01 September 2025

Australia Lays Keel of NUSHIP Carpentaria as Sixth and Final Arafura-class OPV

01 September 2025

Keel laying of sixth and final Arafura-class OPV (photos: Civmec)

Offshore Patrol Vessel NUSHIP Carpentaria Keel Laying Ceremony

A ceremony was held today to mark the laying of the keel of Arafura class Offshore Patrol Vessel (OPV) 6, NUSHIP Carpentaria at Henderson, Western Australia. This is another significant milestone for Australia’s Naval Shipbuilding Program and the Royal Australian Navy.

Rear Admiral Michael Houghton, Head of Patrol Boats and Specialist Ships represented the ceremony, honouring tradition by positioning a coin under the keel of NUSHIP Carpentaria.

“A keel laying ceremony which marks the beginning of a ship’s construction, is an important naval tradition which is believed to bring good luck for the vessel’s build and life at sea,” Rear Admiral Michael Houghton said.

“The OPV program is a major contributor to continuous naval shipbuilding in Australia, which creates and sustains local jobs and harnesses our national defence industry’s local talent and technology.


“Defence investment in a sovereign Naval Shipbuilding and Sustainment Enterprise is expected to support around 8,500 jobs in shipbuilding and sustainment by 2030.

“OPVs help patrol and secure Australia’s maritime border alongside the Evolved Cape Class patrol boats. They also play an important role in Navy’s commitment to supporting the long-term objectives of the National Defence Strategy.”

The first two vessels were constructed at the Osborne Naval Shipyard in South Australia with the remaining four are currently under construction at the Henderson Maritime Precinct. The first ship, HMAS Arafura, was commissioned into service on 28 June 2025 with the second OPV, NUSHIP Eyre, expected to be delivered later this year. 

The OPVs are a more versatile platform compared with previous classes of patrol vessels. They are able to operate over longer distances and can be reconfigured to perform a number of tasks and roles originally carried out by several different classes of vessels.

20 komentar:

  1. TUNDUK BRITISH =
    NGEMIS MERDEKA
    NGEMIS MERDEKA
    GIVEAWAY BY UK
    The effort for independence was spearheaded by Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj, the first Prime Minister of MALONDESH, who led a delegation of ministers and political leaders of Malaya in negotiations with the British in London for Merdeka
    ---
    TUNDUK BRITISH =
    NGEMIS BENDERA
    NGEMIS BENDERA
    BENDERA DISETUJUI UK
    The final version of the Malayan flag was approved by king George VI on 19 May 1950 and was first raised in front of the Sultan of Selangor's residence on 26 May 1950. On 31 August 1957, it was raised upon independence at Merdeka Square in place of the British Union Flag.
    ---
    TUNDUK BRITISH =
    JAGA BUCKINGHAM
    JAGA BUCKINGHAM
    JAGA BUCKINGHAM
    Tugasan untuk berkawal di istana berusia lebih 250 tahun itu digalas penuh rasa tanggungjawab oleh setiap anggota RAMD. MALONDESH yang pernah dijajah British pada suatu masa dahulu diiktiraf kerana mempunyai barisan tentera yang berketrampilan,.
    ---
    TUNDUK BRITISH =
    TIRU BENDERA USA
    TIRU BENDERA USA
    TIRU BENDERA USA
    The current version has 14 stripes and a 14-pointed star. Yellow is a royal colour in MALONDESH, and red, white, and blue indicate the close association of the country with the Commonwealth. The flag design was also influenced by the flag of the United States.
    ---
    TUNDUK CHINA = GIVEAWAY BPA
    TUNDUK CHINA = GIVEAWAY BPA
    TUNDUK CHINA = GIVEAWAY BPA
    Bilangan hari di mana kapal-kapal pengawal pantai China melakukan rondaan di Beting Patinggi Ali berhampiran dengan operasi minyak BBM dan gas penting MALONDESH telah meningkat daripada 279 hari pada 2020 kepada 316 hari pada tahun lepas
    ---
    TUNDUK CHINA = GIVE AWAY RUANG UDARA
    TUNDUK CHINA = GIVE AWAY RUANG UDARA
    TUNDUK CHINA = GIVE AWAY RUANG UDARA
    Jumlah keseluruhan pesawat asing yang dikesan dan direkodkan menceroboh ruang udara negara dari bulan Januari 2023 sehingga Mei 2023 ialah berjumlah 43 kes pencerobohan.
    ---
    MAHATHIR = MALAS MISKIN
    menyebut 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.
    =========
    DEBT MARCH 2025 = RM 1.65 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
    DEBT 2019 = RM 1,25 TRILLION
    DEBT 2018 = RM 1,19 TRILLION
    MARCH 2025 — deputy finance minister. KUALA LUMPUR (Aug 13): Malaysia's household debt stood at RM1. 65 trillion as of end-March 2025, equivalent to 84.3% of gross domestic product (GDP) as at end-March 2025, a level that remains elevated but is balanced by strong household assets.
    -
    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.

