Saturday, September 24, 2011

PACCOM CO bets on F-35 or F/A-18 for Japan...

via Reuters...

(Reuters) - The head of U.S. military forces in Asia and the Pacific predicted Friday that Japan's choice of a new multibillion-dollar fighter fleet would reflect plans to stay "very complementary" with U.S. air forces.
Proposals are due in Tokyo on Monday from the three rivals for Japan's so-called F-X deal -- Boeing Co (BA.N) and Lockheed Martin Corp (LMT.N) of the United States and Europe's Eurofighter GmbH consortium, made up of Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain.Japan is expected to buy 42 planes, a deal experts say could be worth $6 billion to $8 billion, including spares, pilot training and related gear.U.S. Navy Admiral Robert Willard, head of the Hawaii-based, U.S. Pacific Command, stopped short of predicting that Tokyo would pick Boeing's F/A-18E/F Super Hornet or Lockheed's radar-evading F-35 Lightning II over the Eurofighter Typhoon.But he said Japanese defense forces "understand the importance of remaining interoperable with the United States, their ally that is home based in Japan or being hosted in Japan, as well as U.S. forces that are deployed in the region.""And I think have confidence that the decision that they make on this next fighter will reflect that," he added in an interview with Reuters.Pressed to say whether the Americans would best the Europeans, Willard replied: "No, I wouldn't go that far."But he said he was confident that Japanese commanders will make sure that whichever plane they buy "remains interoperable and very complementary to our capabilities."
Lets see...a rising China...no European capability or forces in the area...two of its major allies operate the F-18 and will soon operate the F-35...and despite the thoughts by some that the F-18 is inadequate, most know the truth--its a very effective fighter.

All that add up to Willard probably being right.  Welcome aboard the F-35 program Japan!

Friday, September 23, 2011

Mountain Warfare Training

CPL Jose Pacheco a soldier with Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, practices rappelling techniques during the basic-mobility portion of Mountain Exercise 08-11 at the Marine Corps’ Mountain Warfare Training Center in Northern California’s Toiyabe National Forest, Sept. 22. Pacheco and his fellow Soldiers will use the technical skills they learn during basic-mobility to gain a tactical advantage over their adversaries during the subsequent force-on-force exercise.

Cpl. Jose Pacheco, a soldier with Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, practices rappelling techniques during the basic-mobility portion of Mountain Exercise 08-11 at the Marine Corps’ Mountain Warfare Training Center in Northern California’s Toiyabe National Forest, Sept. 22. Pacheco and his fellow soldiers will use the technical skills they learn during basic-mobility to gain a tactical advantage over their adversaries during the subsequent force-on-force exercise.

Spc. Brian Short from Company D, 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, is conducting Assault Climbers Training at the Marine Corps’ Mountain Warfare Training Center in northern California’s Toiyabe National Forest, Sept. 22. The Assault Climbers Course is three weeks of training that is both technically and physically challenging, intended to take the most capable junior leaders from a formation and give them the skills and confidence necessary to lead their units through complex terrain.

Soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, attend a three week-long Assault Climbers training at the Marine Corps’ Mountain Warfare Training Center in Northern California, Sept. 22. This is the first non Special Forces unit to attend this physically challenging exercise.

Jacked up road march...

I never heard of so many heat casualties in one training evolution.  Wonder what was going on?

FORT BRAGG, N.C. --- Dozens of Soldiers at North Carolina's Fort Bragg suffered heat-related problems after participating in an early morning march.Base spokesman Ben Abel said Friday that 37 Soldiers required medical treatment. Of those, 13 were taken to Womack Army Medical Center.One Soldier remains in the hospital's intensive care unit.About 60 Soldiers from various units at the sprawling Army base in the southeastern area of the state set out at about 5:30 a.m. for a road march in full combat gear as part of final training to receive their expert field medical badge.
Temperatures were in the 70s but with a light rain and humidity as high as 95 percent.
Doesn't seem like it was crazy hot...I wonder what the pace was and the type of Soldiers involved (their MOS...if these were grunts then something weird is going on).

Pics of the day...




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Thursday, September 22, 2011

Recon gets into the breeze...

Reconnaissance Marines with the 11th MEU watch their fellow service members parachute from a CH-46E on Camp Pendleton

Reconnaissance Marines with the 11th MEU prepare their gear before they jump out of a CH-46E on Camp Pendleton

Reconnaissance Marines with the 11th MEU jump out of a CH-46E on Camp Pendleton Sept. 22

24th MEU trains at Army base Fort Pickett

Photos by Sgt. Richard Blumenstein



Marines from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, collect information on a simulated enemy target during a raid on Fort Pickett's Cherry Villiage, Va., Sept. 19, 2011. More than 900 Marines and sailors are taking part in the Deployment for Training exercise at Fort Pickett, Sept. 6-23. The battalion is scheduled to attach to the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit as its Battalion Landing Team a few days after the training.

