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The Multi-role Maritime Fighter concept

Click on photo for a slide show
presentation
Not many military fighter
aircraft have been designed specifically for "other-than-war" operations.
Certainly, no fighter prior to the MRMF (Multi-role Maritime Fighter) has
been designed to function as an anti-submarine aircraft.
Using specially designed
torpedoes to surface hostile submarines without destroying them, the MRMF
can hunt down rogue subs that harass shipping and offshore oil drilling
operations.
With international shipping
often being held hostage to modern day pirates, the MRMF is designed to rapidly
respond to maritime distress calls, providing security and law enforcement
on the seas. In conjunction with the USMC V-22 Osprey aircraft, the
MRMF can hunt down (and hold at bay) both surface and submerged rogue vessels
that prey upon shipping and offshore oil operations worldwide.

Click on photo for more views of
the V-22
The MRMF comes in four
configurations that include attack, high altitude reconnaissance, unmanned
air vehicle and anti-sub operations. |
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Iran test new maritime wonder weapon
TEHRAN, IranIran announced Monday that it has tested
a new weapon capable of sinking ships nearly 200 miles away, and reiterated
threats to close a strategic waterway at the mouth of the Persian Gulf if
attacked.
Up to 40 percent of the world's oil
passes through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow passage along Iran's southern
coast. Tehran has warned it could shut down tanker traffic there if
attackeda move likely to send oil prices skyrocketing.
The warnings came two days after
a deadline expired for Iran to respond to incentives from six world powers,
offered in exchange for a promise to curb its uranium enrichment.
Later Monday, the U.S. State Department
said the groupthe five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council,
plus Germanyagreed to pursue further sanctions against Iran because
of its failure to meet the Saturday deadline.
Iran and the West have been mired
in a standoff over the country's disputed nuclear program. The United Nations
has already slapped Iran with three rounds of sanctions, over its refusal
to stop enriching uraniuma key process that generates either fuel for
a nuclear reactor, or the fissile material for a bomb.
Iran says its nuclear program is
for peaceful purposes only, to generate electricity.
Revolutionary Guards commander Gen.
Mohammad Ali Jafari said Monday that the new marine weapon is "unique in
the world" and has a range of 300 kilometers (186 miles), according to the
state news agency IRNA.
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That's within range of U.S.
warships deployed in the Persian Gulf. Last month, Iran tested missiles it
claimed were capable of reaching 1,250 miles (2,000 kilometers)
awayputting U.S military bases in the Middle East as well as Israel,
Turkey, the Arabian peninsula, Afghanistan and Pakistan all within striking
distance.
Monday's report gave no details on when or where the new weapon was
tested. Its range indicates it could be a type of torpedo, but state radio
called it a missile.
Jafari warned Iran would respond
decisively if any military strike is carried out against it.
"Enemies know that we are easily
able to block the Strait of Hormuz for an unlimited period," he was quoted
by state radio as saying. "The strait and vessels are in range of our various
weapons."
Both the U.S. and Israelwhich
shares American concerns over Iran's nuclear programhave said they
would prefer a diplomatic solution to the standoff with Iran, but have not
ruled out other optionsincluding a military one.
Israeli analyst Ephraim Kam, a former
senior intelligence officer, dismissed the new weapons test.
"They are always boasting about their
weapons and their military capabilities and saying how unique they are, but
they are usually just standard military weapons," he said. |
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