemilikan aset nyata (ekuitas) yang memberikan dividen jangka panjang tanpa harus mengeluarkan modal segar.
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Model Malaysia (Ekspansi Investasi Timbal Balik):
Investasi Agresif: Komitmen USD 70 miliar di AS selama 10 tahun adalah langkah berisiko tinggi namun strategis. Malaysia tidak hanya menjadi penerima modal, tetapi menjadi pemain global yang menanamkan pengaruhnya di ekonomi domestik AS.
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3. Paradigma Kedaulatan Sumber Daya Alam (SDA)
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Pendekatan Indonesia (Nasionalisme Ekonomi):
Dominasi Kepemilikan: Dengan 63,23% saham PTFI, Indonesia menggeser peran dari sekadar regulator menjadi pengendali operasional dan finansial. Ini adalah perwujudan langsung dari Pasal 33 UUD 1945 mengenai penguasaan negara atas kekayaan alam.
Mandat Hilirisasi: Kepemilikan mayoritas ini memastikan kebijakan hilirisasi (seperti pembangunan smelter) tetap berjalan sesuai agenda nasional tanpa hambatan dari pemegang saham asing.
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Pendekatan Malaysia (Kolaborasi Strategis Mineral Kritis):
Sistem Tinjauan Bersama: Melalui klausul 5.2.3 ART, Malaysia memilih jalur kolaboratif dalam mengelola mineral kritis (seperti tanah jarang). Malaysia menyadari keterbatasan teknologi dan modal, sehingga mereka berbagi beban pengawasan dengan AS untuk memastikan standar lingkungan dan keamanan terpenuhi.
Dualisme Kekuasaan: Malaysia menghadapi kompleksitas hukum antara kekuasaan Federasi dan Negara Bagian terkait royalti
IDN : SHOPPING VERSUS MY : CANCELLING
BalasHapusIDN : BUYING VERSUS MY : LEASING
IDN : PROCUREMENT VERSUS MY : RETIREMENT
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INDONESIA = BATAS LIMIT 60%
GOV. DEBT : 40% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 16% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 2,9%
GDP = USD 1,44 TRILIUN
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MALAYDESH = BATAS LIMIT 65%
GOV. DEBT : 69% OF GDP
HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84,3% OF GDP
DEFISIT : 3,8%
GDP = USD 416,90 MILIAR
5X PM 6X MOD = 2026 FREEZES - 2023 CANCELLED
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💰 1. Chronic Budget Constraints
• Malaydesh defense budget has remained stagnant or modest relative to its strategic needs. Successive governments have been unwilling to reallocate funds from other sectors or reduce manpower to prioritize modernization.
• For example, the Army is still awaiting Finance Ministry approval for the procurement of 136 High Mobility Armoured Vehicles (HMAV), despite urgent operational requirements.
Result: Procurement plans are delayed or scaled down, leaving aging platforms in service well past their intended lifespan.
🧱 2. Procurement Mismanagement & Delays
• The Auditor-General’s 2025 report flagged RM7.8 billion in armoured vehicle contracts plagued by:
o Delayed deliveries (e.g., 68 GEMPITA units delivered late)
o Full payments made despite contract breaches
o Weak enforcement of penalties (RM162.75 million fine claimed two years late)3
• Maintenance and spare parts for key assets like ADNAN and PENDEKAR were also delayed, with fines left uncollected.
Result: Even when acquisitions are approved, execution is inefficient and accountability is weak.
🕴️ 3. Middlemen & Non-Transparent Deal Structures
• Defense procurement is often conducted via limited tenders or single-source contracts, with fewer than one-third awarded through open competition.
• Politically connected firms—often led by retired military officers—dominate the landscape, inflating costs and reducing transparency.
• The King of Malaydesh recently rebuked the Defence Ministry for relying on “agents” and “salesmen,” calling out inflated prices and the attempted purchase of 30-year-old Black Hawk helicopters, which he likened to “flying coffins”.
Result: Corruption risks and inflated pricing erode trust and reduce the effectiveness of spending.
🧓 4. Aging Inventory & No Replacement Strategy
• As of late 2024, 171 military assets across the Army, Air Force, and Navy were over 30 years old.
• Yet, there is no clear roadmap for phased replacement or recapitalization, and ad hoc purchases continue to dominate.
Result: Operational readiness suffers, and Malaydesh risks capability gaps in key domains like air defense, maritime patrol, and armored mobility.
📊 Summary Table: Why Malaydesh Struggles to Acquire Military Assets
Factor Description Impact
Budget limitations Low prioritization of defense in national spending Delayed or cancelled acquisitions
Procurement mismanagement Poor contract enforcement, late deliveries Waste of funds, reduced readiness
Middlemen & opaque deals Politically connected firms inflate costs Corruption risk, poor value
Aging inventory No structured replacement plan Capability gaps, low deterrence