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Owhhh ini rapalan khusus utk tetangga kesayangankuh,
      bgituw kebaca para warganyet kl..
      njoosss langsung FANAAAASSSSS🔥 🔥🔥
      klo kita mah gak mempan..ngakak iye om pemburu haha!🤣🤣🤣

      Hapus
  2. GOKILL ROCKET SYSTEM KEREN BANGET !

    BalasHapus
  3. manakala negara sebelah dalam kehancuran akibat demo yang semakin merebak ke banyak wilayah.....

    negara BUBAR semakin nyata.....

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. Ekok bubar....guru dia bayar 30k rupiah sebulan..pengemis malaya lagu byk kutipanntab..kalau guru pun x mampu bayar ..elok bubar Indonesia .bebaskan semua pulau2 dari cengkaman Jawa

      Hapus
    2. MISKIN = MARCH 2025 .....
      RM 1.65 TRILLION = 84.3% OF GDP
      RM 1.65 TRILLION = 84.3% OF GDP
      RM 1.65 TRILLION = 84.3% OF GDP
      MARCH 2025 — deputy finance minister. KUALA LUMPUR (Aug 13): Malaysia's household debt stood at RM1. 65 trillion as of end-March 2025, equivalent to 84.3% of gross domestic product (GDP) as at end-March 2025, a level that remains elevated but is balanced by strong household assets.
      =============
      MISKIN ......
      DEBT MARCH 2025 = 1,65 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
      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
      =============
      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
      😝2025 DEBT RM 1.65 TRILLION = 84.3% OF GDP😝

      Hapus
    3. MISKIN = OVERLIMITS DEBT
      GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% of GDP
      HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% of GDP
      As of June 2025, Malondesh's federal government debt was RM 1.3 trillion, up from RM 1.25 trillion at the end of 2024, with a projected debt-to-GDP ratio of 69% by the end of 2025. Simultaneously, household debt reached RM 1.65 trillion in March 2025, representing 84.3% of GDP, but this level is considered manageable due to strong household financial assets, which are 2.1 times higher than the total debt.
      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
      • End of March 2025: RM 1.65 trillion or 84.3% of GDP
      =============
      MISKIN ......
      DEBT MARCH 2025 = 1,65 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
      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
      =============
      ISR, C4ISR, dan domain bersama
      • Fusion ISR dan COP belum matang: Data dari radar darat, sensor udara/laut, dan sumber eksternal belum sepenuhnya terintegrasi ke common operational picture real-time.
      • MDAs tidak merata: Cakupan radar maritim dan kamera pantai tidak homogen; bottleneck di choke point tertentu.
      • Interoperabilitas gabungan & mitra: Prosedur, data link, dan TTP gabungan belum standar penuh untuk operasi koalisi.
      SDM, latihan, dan kesiapan
      • Jam terbang & sea days berfluktuasi: Anggaran O&M dan ketersediaan platform memengaruhi exposure latihan, proficiency, dan sertifikasi awak.
      • Retensi teknisi & pilot: Persaingan pasar sipil dan jalur karier mempengaruhi retensi kompetensi kritikal (avionik, mesin, sistem senjata).
      • Latihan gabungan high-end terbatas: Kompleksitas skenario mult domain (EW/SEAD/ASW) belum rutin pada skala memadai.
      Logistik, sustainment, dan industri
      • Fragmentasi armada multi-asal: Kombinasi Rusia, Amerika, Eropa, dan China meningkatkan beban suku cadang, alat uji, pelatihan pemeliharaan, dan dependensi geopolitik.
      • Kontrak TLS & suku cadang: Perencanaan siklus hidup dan pencadangan parts tidak selalu selaras realisasi anggaran, memicu cannibalization dan downtime.
      • Governance pengadaan & local content: Keterlambatan proyek besar (contoh LCS) dan tuntutan alih teknologi yang tidak realistis meningkatkan risiko biaya dan jadwal.
      Siber dan ruang
      • Kapabilitas siber militer terbatas: Defensive cyber, red-teaming, dan kemampuan pemulihan C2 dari serangan canggih perlu ditingkatkan.
      • Ketahanan satkom & PNT: Ketergantungan pada aset komersial/mitra untuk komunikasi strategis dan navigasi memperbesar risiko jamming/spoofing.
      Risiko misi paling kritikal
      1. Kehilangan kontrol udara lokal: Tanpa AEW&C, MRCA, dan GBAD berlapis, sulit mempertahankan superioritas udara waktu-kritis.
      2. Sea control/denial di SCS & Selat: Kombatan permukaan modern terbatas dan ASW lemah menurunkan efek gentar terhadap kapal permukaan/selam lawan.
      3. Ketahanan operasi rendah: Kesiapan platform dan stok amunisi presisi membatasi durasi operasi intensitas menengah.
      4. Respons grey-zone kurang tajam: LMS minim senjata dan beban tugas konstabulary mengurangi kemampuan “presence with punch”.

