Saturday, November 30, 2013

Boot PFC's actually tried the bullshit.

Do you remember sitting underneath the stars digging through another messed up meal, talking to your buddies about how you're so skilled in tactics that in the lousy economy you should get together and form up a team to take down drug dealers?  Its bootcamp bullshit that is best forgotten.  I never heard of anyone actually trying it.  Till now.  via Marine Corps times.
BEAUFORT, S.C. — Authorities have charged two Parris Island Marines in connection with an attempted armed robbery which left another Marine dead.
The Beaufort Gazette reports Beaufort police say 18-year-old Pfc. Sierra Danielle Powers and 20-year-old Pfc. Brandi Toniqua Hardy are charged with criminal conspiracy for their roles in the attempted robbery during a drug deal last Friday. Both are in jail pending bond hearings.
Deputy Chief Dale McDorman wouldn’t specify how Powers and Hardy were involved.
McDorman said two Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort privates arranged to purchase marijuana from another man. According to McDorman, it was during that deal that the Marines pulled fake pistols and tried to rob the man, who pulled a real gun and shot and killed 20-year-old Pfc. Jerrit Timberson of Fairview Heights, Ill.
Amazing.

I'd love to hear the particulars of this incident.

The old saying is true both in and out of uniform.  Don't hang around stupid people doing stupid things.  

F-35 cuts are now inevitable. Especially since military pay cuts loom....

Note:  No graphic with this one.  Just a story from the New York Times.
In a speech last month, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel warned that without serious savings in this area, “we risk becoming an unbalanced force, one that is well compensated but poorly trained and equipped, with limited readiness and capability.” Meanwhile, Gen. Ray Odierno, the Army chief of staff, told a hearing: “The cost of a soldier has doubled since 2001; it’s going to almost double again by 2025. We can’t go on like this, so we have to come up with [new] compensation packages.”
The Wall Street Journal reported recently that military commanders have agreed to a plan that would curb the growth of pay and benefits for housing, education and health. But it must still be approved by Mr. Hagel and President Obama. In past years, Congress has approved pay raises and benefit improvements and resisted rollbacks. It is possible that politically savvy Pentagon leaders may be hitting the personnel issue hard right now to force lawmakers to end the sequester or to otherwise soften its blow to the overall military budget. Personnel costs are not the only ones rising. Weapons procurement has risen 88 percent from 2001 to 2012.
Bush started it.  Obama continued it.

The use of the military as a political prop is now about to come back and bite all those who benefited from that exposure.

Pay and benefits are about to get meat axed.

Quite honestly if its an across the board (meaning federal govt) type thing then its a bit more comforting but its still going to come as a shock to many.  If the editorial board at the New York Times is now speaking out about cutting pay and benefits then you can bet that big ticket items like the F-35 are going to be the first things to go.

Sequestration is going to continue.  The F-35 will be cut.  So will pay and benefits.

The saddest part of this entire saga is that the JCS has failed us all.  The Hollow Military is here.

Top Tanks. Who didn't make the list and why.

An update and quick run down/explanation of why a few well known tanks didn't make the list...

Chinese Type 99.



We're entering a strange period in military intel.  Either they don't know much about this tank or they're not passing it along.  This tank didn't hit the list because we don't know much about it.  We can see the obvious.  ERA Tiles.  Angular sloping.  Big gun (assumed to be a Russian model), but other than that, its pretty much a blank.

AMX 56 LeClerc.




I wanted to include the LeClerc.  I really did.  But name one thing it leads the pack on.  Quite honestly I expected to see it at the top of my expeditionary list but it fell because the French did not include it in its latest combat ops in Northern Africa.  So its not expeditionary.  Firepower?  Run of the mill.  So is it capable in ways we don't know?  We don't know.  Its been in service for years but is still a mystery.

T-90.




This one is simple.  I'll never trust Russian tanks until I see some type of move ahead in tech.  Have you seen the insides of a tank that got penetrated but didn't burn out?  Human goo.  Its almost merciful when the Iraqi tank crews suffered catastrophic explosions of onboard ordnance.  I need to see more before I hold these tanks in high regard.

Any others that should have made the list but I forgot about?  I don't think so.

Which brings me to the juicy bits.

Don't be led astray by optics, guns etc.  Take a look at the Altay MBT.  Guess who is partnered with Turkish industry.  BAE.  Perhaps the number one armored vehicle house on the planet.  Guess who is in Poland.  BAE.  Many of these new tanks like the Altay and armored vehicles like the Anders have a Brit/US pedigree.

Get over it guys.  The little guys (meaning countries) are coming.  And they're coming in well designed armor that will take the market by storm.  Can't afford the LEO, Abrams or Challenger, but still need top line stuff?  Check out the Toyota of armored vehicles coming from Turkey or Poland.  The armored vehicle segment has been neglected by the Western traditional military powers and a new breed are going to take the reigns.

UPDATE:
I'm getting complaints about the CV-90120T being listed as the best expeditionary tank.  I've gotten e-mails that call it a mobile gun system, others call it a APC with tank gun attached and others are simply calling it an enhanced IFV.