Marines from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, collect information on a simulated enemy target during a raid on Fort Pickett's Cherry Villiage, Va., Sept. 19, 2011. More than 900 Marines and sailors are taking part in the Deployment for Training exercise at Fort Pickett, Sept. 6-23. The battalion is scheduled to attach to the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit as its Battalion Landing Team a few days after the training.

Marines from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, collect information on a simulated enemy target during a raid on Fort Pickett's Cherry Villiage, Va., Sept. 19, 2011. More than 900 Marines and sailors are taking part in the Deployment for Training exercise at Fort Pickett, Sept. 6-23. The battalion is scheduled to attach to the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit as its Battalion Landing Team a few days after the training.

Marines from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, collect information on a simulated enemy target during a raid on Fort Pickett's Cherry Villiage, Va., Sept. 19, 2011. More than 900 Marines and sailors are taking part in the Deployment for Training exercise at Fort Pickett, Sept. 6-23. The battalion is scheduled to attach to the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit as its Battalion Landing Team a few days after the training.

Pfc. Cassius Johnson, a rifleman with Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, and Summit. Miss., native, posts security as an MV-22 Osprey lands near Fort Pickett's Cherry Villiage, Va., Sept. 19, 2011. More than 900 Marines and sailors are taking part in the deployment for training exercise at Fort Pickett, Sept. 6-23. The battalion is scheduled to attach to the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit as its Battalion Landing Team a few days after the training.

Marines from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, collect information on a simulated enemy target during a raid on Fort Pickett's Cherry Villiage, Va., Sept. 19, 2011. More than 900 Marines and sailors are taking part in the Deployment for Training exercise at Fort Pickett, Sept. 6-23. The battalion is scheduled to attach to the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit as its Battalion Landing Team a few days after the training.

First Steps To The Deck

Qualification flights to land the F-35B Lightning II on the deck of an amphibious assault ship at sea began at NAS Patuxent River, Maryland, on 14 September 2011. Four test pilots started with expeditionary airfield, or EAF, landing practice, which will lead to field carrier landing practice, or FCLP, where shipboard landings are simulated at a land base. EAF and FCLP testing is part of the pilot certification process for landing aircraft on a ship’s deck. The first ship trial on board the USS Wasp (LHD-1) for the F-35B is on track for late 2011, and is scheduled to include the first short take-offs, vertical landings, deck handling, and shipboard landing systems Deck environmental data will be collected as well.


Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Dept. Of Defense sees the value of STOVL aircraft.

via the Washington Times..
In addition to announcing the Taiwanese military upgrade, the Pentagon this week will release a congressionally mandated study on Taiwan’s air power.
The study concludes that Taiwan's military should buy short-takeoff and vertical-landing jets such as the British-design AV-8B Harrier jump jet or the new F-35B vertical-takeoff version, according to the officials familiar with the aircraft.
That conclusion was based on anticipated Chinese missile strikes against Taiwanese airfields with cratering munitions that would thwart takeoffs by F-16s and other jets
Read the whole thing.  Understand that the WT was able to find an "expert" that shot down the report as simply being justification not to sell new F-16's to Taiwan.  But in my opinion there is more to it than just that.  It should be obvious to all that the nation of Taiwan is vulnerable and that the only aircraft that will be able to get into the air after a missile strike is on that is STOVL.

C-130J in Action

Shots across the pelvis???

I got this from the Gun, Holsters and Gear blog.  I don't know if this is real or web folklore but what caught my attention wasn't the issue with whether Delta Teams are using Glocks or 1911's...what caught my attention is this part of the story...
And we changed the way we shoot. In training Army it was two in the chest and one in skull if needed. Now, if I give you 1 you are getting 2, if I give you 2 your are getting 5, if you get 5 then you get the rest of the mag. Plain and simple I am not going to let you get up and hurt one of my team mates.
And we will put all my shots right across your pelvis and then the shoulder girdle. I don’t care if you got a trauma team on hand, 5 shots across the pelvis and you ain’t getting up. The enemy is likely to wear some kind of armor now a days just as much as we are. 2 in a 3×5 card ain’t cutting it. So there are lots more ammo expended in training, which effects how well the guns hold up also.
Quite honestly that never occurred to me.

When talking concealed carry...heck even law enforcement.  If this ever catches on then you're going to see bad guys dying in some pretty gruesome ways.

5 across the pelvis.

Nasty.

Real nasty.

I like it.

Time to change my training routine...web folklore or not.