      Hapus
  4. Dengar Indognsial bubar..semua dewan DPR kobong....wkwkwkwkwkwkwkwkwkwkwkwk

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. TUNDUK BRITISH =
      NGEMIS MERDEKA
      NGEMIS MERDEKA
      GIVEAWAY BY UK
      The effort for independence was spearheaded by Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj, the first Prime Minister of MALONDESH, who led a delegation of ministers and political leaders of Malaya in negotiations with the British in London for Merdeka
      ---
      TUNDUK BRITISH =
      NGEMIS BENDERA
      NGEMIS BENDERA
      BENDERA DISETUJUI UK
      The final version of the Malayan flag was approved by king George VI on 19 May 1950 and was first raised in front of the Sultan of Selangor's residence on 26 May 1950. On 31 August 1957, it was raised upon independence at Merdeka Square in place of the British Union Flag.
      ---
      TUNDUK BRITISH =
      JAGA BUCKINGHAM
      JAGA BUCKINGHAM
      JAGA BUCKINGHAM
      Tugasan untuk berkawal di istana berusia lebih 250 tahun itu digalas penuh rasa tanggungjawab oleh setiap anggota RAMD. MALONDESH yang pernah dijajah British pada suatu masa dahulu diiktiraf kerana mempunyai barisan tentera yang berketrampilan,.
      ---
      TUNDUK BRITISH =
      TIRU BENDERA USA
      TIRU BENDERA USA
      TIRU BENDERA USA
      The current version has 14 stripes and a 14-pointed star. Yellow is a royal colour in MALONDESH, and red, white, and blue indicate the close association of the country with the Commonwealth. The flag design was also influenced by the flag of the United States.
      ---
      TUNDUK CHINA = GIVEAWAY BPA
      TUNDUK CHINA = GIVEAWAY BPA
      TUNDUK CHINA = GIVEAWAY BPA
      Bilangan hari di mana kapal-kapal pengawal pantai China melakukan rondaan di Beting Patinggi Ali berhampiran dengan operasi minyak BBM dan gas penting MALONDESH telah meningkat daripada 279 hari pada 2020 kepada 316 hari pada tahun lepas
      ---
      TUNDUK CHINA = GIVE AWAY RUANG UDARA
      TUNDUK CHINA = GIVE AWAY RUANG UDARA
      TUNDUK CHINA = GIVE AWAY RUANG UDARA
      Jumlah keseluruhan pesawat asing yang dikesan dan direkodkan menceroboh ruang udara negara dari bulan Januari 2023 sehingga Mei 2023 ialah berjumlah 43 kes pencerobohan.
      ---
      MAHATHIR = MALAS MISKIN
      menyebut 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.
      =========
      DEBT MARCH 2025 = RM 1.65 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
      DEBT 2019 = RM 1,25 TRILLION
      DEBT 2018 = RM 1,19 TRILLION
      MARCH 2025 — deputy finance minister. KUALA LUMPUR (Aug 13): Malaysia's household debt stood at RM1. 65 trillion as of end-March 2025, equivalent to 84.3% of gross domestic product (GDP) as at end-March 2025, a level that remains elevated but is balanced by strong household assets.
      -
      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.



