Latma Urban Warfare yang digelar King Abdullah II Special Operations Training Center (KASOTC), di Amman, Yordania (photos: TNI AL)
Pasukan elite Korps Marinir TNI AL dari Batalyon Intai Amfibi 3 Marinir, menuntaskan misi dalam Latihan Bersama (Latma) Purkota yang digelar King Abdullah II Special Operations Training Center (KASOTC), Amman, Yordania, Timur Tengah, awal pekan ini.
Dalam latihan tersebut, prajurit Korps Marinir tergabung bersama pasukan Korps Artileri Kerajaan Yordania dan personel dari berbagai negara sahabat. Materi latihan yang telah diberikan meliputi operasi darat, pertempuran kota (Urban Warfare), hingga simulasi operasi penyelamatan sandera. Seluruh rangkaian latihan dilaksanakan dengan penuh semangat dan profesionalisme yang tinggi.
Latihan yang berlangsung selama beberapa bulan ini ditutup secara resmi melalui latihan puncak berupa simulasi pertempuran kota di KASOTC. Pada kesempatan tersebut, seluruh peserta dari berbagai negara, termasuk TNI AL menerima sertifikat sebagai tanda kelulusan dan keberhasilan menyelesaikan misi latihan.
Menurut Danpasmar 3 Brigjen TNI Mar Andi Rahmat, latihan ini bukan hanya sebagai ajang untuk meningkatkan kemampuan teknis dan taktis, namun juga menjadi sarana mempererat hubungan kerja sama militer antara Indonesia dan Yordania, serta dengan negara-negara sahabat lainnya.
“Harapannya, Prajurit TNI AL dapat mengaplikasikan ilmu, pengalaman, dan keterampilan yang telah diperoleh dalam latihan ini ke dalam penugasan nyata di lapangan, serta menjadikannya sebagai motivasi untuk terus meningkatkan profesionalisme dalam mengabdi kepada bangsa dan negara,” ujar Danpasmar 3.
Pelaksanaan kegiatan tersebut merupakan implementasi dari perintah Kepala Staf Angkatan Laut (Kasal) Laksamana TNI Dr. Muhammad Ali yang menekankan kepada Prajurit TNI AL agar meningkatkan kesiapan dan kesiapsiagaannya untuk menghadapi segala ancaman yang datang.
(TNI AL)
📌 1. What Are Policy Flip-Flops?
BalasHapusPolicy flip-flops in Malondesh defense mean:
• Frequent changes in plans, programs, and procurement priorities.
• Caused by government changes, minister reshuffles, or shifting political agendas.
• Leads to cancellations, re-tendering, or redesigning programs.
• Results in years of delays, wasted funds, and capability gaps.
________________________________________
📌 2. Drivers of Policy Flip-Flops
a. Frequent Political Changes
• Since 2018: Malondesh had 5 prime ministers in 7 years (Najib → Mahathir → Muhyiddin → Ismail Sabri → Anwar).
• Each PM/defense minister reviews and changes defense priorities.
• Example: The same program (fighter jets, navy ships) can be launched, paused, revived, or cancelled multiple times.
________________________________________
b. Short-Term Focus
• Politicians prioritize 5-year election cycles over 15–20 year defense modernization.
• Programs requiring long-term funding commitments (e.g., fighter jets, submarines, frigates) get disrupted.
________________________________________
c. Budget Pressures
• High national debt (69% of GDP in 2025).
• Defense is seen as “non-essential”, so big-ticket programs are often the first to be cut or postponed.
• Leads to repeated “defer until later” cycles.
________________________________________
d. Corruption & Scandals
• When scandals erupt (e.g., LCS RM9 billion scandal), programs face:
o Audits, suspensions, parliamentary probes.
o Restructuring or even outright cancellation.
• Creates uncertainty for ongoing and future procurement.
________________________________________
📌 3. Examples of Policy Flip-Flops
✈️ Fighter Jet Replacement (MRCA Program)
• 2007–2010: Plan to replace MiG-29 with new fighters.
• Candidates: Rafale, Typhoon, Gripen, Super Hornet, Su-35.
• 2015: Najib government delayed due to budget.
• 2018: Mahathir cancelled, shifted to cheaper LCA (Light Combat Aircraft).
• 2022: RMAF selected Korean FA-50 → but deliveries only from 2026.
⏳ Result: 20 years later, still no MRCA. MiG-29 retired with no replacement.
________________________________________
🚢 Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Program
• 2011: Najib government approved 6 ships (RM9 billion).
• 2018: PH government halted payments due to mismanagement.
• 2020: PN government restarted program with restructuring.
• 2023–2025: Still no ship delivered.
⏳ Result: Program flip-flopped between “go-ahead” and “pause”, now 14 years with 0 ships.
________________________________________
🚁 Helicopter Procurement
• Malaysia planned medium-lift helicopter replacements (Nuri).
• 2017: Nuri retired suddenly → capability gap.
• 2019: Mahathir’s government cancelled immediate purchase, shifted to leasing option.
• 2022: Army announced leasing 4 Black Hawks → contract collapsed due to disputes.
⏳ Result: Years without adequate helicopters.
________________________________________
🪖 Army Armored Vehicles
• 1980s Condor APCs still in use.
• AV-8 Gempita ordered (2011) → only 257 built, production ended.
• Plan for new wheeled APC → repeatedly delayed.
⏳ Result: Army still operates outdated vehicles because replacement kept shifting.
________________________________________
📌 4. Consequences of Policy Flip-Flops
1. Capability Gaps
o Air Force without MRCA fighters.
o Navy without new frigates.
o Army using outdated artillery and APCs.
2. Wasted Money
o Billions spent on projects that stall or fail (e.g., LCS, helicopter leasing).
3. Industry Instability
o Local companies cannot plan or invest because contracts keep shifting.
o Leads to failures like Boustead Naval Shipyard.
4. Loss of Credibility
o Foreign suppliers lose trust in Malondesh.
o Military loses confidence that promised equipment will ever arrive.