It doesn't matter.

We can do the "change" thing and call it all of the above, but if we were to flash back to the past, then a vehicle like the CV-90120T would be called an infantry support tank.  Tank being the operative word.  Anyway you slice it (in my opinion), if you have a vehicle mounting a tank caliber gun, operating in any of the tank classic roles then you have a tank.

CV-90120T?  Tank.  Commando 105mm wheeled vehicle?  Tank.  Anders 105mm?  Tank.

Friday, November 29, 2013

SPz Puma in Abu Dhabi






Marine Corps aircraft at the Dubai AirShow. via Army Recognition.



I still have mixed feelings about US Marines in particular and US Military Personnel in general acting as "salesmen" at these airshows.


Top Tanks.

My quick and dirty top tanks for each "need"...Please note ahead of time that my placing of the Leopard in the celebrity category will enrage all its supporters.  Sorry, but yes, the Canadians used it in Afghanistan but it never got a chance to see the full time combat in their sector.  We still don't know how it stands up to the rigors of deployment and the brunt of enemy fire.  Until we do, it remains a question.  Is it as tough as we're all told or is it a paper tiger that will shred once the first anti-tank round hit it?  I don't know and neither do you.

Expeditionary.  You have to move halfway around the world and need firepower to bring with you because airpower is spotty and you might not have enough cannons available.

CV-90120.



Defensive.  You're surrounded by enemies that want to slice your throat in the dark and you need a tank that can soak up punishment while dishing it out.

Tie.  Merkava IV and Challenger 2.




Offensive.  You need a tank that can go fast, hit hard and protect its crews at the same time.

M1A2 Abrams.



Cutting edge.  The future of warfare.  We don't know where armored vehicle development is going but these look good.

Tie.  Altay, K2 and Type 10.





Celebrity.  You're loved, we don't quite know why but everyone worships the ground you walk on.

Leopard 2.


Arma 8x8 Wheeled Infantry Fighting Vehicle w/Mizrak-30 pics








Thursday, November 28, 2013

Altay Main Battle Tank. Turkey's death dealer...

Many thanks to Mustafa for the vid!



Fast forward to 05:21 for the firing tests.

I am so impressed by this machine.  I want to see it in combat before I declare perfection but I like what I see and consider this.  Japan and Turkey have the newest tanks in the world. Everyone else is operating cold war variants of long established tanks.  Is our ranking of the worlds best tanks justifiable?  I wonder.

F-35. Giovanni de Briganti nails down the lies about it costs...


If South Korea’s order for 40 F-35s does indeed save the Pentagon about $2 billion, then each aircraft lowers Pentagon costs by $50 million. By the same logic, each lost order should increase the cost to the Pentagon by the same $50 million – not far off, by the way, from the $65 million unit cost that Lockheed continues to claim is the average unit cost of the aircraft.
Following the same logic, we can now estimate how much the reduced orders by other customers have increased the price the Pentagon will pay for its F-35s.
A short look at recent changes in the foreign order book is thus instructive.
- United Kingdom:
Initially slated to buy 150 aircraft, the UK government has now amended its plans and will only buy 48 F-35Bs for its new aircraft carriers, any possible buy for the Royal Air Force being pushed off well into the future. At $50m each, the loss of 102 UK orders adds $5.1 billion to what the Pentagon will pay for its F-35s.
- Italy:
Italy initially planned to buy 130 F-35s, but this was reduced to 90 because of budget cuts. This is a loss of 40 orders, which will add $2 billion to the Pentagon’s F-35 bill.
- Netherlands:
The Dutch air force initially planned to buy 85 F-35s, but the current government has decided to reduce the number to 37, a loss of 48 orders and a price increase of $2.4 billion for the Pentagon.
- Canada:
Initially due to buy 65 F-35s, Canada has now reopened its new fighter replacement program. While the F-35 might still be selected, but in smaller numbers as there is a price cap on the program. For the time being Canada is no officially no longer a buyer, and the loss of its 65 orders translates into a cost increase of $3.25 billion for the Pentagon.
- Norway:
While it also initially planned to buy 85 F-35s, Norway has now decided it will buy only 52, a reduction of 33 and thus a cost increase of $1.65 billion for the Pentagon’s own F-35s.
So, in total, the program has so far lost 228 orders from the above international partners.
At $50m a pop, these cancellations have so far added $14.4 billion to the cost of the Pentagon’s own F-35s – something that Lockheed’s P.R. machine has failed to point out, even though it was quick to stress the $2 billion savings entailed by that future Korean order.
I've been waiting for someone to do this.

Pretty damning huh?

What say you now Jason Simmons?  

(Note.  If someone makes personal attacks against the author of the piece then I'll immediately delete your comments.  I've done it, thought better and we're not going down that road.  I won't let you make my same mistake).