      Hapus
    2. DAFTAR PENGADAAN ALUTSISTA ON PROGRESS
      2 KRI Frigate Brawijaya Class dari Italia
      2 KRI Frigate Merah Putih dari PT PAL
      2 KRI Frigate Istif Class dari Turkiye
      1 KRI Rigel Class dari Palindo/Jerman
      2 KRI Kapal Cepat Rudal dari Turkiye
      1 KRI Kapal Cepat Rudal dari Tesco Bekasi
      2 KS Scorpene dari Perancis & PT PAL
      1 Kapal Induk Giribaldi dari Italia (Opsi)
      1 Kapal LHD Helikopter dari PT PAL (Opsi)
      42 Jet Tempur Rafale dari Perancis
      48 Jet Tempur IFX kerjasama Korsel RI
      48 Jet Tempur KHAAN dari Turkiye
      6 Jet Tempur T50 dari Korsel
      2 Pesawat angkut A400M dari Spanyol
      13 Radar GCI dari Thales Perancis
      12 Radar Retia dari Ceko
      3 Baterai Rudal Balistik KHAN Turkiye
      3 Baterai Rudal ADS Trisula dari Turkiye
      22 Helikopter Blackhawk dari AS
      12 Drone Anka dari Turkiye
      60 Drone Bayraktar TB3 dari Turkiye
      45 Rudal anti kapal Atmaca dari Turkiye
      ----------------
      GDP INDONESIA 2024 X 1.5% = BUDGET DEFENSE
      USD 1492 BILLION X 0.015 = USD 22 BILLION
      USD 1492 BILLION X 0.015 = USD 22 BILLION
      USD 1492 BILLION X 0.015 = USD 22 BILLION
      Indonesia's Ministry of Defense aims to gradually increase the defense budget from 0.8 percent to 1.5 percent of the country's gross domestic product (GDP) to enhance defense capabilities
      =============
      =============
      MISKIN = MARCH 2025 .....
      RM1. 65 TRILLION = 84.3% OF GDP
      RM1. 65 TRILLION = 84.3% OF GDP
      RM1. 65 TRILLION = 84.3% OF GDP
      MARCH 2025 — deputy finance minister. KUALA LUMPUR (Aug 13): Malaysia's household debt stood at RM1. 65 trillion as of end-March 2025, equivalent to 84.3% of gross domestic product (GDP) as at end-March 2025, a level that remains elevated but is balanced by strong household assets.
      ----------------
      MISKIN ......
      DEBT MARCH 2025 = RM 1.65 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
      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.
      ----------------
      2025 $1.3 BILLION MINDEF =
      MAINTENANCE
      REPAIRS
      ASSETS.
      (SEWA, SEWA AND SEWA)
      In 2025, MALONDESH Ministry of Defense (MINDEF) was allocated $4.8 billion to protect the country's sovereignty.
      This budget included $1.3 billion for maintenance, repairs, and new military assets...