😝😝😝😝😝😝😝😝😝
MALINDESH KOK GA DIAJAK SAMA JORDAN....🫢🫢🫢🫢
BalasHapusOALAHH NEGERA MISKIN CUKUP JADI JURU SORAK SAJA 🤣🤣🤣🤣
01. Salam bina Candi LCS MaharajaLele Mangkrak Karatan 14 tahun SALAH POTONG, seharga RM 12 Billion
BalasHapus02. Salam bina senapang Allien tembak tupai VITA lendir BERAPI
03. Salam KERAjaan BANGKRAP di gondoli Jho Law
04. Salam bina kereta kebal 8x8 GEMPITA tampel sticker tak boleh eksport
05. Salam bina tank ugly STRIDE bentuk KOTAK Turet impoten
06. Salam bina rudal antar Galaxy ugly TAMING SARI
07. Salam bina jet PTM GEN 6 hasil mimpi basah insinyur 5 top university
08. Salam bina drone ugly NYAMUK
09. Salam bina KERETA KIPAS TERBANG tampal Sticker dari Cina
10. Salam bina kereta PROTON tak laku di jual ke gelly cina
11. Salam Komando LETUPKAN wanita hamil
12. Salam komando TEWAS saat DEMO, tembak Komandan sendiri
13. Salam komando PINGSAN saat latihan berbaris
14. Salam Komando TEWAS dilempar GRANAT teman sendiri
15. Salam Komando tewas Saat BERENANG
16. Salam kapal selam SCORPANE tak boleh selam sebelum MRO
17. Salam LMS Ompong, plat tipis, lambat, setahun pakai radio rusak, dari CINA untuk lawan CINA
18. Salam kapal RUSAK oleh JARING nelayan NGUYEN
19. Salam kapal TONGKANG untuk kapal militer BUNGA MAS LIMA
20. Salam 7 Jet Tersikit dunia F18 hornet meletup JATUH guna parade aja tiada SOURCE CODE
21. Salam Su30MKM 18 Ekor hanya 4 yg boleh terbang
22. Salam Mig29 GROUNDED
23. Salam kilang AIRCROD Lembab MRO 1 pesawat butuh masa 3 tahun
24. Salam heli TELUR PUYUH MD530 KILANGnya Bangkrut
25. Salam engine jet HILANG di SONGLAP ke Uruguay
26. Salam ASKAR BERSARONG bangga jadi penjaga ISTANA british
27. Salam EJECT KAT HANGGAR world record 2 kali
28. Salam kapal militer Gagah Samudra kena sita MYBANK
29. Salam JUDI HALAL BERSYARIAH Gentting Highland daulat tuanku
30. Salam tak punya korps MARINIR,Kapal HOSPITAL,LPD,LST, Tank Amphibi dan SPH
31. Salam TANK PENDEKAR design WW II MOGOK tengah jalan
32. Salam HUTANG Rm 1.5 Trillion 84% PDB, Kumpul koin, Bayar hutang CINA pakai hutang JEPUN, gali LOBANG tutup LOBANG
33. Salam BELI pespur MB339 BARU TANPA ENGIN baru 12 tahun pakai sudah Grounded
34. Salam 88 bijik Jet Bekas GURUN A4 Skyhawk hilang setengah di parkiran GURUN
35. Salam BOMBER Cina dan 16 Pesawat Cina pusing - Pusing langit Sabah cuma kirim NOTA Protes
36. Salam CCG KEKAL 289 hari pertahun di betting Ali, CCG dan nelayan Cina sudah makan tidor berak sedot ikan sedot minyak buang tahi
37. Salam Komando tewas kena tembak SENAPAN ANGIN penyelundup Perlis
38. Salam TAMPAL STICKER Batik,Reog,Wayang,Rendang,Anklung,kuda lumping,Keris,pacu jalur,lagu rasa sayange,lagu halo halo bandung dan lagu terang bulan
39. Salam 9 APC Guardian di tolak PBB tiada RCWS hendak prank PBB dengan harga komplit RCWS
40. Salam dapat SEDEKAH Amerika Convert CN235 basic ke versi MSA Upgrade di PT DI
41. Salam UCAV drone DJI di tempel dua senapan M4 untuk menakuti Kelalawar
42. Salam di bully Singapure, bayar air murah, di ceroboh Jet dan Apache, di ambil batu puteh, bayar denda kereta Cepat, Su 30 MKM di usir dari singapure tiada SLOT
43. Salam dapat SEDEKAH Merdeka semu 999 tahun Tanah mesti sedia di tempati
44. Salam HMAV 4X4 TARANTULA SEWA, Tempel Sticker Hizir Turki
45. Salam RADAR IMPOTEN tak bisa kesan MH370
46. Salam satu satunya LST KD Sri Idrapura Terbakar tiada ganti
47. Salam pesawat intai ISRAEL kencing di langit Ibu negara tak takut di salvo Jernas Lapook
48. Salam TERJUN PAYUNG tersasar ke PASAR
49. Salam 4 kali ditolak NGEMIS hornet bekas RONGSOK Kuwait
50. Salam Eksportir kondom Unisex,Narkoba,Teroris,Togel,Maling ikan,Maling patok
51. Salam tak bayar SEWA Sabah, aset Petronas kena sita SULU
52. Salam GFP Rank 48 di bawah kaki Myanmar
53. Salam SEWA Merata untuk militer Heli AW139,Heli EC120 B,Kapal Hidrografi,Simulator heli,Boat FIB,Boat RHFB,Rover,Motosikal,ATV, Vellfire
54. Salam OPV Fatima berenang MIRING
55. Salam Rehull kapal USANG di Make Over PC ex KD Sundang, PC ex KD Panah
56. Salam PM ex Narapidana Korupsi dan ex Narapidana Sodomi
57. Salam tentara tanam SAYUR
58. Salam KD Ganas Kapal Peyot Tua Rongsok Ompong
01. Salam bina Candi LCS MaharajaLele Mangkrak Karatan 14 tahun SALAH POTONG, seharga RM 12 Billion
BalasHapus02. Salam bina senapang Allien tembak tupai VITA lendir BERAPI
03. Salam KERAjaan BANGKRAP di gondoli Jho Law
04. Salam bina kereta kebal 8x8 GEMPITA tampel sticker tak boleh eksport
05. Salam bina tank ugly STRIDE bentuk KOTAK Turet impoten
06. Salam bina rudal antar Galaxy ugly TAMING SARI
07. Salam bina jet PTM GEN 6 hasil mimpi basah insinyur 5 top university
08. Salam bina drone ugly NYAMUK
09. Salam bina KERETA KIPAS TERBANG tampal Sticker dari Cina
10. Salam bina kereta PROTON tak laku di jual ke gelly cina
11. Salam Komando LETUPKAN wanita hamil
12. Salam komando TEWAS saat DEMO, tembak Komandan sendiri
13. Salam komando PINGSAN saat latihan berbaris
14. Salam Komando TEWAS dilempar GRANAT teman sendiri
15. Salam Komando tewas Saat BERENANG
16. Salam kapal selam SCORPANE tak boleh selam sebelum MRO
17. Salam LMS Ompong, plat tipis, lambat, setahun pakai radio rusak, dari CINA untuk lawan CINA
18. Salam kapal RUSAK oleh JARING nelayan NGUYEN
19. Salam kapal TONGKANG untuk kapal militer BUNGA MAS LIMA
20. Salam 7 Jet Tersikit dunia F18 hornet meletup JATUH guna parade aja tiada SOURCE CODE
21. Salam Su30MKM 18 Ekor hanya 4 yg boleh terbang
22. Salam Mig29 GROUNDED
23. Salam kilang AIRCROD Lembab MRO 1 pesawat butuh masa 3 tahun
24. Salam heli TELUR PUYUH MD530 KILANGnya Bangkrut
25. Salam engine jet HILANG di SONGLAP ke Uruguay
26. Salam ASKAR BERSARONG bangga jadi penjaga ISTANA british
27. Salam EJECT KAT HANGGAR world record 2 kali
28. Salam kapal militer Gagah Samudra kena sita MYBANK
29. Salam JUDI HALAL BERSYARIAH Gentting Highland daulat tuanku
30. Salam tak punya korps MARINIR,Kapal HOSPITAL,LPD,LST, Tank Amphibi dan SPH
31. Salam TANK PENDEKAR design WW II MOGOK tengah jalan
32. Salam HUTANG Rm 1.5 Trillion 84% PDB, Kumpul koin, Bayar hutang CINA pakai hutang JEPUN, gali LOBANG tutup LOBANG
33. Salam BELI pespur MB339 BARU TANPA ENGIN baru 12 tahun pakai sudah Grounded
34. Salam 88 bijik Jet Bekas GURUN A4 Skyhawk hilang setengah di parkiran GURUN
35. Salam BOMBER Cina dan 16 Pesawat Cina pusing - Pusing langit Sabah cuma kirim NOTA Protes
36. Salam CCG KEKAL 289 hari pertahun di betting Ali, CCG dan nelayan Cina sudah makan tidor berak sedot ikan sedot minyak buang tahi
37. Salam Komando tewas kena tembak SENAPAN ANGIN penyelundup Perlis
38. Salam TAMPAL STICKER Batik,Reog,Wayang,Rendang,Anklung,kuda lumping,Keris,pacu jalur,lagu rasa sayange,lagu halo halo bandung dan lagu terang bulan
39. Salam 9 APC Guardian di tolak PBB tiada RCWS hendak prank PBB dengan harga komplit RCWS