Philippine Army deploys to the Golan Heights????



via The Inquirer.
MANILA, Philippines–The Philippine Army sent off on Thursday more than 300 of its personnel to the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force in Golan Heights.
A ceremony was held at the Army Grandstand at Fort Bonifacio, with Army chief Lieutenant General Noel Coballes as guest of honor.
This batch will replace the contingent in Golan Heights that has been serving for a year now, exceeding the usual six months of duty. The current batch of peacekeeping forces in Golan Heights was deployed November last year and was supposed to return home last May. However, their return home was delayed several times pending the government decision and the United Nations.
Twenty five of the peacekeepers currently deployed in Golan Heights were abducted in March and May this year. They were later released. In June, one was injured in a “wayward indirect fire” amid fighting between Syrian rebels and the government.
They are scheduled to arrive in the country early December.
The contingent sent off on Thursday consists of 336 Army personnel, wherein 15 are female. Out of the 336, 49 are officers and 287 are enlisted personnel; and out of the 15 females, four are officers.
The contingent will leave for Golan Heights in three batches: November 29 (first serial), November 30 (second serial), and December 7 (third serial).
The battalion which will be deployed to Syria underwent the battalion of excellence program, Coballes said.

“This was created to cater all the needs to be an outstanding unit,” he said.
He added that all regular battalions undergo the excellence program. It just happened that the 80th Infantry Battalion is the one trained for this year.
Coballes said he advised the peacekeepers to abide by the instructions of the UN.
“In these kinds of UN deployments there is minimal use of force. We only use force on self defense,” he said.
In his speech, Coballes assured they received a guarantee from the United Nations that measures will be put in place for the personal safety and well-being of the deployed personnel during their tour of duty.
The Philippines started sending troops to Golan Heights in Syria in November 2009. Foreign peacekeepers have assisted the United Nations in its mission to bring about international peace for the Syrian and Israeli governments.
Why?  Are the pennies that the UN pays these smaller countries so enticing that they would ignore the disaster at home (where every military member is needed) to service a useless mission?  Lets be honest here too.  These observer missions are dog and pony shows that couldn't stop a determined Boy Scout unit.  I've ignored these observer missions since the US has basically pulled out of them.  It might be time to give them a second look.


The Battle of the Chosin Reservoir begins (The famous Frozen Chosin). Today in Marine Corps history.

via Stolen Valor facebook page.

Also on this day in History, 27 November 1950, the Battle of Chosin Reservoir begins.

The Battle of Chosin Reservoir, also known as the Chosin Reservoir Campaign or the Changjin Lake Campaign (Korean: 장진호 전투; Chinese: 长津湖战役; pinyin: Cháng Jīn Hú Zhànyì), was a decisive battle in the Korean War.

Shortly after the People's Republic of China entered the conflict, the People's Volunteer Army 9th Army infiltrated the northeastern part of North Korea and surprised the US X Corps at the Chosin Reservoir area. A brutal 17 day battle in freezing weather soon followed. In the period between 27 November and 13 December 1950, 30,000 United Nations (UN) troops (nicknamed "The Chosin Few") under the command of Major General Edward Almond were encircled by approximately 67,000 Chinese troops under the command of Song Shi-Lun. The units near the Chosin (Changjin) Reservoir included the 1st Marine Division and elements of the 7th Infantry Division.

Although Chinese troops managed to surround and outnumber the UN forces, the UN forces broke out of the encirclement while inflicting crippling losses on the Chinese. The evacuation of the X Corps from the port of Hungnam marked the complete withdrawal of UN troops from North Korea.

On the night of 27 November, the PVA 20th and 27th Corps of the 9th Army launched multiple attacks and ambushes along the road between the Chosin Reservoir and Koto-ri. At Yudam-ni, the 5th, 7th and 11th Marines were surrounded and attacked by the PVA 59th, 79th and 89th Division. Similarly, RCT-31 was isolated and ambushed at Sinhung-ni by the PVA 80th and the 81st Division. Finally, the PVA 60th Division surrounded elements of the 1st Marines at Kotor-ri from the north.Caught by complete surprise, the UN forces were cut off at Yudam-ni, Sinhung-ni, Hagaru-ri and Kotor-ri by 28 November.

Advancing quickly, the Ninth Army Group of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) blunted X Corps advance and swarmed around the UN troops at Chosin. Alerted to their predicament, Almond ordered the commander of the 1st Marine Division, Major General Oliver P. Smith, to begin a fighting retreat back towards the coast.

Smith's men endured extreme cold and severe weather. The next day, the 5th and 7th Marines attacked from their positions near Yudam-ni, on the west bank of the reservoir, with some success against the PLA forces in the area. Over the next three days the 1st Marine Division successfully defended their positions at Yudam-ni and Hagaru-ri against Chinese human wave assaults. On November 29, Smith contacted Colonel "Chesty" Puller, commanding the 1st Marine Regiment, at Koto-ri and asked him to assemble a task force to re-open the road from there to Hagaru-ri.

Complying, Puller formed a force consisting of Lieutenant Colonel Douglas B. Drysdale's 41 Independent Commando (Royal Marines Battalion), G Company (1st Marines), B Company (31st Infantry), and other rear echelon troops. Numbering 900 men, the 140-vehicle task force departed at 9:30 AM on the 29th, with Drysdale in command. Pushing up the road to Hargaru-ri, the task force became bogged down after being ambushed by Chinese troops. Fighting in an area that was dubbed "Hell Fire Valley," Drysdale was reinforced by tanks sent by Puller.