      Hapus
    3. MISKIN = OVERLIMITS DEBT
      GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% of GDP
      HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% of GDP
      As of June 2025, Malondesh's federal government debt was RM 1.3 trillion, up from RM 1.25 trillion at the end of 2024, with a projected debt-to-GDP ratio of 69% by the end of 2025. Simultaneously, household debt reached RM 1.65 trillion in March 2025, representing 84.3% of GDP, but this level is considered manageable due to strong household financial assets, which are 2.1 times higher than the total debt.
      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
      • End of March 2025: RM 1.65 trillion or 84.3% of GDP
      =============
      MISKIN ......
      DEBT MARCH 2025 = 1,65 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
      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
      =============
      KELEMAHAN KAPAL PERANG MILITER MALONDESH
      Militer Laut Diraja Malondesh menghadapi beberapa kelemahan mendasar yang membatasi efektivitas operasional dan daya jaga kedaulatan laut. Faktor utama meliputi usia armada yang tinggi, jumlah platform terbatas, kesenjangan kemampuan tempur, serta tantangan pemeliharaan dan logistik.
      1. Aset dan Modernisasi
      • Usia rata-rata kapal melebihi 30 tahun, memicu frekuensi kegagalan sistem dan tenggelamnya KD Pendekar akibat kebocoran ruang mesin pada Agustus 2024.
      • Hanya memiliki 6 fregat utama (Lekiu-class dan Maharaja Lela-class) untuk mengawaki lebih dari 4.600 km garis pantai.
      • Rencana pengadaan Maharaja Lela-class terhambat gangguan rantai pasok dan anggaran, memperpanjang keterbatasan jumlah unit tempur.
      2. Kekuatan Tempur dan Sensor
      • Kapasitas penembakan rudal anti-kapal terbatas pada sistem peluncur jarak menengah; tidak ada rudal jelajah anti-kapal jarak jauh.
      • Sistem pertahanan udara kapal sebagian besar hanya mengandalkan peluncur rudal MICA VL (16 sel), tanpa VLS terintegrasi untuk ancaman berlapis.
      • Sensor sonar aktif/pasif pada kapal selam Scorpene-class belum dilengkapi towed array sonar, mengurangi jangkauan deteksi kapal selam musuh.
      3. Pemeliharaan, Logistik, dan Industri
      • Kapasitas galangan nasional untuk perawatan tengah-umur (mid-life upgrade) terbatas; sebagian besar kapal diperbaiki di luar negeri dengan lead time > 6 bulan.
      • Sistem manajemen suku cadang terfragmentasi, menyebabkan stok critical-spare part sering kosong.
      • Anggaran operasional dan pemeliharaan (O&M) hanya 15-18% dari total alokasi Angkatan Laut, di bawah standar ideal 20-25%.
      4. Interoperabilitas dan Jaringan
      • Belum ada sistem C4I terpadu antar kapal dan pesawat patroli untuk datalink real-time; setiap platform menggunakan protokol berbeda.
      • Latihan bersama (multilateral exercises) terbatas pada skala korvet dan frigat; belum pernah full-spectrum joint exercise dengan platform HMS/US Navy.

      Hapus
    4. MISKIN = OVERLIMITS DEBT
      GOVERNMENT DEBT : 69% of GDP
      HOUSEHOLD DEBT : 84.3% of GDP
      As of June 2025, Malondesh's federal government debt was RM 1.3 trillion, up from RM 1.25 trillion at the end of 2024, with a projected debt-to-GDP ratio of 69% by the end of 2025. Simultaneously, household debt reached RM 1.65 trillion in March 2025, representing 84.3% of GDP, but this level is considered manageable due to strong household financial assets, which are 2.1 times higher than the total debt.
      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
      • End of March 2025: RM 1.65 trillion or 84.3% of GDP
      =============
      MISKIN ......
      DEBT MARCH 2025 = 1,65 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
      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
      =============
      KELEMAHAN ANGGARAN MILITER MALONDESH
      1. Proporsi Belanja Personel Terlalu Tinggi
      • Pada tahun 2024, lebih dari 40 % dari total anggaran (RM 19,73 miliar) dialokasikan untuk gaji dan tunjangan personel, meninggalkan hanya sekitar 30 % untuk pengadaan dan modernisasi peralatan.
      • Implikasi: Pembelian kapal, pesawat, dan sistem pertahanan menjadi terbatas, sehingga umur aset semakin menua.
      2. Dampak Depresiasi Ringgit
      • Kenaikan alokasi nominal untuk pengadaan (dari RM 5,04 miliar ke RM 5,71 miliar tahun 2024) sebagian besar hanya mengkompensasi melemahnya ringgit terhadap dolar AS.
      • Implikasi: Daya beli nyata menurun, biaya impor peralatan meningkat, dan program modernisasi tertunda.
      3. Ketergantungan pada Pemasok Asing
      • Malondesh masih sangat bergantung pada OEM luar negeri untuk peralatan utama (pesawat tempur, kapal selam, sistem radar).
      • Implikasi: Proses transfer teknologi terbatas, siklus pengadaan panjang, dan kerentanan terhadap fluktuasi mata uang serta kebijakan ekspor negara pemasok.
      4. Kurangnya Perencanaan Jangka Panjang dan Transparansi
      • Proses budgeting belum memberikan garis waktu yang jelas untuk setiap program pengadaan maupun kapan dana akan tersedia.
      • Implikasi: Angkatan bersenjata sulit menyusun roadmap modernisasi dan menyesuaikan kebutuhan dengan anggaran tahunan.
      5. Pendapatan Fiskal Tertekan
      • Penurunan pendapatan dari sektor minyak dan gas, ditambah defisit akibat subsidi domestik, membatasi ruang fiskal untuk pertahanan.
      • Implikasi: Pemerintah enggan memotong belanja lain atau menaikkan pajak untuk mendanai pertahanan.
      6. Aset Menua dan Ancaman Regional Meningkat
      • Kapal perang usia 45 tahun (misalnya KD Pendekar yang tenggelam tahun 2024) mencerminkan minimnya penggantian aset tua.
      • Ancaman di Laut China Selatan semakin nyata, tetapi anggaran masih dianggap “tidak cukup” untuk rencana modernisasi lanjutan.