40. Salam dapat SEDEKAH Amerika Convert CN235 basic ke versi MSA Upgrade di PT DI
41. Salam UCAV drone DJI di tempel dua senapan M4 untuk menakuti Kelalawar
42. Salam di bully Singapure, bayar air murah, di ceroboh Jet dan Apache, di ambil batu puteh, bayar denda kereta Cepat, Su 30 MKM di usir dari singapure tiada SLOT
43. Salam dapat SEDEKAH Merdeka semu 999 tahun Tanah mesti sedia di tempati
44. Salam HMAV 4X4 TARANTULA SEWA, Tempel Sticker Hizir Turki
45. Salam RADAR IMPOTEN tak bisa kesan MH370
46. Salam satu satunya LST KD Sri Idrapura Terbakar tiada ganti
47. Salam pesawat intai ISRAEL kencing di langit Ibu negara tak takut di salvo Jernas Lapook
48. Salam TERJUN PAYUNG tersasar ke PASAR
49. Salam 4 kali ditolak NGEMIS hornet bekas RONGSOK Kuwait
50. Salam Eksportir kondom Unisex,Narkoba,Teroris,Togel,Maling ikan,Maling patok
51. Salam tak bayar SEWA Sabah, aset Petronas kena sita SULU
52. Salam GFP Rank 48 di bawah kaki Myanmar
53. Salam SEWA Merata untuk militer Heli AW139,Heli EC120 B,Kapal Hidrografi,Simulator heli,Boat FIB,Boat RHFB,Rover,Motosikal,ATV, Vellfire
54. Salam OPV Fatima berenang MIRING
55. Salam Rehull kapal USANG di Make Over PC ex KD Sundang, PC ex KD Panah
56. Salam PM ex Narapidana Korupsi dan ex Narapidana Sodomi
57. Salam tentara tanam SAYUR
58. Salam KD Ganas Kapal Peyot Tua Rongsok Ompong
wuiihh jauh jugak maennya, skalian ngetes Blekhok, kaliaja marinir dapet jugak kelak haha!👍😉👍
BalasHapuskamo kita cuco pas pake rantis item, buser malem
Setelah iklim tropis Indonesia... sekarang berlatih di iklim gurun di Jordania....
BalasHapusBravo Korps MARINIR!!!
Lanjutkan!!!
Pejuang OPM pakai panah saja masih mampu buat KOMANDO INDIANESIA KUCAR KACIR DALAM HUTANG PAPUA... 🤣🤣🤣
BalasHapus🧱 1. Fragmented and Underdeveloped Defense Industry
Hapus• Malondesh defense industry is overseen by the Malondeshn Defence Industry Council (MDIC), established in 1999 and later expanded into MIDES.
• Despite having six strategic sectors (Aerospace, Maritime, Weaponry, Automotive, ICT, Common-user Equipment), the ecosystem lacks:
o A clear, enforceable blueprint
o Robust infrastructure
o Skilled manpower
• Many local firms are assemblers or subcontractors, not full-spectrum developers. For example, Malondesh still assembles M4 carbines under license, while Indonesia and Singapore produce their own rifles (SS1 and SAR-21 respectively).
Impact: Malondesh cannot independently design, produce, or sustain core military systems.
🧠 2. Minimal R&D and Technology Investment
• Indigenous R&D in areas like combat management systems (CMS), sensors, and autonomous platforms is nascent and underfunded.
• Studies show that Malondesh lacks structured tendering policies and technology readiness frameworks to support local innovation.
• AI, cyber warfare, and surveillance systems are still in early-stage development, with no operational deployment.
Impact: Malondesh falls behind in emerging tech domains critical to modern warfare.
🔄 3. Dependence on Foreign OEMs for Strategic Systems
• Malondesh imports nearly all major platforms:
o Aircraft: Su-30MKM (Russia), FA-50 (South Korea), Hawk (UK)
o Naval systems: Scorpène submarines (France), LCS (French-German design)
o Missiles: Starstreak (UK), MICA (France), Exocet (France)
• There are no indigenous missile programs, no local radar production, and no domestic armored vehicle design.
Impact: Strategic vulnerability in times of embargo, conflict, or supply chain disruption.
📉 4. Policy Gaps and Execution Failures
• Malondesh has published defense blueprints and industrial strategies, but implementation is weak due to:
o Budget constraints
o Lack of political continuity
o Limited private-sector incentives
• Even promising initiatives like the 15-to-5 naval transformation plan have stalled due to procurement scandals and delivery failures.
Impact: Indigenous capability remains aspirational, not operational.
📊 Summary Table: Weaknesses in Indigenous Capability Development
Dimension Description Strategic Impact
Industrial base Fragmented, lacks full-spectrum development No self-reliance in core systems
R&D investment Minimal funding, weak frameworks Falls behind in emerging technologies
Foreign dependency Imports all major platforms and weapons Vulnerable to external shocks
Policy execution Strong on paper, weak in practice Stalled programs and missed timelines
🧭 Strategic Consequences
• Malondesh cannot scale or sustain its military without foreign support.
• It lacks the ability to customize systems to local needs, export defense products, or build strategic depth.
• In contrast, countries like Indonesia (Pindad, PT PAL), Vietnam (Z111 Factory), and Singapore (ST Engineering) have made significant strides in indigenous capability
📄 1. Ambitious Policy Documents with Limited Follow-Through
Hapus• Malondesh’s first Defence White Paper (DWP), launched in 2019, laid out a 10-year roadmap for force modernization, defense industry reform, and multi-domain readiness.
• It proposed initiatives like:
o A revised National Military Strategy
o A Defence Capacity Plan
o A National Defence Industry Policy
• However, by 2021–2025, many of these remained in draft form or unimplemented, with only partial progress on cyber and air surveillance capabilities.
Impact: Strategic clarity exists, but execution lags, creating a credibility gap between policy and reality.
🕰️ 2. Stalled Programs and Missed Timelines
• The Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) program is the most glaring example:
o RM9 billion allocated for six ships
o None delivered as of 2025
o Delays linked to mismanagement, redacted audits, and political interference
• Other programs like the Ground-Based Air Defence (GBAD) system and High Mobility Armoured Vehicles (HMAV) remain unfunded or stuck in approval stages.
Impact: Operational capability suffers, and the military continues to rely on aging platforms.
🏛️ 3. Political Instability and Policy Discontinuity
• Malondesh experienced multiple changes in government between 2020 and 2022, disrupting defense planning cycles.
• Each administration brought new priorities, causing re-scoping, delays, or abandonment of existing programs.
• Even when policies are reaffirmed, bureaucratic inertia and fragmented oversight slow implementation.
Impact: Defense reform lacks continuity, and long-term planning is undermined.
🧱 4. Weak Institutional Mechanisms for Execution
• There’s no centralized authority to monitor and enforce defense policy implementation.
• Oversight is split between MINDEF, the Ministry of Finance, and political leadership, leading to diffused accountability.
• Audit findings are often delayed or redacted, and recommendations go unenforced.
Impact: Programs stall without consequence, and systemic inefficiencies persist.