Pressing on, Drysdale's men ran a gauntlet of fire and reached Hagaru-ri with the bulk of 41 Commando, G Company, and the tanks. During the attack, the B Comapany, 31st Infantry, became separated and isolated along the road. While most were killed or captured, some were able to escape back to Koto-ri. While the Marines were fighting to the west, the 31st Regimental Combat Team (RCT) of the 7th Infantry was battling for its life on the eastern shore of reservoir.

While not a victory in the classic sense, the withdrawal from the Chosin Reservoir is revered as a high point in the history of the US Marine Corps. In the fighting, the Marines and other UN troops effectively destroyed or crippled seven Chinese divisions which attempted to block their progress. Marine losses in the campaign numbered 836 killed and 12,000 wounded. Most of the latter were frostbite injuries inflicted by the severe cold and winter weather. US Army losses numbered around 2,000 killed and 1,000 wounded. Precise casualties for the Chinese are not known but are estimated at 35,000 killed. Upon reaching Hungnam, the veterans of Chosin Reservoir were evacuated as part of the large amphibious operation to rescue UN troops from northeastern Korea.

Chest Puller made one of his more famous quotes a Chosin, "We're surrounded. That simplifies our problem of getting to these people and killing them." – November 1950, during Chosin Reservoir campaign.

PHOTO: Marine braving the cold at Chosin

King Tiger vs. IS-2. World of Tanks battle royal.


Blame and credit World of Tanks.

I've been running the American line of tank destroyers and have noticed that the IS-2 is a tough nut to crack and the KV-1s seem overpowered for their tiers.  We won't even get into the Tiger and King Tiger side of the equation, so I wanted to do some light reading on how they performed in combat.

The game's designers are Russian so that I thought they were biased toward Soviet vehicles (or maybe its my American nationalism peeking through) but after reading a few things it seems they are playing it pretty straight.

The above pdf just scratches the surface with information on the two vehicles but it gives a nice, quick overview of things.  Check it out.

Happy Thanksgiving.



Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Scorpion Taxi Test

The Pacific. Looking more and more like pre-WW2 days...

Sōryū-class submarine
via The Telegraph.
The Asian arms race is young, but clearly under way already. China has launched its first stealth drone, known as Sharp Sword. It developing indigenous aircraft carriers. Its “Two-Ocean-Strategy” implies a fleet of five or six carrier battle groups.
Japan is already rearming. It is building a de facto marine force. It has launched its largest warship since WW2, an 800-foot long DDH-class helicopter carrier, an aircraft carrier in all but name. Tokyo is developing its own version of the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency. Spending on warships and aircraft will jump by 23pc this year.
When I visited the spanking new buildings of the Japanese defence ministry in Tokyo in March, it already seemed like another world from the run-down digs of the old Self-Defence Force that I had visited six years earlier.
You could feel the emergence of a new military power, pacifist still in name only. The message that came through loud and clear from talking to officials is that Japan is ready for a fight if necessary, and is convinced that it can sink or shoot down any force sent by China into Japan's waters and airspace – whether to close in on the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands, or to ratchet up pressure against Okinawa.
The author looks at British history pre-WW1 as a template for whats going on.

I think if you change the names of the players, you have a pre-WW2 scenario going on.  A hunt for resources, age old claims and extreme nationalism.

Yes.  I will be alarmist.  The seeds have been sown and soon the crops will be harvested.

We're looking at the opening moves for the next major war.  Oh and yeah.  I called this an arms race months ago and finally the mainstream media is catching on. 

F-35. Supporters move from questionable claims to utter bullshit...


via Reuters....
By 2019, the Pentagon projects the cost of each new F-35 fighter plane will be around $85 million, putting it on a par with the cost of current fighter planes, said Jim McAleese, a Virginia-based defense consultant.
The South Korean order could create 10,000 jobs at Lockheed and its suppliers as they build the components to make the 40 jets.

The sources said the projected savings and job counts were comparable to similar estimates released when Japan announced plans to buy 42 F-35 jets from the U.S. government in December 2011
I'm throwing the bullshit flag on this one.

No.  I'm not an economist but if 40 jets can create 10,000 jobs then the USAF order alone should bring the US unemployment rate down to at least 5%.

Read the entire article (here) but be advised.  They moved from questionable claims to fantasy island.

Why are they this desperate?  What is going on that we can't see to make supporters give such silly statements to reporters, and why can't reporters see that its craziness on a bun? 

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

X-47. At sea and kicking ass...

Thanks for the article NICO!


via Aviation Week.
The USS Theodore Roosevelt returned to port last week after hosting the X-47B for more at-sea trials.
The goal was to test the aircraft's interaction wiht the ship in off-nominal wind conditions. Nominal conditions are winds up to 25 kt. right down the runway on deck. Testers were looking for 35 kt. of relative winds and crosswinds up to 7kt.
Here are a few statistics from the tests:
26 total deck touchdowns
21 of those were touch and gos
five catapult launchs and five trap landings
five wave offs (two planned and three owing to software logic the automatically conducted a wave off owing to extreme wind conditions).
A robotic attack airplane.

