Pryvyd - Ukrainian sixth generation fighter concepthttps://t.co/yHKBaR1IPZ#sixthgenerationfighter #fx #ngad #fighter pic.twitter.com/p821PuwNI6
— rodrigo avella (@rodrigoavella) March 28, 2022
Thursday, March 31, 2022
Late Open Comment Post(Ukraine/Russia War). 31 Mar 22
Wednesday, March 30, 2022
Stop minimizing the looming issues of global energy, supply chains & food systems...the elite are slowly stating the obvious
I've posted many articles warning of this danger. The threat of a recession has gone from probable to likely to almost a certainty. Oh and that's GLOBAL recession. I hope you're preparing accordingly.NEW - Klaus Schwab says "we do know the global energy systems, food systems, and supply chains will be deeply affected" at the World Government Summit 2022.pic.twitter.com/uY271thlJ8
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) March 30, 2022
The nine Freedom-class Littoral Combat Ships currently in Navy service – the youngest of which commissioned in 2020 – have been marked for disposal
via USNI News
THE PENTAGON – The nine Freedom-class Littoral Combat Ships currently in Navy service – the youngest of which commissioned in 2020 – have been marked for disposal as part of the Department of Defense’s Fiscal Year 2023 budget proposal, USNI News has learned.
The ships – USS Fort Worth (LCS-3), USS Milwaukee (LCS-5), USS Detroit (LCS-7), USS Little Rock (LCS-9), USS Sioux City (LCS-11), USS Wichita (LCS-13), USS Billings (LCS-15) and USS St. Louis (LCS-19) – are part of the 24 ships the service has chosen to decommission in FY 2023 for an estimated $3.6 billion in savings.
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The Navy intends to take the remaining six Freedom-class ships under construction and fit them with a variation of the surface warfare mission package for missions in U.S. Central and Southern commands, a service official told USNI News.
Consider this.
The same group of Admirals and Generals that gave us the LCS, MLP and a few other failed ships are the same Admirals and Generals that are putting together the plan to take on China.
How can you have confidence in leadership that failed so badly at their shipbuilding plan that a ship that is less than two years old is being decommissioned?
They're decommissioning ships faster than they're being built but we're supposed to believe that they have the chops to develop a plan to defeat China?
For the first time I'm seeing a bit of synergy in the Russian assault. Armor & infantry operating together in the assault on Mariupol...
I have never believed that this was our fight. I always thought that this war is a distraction from pressing problems that the USA has right here at home...in the challenge of China...and in the confusion/friction we have within our own borders with regard to how this country moves forward.Additionally I chafe at the idea that Russia is fighting this war in the same it would if it had been in the Middle East or Africa. I contend that if the belligerents were dark skinned that the Russians would have bulldozed them if they had the temerity to try and block armored formations with protests. I believe that anywhere else on the planet the Russians would have gone hardcore and clapped anyone with unmitigated gall to think that protesting against their advances would end in anything but broken/dead/burnt bodies.The reaction to refugees has been telling. If they were from any other area of the world they would have been blocked without question and MANY OF THE SAME PEOPLE here would have been cheering their leadership for keeping them out.Also, while I stand alone in thinking that this war isn't ours to participate in (even using the Ukrainians as proxies), I believe that if this war was happening anywhere else in the world that MANY OF THE SAME PEOPLE that are my most vocal critics would suddenly switch sides and cheer me for having that view.
Scott Ritter (former Marine & UN Inspector) with his "Big Arrow" Theory, gives the best explanation of the Russian attack on Ukraine I've read.
1/ Big Arrow War—a primer. For all those scratching their heads in confusion, or dusting off their dress uniforms for the Ukrainian victory parade in Kiev, over the news about Russia’s “strategic shift”, you might want to re-familiarize yourself with basic military concepts.
— Scott Ritter (@RealScottRitter) March 29, 2022
Weird! Russia backs off demands that it gas be paid for in roubles...
via Reuters
Russia will not immediately demand that buyers pay for its gas exports in roubles, the Kremlin said on Wednesday, promising a gradual shift and saying Russia should work on an idea to widen the list of its exports requiring rouble payment.
President Vladimir Putin issued an order last week for Russian gas, which accounts for 40% of European needs, to paid for in roubles instead of dollars or euros.
Earlier on Wednesday, Russia's top lawmaker Vyacheslav Volodin said the European Union would have to pay in roubles if it wanted Russian gas and said oil, grain, metals, fertiliser, coal and timber exports could be priced the same way. read more
The government, the central bank and Gazprom (GAZP.MM) are due to present proposals for the switch by Thursday.
Asked whether the payments should be in roubles starting from Thursday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "Absolutely no."
"As we discussed before, payments and delivery is a time consuming process ... This does not mean that a tomorrow's delivery should be paid (in roubles). From a technological point of view, this is a more prolonged process," he said.
First a weird war.
Russian forces held back by protesters? That's some strange shit! Russian forces abandoning vehicles, surrendering en masse and basically not fighting as combined arms teams? Strange shit!
Now?
Now the West has basically sought to cripple the Russian economy, the Russians have a way to bring at least Europe to its knees and get a little payback and again the Russians do some strange shit!