📊 Summary Table: Why Policy Execution Is Weak
Problem Area Description Strategic Impact
Overambitious planning Policies exceed institutional capacity Unrealistic timelines, stalled delivery
Political volatility Frequent leadership changes disrupt continuity Re-scoping and abandonment of programs
Fragmented oversight No unified implementation body Poor accountability and follow-through
Audit suppression Delayed or redacted findings Mismanagement goes unchecked
🧭 Strategic Consequences
• Malondesh’s defense posture remains reactive and maintenance-heavy, not transformation-driven.
• The credibility of future policy documents is weakened unless backed by institutional reform and budget discipline.
• Regional peers like Indonesia and Vietnam are executing modernization plans more consistently, widening the capability gap.
📄 1. Ambitious Policy Documents with Limited Follow-Through
Hapus• Malondesh’s first Defence White Paper (DWP), launched in 2019, laid out a 10-year roadmap for force modernization, defense industry reform, and multi-domain readiness.
• It proposed initiatives like:
o A revised National Military Strategy
o A Defence Capacity Plan
o A National Defence Industry Policy
• However, by 2021–2025, many of these remained in draft form or unimplemented, with only partial progress on cyber and air surveillance capabilities.
Impact: Strategic clarity exists, but execution lags, creating a credibility gap between policy and reality.
🕰️ 2. Stalled Programs and Missed Timelines
• The Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) program is the most glaring example:
o RM9 billion allocated for six ships
o None delivered as of 2025
o Delays linked to mismanagement, redacted audits, and political interference
• Other programs like the Ground-Based Air Defence (GBAD) system and High Mobility Armoured Vehicles (HMAV) remain unfunded or stuck in approval stages.
Impact: Operational capability suffers, and the military continues to rely on aging platforms.
🏛️ 3. Political Instability and Policy Discontinuity
• Malondesh experienced multiple changes in government between 2020 and 2022, disrupting defense planning cycles.
• Each administration brought new priorities, causing re-scoping, delays, or abandonment of existing programs.
• Even when policies are reaffirmed, bureaucratic inertia and fragmented oversight slow implementation.
Impact: Defense reform lacks continuity, and long-term planning is undermined.
🧱 4. Weak Institutional Mechanisms for Execution
• There’s no centralized authority to monitor and enforce defense policy implementation.
• Oversight is split between MINDEF, the Ministry of Finance, and political leadership, leading to diffused accountability.
• Audit findings are often delayed or redacted, and recommendations go unenforced.
Impact: Programs stall without consequence, and systemic inefficiencies persist.
📊 Summary Table: Why Policy Execution Is Weak
Problem Area Description Strategic Impact
Overambitious planning Policies exceed institutional capacity Unrealistic timelines, stalled delivery
Political volatility Frequent leadership changes disrupt continuity Re-scoping and abandonment of programs
Fragmented oversight No unified implementation body Poor accountability and follow-through
Audit suppression Delayed or redacted findings Mismanagement goes unchecked
🧭 Strategic Consequences
• Malondesh’s defense posture remains reactive and maintenance-heavy, not transformation-driven.
• The credibility of future policy documents is weakened unless backed by institutional reform and budget discipline.
• Regional peers like Indonesia and Vietnam are executing modernization plans more consistently, widening the capability gap.
Tentara malon nembak anjing dan ayam di kampung kampung sulu serta ngebom pokok sawit..saking paniknya blum pernah perang🤣🤣🤣😁😁😁
HapusBIAR BUKTI BERBICARA.... KOMANDO INDIANESIA DIBANTAI SAMA PEJUANG OPM... 🤣🤣🤣
BalasHapusSesumbarnya KKB Bikin Kopassus Kocar Kacir di Hutan Papua: 6 Tewas, 9 Ditahan
https://www.harianhaluan.com/news/108500030/sesumbarnya-kkb-bikin-kopassus-kocar-kacir-di-hutan-papua-6-tewas-9-ditahan
🔧 1. MAINTENANCE BURDEN: AGING ASSETS, FRAGMENTED SUPPORT
Hapus⚙️ Structural Drivers
• Asset Age: As of late 2024, 171 military platforms across the Army, Navy, and Air Force have exceeded 30 years of service life. This includes:
o 108 Army vehicles and artillery systems
o 29 RMAF aircraft (e.g., F-5E, Hawk 208)
o 34 RMN vessels, including Fast Attack Craft over 40 years old
• Obsolescence: Many platforms are no longer supported by OEMs (Original Equipment Manufacturers), making spare parts scarce and costly.
💸 Economic Strain
• Maintenance consumes over 50% of the defense budget’s operational expenditure (OPEX), leaving limited room for modernization.
• Even with recent efforts to localize MRO (Maintenance, Repair, Overhaul) for fighter jets like the F/A-18, cost savings (~20%) are offset by the scale of aging fleets.
🧩 Outsourcing Challenges
• Malondesh has long outsourced support functions to private firms to reduce costs.
• However, lack of centralized oversight, inconsistent quality control, and limited technical depth in local vendors have led to delays and suboptimal readiness.
📡 2. Poor Interoperability: Platform Diversity, Command Silos
🛠️ Platform Fragmentation
• Malondesh military operates a highly diverse inventory sourced from:
o Western suppliers (US, UK, France)
o Eastern bloc (Russia, China)
o Regional partners (South Korea, Turkey)
• This results in incompatible communication systems, data links, and logistics chains. For example:
o Russian-made Su-30MKM fighters cannot seamlessly integrate with NATO-standard AWACS or datalink systems.
o Naval platforms lack unified combat management systems across classes.
🧠 Command & Control Gaps
• Joint operations are hindered by service-specific doctrines and siloed command structures.
• The absence of a Joint Operations Command with real-time data fusion limits Malondesh ability to conduct multi-domain operations.
🧪 Training & Simulation Deficiencies
• Lack of integrated simulation environments means personnel are trained on platform-specific systems, not joint mission profiles.
• Exercises like MALBATT and CARAT show progress, but interoperability remains tactical, not strategic.
📊 Summary Table: Maintenance vs. Interoperability Weaknesses
Dimension Maintenance Burden Poor Interoperability
Root Cause Aging assets, fragmented procurement Diverse suppliers, siloed doctrines
Budgetary Impact High OPEX, low modernization headroom Redundant systems, inefficient upgrades
Operational Impact Low readiness, frequent downtime Limited joint ops, weak situational awareness
Reform Challenges Weak vendor oversight, slow MRO localization No unified C4ISR architecture
MISKIN = OVERLIMITS DEBT
HapusGOVERNMENT 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 = 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): Malondesh'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
😝 😝 😝 😝 😝
📄 1. Ambitious Policy Documents with Limited Follow-Through
Hapus• Malondesh’s first Defence White Paper (DWP), launched in 2019, laid out a 10-year roadmap for force modernization, defense industry reform, and multi-domain readiness.
• It proposed initiatives like:
o A revised National Military Strategy
o A Defence Capacity Plan
o A National Defence Industry Policy
• However, by 2021–2025, many of these remained in draft form or unimplemented, with only partial progress on cyber and air surveillance capabilities.
Impact: Strategic clarity exists, but execution lags, creating a credibility gap between policy and reality.
🕰️ 2. Stalled Programs and Missed Timelines
• The Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) program is the most glaring example:
o RM9 billion allocated for six ships
o None delivered as of 2025
o Delays linked to mismanagement, redacted audits, and political interference
• Other programs like the Ground-Based Air Defence (GBAD) system and High Mobility Armoured Vehicles (HMAV) remain unfunded or stuck in approval stages.