Started development after the F-35, made it to the carrier before the F-35, has a higher degree of stealth than the F-35 (this is my layman's view .... I read somewhere that tail-less designs are more stealthy) and for a Marine Corps view of things can set up orbit over a squad of Marines in contact and provide support until no longer needed or relieved (assuming that they integrate aerial refueling for these planes...really a no brainer...if you can land on a carrier then refueling in air shouldn't be difficult).

Now tell me why the Navy needs the F-35 again,

NOTE:  Follow the link to check out some of the vids that Amy "Wonder Woman" Butler posted.

US Army gets its AMPV program going despite budget woes...


via Army Times...
The new document says the Army plans to award a five-year EMD contract in May 2014 to one contractor who will manufacture 29 vehicles for government testing, followed by a three-year low-rate initial production contract beginning in 2020.
Earlier documents estimated the EMD phase would run from fiscal 2014 to 2017 and cost $388 million. But the final plan stretches that out while adding to the overall price tag. The EMD phase will run from fiscal 2015 to 2019 and cost $458 million to develop and build the 29 prototypes.
The document released Tuesday lowered that number slightly to $436 million.
Likewise, whereas the estimate for the LRIP order of 289 vehicles between 2018 and 2020 was initially pegged at $1.08 billion, the Tuesday RFP lists three options for the LRIP years totaling $1.2 billion, giving the program a $1.68 billion budget before full-rate production begins.
Simple question.

If the Army is able to do this with their Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle (AMPV) then why wasn't the Marine Corps able to move forward with a low rate production run of Marine Personnel Carriers?  Or even better a quick and dirty high rate production run?

As things stand the US Army is drinking our milkshake.  Is the Air Wing and MARSOC the only portions of the Marine Corps that current leadership cares about? 

Chinese Carrier Battle Group puts to sea. And now it begins...


The USAF flew two B-52's into China's Air Defense Identification Zone.  NBG.  No Big Deal.  Not big fucking deal.  Just...no big deal.

It matters not.  Its not flexing muscle and its the same thing that we have setup.  The UK too.  Japan, Australia, S. Korea...practically everyone has it.

But an advanced Carrier Battle Group?  That my friends is a VBFD.  A VERY BIG FUCKING DEAL.

No throw back to Russian single ship operations.

No hybrid type fleet.

They are practically saying that they will meet the US Navy on the high seas, face off with them and that they're planning on winning.

Read about this development here.  Also make note of the escorts.  Air Defense Ships.  Harpoons won't get it done.  LRASM (subsonic) will get shot down.  And we're cutting defense.  Experts say parity in 20 years.  I say 10...if we're lucky.

Monday, November 25, 2013

Swedish Strv 105 A/T, the best Centurion. Next up for World of Tanks?

The Swedish Strv 105 A/T as its full designation was, was arguably the best centurion upgrade ever made. It had been modified with a french IRV-sight with monitors for the gunner and commander. This sight was supposedly better than the one in the new Leopard 2S or Strv 122. The turretdrive had been modified and adjusted for a smoother, more precise rotation. The commanders cupola was now powered by electricity and a hunter-killer system was added. The electrical system had been changed from the troublesome system in the Strv 104 to a much improved one. A new suspension allowed the full capacity of the engine to be used, greatly adding to the tanks speed. A revolving turretfloor was added and was clearly better than the one in the Strv 101 which many thought less efficient than the lack of one as in the Strv 102 or 104. A new air cleaner system for the engine, a new hatch and seat for the driver are examples of less revolutionary, but still appreciated modifications. There was only one built and that is now to be seen at Axevalla armormuseum. The 105 was almost impossible to identify externally. The only easy thing to use for distuinguishing it from the 104 was the IRV-camera mounted by the gunbarrel.

Source: swipnet.se..via War Machine

US Army heading towards smaller squads, lighter vehicles? Big mistake.

high speed roll on/roll off ship.

via DefenseNews.
During the service’s yearly sen­ior leader seminar Nov. 20, the Army’s top uniformed leadership for the first time called for a look at cutting the size of the squad from nine soldiers to as low as six, while reminding subordinates that the service is shrinking and likely won’t be able to afford new leap­ahead technologies in the near fu­ture.
And briefing slides referenced vehicles half the weight of the Ground Combat Vehicle (GCV), which enjoys dwindling support among the brass.
Going smaller while focusing in­vestments on increasing the com­bat punch a small unit can bring to bear will “make us more afford­able, yet as capable” as the service is now, one leading general said. A key point is also to become faster and more expeditionary.
One senior leader said that in coming years, the Army will have to “reduce the size of our forma­tions but increase the capability of our formations. ...If we can be more effective with less people it will make us more expeditionary.”
A handful of reporters were al­lowed to sit in on the briefing un­der the condition that names not be used.
This talk about moving faster comes in response to the fact that the Army will primarily be a do­mestically based force in the com­ing years. The idea that rapid deployability to hot spots around the world will be a key to future conflicts is one that the Army is taking very seriously.
This new push has generated a new Army catchphrase: “Speed that matters.”
The thinking goes that speed can act as a deterrent to adversaries. The idea was also floated during the seminar that having a rapidly deployable force provides civilian leadership with more leverage and “decision space” in which to politi­cally exploit an adversary’s weak­ness.
Read the entire article and marvel at the stupidity, shortsightedness and lack of spine being shown by Army leadership.  The only thing that gives me hope is the knowledge that the Marine Corps isn't the only organization suffering from failed leaders.

