Sunday, May 27, 2018

Kasal could motivate...



Damn.  I so wished he stayed in to pick up Sgt Major of the Marine Corps!  This dude could motivate a conscientious objector into attacking a machine gun position and then going back home and telling his friends how he loved the sound of his enemies fleeing before him.

Have you noticed one thing that the greats of the Corps (old, recent and those that I don't know about but will be one day) always incorporate into their school circles, platoon talks, battalion briefs etc...?

They always seem to add a historical element to the thing.

Is that part of Marine culture?  Don't know.  I do know it sings to me.

Blast from the past. F-111A from the 428th TFS...


Open Comment Post. May 27, 2018


Operation Uphold Democracy and the bastardization of a US Carrier...


Pic is from the Loadout Room and the story is here.

Opinions will vary about that operation and what you see in the above pic.  From my chair?  All I see is nasty.  All I see is the bastardization of a carrier.  I see the total misuse of an expensive asset to justify a flimsy mission based on a clumsy rationale.

What you're seeing is fraud, waste and abuse wrapped in an American flag sailing to save a country from what exactly?

The military replaced (overthrew..conducted a coup) a jacked up, mentally ill leader?  Why would we want to get in the middle of that?

I'd really love to hear your opinions on this operation.  In some ways I have to wonder if this didn't set the template for future actions in the middle east to "uphold democracy"....

16th Air Assault Brigade Troops work to earn the right to wear US Army Jump Wings...

Troops from 16 Air Assault Brigade being briefed ahead of qualifying for their #US#Army parachute wings.
#British and US troops from the 173rd Airborne Brigade parachuted under US T-11 canopies from a Chinook #helicopter during the #training in Grafenwohr, southern Germany. The jumps were in preparation for #Exercise Sabre Strike, which will see British and US #airborne #forcestraining together in Latvia next month.

Saturday, May 26, 2018

The sad reality of the F-35C. It will be produced in the lowest numbers and most expensive variant...


I've been monitoring the conversation about the Super Hornet's absolutely mindblowing performance and gotten an inkling of the planes future ability to track targets (perhaps including stealth) at long range without use of its AESA radar (this also shows us why the RAF MIGHT BE PUSHING for more Tornadoes instead of F-35s).

Which lead me to this realization.

Even if the F-35 program progresses on track from this moment out, the F-35C will be produced in the lowest numbers and be the most expensive variant.

To take this line of thinking further an Aussie reader named Jason had the thought that the Navy might simply abandon the F-35 on cost grounds and seek to push ahead with only the Super Hornet as a money saving move.

I think he's onto something.

Boeing already has the contract so why are they broadcasting these capabilities?  To make sales overseas?  They could keep all this inhouse and simply present these capabilities to military leadership.  To thumb their noses at Lockheed Martin?  Nah, they're playing nice and insist on saying that the
Super Hornet will complement the F-35.

So why are they doing this?

I think that report I've been barking for, the one ordered by the SecDef comparing the Super Hornet to the F-35 brought some painful facts to the table.

I think the Navy has never been a fan of the F-35.  I think Boeing is carrying the Pentagon's water and making a case to the public for why the Super Hornet is good enough.

Remember there is a segment of the population that wants gold plated whatever for the military despite the cost and will agitate if the uber plane isn't in Navy Grey.

This is a public relations campaign to sell the Super Hornet as the sole fighter for the Navy to its members and the general public.

Long story short.

The F-35C is dead.  One down, two to go with the understanding that these planes are Dracula on steroids so the best we can hope for is a truncated buy.

One last thing.

Have you noticed that all the talk has disappeared from earlier?  We heard talk of revising the B-1R, turning the F-15 into a missile truck, making the F-16 a missileer and other idea to tout missiles while the stealth fighters searched for targets.

That talk has gone away.  Why?  Because they're trying to push the F-35 across the finish line and while those ideas will be revised later they will only serve to slice numbers now.

Are you a gazelle or a lion?

Fighting over dinner....


That fox doesn't stand a chance.  He better let go or the rabbit becomes the appetizer and he'll be the main course!

The Warzone Blog has been on a tear! Latest on the S-500!



Forgot who sent the link on this but hit me up so I can credit you!

Story here.

Ponder this.  I don't know if it's even possible but I do know that the US has done it.  What happens if the Russians can turn the S-400/500 into an anti-ship missile?  What happens if they can somehow get it airborne and we're looking at a 250-400 mile anti-air missile carried by fighters to knock out our AWACS?

Nine years ago the Navy retired its dedicated carrier tanker, carrier anti-sub, and a plane with double the range of anything flying off the deck....


Story here.

This story is enough to make you get a bit emotional and to wonder what they were thinking.  The weird thing?  They're trying to recapture all these capabilities when they have airframes sitting in the desert that can be easily refurbished for use today.

If all of the above isn't bad enough then focus on the ES-3A model.  Electronic warfare back in vogue?  Well this would be an AWESOME supplement to the Growler....if we were serious about EW!


I guess this magnificent airplane suffered from the biggest sin in aviation.  It just plain worked well but wasn't sexy enough.