Impact: Operational capability suffers, and the military continues to rely on aging platforms.
🏛️ 3. Political Instability and Policy Discontinuity
• Malondesh experienced multiple changes in government between 2020 and 2022, disrupting defense planning cycles.
• Each administration brought new priorities, causing re-scoping, delays, or abandonment of existing programs.
• Even when policies are reaffirmed, bureaucratic inertia and fragmented oversight slow implementation.
Impact: Defense reform lacks continuity, and long-term planning is undermined.
🧱 4. Weak Institutional Mechanisms for Execution
• There’s no centralized authority to monitor and enforce defense policy implementation.
• Oversight is split between MINDEF, the Ministry of Finance, and political leadership, leading to diffused accountability.
• Audit findings are often delayed or redacted, and recommendations go unenforced.
Impact: Programs stall without consequence, and systemic inefficiencies persist.
📊 Summary Table: Why Policy Execution Is Weak
Problem Area Description Strategic Impact
Overambitious planning Policies exceed institutional capacity Unrealistic timelines, stalled delivery
Political volatility Frequent leadership changes disrupt continuity Re-scoping and abandonment of programs
Fragmented oversight No unified implementation body Poor accountability and follow-through
Audit suppression Delayed or redacted findings Mismanagement goes unchecked
🧭 Strategic Consequences
• Malondesh’s defense posture remains reactive and maintenance-heavy, not transformation-driven.
• The credibility of future policy documents is weakened unless backed by institutional reform and budget discipline.
• Regional peers like Indonesia and Vietnam are executing modernization plans more consistently, widening the capability gap.
Tentara malon ngebom pokok sawit,nembak anjing dan ayam ayam di kampung kampung Sulu..Saking paniknya belum pernah perang🤣🤣🤣 Wajar klu ada gangguan dr Indonesia mereka langsung Ngadu sama papa charles😁😁😁🤪😜😝
HapusBIAR BUKTI BERBICARA.... KOMANDO INDIANESIA DIBANTAI SAMA PEJUANG OPM... 🤣🤣🤣
BalasHapusSesumbarnya KKB Bikin Kopassus Kocar Kacir di Hutan Papua: 6 Tewas, 9 Ditahan
https://www.harianhaluan.com/news/108500030/sesumbarnya-kkb-bikin-kopassus-kocar-kacir-di-hutan-papua-6-tewas-9-ditahan
📌 1. What Are Policy Flip-Flops?
HapusPolicy flip-flops in Malondesh defense mean:
• Frequent changes in plans, programs, and procurement priorities.
• Caused by government changes, minister reshuffles, or shifting political agendas.
• Leads to cancellations, re-tendering, or redesigning programs.
• Results in years of delays, wasted funds, and capability gaps.
________________________________________
📌 2. Drivers of Policy Flip-Flops
a. Frequent Political Changes
• Since 2018: Malondesh had 5 prime ministers in 7 years (Najib → Mahathir → Muhyiddin → Ismail Sabri → Anwar).
• Each PM/defense minister reviews and changes defense priorities.
• Example: The same program (fighter jets, navy ships) can be launched, paused, revived, or cancelled multiple times.
________________________________________
b. Short-Term Focus
• Politicians prioritize 5-year election cycles over 15–20 year defense modernization.
• Programs requiring long-term funding commitments (e.g., fighter jets, submarines, frigates) get disrupted.
________________________________________
c. Budget Pressures
• High national debt (69% of GDP in 2025).
• Defense is seen as “non-essential”, so big-ticket programs are often the first to be cut or postponed.
• Leads to repeated “defer until later” cycles.
________________________________________
d. Corruption & Scandals
• When scandals erupt (e.g., LCS RM9 billion scandal), programs face:
o Audits, suspensions, parliamentary probes.
o Restructuring or even outright cancellation.
• Creates uncertainty for ongoing and future procurement.
________________________________________
📌 3. Examples of Policy Flip-Flops
✈️ Fighter Jet Replacement (MRCA Program)
• 2007–2010: Plan to replace MiG-29 with new fighters.
• Candidates: Rafale, Typhoon, Gripen, Super Hornet, Su-35.
• 2015: Najib government delayed due to budget.
• 2018: Mahathir cancelled, shifted to cheaper LCA (Light Combat Aircraft).
• 2022: RMAF selected Korean FA-50 → but deliveries only from 2026.
⏳ Result: 20 years later, still no MRCA. MiG-29 retired with no replacement.
________________________________________
🚢 Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Program
• 2011: Najib government approved 6 ships (RM9 billion).
• 2018: PH government halted payments due to mismanagement.
• 2020: PN government restarted program with restructuring.
• 2023–2025: Still no ship delivered.
⏳ Result: Program flip-flopped between “go-ahead” and “pause”, now 14 years with 0 ships.
________________________________________
🚁 Helicopter Procurement
• Malaysia planned medium-lift helicopter replacements (Nuri).
• 2017: Nuri retired suddenly → capability gap.
• 2019: Mahathir’s government cancelled immediate purchase, shifted to leasing option.
• 2022: Army announced leasing 4 Black Hawks → contract collapsed due to disputes.
⏳ Result: Years without adequate helicopters.
________________________________________
🪖 Army Armored Vehicles
• 1980s Condor APCs still in use.
• AV-8 Gempita ordered (2011) → only 257 built, production ended.
• Plan for new wheeled APC → repeatedly delayed.
⏳ Result: Army still operates outdated vehicles because replacement kept shifting.
________________________________________
📌 4. Consequences of Policy Flip-Flops
1. Capability Gaps
o Air Force without MRCA fighters.
o Navy without new frigates.
o Army using outdated artillery and APCs.
2. Wasted Money
o Billions spent on projects that stall or fail (e.g., LCS, helicopter leasing).
3. Industry Instability
o Local companies cannot plan or invest because contracts keep shifting.
o Leads to failures like Boustead Naval Shipyard.
4. Loss of Credibility
o Foreign suppliers lose trust in Malondesh.
o Military loses confidence that promised equipment will ever arrive.
😝😝😝😝😝😝😝😝😝
💰 1. Budget Composition Skewed Toward Salaries and Maintenance
Hapus• In 2024, Malondesh allocated RM19.73 billion (~USD 4.16 billion) for defense.
o RM8.2 billion (~41.5%) went to salaries and allowances.
o RM5.8 billion was earmarked for maintenance and asset upkeep.
• That leaves less than RM6 billion for all other needs—including procurement, R&D, and infrastructure.
Impact: The lion’s share of the budget sustains personnel and legacy systems, leaving little for new combat capabilities.
📦 2. Procurement Budget Includes Legacy Payments
• The RM5.71 billion procurement allocation in 2024 isn’t entirely for new systems. It includes:
o Scheduled payments for previously signed contracts (e.g. FA-50 jets from South Korea, A400M upgrades).
o Progressive payments for delayed projects like the Maharaja Lela-class Littoral Combat Ships.
o Small-scale purchases (e.g. small arms, radios, support vehicles).
Impact: The actual discretionary funding for new combat platforms is far lower than it appears on paper.
📉 3. Currency Depreciation Erodes Purchasing Power
• Malondesh sources most of its advanced systems from foreign OEMs (e.g. France, UK, South Korea).
• The depreciation of the ringgit against major currencies means that even modest increases in nominal budget do not translate into real gains.
Impact: Malondesh pays more for the same equipment, reducing the volume and quality of new acquisitions.
🧱 4. No Multi-Year Strategic Investment Framework
• Unlike Singapore or South Korea, Malondesh lacks a ring-fenced capital investment stream for defense.