Assuming that we are heading into a time period where we will be reacting to moves from bad actors or using Special Ops to shape future battlefields, I wonder why the idea is to replicate a hybrid Armored Airborne/Motorized Infantry.

The issue is and has always been transport.

The issue is and has always been the lack of acceptance by Army officials that transport by air is NOT delivering the benefits long promised.

The answer isn't to make squads smaller.

Not to make smaller, lighter more vulnerable vehicles.

The answer is to work with the US Navy and develop/deploy high speed roll on/roll off ships that can motor from the US to distant area quickly.   

Instead of doing the obvious, they would instead tinker once again with war winning formations just so they can be at the forefront of "change".  Change without purpose is stupid meddling.  Army leadership is meddling.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Mainstream media finally wakes up to the police MRAP situation.


via The AP.
An Associated Press investigation of the Defense Department military surplus program this year found that a disproportionate share of the $4.2 billion worth of property distributed since 1990 - everything from blankets to bayonets and Humvees - has been obtained by police and sheriff's departments in rural areas with few officers and little crime.
After the initial 165 of the MRAP trucks were distributed this year, military officials say police have requests in for 731 more, but none are available.
People are asleep.  Once they wake up ... if they wake up ... many are going to be asking serious questions.  From NSA spying, to the Obamacare issue, to the IRS overreach, to Fast and Furious.

I'm not a Tea Partier, mainly because the organization has been corrupted by the Republican hierarchy, but they were right when they first started.  A big government is big trouble.

Read the entire story here.  Its eye opening.

NOTE:  The DoD really should have put some restraints on this program.  Giving them to each states Highway Patrol or State Police force.  Enough to have a couple in each major city.  Maybe some to each major city with a population over 1 million people...heck even 500,000.  Have each department write a serious justification for needing the vehicle (not the bullshit that Ohio State University used to get one) etc...  As things stand both law enforcement AND the Defense Dept are going to be painted with the same bad brush.

Hey Gunny, you have the right to act an ass, just not in uniform.


The Marine Corps needs to get a handle on public decorum while in uniform.

Most, I'd say 99% of you won't agree with me on this, but its ok for the Gunnery Sgt to act an ass...just not in uniform.

He's cheering on his favorite college team...and gaining attention for doing so.  But is this how we want Marines to be viewed?  This isn't the only instance of a SNCO or Officer messing up while representing (or being viewed as representing) the Marine Corps.

Remember Marine Day in St Louis either last year or the year before?  A Colonel with the SPMAGTF spoke out of turn while being interviewed on the radio.  The announcer tried to reel the cocky bastard back in but the pompous idiot continued.

Something is broken in our house gents.  This type of behavior is new.  Its time to "crush" it now.  For the good of the Corps.

PTL02 assault gun tank destroyer via Army Recognition.



The US military is so caught up in defeating the anti-access strategy of China that the ground forces are losing sight of what needs to be done once that access is gained.

If we're talking about a peer competitor (China) then we need to focus on developments in their ground forces.  I'll find the article, but China is moving toward a smaller, more technologically advanced force.  Smaller is relative, but technologically advanced is not.  The PTL02 assault gun is just one example.  Amphibious landings.  Air Assault.  Airborne Ops.  They all become more difficult if they've doped out our sites and have a couple of companies of these vehicles, along with infantry waiting.

Why the sermon?  Because the Marine Corps seems to be getting more and more locked into this SPMAGTF-CR concept. 

The MV-22 is a sitting duck in the approach to the landing zone.  It might be fast but in the end all the pilots and grunts will be doing is rushing to their deaths if we don't get beyond the idea of MV-22 transported infantry/Special Ops being able to take on mechanized forces and win.

Bro' Code via Grunt Works.


Saturday, November 23, 2013

F-35. Quote of the day.

Future F-35 gobbler?

“The JSF does not have a high-end air-to-air capability,” he told the conference. We need to have both aircraft.”...Italian Air Force Col. Vito Cracas, commander of the 36th Fighter Wing (quote is via an Aviation Week article found here). 
It can be assumed that the Colonel has had the full F-35 briefing.  It can further be assumed that he is a professional with an eye toward making sure that his nation AND personnel are as protected as possible.

And there is no reason for him to lie.

You heard it here second.

The F-35 is NOT a high end air to air fighter.

Which means the Navy, Air Force and our allies are about to buy an airplane THAT IS NOT COMPETITIVE with the new stealth fighters from Russia and China. 