      Hapus
    5. 📌 1. Budget Size in Absolute Terms
      • Malondesh’s defense budget (2024–2025 estimates) is roughly RM15–18 billion/year (~USD 3.5–4.0 billion).
      • For a country with ~32 million people and a sizeable military, this is relatively small, especially for modernization programs.
      • Comparison with regional neighbors:
      Country Budget (approx.) % of GDP
      Malondesh RM15–18B (~$4B) ~1%
      Singapore RM70B (~$16B) ~3%
      Indonesia RM60B (~$13B) ~0.8%
      Thailand RM35–40B (~$8–9B) ~1.2%
      Vietnam RM40–45B (~$9B) ~2%
      👉 Malondesh spends far less in absolute terms than Singapore or Indonesia, and even its GDP percentage is low.
      ________________________________________
      📌 2. Causes of Small Budget
      a. Limited Fiscal Space
      • Malondesh has high public debt (~69% of GDP) and large annual deficits.
      • Revenue collection is constrained due to:
      o GST abolished 2018 → RM15–20B revenue lost per year
      o Heavy dependence on volatile oil & gas revenues
      • Consequently, the government must prioritize social programs, subsidies, and civil service salaries over defense.
      b. Perceived Low Threat
      • Malondesh sees itself as geographically secure, facing no direct high-intensity threat.
      • Politically, it’s easier to allocate more funds to welfare than to defense.
      c. Political Short-Termism
      • Defense modernization takes decades to complete, but politicians prefer quick-return spending (cash aid, subsidies, infrastructure projects).
      ________________________________________
      📌 3. Effects of Small Budget
      a. Limited Procurement
      • Malondesh cannot purchase enough modern platforms:
      o Fighter jets, frigates, submarines, armored vehicles
      • Leads to piecemeal acquisition rather than coherent modernization.
      b. Maintenance & Spare Parts Shortages
      • Small O&M allocation → aircraft, ships, and vehicles are grounded.
      • Examples:
      o Only ~4 of 18 Su-30MKMs airworthy at one point
      o Navy relies on 1980s corvettes due to LCS delays
      c. Low Training Hours
      • Pilots and soldiers get fewer flight hours, exercises, and field deployments.
      • Readiness and operational effectiveness decline.
      d. Personnel vs Capability Imbalance
      • Large manpower (110,000 active personnel) consumes 60% of the budget, leaving little for equipment.
      • Malondesh ends up with many troops but outdated weapons