• Each year’s procurement is subject to political negotiation and fiscal trade-offs, with no guaranteed continuity.
• This discourages long-term programs like missile development, drone fleets, or integrated air defense systems.
Impact: Strategic programs are fragmented, delayed, or abandoned mid-cycle.
📊 Summary Table: Why Funding for New Combat Systems Is Thin
Factor Description Strategic Impact
Budget skew 60–70% spent on salaries and maintenance Minimal room for new acquisitions
Legacy obligations Procurement includes old contracts and delayed projects New systems get crowded out
Currency depreciation Ringgit weakens against USD/EUR Reduces real purchasing power
No strategic investment model No multi-year capital planning Limits continuity and ambition
💸 1. Budget Breakdown: Overweight on Operational Costs
Hapus• In 2024, Malondesh allocated RM19.73 billion (~USD 4.16 billion) for defense.
o Salaries and allowances alone accounted for RM8.2 billion (~41.5%).
o Maintenance and asset upkeep received RM5.8 billion in 2025.
• That leaves less than RM6 billion for all other needs—including procurement, R&D, infrastructure, and strategic programs.
Impact: The budget is heavily skewed toward sustaining the current force rather than building future capabilities.
🧱 2. Procurement Funding Is Thin and Fragmented
• The RM5.71 billion allocated for procurement in 2024 includes:
o Scheduled payments for existing contracts (e.g. FA-50 jets, A400M upgrades, LCS ships)
o Small-scale purchases like communication gear, vehicles, and small arms
• Due to ringgit depreciation and reliance on foreign suppliers, real purchasing power is eroded.
Impact: Malondesh struggles to fund new combat systems, let alone strategic platforms like missiles, drones, or ISR networks.
🧰 3. Maintenance of Aging Assets Is Costly and Inefficient
• Much of the RM5.8 billion maintenance budget goes to keeping legacy platforms operational, some over 30–40 years old.
• Example: The Navy’s Condor APCs and older patrol vessels require frequent repairs, yet offer limited tactical value.
Impact: High sunk costs in outdated systems reduce the ability to invest in transformative technologies.
🧠 4. No Dedicated Strategic Investment Stream
• Malondesh lacks a multi-year capital investment framework for defense.
• Unlike Singapore or South Korea, there’s no ring-fenced funding for:
o Missile development
o Cyber warfare
o Space-based surveillance
o Indigenous defense R&D
Impact: Strategic programs are ad hoc, underfunded, and vulnerable to political shifts.
📊 Summary Table: How Budget Crowds Out Combat Capability
Category Allocation (2024–2025) Strategic Impact
Salaries & Allowances RM8.2B (~41.5%) Limits flexibility for modernization
Maintenance & Upkeep RM5.8B Sustains aging platforms, not upgrades
Procurement (net new) RM5.71B (incl. legacy contracts) Thin funding for new combat systems
R&D / Strategic Programs Negligible No indigenous capability development
FAKTA BERBICARA ..... MALASIYA MINIM SHOPING AKIBAT UTANG KERAJAAN MENGGUNUNG .....
BalasHapus🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
NGERI UTANG MALON SANGAT MENGGUNUNG 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
BalasHapusSetiap penduduk MALON mempunyai UTANG rata2 RM 47.000
Setiap penduduk MALON dibebani UTANG KERAJAAN sekitar RM 37.000
NGERI ...
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Pada akhir kuartal pertama 2025 (Maret 2025), total utang rumah tangga Malaysia adalah RM 1,65 triliun atau setara 84,3% dari PDB, sedangkan utang pemerintah persekutuan mencapai RM 1,3 triliun pada akhir Juni 2025, naik dari RM 1,25 triliun pada akhir 2024. Utang pemerintah terhadap PDB diperkirakan akan mencapai 69% pada akhir 2025.
💰 1. Budget Composition: Operational vs Development
BalasHapus• In 2025, Malondesh allocated RM21.2 billion to the Ministry of Defence.
o Operational Expenditure (OPEX): RM13.36 billion (~63%) — covers salaries, pensions, allowances, and day-to-day operations.
o Development Expenditure (DE): RM7.49 billion (~37%) — intended for asset acquisition, infrastructure, and modernization.
Impact: The bulk of funding goes to sustaining the status quo, not building future capabilities.
👥 2. Personnel Costs Dominate Spending
• Salaries, pensions, and welfare programs for active-duty personnel and veterans consume over half of OPEX.
• Initiatives like RKAT housing repairs, pension adjustments, and cost-of-living allowances are important for morale but crowd out capital investment.
• Malondesh armed forces have a relatively large administrative footprint compared to its combat strength.
Impact: High fixed costs reduce flexibility for strategic procurement or force restructuring.
🔧 3. Maintenance Over Modernization
• RM5.8 billion in 2025 was earmarked for maintenance, repair, and acquisition of military assets.
• However, most of this goes to keeping aging platforms operational, not acquiring new ones.
• Example: The Royal Malondeshn Navy spends heavily on maintaining ships that are 30–40 years old, with minimal upgrades.
Impact: Funds are spent on patching legacy systems rather than leapfrogging to modern technologies.
📉 4. Low R&D and Capability Investment
• Malondesh allocates negligible funding to defense R&D, indigenous production, or strategic systems (e.g. missiles, cyber, ISR).
• Unlike peers such as Indonesia or Vietnam, Malondesh has no major co-development programs or defense industrial offsets.
Impact: Malondesh remains dependent on foreign suppliers and lacks autonomy in capability planning.
📊 Summary Table: Budget Allocation Weaknesses
Category Description Strategic Impact
Operational Expenditure RM13.36B for salaries, pensions, and operations Limits modernization and flexibility
Personnel Costs High welfare and admin spending Crowds out combat capability investment
Maintenance Focus RM5.8B for upkeep of aging assets Sustains outdated platforms
Low R&D Investment Minimal funding for innovation or strategic systems No indigenous capability development
Kenapa bisa beda jauh' ya seperti langit dan bumi padahal sama2 80tahun anniversary . Yg satu pamer' dong Feng, AI, pespur2 gen 5 dan 6, yg satu pamer' kerusuhan, Ojol dilindas, joget joget dan ngetololin rakyat sendiri
BalasHapusHahahaha gara2 masih gampang di beli ama organisasi kaya CIA.
HapusYang pertama nindasnya sudah beberapa tahun sebelumnya.😶
HapusAmbil yg terbaik dari mereka, jangan yg terburuk.😊
Memang ada 🇲🇾 Dongfeng, Pespur 5 dan 6 yg ada rongsok, jadul, miskin, cakap sembang, bodoh, penakut dan yg terakhir 🇲🇾BENALU.. 🤣🤣🤣😝😝😝😝
HapusNGERI UTANG MALON SANGAT MENGGUNUNG 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
BalasHapusSetiap penduduk MALON mempunyai UTANG rata2 RM 47.000
Setiap penduduk MALON dibebani UTANG KERAJAAN sekitar RM 37.000
NGERI ...
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Pada akhir kuartal pertama 2025 (Maret 2025), total utang rumah tangga Malaysia adalah RM 1,65 triliun atau setara 84,3% dari PDB, sedangkan utang pemerintah persekutuan mencapai RM 1,3 triliun pada akhir Juni 2025, naik dari RM 1,25 triliun pada akhir 2024. Utang pemerintah terhadap PDB diperkirakan akan mencapai 69% pada akhir 2025.