Friday, November 22, 2013

Longer-range sensors and weapons and electronic attack should be considered part of stealth...we finally know what the Navy is thinking...



via Aviation Week.
Much of the U.S. defense community “has lost sight of reality” as to what stealth means, a Raytheon executive told the Defense IQ International Fighter Conference here this month. Michael Garcia, the company's senior business development manager for active, electronically scanned (AESA) radars, suggested that longer-range sensors and weapons and electronic attack should be considered part of stealth, rather than placing complete reliance on RCS.
Comparing detection and weapon ranges, as well as RCS, Garcia argued that the “essence of stealth is that the Blue circles [for detection and weapon range] impact Red before Red can detect,” and that jamming, sensors and weapons affect that calculation.
“The level of RCS has not been improving,” Garcia said, and it cannot be greatly improved through an aircraft's life. “It is time-stamped with whatever date it came out of the factory. There has been a revolution in detection” of low-RCS targets, meanwhile, he added, citing the Russian development of an operational, mobile VHF AESA radar (AW&ST Sept. 2, p. 28) and resurgent interest in infrared search-and-track systems. “Conventional stealth is vulnerable to low-band detection,” Garcia said. “And the 'fifth-generation' scenario has become outdated over the past five years.” He mentioned contrails and visible vortices as signatures that are not affected by RCS reduction. Other analysts have noted the dense wingtip vortex trails visible in many inflight photos of F-35s.
Raytheon is a major supplier to the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet program and has a small stake in the F-35. However, this is the first time that any U.S. contractor has gone on the record with a direct critique of the JSF's prime rationale.
Read the whole thing here.

But its now obvious.  The final piece fell into place.  We see the Navy's thinking.

They can accomplish stealth like benefits without an expensive airframe but with advanced avionics, weapon systems etc....

They're betting that they can do it cheaper and better than an expensive fighter.

I think they're right.


SuperAV and other armor from the Army Maneuver Conference 2013 via Grunts and Co.

Check out Grunts and Co. Blog (note pics are from his site).

Stryker Testbed with the Kongsberg 30mm RWS.

SuperAV...GOD! The Marine Corps needs this vehicle!

For some reason they rolled out the XM8.  I guess the 82nd is serious about bringing back airborne tanks.

The Japanese can do it, why not the USMC?

Japan cutting tanks replacing with Maneuver Combat Vehicles.

Thanks Alexander Clark @ Naval History for this story!


via AJW.
The Defense Ministry plans to slash its tank forces by more than half and redeploy the remaining vehicles to Hokkaido and Kyushu to meet the realities of the post-Cold War world, sources said.
The number of Ground Self-Defense Force tanks will be reduced from the current 741 to 300 within 10 years, they said.
The proposal to reduce tank numbers will be included in the new National Defense Program Guidelines, the government’s basic 10-year plan for defense and national security, scheduled for completion in mid-December.
During the Cold War, the Self-Defense Forces put top priority on preventing an invasion by the Soviet Union with its large armored units. The Defense Ministry plans to shift its emphasis from the defense of the mainland to the protection of remote islands, with China’s growing naval capabilities in mind.
After all tank regiments are withdrawn from Honshu, the SDF will deploy high-speed, highly maneuverable, lightweight armored vehicles to Honshu in their place.
Armed with 105-millimeter cannons, the same caliber as that of standard tanks, the eight-wheeled maneuver combat vehicles can reach speeds of 100 kph. In addition, the vehicles are light enough to be transported aboard C-2 aircraft, allowing the SDF to deploy them to threatened islands more quickly.
Ordinarily I'd be up in arms about a reduction in the number of armored vehicles in any army, but in this case it makes perfect sense.

First, they're not giving up the firepower and shock effect of a heavy cannon.  Second, they're a VERY highly urbanized country.  Wheeled vehicles will be able to respond much better to enemy actions, without paying the penalty of having to survey roads and bridges to get them to the scene.

I do have an argument with the idea that transporting armored vehicles by aircraft is a reasonable approach but I think that might be more selling point than actual wartime utility (at least I hope so).

All in all I think the Japanese are taking the threat of future combat very seriously and are adapting their forces to face the future threat.

Top five reasons for police stops via Modern Survival Blog.

Avoid these top-5 things and you will greatly lessen your chances of getting pulled over by the police. We already live in a police state, so don’t give the system any more reason to go after you and pull you over…

This list shows you the things to watch out for if you want to avoid unwanted contact with the boys (and girls) in blue.

SPEEDING
Yes, there’s a “buffer,” perhaps 5-7 mph, but the decision to cut a speeder some slack is up to the officer’s discretion. Not only are you vulnerable on the freeway, but pay attention to speed limit changes while on secondary roads, which sometimes change unexpectedly and often.
DISTRACTED DRIVING
Texting.
Talking on a mobile phone.
Stop sign violation.
Stoplight violation.
Illegal U-turns.
Failures to yield.
EQUIPMENT VIOLATIONS
Heavily tinted windows.
Burned-out headlights.
Broken windshields.
Expired tags.
The lack of a front license plate (in some states).
Loud exhaust modifications.
TAILGATING
Driving too close.
IMPROPER LANE CHANGES
An improper lane change means cutting someone off or changing lanes without looking first. Failure to signal can also be added to this ticket, but it usually doesn’t initiate the traffic stop — partly because the failure to signal is so common.
Easy.