      Hapus
    6. 📌 1. Malondesh Defence White Paper (DWP) 2019
      a. Objective
      • The DWP 2019 was intended as Malondesh’s first long-term defense roadmap.
      • Goals:
      o Identify threats and security priorities (maritime security, terrorism, cyber, regional tensions).
      o Outline modernization plans for Navy, Air Force, and Army through 2030.
      o Provide guidance for procurement, O&M, and capability building.
      b. Proposed Approach
      • 10-year horizon (2021–2030) for modernization.
      • Emphasis on:
      o Upgrading aging ships, aircraft, and armored vehicles.
      o Strengthening maritime and air defense.
      o Developing cyber, UAV, and special operations capabilities.
      c. Failure Reasons
      1. Political Collapse
      o Pakatan Harapan government fell in 2020.
      o DWP implementation depended on continuity of political support, which disappeared.
      2. No Legal/Institutional Backing
      o Unlike Singapore or Indonesia, Malondesh has no law forcing successive governments to follow the plan.
      3. Short-Term Budgeting
      o Malondesh still allocates budgets year-by-year, leaving little certainty for multi-year projects.
      4. Budget Constraints
      o Small overall defense budget (~1% of GDP) → most plans remained aspirational.
      5. Result
      o Modernization projects delayed or cancelled.
      o Navy still waits for LCS ships, Air Force stuck with aging jets, Army using 1980s APCs.
      👉 DWP became a paper plan with little real impact.
      ________________________________________
      📌 2. Indonesia Minimum Essential Force (MEF)
      a. Objective
      • MEF (Minimum Essential Force) is Indonesia’s long-term military modernization plan, started in 2004.
      • Goals:
      o Achieve a minimum level of capability to defend the country.
      o Develop integrated capabilities across Army, Navy, Air Force.
      o Plan modernization in phases over decades.
      b. Implementation Approach
      • Multi-phase program:
      o MEF I (2004–2009): Procurement of basic platforms, focus on territorial defense.
      o MEF II (2010–2014): Expand fleet, improve air defense.
      o MEF III (2015–2024): Focus on advanced assets (fighters, submarines, naval combatants).
      • Legally recognized: MEF has multi-year funding plans, independent of short-term political changes.
      • Result:
      o Indonesian Navy expanded with new frigates, corvettes, submarines.
      o Air Force replaced aging fighters and increased UAV capabilities.
      o Army received modern APCs, artillery, and transport vehicles.

      Hapus
    7. 📌 1. Limited Procurement & Modernization
      • Malondesh’s annual defense budget (~RM15–18 billion, 1% of GDP) is insufficient for large-scale procurement.
      • Effects:
      o Fighter jets: MRCA replacement program delayed; RMAF still uses aging F/A-18D Hornets, Hawks, and Su-30MKMs with limited operational readiness.
      o Navy: LCS project stalled for over a decade; old corvettes and patrol ships remain in service.
      o Army: Many vehicles like Condor APCs and older artillery pieces are still in use because modernization is unaffordable.
      • Result: Malondesh acquires equipment piecemeal instead of building a balanced, modern force.
      ________________________________________
      📌 2. Underfunded Operations & Maintenance (O&M)
      • Only ~20–25% of the budget is allocated to fuel, spare parts, repairs, training.
      • Effects:
      o Many aircraft and ships are grounded due to maintenance backlogs.
      o Pilots and crews get fewer training hours, reducing readiness.
      o Aging vehicles and ships wear out faster, accelerating obsolescence.
      • Examples:
      o Only ~4 of 18 Su-30MKMs were airworthy at one point.
      o Navy relies on ships built in the 1980s due to delays in LCS delivery.
      ________________________________________
      📌 3. Personnel vs Capability Imbalance
      • ~60% of the budget goes to salaries and pensions.
      • Consequences:
      o Large manpower (110,000 active personnel) cannot be properly equipped.
      o Military is “people-heavy but equipment-light,” limiting operational effectiveness.
      • Soldiers are well-paid but often lack modern tools or transport, reducing combat effectiveness.
      ________________________________________
      📌 4. Reduced Readiness
      • Small budget and underfunding of O&M → low operational readiness:
      o Aircraft, ships, and armored vehicles often not deployable.
      o Training exercises are limited due to fuel and maintenance costs.
      • Malondesh cannot sustain continuous deterrence or regional presence, unlike Singapore or Indonesia.
      ________________________________________
      📌 5. Vulnerability to Regional Gap
      • Neighbors (Singapore, Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia) have invested more in modernization and readiness.
      • Malondesh’s small budget → capability gap grows:
      o Navy: fewer modern frigates and submarines.
      o Air Force: fewer operational jets and limited air defense.
      o Army: older vehicles, limited mobility.
      ________________________________________
      📌 6. Delayed or Cancelled Programs
      • Many projects are postponed indefinitely due to funding constraints:
      o MRCA (fighter replacement)
      o Littoral Combat Ship (LCS)
      o Armored vehicle upgrades and artillery modernization
      • Stop-go procurement leads to wasted funds, inefficiency, and obsolescence.

      Hapus
  5. silakan di bom karpet ☄️ om pemburu...jangan kasi kendor haha!😄😄😄

    BalasHapus