Skyway escreveu:Ou seja, estão tentando fazer de um AT-6 um Super Tucano.
Sinto muito por eles...pode até chegar perto, mas Super Tucano é Super Tucano...
O problemas das cópias é que sempre estão alguns passos atrás.Viva o ST.
Moderadores: Glauber Prestes, Conselho de Moderação
Skyway escreveu:Ou seja, estão tentando fazer de um AT-6 um Super Tucano.
Sinto muito por eles...pode até chegar perto, mas Super Tucano é Super Tucano...
Eu li isso em um sitePablo Maica escreveu:A força aérea da Indonesia parece que ja tinha recebido sinal verde pra comprar o ST.
Um abraço e t+
Pra isso eles usam aviões agricolas, e adivinha de onde são as empresas contratadas para este serviço.Túlio escreveu:Issaê: CHUMBO NOS NARCOS!!!
Mas creio que ficaria melhor ainda se adaptassem uns tanques nos STs para dispersarem algum agente que matasse os pés de coca, deve existir algo assim...
O problema é q não mata só pé de coca...Túlio escreveu:Issaê: CHUMBO NOS NARCOS!!!
Mas creio que ficaria melhor ainda se adaptassem uns tanques nos STs para dispersarem algum agente que matasse os pés de coca, deve existir algo assim...
CONFIRMADO!POSITIVO E OPERANTE!Divino Alves escreveu:Colombia Kills at Least 27 FARC Rebels as Santos Steps Up Fight
September 20, 2010, 3:37 PM EDT
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-0 ... fight.html
Sept. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Colombia’s armed forces killed at least 27 rebels and their leader in a late-night air raid yesterday that President Juan Manuel Santos said underscored his commitment to keeping up pressure on drug-funded armed groups.
The attack on the rebel base in southern Putumayo province killed Sixto Cabana, a commander of the 48th Front of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, who is wanted by the U.S. on drug trafficking charges, Defense Minister Rodrigo Rivera said. After the air raid, police and army troopers seized the base and found arms, radios and laptop computers.
“This is a demonstration of how we are going to react to the FARC,” Santos said in a statement posted on the president’s website, using the group’s Spanish acronym.
The FARC death toll could be much higher since estimates provided by military intelligence indicated that the camp housed 60 rebels, Admiral Edgar Cely, commander of Colombia’s military forces, said in a Caracol Radio interview. Since 2003, more than 700 rebels from the 48th Front have been killed in combat, Cely said.
The raid, called “Operation Strength Two” employed nine Black Hawk helicopters, and three Super Tucano aircraft, daily El Tiempo reported. The airplanes are manufactured by Sao Jose dos Campos, Brazil-based Empresa Brasileira de Aeronautica SA.
Air force helicopters patrolled the border to prevent surviving rebels from escaping the less than 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) into Ecuador. Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa pledged to secure the border.
Thanking Correa
“This is the way we will be much more effective in the border zones,” said Santos, who promised to call and thank Correa.
Cabana, known by his alias as Domingo Biojo, is part of the political wing of the FARC and head of the rebel unit that earlier this month entered the urban area of San Miguel, a town on the border with Ecuador, and ambushed and killed eight police officials. FARC attacks have left as many as 40 military and police dead this month.
Santos, who took office Aug. 7, pledged during his presidential campaign to continue efforts by former President Alvaro Uribe to end almost 50 years of FARC violence.
“We have these recent attacks by the FARC and the hard liners start questioning Santos’ ability to maintain the security,” said Felipe Botero, a political science professor at Bogota’s Universidad de los Andes. “Whether the military attacks on guerrilla camps this weekend was a direct response to that pressure is unclear. It certainly helps to show that the government is not a push-over.”
--Editors: Robert Jameson, Brendan Walsh
To contact the reporter on this story: Helen Murphy in Bogota at Hmurphy1@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Joshua Goodman at jgoodman19@bloomberg.net