Friday, July 13, 2018
French Army VBCI's ready to roll out (pics)...
Interesting. Starting to see more of the APC model with the 50 cal RWS instead of the full on IFV with the 30 (?)mm.
Thursday, July 12, 2018
Blast from the past. A-4C Skyhawk hit by an SA-2 almost brings his pilot back to the ship...
Thanks to USS Edsall Tumblr Page for the pic!
I am in awe...both the man and the machine were well made and performed heroically!
I am in awe...both the man and the machine were well made and performed heroically!
The F-35 vs. A-10 Warthog Face-off Is a Total Sham. Here's Why. --- via The National Interest Blog....
via National Interest...
They want their largest and highest-priority weapons buy, the troubled, $400-billion F-35 multi-mission fighter, to quickly replace the A-10 they’ve been trying to get rid of for over two decades. The now-former Pentagon weapons testing director, J. Michael Gilmore, said in 2016 that a fly-off would be the only way to determine how well the F-35 could perform the close-air-support role compared to the A-10—or whether the F-35 could perform that role at all.Story here.
The testing office and the various service testing agencies had already meticulously planned comparative tests to pit the F-35 against the A-10, F-16, and the F-18, because the F-35 program is contractually required to show better mission effectiveness than each of the legacy aircraft it is to replace.
In other words, the test was designed by someone with a vested financial interest in the F-35 program, rather than by people whose primary interest is its performance in combat.
Many Air Force leaders strenuously objected to the fly-off , claiming that the F-35 would perform the mission differently so it wouldn’t be fair to compare its performance to the A-10. These tests are only happening now—albeit in an inadequate form—because Congress mandated them nearly three years ago .
The Senate established strict criteria and specific scenarios for the tests. These include demonstrating the F-35’s ability to visually identify friendly forces and the enemy target in both day and night scenarios, to loiter over the target for an extended time, and to destroy targets without a joint terminal attack controller directing the strike.
The Congressionally-approved plan includes a schedule for tests and funding for elaborate tactical test ranges with combat-realistic, hard-to-find targets defended by carefully simulated missile and gun defenses, and appropriate ground-control teams for the close-support portion of the test scenarios. Testing to date has revealed the F-35 is incapable of performing most of the functions required for an acceptable close-support aircraft, and it seems unlikely the criteria outlined by Congress and testing officials would have produced the results Air Force leaders wanted.
Designed to mislead
Air Force leaders came up with a simple solution to this dilemma. They are staging an unpublicized, quickie test on existing training ranges, creating unrealistic scenarios that presuppose an ignorant and inert enemy force, writing ground rules for the tests that make the F-35 look good—and they got the new testing director, the retired Air Force general Robert Behler, to approve all of it.
This program, its supporters, the military brass and Lockheed Martin are all fraudulent, liars and will get people killed.
From my chair this is damning and discouraging.
I don't care about Marine Air wanting to go play fleet defense with the Navy. I don't care about Marine Air wanting to go play air superiority and deep strike with the Air Force. I don't care about any of that.
I do care about the plane's ability to support the Ground Combat Element of the US Marine Corps and if needed provide assistance to Army units caught in a fight and even our allies.
But the people supporting this travesty don't.
The fact that the plane is substandard means nothing to them.
There is a special place in hell for this type of dishonesty. I hope they enjoy their new spot while future Marines are suffering for their hubris.
Amphibious by Nature...pics by Sgt. Zachary Orr
Caption to the pics below:
U.S. Marines stage AAV-P7/A1 assault amphibious vehicles for splash training at Pyramid Rock Beach as part of Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise on Marine Corps Base Hawaii July 8, 2018. RIMPAC provides high-value training for task-organized, highly capable Marine-Air Ground Task Force and enhances the critical crisis response capability of U.S. Marines in the Pacific.
NATO's 30-30-30 Plan...thanks Trump!
Dude accused a previous post of mine to be pure click bait (happening alot lately). Well on this one I'm not try to click bait ya, just being provocative as hell!
What is the 30-30-30 plan? Something new from NATO. Check out the caption that goes with the pic above...oh and this is from the US Mission in NATO Instagram Page.
What does 30-30-30-30 mean? It's @NATO's plan to boost combat readiness by ensuring 30 medium-heavy battalions, 30 fighter squadrons & 30 combat ships from across the Alliance are able to meet any threat within 30 days. #NATOSummit #AlliedStrongInteresting isn't it.
The Bush Admin complained about NATO member spending.
The Obama Admin complained about NATO member spending.
Trump complains about NATO member spending and suddenly its a threat to the alliance, unprecedented and a threat to the future.
If you're not seeing the connection here then I can't help ya. Hate Trump all you want but HE IS shaking up the status quo. He is FINALLY getting our allies to START moving toward doing their fair share to DEFEND THEMSELVES!
The "thanks Trump" part seems like click bait to you? Seems like he's scaring people straight to me.
Still hate his tweeting. He's drifted dangerously close to the racists section of our country. His tax cuts are pure Republican orthodoxy and benefited the wealthy MUCH MORE than they did the middle class.
But when he does stuff right he deserves credit. On this he deserves credit.
BAE's Howitzer is having major issues...
via Bloomberg.
BAE Systems Plc’s manufacture of the U.S. Army’s new howitzer is hobbled by poor welding, supply chain problems and delivery delays even as the service nears a $1.3 billion decision on full production, according to the Pentagon’s contract management agency.Story here.
Among the setbacks have been a six-month halt in deliveries last year because of welding flaws and the return of 50 of 86 vehicles that had already been delivered due to repair production deficiencies.
Nevertheless, Army officials plan to meet on Thursday to decide on approval of full-rate production, the most lucrative phase for London-based BAE. That would trigger $1.3 billion in contract options and increase vehicle production to about 60 from 48 a year, according to a Pentagon program assessment.
The Pentagon’s Defense Contract Management Agency “assesses that BAE is currently experiencing significant supply-chain, part quality and delivery issues,” spokesman Mark Woodbury said in an email. “DCMA’s assessment has been shared with” the Army and “could potentially aid the program office’s final decision to proceed” to full-rate production, he said.
This is concerning.
I'm a BAE fanboy and one of the reasons why they were able to decisviely beat SAIC/ST Kinetics is because they were able to execute.
They were on time and on target with every point of the contest for the ACV...their competitors were not. The competition paid the price in having an excellent vehicle that showed more poorly than it should have because of their basic failure in doing basic stuff.
Now?
Now we're seeing the same company that was able to get it done by the numbers stumble and fall in delivering quality vehicles to the US Army.
Bad welds?
That's important but simple shit they should get right. Delivery chain issues? Important but again simple (for an organization like BAE) shit they should get right.
Don't know what's going on with BAE but they're starting to command a significant portion of our armored vehicle fleet (that's actually in service/slated to be in service) and they must do better.
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