Want to avoid cops?  Don't do the stuff listed above.

Why the intense USMC propaganda over the MV-22???


via Defense Web.
With the Ospreys as a key player in the Philippine’s relief, another story highlights the flexibility of this unique aircraft.
According to a USMC story by Captain Sharon Hyland:
Marines from the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force Crisis Response completed a long-range transport of Marines from Moron, Spain, to Dakar, Senegal, on November 13, utilizing MV-22Bs and a KC-130J.

The trip totalled more than 1,500 nautical miles and consisted of more than 30 Marines from SPMAGTF-CR and Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force Africa 13. The Marines with SPMAGTF-Africa 13 were inserted in Senegal to participate in a small-boat operations and marksmanship training and exercises with the Senegalese military.

The mission marked the first time MV-22B Ospreys arrived in West Africa and offered the Senegalese and American Embassy personnel an up-close look at the tiltrotor aircraft during a static display and orientation flight.

This flight to Senegal can be added to other activities of the Osprey worldwide including: a first landing on a Japanese warship in the APR; the TRAP mission from North Carolina to Colorado; the Philippine’s relief mission; and the training with the Foreign Legion.
Clearly, the Osprey and its capabilities are becoming central to US Marine Corps global operations.
~
I'm skeptical.

Flying 30 Marines fifteen hundred miles does nothing but make me wonder who emptied the porta potty.

That's a piss ant force for a piss ant mission.

A bigger issue is why?  Why is the Marine Corps filling the airwaves with MV-22 propaganda?  Is its funding under potential threat?  The concept of a SPMAGTF-CR doesn't hold up to anyone that has even a thimble full of knowledge about combat ops so what gives? 

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Navy X-47 will be ISR & carry JDAMS.


via DefenseTech.
The Navy plans to load their next generation carrier drone with a wide range of weapons, including GPS-guided precision-strike air-to-ground weapons called Joint Direct Attack Munitions, or JDAMs, service officials said.
The Unmanned Carrier Launched Surveillance and Strike aircraft is being designed as a carrier-launched Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance and Targeting, or IRS&T, technology, will also be designed to accomodate a next-generation Active Electronically Scanned Array radar, or AESA.
The exact weapons payload to be engineered on the Unmanned Carrier Launched Surveillance and Strike aircraft is still a work-in-progress and something that will be influenced by the competing vendors offering designs, said Capt. Beau Duarte, program manager, unmanned carrier aviation program office.
While weaponization for the UCLASS is not planned as an immediate step, it is considered by developers to be an integral part of the platform’s future capabilities. It is expected the UCLASS will be able to draw from most of the weapons currently being used on the Navy’s carrier wings.
“Weapons requirements will be defined in the final proposals. It is up to the vendors to come back with proposals and leverage what is available,” Cmdr. Pete Yelle, UCLASS/UCAS-D requirements officer.
While adding weapons will be a significant future development for the UCLASS platform, the technology is still primarily intended as an ISR platform, Navy officials said.
Defense officials always talk about the F-35 being more than just a weapons platform but also an intelligence asset.

Now, so is the Navy UCAV.

So tell me.

Which is going to be more cost effective.  A carrier with UCAVs and F-18s or F-35s, F-18 and UCAVs?

If you said F-18s and UCAVs you're right.

Probably deadlier too.  You send your strike fighter after the Chinese anti-ship ICBMs, do you send your manned fighters or do you send UCAVs?  Which is easier to plan?  Destruction of vehicles if they're downed or destruction and recovery of pilots if they're downed?

UCAV for the win.

But more importantly, this is a direct shot across the bow of the F-35.  This convinces me more than ever that the Navy is actively planning for the F-35 to either fail or price itself out of future Navy Air Wings.

Today in history. The Son Tay Raid.


Google Son Tay Raid for more info, but if you want a bit more take a look around the internet for the baddest motherfucker you never heard about.  Colonel Bull Simons.  An American original.

F-35 will hurt US/Japan ties?


via The Diplomat.
Although the F-35 was the only 5th generation jet, the Defense Ministry’s choice was a gamble. Ongoing problems with the plane, such as cracks in the fuselage, fuel concerns over not only its performance and safety, but successful completion of its development. Persistent problems mean falling behind the development schedule and increases in the final cost. Worse, U.S. defense spending cuts and the European debt crisis could lead to reduced orders or even participation by some of the planes’ developers since four of the partner nations are EU members. Fewer orders or resources could lead to further spikes in costs.
Which just says DEATH SPIRAL in a more civilized way.

We're going to see this across the board.  Nations need to replace fighters, the F-35 is touted as the latest and greatest, maintenance and procurement costs spike, numbers bought are decreased AND US/partner nations relations are ruined.

Everyone that still supports this program says to "don't quit" and "stay the course".

Custer said the same thing to his SNCO's when they told him that he was riding into a trap.