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FINMECCANICA
AgustaWestland sbarca in Cina. La società di Finmeccanica leader mondiale nel settore elicotteristico ha firmato con la cinese Jiangxi Changhe Aviation Industries Company un accordo per la costituzione di una joint-venture per la produzione in Cina dell'elicottero biturbina leggero A109 Power (nella foto la versione utilizzata dalla guardia costiera americana)


http://www.corriere.it/edicola/index.jsp?path=ECONOMIA&doc=FONOTI

La Germania riduce le basi militari

Berlin. Defense Minister Peter Struck of Germany said Tuesday he intended to close 105 of the country's military bases as part of a strategy designed to modernize the armed forces and prepare them for the 21st century.
Struck said the closings and reductions would take effect by 2010, leaving the German Army "fitter" and more capable of dealing with new challenges and threats.
The move, however, comes at a difficult time for Struck, who is being urged by Finance Minister Hans Eichel to find ways to trim the defense budget. From another flank, Struck is under pressure from NATO and the European Union to increase defense expenditures, especially on new military equipment.
Struck said the closings could save €200 million, while the sale of land once the army leaves could lead to more savings, although it is unlikely any money earned from such sales would be allocated to the Defense Ministry.
The reduction in number of garrisons, from a total of 496, will affect almost all of the 16 German states and lead to between 10 and 1,000 job losses. The armed forces will be reduced from 285,000 to 250,000 and the number of civilian posts will be sharply reduced as well. The number of brigades will be slashed from 22 to 12.
"This is not an easy decision for me," Struck said at a news conference. But he insisted it was necessary to make a final break with the era of the Cold War. During that time, Germany, like other countries belonging to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, maintained large and inflexible armies trained for territorial defense that could withstand a conventional attack from the Soviet-dominated Warsaw Pact military alliance.
The announcement, however, is a double blow for some German communities, especially those where U.S troops have been based over the past five decades. The Pentagon has said it intends to sharply cut back the number of its troops stationed in Germany and close several bases as part of its own restructuring plans. Struck said the final details of those reductions would be made next summer. "We are having consultations with our U.S. counterparts," he said.
Despite this, the restructuring of Germany's armed forces may go some way toward reassuring its NATO and European Union allies that Berlin is taking military reform seriously even though Struck has constantly battled with the Finance Ministry for more money. Struck's defense budget for last year amounted to 1.4 percent of gross domestic product compared with France's 2.4 percent and Britain's 2.6 percent.
Germany, too, has long been criticized by its allies for being too slow in introducing reforms and spending on military equipment and hardware in a way that could make its army more flexible, agile and capable of carrying out high-intensity combat missions.
Germany did not, for instance, have sufficient heavy air transport carriers when it wanted to send its troops to Afghanistan in 2003.
Instead, the troops had to be sent part of the way by train.
Yet German defense analysts said that unlike with its NATO allies, Germany's Defense Ministry inherited special problems when the Berlin Wall collapsed 15 years ago. After 1990, when the two Germanies were united, the government had to find ways to deal with the 175,000-strong army from the former East Germany, which swelled the armed forces of the united Germany to over 500,000.
Instead of moving away from territorial defense, the Defense Ministry spent the first half of the 1990s reducing those forces, finally bringing the number down to today's figure of 285,000.
It also spent much time closing giant garrisons in eastern Germany in addition to cleaning up the hazardous waste left by the 350,000 Russian soldiers who left Germany in 1994.
Furthermore, as NATO countries called on Germany to start playing a role in international peacekeeping missions during the Balkans wars of the 1990s, German politicians were inhibited from doing so because of the legacy of World War II combined with a deeply ingrained pacifism, particularly by the Greens and the Social Democrats.
Both parties feared a greater role by its armed forces would lead to accusations that Germany was reverting to militarism.
Paradoxically, since the late 1990s, Germany's armed forces have begun to play a prominent role in peacekeeping missions under the leftist coalition headed by Gerhard Schröder's Social Democrats in coalition with the Greens led by Joschka Fischer, who forced the Greens to change their attitude toward peacekeeping missions.
Germany now has 10,000 soldiers deployed in the Balkans, the Horn of Africa and Afghanistan.
Struck said the reforms would also focus on having more soldiers for international peacekeeping missions.
The plan is to have 35,000 highly trained soldiers for specialized and combat missions and a further 70,000 troops for long-term peacekeeping missions. The remainder would be used for civil defense.
In the meantime, however, conscription will continue, although its future is slowly being made an issue as Germany gradually moves toward creating a professional, standing army.


http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/11/02/news/berlin.html