Ngeri..tentara malon ngebom pokok sawit,nembak anjing dan ayam2 di kampung2 Sulu...Ngeeerrriii..Saking paniknya tentara malon yg belum punya pengalaman perang..🤣🤣🤣..Wajar klu ada Gangguan dr 🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩 Mereka langsung Ngadu ke papa charles..katanya britis mo kirim kasel nuklir ke selat Malaka..walaupun GR( gede rasa)😁😁😁😝😜🤪
BalasHapusBIAR BUKTI BERBICARA.... KOMANDO INDIANESIA DIBANTAI SAMA PEJUANG OPM... 🤣🤣🤣
BalasHapusSesumbarnya KKB Bikin Kopassus Kocar Kacir di Hutan Papua: 6 Tewas, 9 Ditahan
https://www.harianhaluan.com/news/108500030/sesumbarnya-kkb-bikin-kopassus-kocar-kacir-di-hutan-papua-6-tewas-9-ditahan
📣 1. PROCUREMENT SCANDALS FUEL PUBLIC DISTRUST
HapusLittoral Combat Ship (LCS) Scandal
• The RM9 billion LCS project became a lightning rod for criticism when no ships were delivered despite billions spent.
• Media outlets and the Public Accounts Committee exposed mismanagement, cost overruns, and non-compliance, triggering public outrage and parliamentary scrutiny.
MD530G Helicopter Failure
• Malaysia paid RM112 million upfront for six helicopters that were never delivered on time.
• The media labeled it a “ghost fleet,” and citizens questioned the lack of accountability.
👑 2. Royal Intervention Amplifies Criticism
• King Sultan Ibrahim, also Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, publicly condemned the procurement of 35-year-old Black Hawk helicopters, calling them “flying coffins.”
• His rebuke—“If you don’t know the price, ask me first”—went viral, reinforcing public frustration over opaque and overpriced deals.
🕵️♂️ 3. Smuggling Conspiracy Exposes Internal Corruption
• In Operation Sohor (2025), MACC arrested military intelligence officers for leaking classified data to smugglers.
• Media reports revealed the syndicate earned RM5 million monthly, with officers receiving RM30,000–RM50,000 per trip.
• The scandal was widely covered, with headlines like “Civil Service Corruption Crisis” and “Where is Akmal Saleh?” fueling public anger.
🧑⚖️ 4. Abuse Cases at Military Institutions
• A 2024 bullying case at Universiti Pertahanan Nasional Malaysia (UPNM) reignited outrage when a cadet suffered multiple fractures after being stomped by a senior.
• Media coverage highlighted a pattern of hazing and abuse, prompting demands for institutional reform and stricter oversight.
📱 5. Social Media & Grassroots Pressure
• Platforms like Twitter and TikTok have become battlegrounds for public discourse, with hashtags like #ReformATM and #MilitaryTransparency trending during major scandals.
• Independent media and citizen journalists have played a key role in exposing misconduct, bypassing traditional gatekeepers.
🛠️ Impact on Policy & Reform
• The backlash has led to:
o Cancellation of controversial deals
o Promises of procurement reform
o Greater scrutiny of defense budgets and contractor relationships
• However, many Malaysians remain skeptical, citing deep-rooted patronage networks and slow institutional change
💸 1. LONG-TERM FINANCIAL BURDEN
Hapus• Malaysia’s RM16.5 billion lease for 28 helicopters over 15 years may cost more than outright purchase.
• For comparison, Poland bought 32 AW149 helicopters for US$1.83 billion, while Malaysia is leasing fewer units for nearly double the price.
• Critics argue that bundled services (maintenance, training, insurance) inflate the cost, creating a hidden financial strain over time.
🛠️ 2. Limited Control Over Assets
• Leased helicopters are not fully owned until the end of the contract.
• This restricts Malaysia’s ability to:
o Upgrade systems
o Reconfigure for new missions
o Integrate with other platforms
• Strategic flexibility is compromised, especially in emergencies or regional conflicts.
🧭 3. Missed Opportunity for Local Industry Growth
• Leasing bypasses local manufacturing, assembly, and maintenance, which could have boosted Malaysia’s defense industry.
• No significant technology transfer or job creation occurs under private leasing arrangements.
• This weakens Malaysia’s long-term goal of defense self-reliance.
🕵️♂️ 4. Procurement Transparency Risks
• The deal was awarded to Weststar Aviation, a private firm, raising concerns about middlemen and lobbying.
• Past scandals (e.g., LCS and MD530G) have made the public wary of opaque procurement processes.
• Leasing may reduce upfront corruption risks, but it doesn’t eliminate contractual opacity.
⚠️ 5. Strategic Dependency
• Malaysia becomes dependent on private contractors for asset readiness and maintenance.
• If the contractor fails to meet service-level agreements (e.g., 85% fleet availability), national security could be compromised.
• Legal or financial disputes could delay operations or ground critical assets.
🗣️ Political & Public Backlash
• Opposition leaders and defense experts have criticized the lease as overpriced and strategically flawed.
• The government defends it as a way to avoid upfront costs and ensure faster deployment, but the debate continues in Parliament and among analysts3
💸 1. POTENTIALLY HIGHER LONG-TERM COSTS
Hapus• Critics argue that leasing may cost more than outright purchase over time.
• For example, Poland purchased 32 AW149 helicopters for US$1.83 billion, while Malaysia is leasing 28 helicopters for RM16.5 billion (~US$3.5 billion) over 15 years.
• Leasing includes bundled services (maintenance, training, insurance), but the total cost may exceed the value of the helicopters themselves.
🕵️♂️ 2. Transparency & Procurement Concerns
• The deal was signed with Weststar Aviation, a private firm owned by a prominent businessman, raising questions about middlemen and lobbying.
• Past scandals in Malaysia’s defense procurement—like the LCS and MD530G helicopter failures—have made the public wary of opaque contracts and lack of competitive bidding.
🛠️ 3. Limited Sovereignty Over Assets
• Leased helicopters are not fully owned until the end of the contract, which may limit:
o Upgrades or modifications
o Deployment flexibility
o Integration with other military systems
• This could hinder Malaysia’s ability to adapt the fleet to evolving threats or mission needs.
🧭 4. Missed Opportunity for Local Industry Growth
• Purchasing helicopters could have supported local assembly, maintenance, and technology transfer, boosting Malaysia’s defense industry.
• Leasing centralizes operations under a private provider, reducing opportunities for domestic capability development.
⚠️ 5. Risk of Contractual Disputes or Service Interruptions
• If the leasing company fails to meet service-level agreements (e.g., 85% fleet availability), Malaysia may face operational gaps.
• Legal or financial disputes could delay missions or compromise national security.
🗣️ Public & Political Backlash
• Opposition leaders and defense experts have called the deal overpriced and strategically flawed, urging a review of procurement practices.
• The Prime Minister defended the lease as a way to avoid maintenance burdens, but critics say it reflects short-term budgeting over long-term planning.
