Sunday, September 26, 2021
WS-10C-powered J-20A at Zhuhai
Finally and long awaited clear images of a WS-10C-powered J-20A at Zhuhai showing some sort of new grey RAM edge treatment replacing the former RAM one. 🤔
— @Rupprecht_A (@RupprechtDeino) September 25, 2021
Unfortunately no serial numbers are visible ... 😖 pic.twitter.com/H1Tqc11YN2
Remember me whining about my library? I'm just gonna dump them on the Marine Corps High School ROTC OIC and make him deal with it!
Remember my post (here) where I was whining about throwing away my library?
Well after much thought and considering plenty of options given to me by you guys, I've decided to pack them up, dump them on the Marine Corps High School ROTC OIC in my area and have him deal with it.
I'm gonna dazzle him with bullshit, recount that boot camp story and have him grab a few of his poolees (what do you call those bubbas?) and make him deal with it.
At the end of the day I'm sure he has better contacts than I do and maybe HQMC has something setup to deal with this issue.
God knows I can't be the first to have this pop-up!
Thanks ya'll. The idea of just trashing all these books was making my eyes bleed. I stepped back from the ledge.
PNS Hangor & HMS Conqueror...The only two Submarines that have sunk ships since 1945
via War History Online
PNS Hangor would be the first submarine to sink an enemy ship since 1945. In late November 1971, the Pakistani submarine was dispatched into the Arabian Sea, where she discovered a large group of ships from the Indian Navy. She maintained her distance from the vessels and investigated their communications. Over the next few days, the Indian Navy would learn of PNS Hangor’s presence and sent two British-made frigates to find her.
PNS Hangor was a French-made Daphne-class submarine. She was 200 ft long and armed with twelve 550 mm torpedo tubes.
On December 9, PNS Hangor detected the two frigates approaching her and dived deep until they came into torpedo range. Once they were in range, Hangor fired a homing torpedo at one of the frigates, INS Kirpan, which missed. Kirpan hightailed it away from Hangor as soon as they realized they were being targeted. Meanwhile, the second frigate, INS Khukri, barrelled towards the submarine in an attempt to sink it, however, Hangor fired a second torpedo at Khukri, which hit.
This torpedo dealt a fatal blow to the Khukri, which sank in mere minutes, claiming the lives of 18 officers and 176 sailors. Kirpan returned for another attack, which Hangor responded to with a third torpedo. This failed to stop Kirpan but caused the Indian frigate to flee.
After the engagement, the Indian Navy launched a huge search and destroy mission to find and sink Hangor, but the submarine reached safe waters after remaining submerged for almost a week.
Today, PNS Hangor is on display at the Pakistan Maritime Museum, Karachi, Pakistan.
11th MEU Conducts ship-to-shore TRAP exercise
Saturday, September 25, 2021
This is why I didn't post about the Border Patrol Horse Patrol...it wasn't what that ONE pic indicated...
Gonna make this real short and sweet. That one pic didn't cover the interaction. That's the problem with "emotional" leadership. It opines without having all the info. The public has that luxury. Leaders don't.Sorting through my footage from the border. I was in the river during the viral incident between a Haitian migrant and mounted CBP agent. It's shaky - but here's what I captured. pic.twitter.com/fnvxSU83tO
— Sarah Blake Morgan (@StorytellerSBM) September 24, 2021
WTI 1-22: Close Air Support









































