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Post Info TOPIC: when does Laos buy the army boat on Mekong river?
Anonymous

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when does Laos buy the army boat on Mekong river?
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when does Laos buy the army boat on Mekong river? it's very important to protect our river and Land, does laos has any army boats use on Mekong river like thailand navy?


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7325_104985_on_the_mekong_river_0.jpg

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Anonymous

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No need.no

We had already beaten thai even without gunship more than a few times lately.biggrin


What we need is more Jobs and good career for people.

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Anonymous

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I don't think it's the right time to buy it now. Thailand also look after the river for us and check the drug dealer for us as well. And I don't think Thai people will swim cross Mekong river to Lao to find some job here as well. Right?



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Anonymous

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Anonymous wrote:

I don't think it's the right time to buy it now. Thailand also look after the river for us and check the drug dealer for us as well. And I don't think Thai people will swim cross Mekong river to Lao to find some job here as well. Right?



we don't need Army Boad , we have our Soviet and Chinese made tanks that can accross the river, but we give them secret.Oop don't tell anybody

 



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Anonymous

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Anonymous wrote:

Anonymous wrote:

I don't think it's the right time to buy it now. Thailand also look after the river for us and check the drug dealer for us as well. And I don't think Thai people will swim cross Mekong river to Lao to find some job here as well. Right?



we don't need Army Boad , we have our Soviet and Chinese made tanks that can accross the river, but we give them secret.Oop don't tell anybody

 



No need airbus, no need boat,no need weapons, and  ..... just Vigo Hilux free tax import from thailand right??

 



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Why did you use a picture of a Chinese boat to represent Thailand, and a random civilian fishing boat to represent Laos? It is very misleading. However, decent boats don't cost that much and I'm sure Laos has a somewhat adequate river patrol.

- In 1975 the Lao People's Navy (LPN) was established with the remnants of the Royal Lao Navy. Composed of approximately twenty United States-made river patrol boats and sixteen amphibious landing craft, the navy in mid-1994 had a personnel strength of around 500. As with the air force, Vietnamese advisers helped organize the LPN and trained Laotian cadre in river operations and boat maintenance. The force is responsible for maintaining the security of inland waterways, which includes controlling the movement of resistance forces from their sanctuaries in Thailand, across the Mekong River. In the early 1980s, the navy received six used Soviet Shmel patrol boats and at least twelve more river patrol boats, bringing its total inventory to around thirtyone patrol boats. By mid-1994, the navy had a total of fewer than fifty river patrol boats and continued to provide a marginal level of security for inland waterways.

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Anonymous

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DEATHEP wrote:

Why did you use a picture of a Chinese boat to represent Thailand, and a random civilian fishing boat to represent Laos? It is very misleading. However, decent boats don't cost that much and I'm sure Laos has a somewhat adequate river patrol.

- In 1975 the Lao People's Navy (LPN) was established with the remnants of the Royal Lao Navy. Composed of approximately twenty United States-made river patrol boats and sixteen amphibious landing craft, the navy in mid-1994 had a personnel strength of around 500. As with the air force, Vietnamese advisers helped organize the LPN and trained Laotian cadre in river operations and boat maintenance. The force is responsible for maintaining the security of inland waterways, which includes controlling the movement of resistance forces from their sanctuaries in Thailand, across the Mekong River. In the early 1980s, the navy received six used Soviet Shmel patrol boats and at least twelve more river patrol boats, bringing its total inventory to around thirtyone patrol boats. By mid-1994, the navy had a total of fewer than fifty river patrol boats and continued to provide a marginal level of security for inland waterways.



          Sure it is good for the drug smugglers. Fishing baot is good enough so the police  that they will never catch the drug smugglers .

 



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Anonymous

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Anonymous wrote:

DEATHEP wrote:

Why did you use a picture of a Chinese boat to represent Thailand, and a random civilian fishing boat to represent Laos? It is very misleading. However, decent boats don't cost that much and I'm sure Laos has a somewhat adequate river patrol.

- In 1975 the Lao People's Navy (LPN) was established with the remnants of the Royal Lao Navy. Composed of approximately twenty United States-made river patrol boats and sixteen amphibious landing craft, the navy in mid-1994 had a personnel strength of around 500. As with the air force, Vietnamese advisers helped organize the LPN and trained Laotian cadre in river operations and boat maintenance. The force is responsible for maintaining the security of inland waterways, which includes controlling the movement of resistance forces from their sanctuaries in Thailand, across the Mekong River. In the early 1980s, the navy received six used Soviet Shmel patrol boats and at least twelve more river patrol boats, bringing its total inventory to around thirtyone patrol boats. By mid-1994, the navy had a total of fewer than fifty river patrol boats and continued to provide a marginal level of security for inland waterways.



          Sure it is good for the drug smugglers. Fishing baot is good enough so the police  that they will never catch the drug smugglers .

 




 as far as i know those boats are broken and has not been repaired, the LPV just sold it as trash. now no boats.

 



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Anonymous

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Anonymous wrote:

 

DEATHEP wrote:

Why did you use a picture of a Chinese boat to represent Thailand, and a random civilian fishing boat to represent Laos? It is very misleading.

................................................................

If someone didnt put the photo you say, come on show the photo with topic ? and if someone put the photo and not related to the topic, you also said what the hell is it misleading? have you seen on othere topics that someone put the photos which wasn't related to topic, sometime, somebody here just too stupid and always complian about everything, Kou la bua



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Anonymous

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3711864780_befbd1da52.jpg?v=0
Thai boat on Mekong river

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