MISKIN = OVERLIMITS DEBT
HapusGOVERNMENT 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 = 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): Malondesh'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
😝 😝 😝 😝 😝
Emejing,,wow,,latihan pasukan marinir sampai ke Jordania,,,selamat dan sukses selalu buat Tontaifib dan TNI AL,,Jaya 3X! 😎
BalasHapushttps://youtu.be/ewltNbGsKf0?si=Vs0ArzFGKNnTUhOD
BalasHapus18 TERORIS OPM Papua ditembak MATI oleh TNI
Bravo Satgas HABEMA!
https://youtu.be/xxizzicJC0g?si=7hJdJg4UqJmFz8YZ
BalasHapus3 TERORIS OPM PAPUA ditembak MATI oleh TNI
Bravo TNI!!!
https://youtu.be/W8071kSv4vI?si=MuiYSmCD2ohjbpPy
BalasHapusWakil Panglima TERORIS OPM PAPUA ditembak MATI oleh TNI
BRAVO TNI!!!
https://youtu.be/GZlUyKDrN6U?si=slhaJemfgriCDsR3
BalasHapusKomandan Teroris OPM PAPUA ditembak MATI oleh TNI
Bravo TNI !!!!
https://youtube.com/shorts/UsmL8xuflFk?si=5RKwv97NJfZjRH2q
BalasHapusTokoh Teroris OPM PAPUA ditembak MATI oleh TNI
Bravo TNI !!!
https://youtu.be/jKFVEV7M2jQ?si=vOSFKQUpZTYW5sod
BalasHapus5 orang Teroris OPM PAPUA ditembak MATI oleh Satgas Cartenz
Bravo Satgas Cartenz !!!
https://youtu.be/rrgqLTVcJ8M?si=MrGDboWdeS9Q4k2j
BalasHapus4 orang Teroris OPM PAPUA ditembak MATI oleh Satgas Cartenz
Bravo Satgas Cartenz!!!
https://youtu.be/Hl1rd61A7mU?si=8Zz4-aE7Fz-pNyR9
BalasHapus2 orang Teroris OPM PAPUA ditembak MATI oleh TNI
Bravo TNI !!!!
https://youtu.be/xCy8cjuUocc?si=JigEy2pFWrDkGVwG
BalasHapus3 orang Teroris OPM PAPUA ditembak MATI oleh TNI
Bravo TNI !!!
https://youtu.be/Jr3Js43rl5A?si=flrRKI9y-wM2b_9y
BalasHapusJakarta aman dan Kondusif
3.335 personel TNI melakukan Patroli Skala Besar TANPA BATAS WAKTU di Jakarta untuk menjaga kepentingan nasional dan keamanan rakyat
01. Salam bina Candi LCS MaharajaLele Mangkrak Karatan 14 tahun SALAH POTONG, seharga RM 12 Billion
BalasHapus02. Salam bina senapang Allien tembak tupai VITA lendir BERAPI
03. Salam KERAjaan BANGKRAP di gondoli Jho Law
04. Salam bina kereta kebal 8x8 GEMPITA tampel sticker tak boleh eksport
05. Salam bina tank ugly STRIDE bentuk KOTAK Turet impoten
06. Salam bina rudal antar Galaxy ugly TAMING SARI
07. Salam bina jet PTM GEN 6 hasil mimpi basah insinyur 5 top university
08. Salam bina drone ugly NYAMUK
09. Salam bina KERETA KIPAS TERBANG tampal Sticker dari Cina
10. Salam bina kereta PROTON tak laku di jual ke gelly cina
11. Salam Komando LETUPKAN wanita hamil
12. Salam komando TEWAS saat DEMO, tembak Komandan sendiri
13. Salam komando PINGSAN saat latihan berbaris
14. Salam Komando TEWAS dilempar GRANAT teman sendiri
15. Salam Komando tewas Saat BERENANG
16. Salam kapal selam SCORPANE tak boleh selam sebelum MRO
17. Salam LMS Ompong, plat tipis, lambat, setahun pakai radio rusak, dari CINA untuk lawan CINA
18. Salam kapal RUSAK oleh JARING nelayan NGUYEN
19. Salam kapal TONGKANG untuk kapal militer BUNGA MAS LIMA
20. Salam 7 Jet Tersikit dunia F18 hornet meletup JATUH guna parade aja tiada SOURCE CODE
21. Salam Su30MKM 18 Ekor hanya 4 yg boleh terbang
22. Salam Mig29 GROUNDED
23. Salam kilang AIRCROD Lembab MRO 1 pesawat butuh masa 3 tahun
24. Salam heli TELUR PUYUH MD530 KILANGnya Bangkrut
25. Salam engine jet HILANG di SONGLAP ke Uruguay
26. Salam ASKAR BERSARONG bangga jadi penjaga ISTANA british
27. Salam EJECT KAT HANGGAR world record 2 kali
28. Salam kapal militer Gagah Samudra kena sita MYBANK
29. Salam JUDI HALAL BERSYARIAH Gentting Highland daulat tuanku
30. Salam tak punya korps MARINIR,Kapal HOSPITAL,LPD,LST, Tank Amphibi dan SPH
31. Salam TANK PENDEKAR design WW II MOGOK tengah jalan
32. Salam HUTANG Rm 1.5 Trillion 84% PDB, Kumpul koin, Bayar hutang CINA pakai hutang JEPUN, gali LOBANG tutup LOBANG
33. Salam BELI pespur MB339 BARU TANPA ENGIN baru 12 tahun pakai sudah Grounded
34. Salam 88 bijik Jet Bekas GURUN A4 Skyhawk hilang setengah di parkiran GURUN
35. Salam BOMBER Cina dan 16 Pesawat Cina pusing - Pusing langit Sabah cuma kirim NOTA Protes
36. Salam CCG KEKAL 289 hari pertahun di betting Ali, CCG dan nelayan Cina sudah makan tidor berak sedot ikan sedot minyak buang tahi
37. Salam Komando tewas kena tembak SENAPAN ANGIN penyelundup Perlis
38. Salam TAMPAL STICKER Batik,Reog,Wayang,Rendang,Anklung,kuda lumping,Keris,pacu jalur,lagu rasa sayange,lagu halo halo bandung dan lagu terang bulan
39. Salam 9 APC Guardian di tolak PBB tiada RCWS hendak prank PBB dengan harga komplit RCWS
40. Salam dapat SEDEKAH Amerika Convert CN235 basic ke versi MSA Upgrade di PT DI
41. Salam UCAV drone DJI di tempel dua senapan M4 untuk menakuti Kelalawar
42. Salam di bully Singapure, bayar air murah, di ceroboh Jet dan Apache, di ambil batu puteh, bayar denda kereta Cepat, Su 30 MKM di usir dari singapure tiada SLOT
43. Salam dapat SEDEKAH Merdeka semu 999 tahun Tanah mesti sedia di tempati
44. Salam HMAV 4X4 TARANTULA SEWA, Tempel Sticker Hizir Turki
45. Salam RADAR IMPOTEN tak bisa kesan MH370
46. Salam satu satunya LST KD Sri Idrapura Terbakar tiada ganti
47. Salam pesawat intai ISRAEL kencing di langit Ibu negara tak takut di salvo Jernas Lapook
48. Salam TERJUN PAYUNG tersasar ke PASAR
49. Salam 4 kali ditolak NGEMIS hornet bekas RONGSOK Kuwait
50. Salam Eksportir kondom Unisex,Narkoba,Teroris,Togel,Maling ikan,Maling patok
51. Salam tak bayar SEWA Sabah, aset Petronas kena sita SULU
52. Salam GFP Rank 48 di bawah kaki Myanmar
53. Salam SEWA Merata untuk militer Heli AW139,Heli EC120 B,Kapal Hidrografi,Simulator heli,Boat FIB,Boat RHFB,Rover,Motosikal,ATV, Vellfire
54. Salam OPV Fatima berenang MIRING
55. Salam Rehull kapal USANG di Make Over PC ex KD Sundang, PC ex KD Panah
56. Salam PM ex Narapidana Korupsi dan ex Narapidana Sodomi
57. Salam tentara tanam SAYUR
58. Salam KD Ganas Kapal Peyot Tua Rongsok Ompong