I don't get it.
Maybe I'm twisted but I would seek to extract every ounce of pain from a country that tried to put my own in a hurt locker.
The restraint has been impressive (Mariupol has been bombed hard but I still believe even there they're holding back...Kyiv had hardly been hit...relatively speaking).
The only answer is that Russia still views themselves as part of the European community.
Obviously they still feel kinship there so they're not going for the throat punch followed with thumbs in the eye.
Europe dodged a bullet.
Sidenote. Turkey, a country that the EU has shunned is hosting peace talks, and Russia itself is keeping the EU afloat even while NATO is pushing exercises up against its border, even though intel hasn't stated ONCE that the Russians were gonna make a move into Eastern Europe. WEIRD SHIT!
This war is just plain strange. I don't get it at all. Is this the real future? Half hearted affairs? Peer combat being limited to just the battlefield and not a full effort across societies and govts?
I am stunned by all this. Remember the warnings of cyber attacks? The only cyber attacks that have happened have been against the Russian govt, not them, but our citizens! Supposedly Russian sponsored cyber criminals turned off the gas on the east coast a few years ago. During war, savage sanctions and seizures of assets, Russia does nothing...I've been waiting for a massive outage on the east and west coast due to cyber activity but NOTHING!
The Russian reaction has been SOFT as hell. I would have thought the response would have been MUCH MORE vicious than its been.
I've got to be missing something.
Tuesday, March 29, 2022
U.S Marines with 1/12 learn foraging during Spartan Fury 22.1
About the Chris Rock/Will Smith "issue"
I missed the show but all I did was hear about it the next day. I decided to comment it on it today.Most Americans blame Chris Rock over viral Will Smith slap: poll https://t.co/Ra3wsM3IIR pic.twitter.com/AjkVW0raDb
— New York Post (@nypost) March 29, 2022
Berger gambled and lost it all...Light Amphibious Warship is delayed and more amphibious ships are being retired.
Thanks to George for the link!
via Defense News.
The U.S. Navy wants to buy one last San Antonio-class amphibious ship and then end the production line, the service announced in its fiscal 2023 budget request.
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Under the Navy’s proposal, it would buy just three of the 13 Flight IIs and then end the program, shrinking the amphibious fleet dramatically as the Whidbey Island-class dock landing ships hit the end of their service lives and are decommissioned.
The Navy and Marine Corps are conducting an amphibious warship requirements study expected to wrap up very shortly. Lt. Gen. Karsten Heckl, the deputy commandant of the Marine Corps for combat development and integration, said in January he worried the study’s final result would be based on budget limitations rather than actual need.
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The fleet has 32 amphibious ships today, in line with what Heckl said the Marines need. Marine Corps leadership has said dropping to 28 could mean delays in arrival times in a crisis.
The decision to stop the LPD production line could drop the service to 24, at the very low end of an estimate released by the Biden administration last spring. It’s unclear if a number that low would add risk to arrival times or force a more fundamental rethinking of the ARG/MEU construct in place today.
Here
Berger failed. Badly. To be frank, he jeopardized the Marine Corps because of his false belief that his plan would save it.
No way could the Marine Corps become the lead service in the sea battle!
The Navy has old pros and would not tolerate the Marines becoming the lead dawg in that fight.
So where are we now?
The Navy is slow. Painfully slow. But you can bet your last dollar that they will gobble up every ounce of every shipbuilding dollar to put shooters in the water.
It's gonna be either subs, frigates or destroyers. They'll wait a bit on replenishment ships and even longer to get the light amphibious warship in the water.
Meanwhile the Marines, that the Commandant tried to turn into a joint force sensor, is left on the beach looking dazed and confused.
Amphibious assault? After all the work to keep it viable he threw it away. I contend that an airborne assault is more hazardous but the Army is still doing it. Not for airborne sake but for assault and force in readiness sake.
Berger forgot that.
You wonder why the Marines are having recruiting woes?
It's because no one knows what the Marines are anymore!
Its hard to sell "join the Marines and be in logistics"! Refuel joint and allied aircraft! Become a sensor for the joint force!
It's easy to sell "be one of the few, the proud, the Marines!" Be part of the force that is "ready when the nation is least ready"!
He threw that all away and now the Navy is pouncing to gobble up budget.
The weird thing is that even trying to pivot back to becoming a force in readiness, assault force...to becoming Marines instead of Missile Marines is gonna be super difficult. Even more difficult now than even 6 months ago.
The budget is gonna get ravaged by inflation, social spending, increased costs because of all of the above, a pay raise to the troops and finally increased operating costs across the board.
The ground side has been ravaged for funding. The wing remains but how do you crawl out from underneath the expensive as fuck F-35B, MV-22C, CH-53K and other systems they have?
I can predict that they'll go after the AH-1Z and UH-1Y claiming they no longer are viable but the truth is that its the lowest hanging fruit on the air side.
The real savings could come from chopping a bunch of generals, and colonels. For a force as small as the Marines are we have WAAAAAAAAAAY too many.
It's all probably immaterial.
Berger crushed the Corps and the accountants will come to crush Berger's dream.
Say goodbye to hopes of lower gas prices..Saudi Oil Refineries hit hard by Houthis
Thanks to Alexander Timokhin for the pics!
I find it amazing.
We live in an interconnected world (thanks globalism) but so many Americans can't see beyond their own towns much less shores that they're left dazed and confused when events happen halfway around the world that will affect their lives.
Take the hit on the Saudi Oil Refinery.
This has implications for both Europe and America.
You can pretty much cancel thoughts of lower prices in the near future quite honestly the early predictions of 150 dollar a barrel oil is probably gonna be looked back at fondly.
Additionally many have ignored the warning signs of a looming global recession.
You can stick a pin in that too.
Did you know that a major Chinese city is facing another lockdown because of covid?
via Wired
THE SUPPLY CHAIN is in chaos—and it’s getting worse. Air freight warehouses at Shanghai Pudong Airport are log-jammed as a result of strict Covid testing protocols imposed on China’s biggest city following a local outbreak. At the city’s port, Shanghai-Ningbo, more than 120 container vessels are stuck on hold. In Shenzhen, a major manufacturing hub in the country’s south, trucking costs have shot up 300 percent due to a backlog of orders and a shortage of drivers following the introduction of similar Covid restrictions. Major ports the world over, which used to operate like clockwork, are now beset by delays, with container ships queuing for days in some of the worst congestion ever recorded. The list goes on.
More than a million containers due to travel to Europe from China by train—on a route that goes through Russia—must now make their journey by sea as sanctions bite. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has also severed key supply lines for nickel, aluminum, wheat, and sunflower oil, causing commodity prices to skyrocket. Countries in the Middle East and Africa that rely on produce from Ukraine are likely to experience serious food shortages in the coming weeks and months. Some European automotive production lines have cut their output due to a shortage of wiring normally sourced from factories in Ukraine. If the pandemic, which triggered a surge in purchasing of goods, caused the global supply chain to buckle, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and China’s continuing zero-Covid policy risk breaking it completely.
The supply chain is too complex, interconnected, and fragile to be made completely immune to shocks, especially ones as seismic as a global pandemic or a major war. But a new reality is forcing companies to adopt new strategies to keep goods moving. In this reality, backlogs and breakdowns are the new normal, which makes getting ahead of disruptions as early as possible more important than ever.
“We used to occasionally have black swan events,” says Richard Wilding, professor of supply chain strategy at Cranfield University in the UK, referring to rare and hard-to-predict occurrences that have major impacts. “The problem at the moment is we have a whole flock of black swans coming at us.”
Buckle up boys and girls.
You wanted interesting times?
You're about to get your wish.
Navy Electronic Attack aircraft head to Europe
Six @USNavy EA-18G Growler aircraft from @NASWhidbeyIslan arrived at Spangdahlem AB yesterday to enhance @NATO's collective defense posture within the European theater.
— Spangdahlem Air Base (@Spangdahlem_AB) March 29, 2022
Read more here: https://t.co/is1gjG0c0Y@HQUSAFEAFAF @usairforce @NATO_AIRCOM pic.twitter.com/xjVYT8x8JQ
J-35....
Leaked Series of J-35 Maiden Flight till Now🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/CXdkw6QVvT
— David Wang (@Nickatgreat1220) March 29, 2022
The show stopper for Force Design 2030 is the LAW. It won't appear till after Berger leaves office.
via Defense News
The big-ticket items ― ships and missiles ― are critical to the Corps’ future war-fighting vision. All see funding increases, but not exactly at the level or timing that Marine leaders have wanted.
For example, the light amphibious warship, which Marine leaders have been pushing to be procured by 2023, will have to wait until at least 2025, according to the new budget.
Well its a done deal.
Berger will have left the Marine Corps in worse shape than when he found it.
That is leadership failure.
To be blunt he brought this on himself. He did not sell his plan to the masses that he leads, instead he tried to ram it thru.
He's failed and now what do we see? Amphibs are being retired and their replacement isn't here yet.
Capability continues to be lost and the transition is years away. Read this part again.
...the light amphibious warship, which Marine leaders have been pushing to be procured by 2023, will have to wait until at least 2025...
If you assume perfect procurement (which I don't) then you can bet that 2025 is a pipe dream.
With the pressure to get other ships into service (ya know the things that are required to win a war at sea) you can bet that the Navy will be pushing for its new Frigate as fast as possible.
Pretty piss poor planning to develop a plan that has a single point of failure.
Sidenote. Do you realize that we've now had a string of 3 failed Commandant's in a row? Amos? Trash. Neller? I don't know what the fuck Neller is known for except for bowing his head when a female congress critter was talking shit to him. Berger? I can't even call it. Let's hope the next one is better. We need a General Gray in the worst way.
Max effort sometimes results in a bit of weirdness (reality check)
Pretty disgusting huh?This is crazy. She’s pissing herself doing deadlifts 😳 pic.twitter.com/xOHQYChTkB
— Toxic King 🧟 (@EasyWorkMaddi) March 28, 2022


















