Monday, August 24, 2015

Blood bath in stocks...Shanghai down 8.5%

via Jerusalem Online.
The Far East stock markets continue to fall today. The Shanghai Composite lost 8.5% of its value in the first hours of trade. The leading Hong Kong Market index lost 4.5% and reached a three year low. Tokyo is down 3.5% and the leading index in Taiwan plunged 7.5%, marking the worst stock market opening in its history.

The world is now waiting to see how the European and US markets would respond when they open later today.
The average investor is sleeping while the pros are already making moves to protect themselves.

Americans might wake up to their profits over the last two years being wiped out.

Told ya so.  The house of cards begins to fall.

Is this N. Korea thing more serious than we think?


via Bantay Spratly.
BREAKING NEWS! China PLA troops head to North Korea (DPRK) border as North-South tensions mount
The People's Liberation Army has sent troops to China's border with North Korea as escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula have pushed North and South to the brink of possible war.
The Hong Kong-based Oriental Daily reported Saturday that internet users have been uploading photos of what appear to be PLA armored vehicles and tanks passing through the streets of Yanji, the seat of the Yanbian Korean autonomous prefecture in eastern Jilin province. The city, considered a key transport and trade hub between China and the DPRK, is less than 30 kilometers from the 1,400-kilometer border.
The military deployment is believed to reflect how seriously Beijing considers the the current standoff between North and South Korea. Delegates from Pyongyang and Seoul have agreed to continue talks at 3 pm Sunday local time after the first high-level dialogue between the two sides in nearly a year was adjourned following a marathon 10-hour session.
What do the Chinese know that we don't?

All I'm getting from United States Forces Korea is that they're monitoring the situation.  8th Army isn't saying anything either.  I don't expect much from USMC Forces Korea so what is the deal here?

What has the Chinese so spooked that they'd deploy this many additional troops to an already militarized border?

Sunday, August 23, 2015

This is why I hate USNI Blog. Stop dividing/sectioning your writers....



via USNI Blog...
Beginning on Women’s Equality Day (26 August), the Naval Institute Blog will be running a “Women in Writing Week,” highlighting the writing of female commissioned officers and enlisted personnel in the sea services.
Women comprise more than half of the US population and 18% of naval officers between O-1 and O-4, yet they make up fewer than 1% of writers at the Naval Institute Blog.
We invite ALL females–active, reserve, retired, civilian–to write for the Naval Institute Blog on any topic of their choice. We also invite all writers of any gender to write about their favorite female writers in the military, and those role models who have paved the way for others to follow.
Interesting...but wait it gets better.  Check out this cleansing statement that follows the preaching above....
 Blogging is not a gender-specific sport. We invite all men and all women to participate, to share in their equal voice and contribute to our great naval debate.
Yeah.

When a person has something to say you don't need to put out a call.  When a person wants to put themselves out there on a professional subject they don't need to use USNI as a conduit.

This is the mindset in that house.  What next?  You want black, white, hispanic, asian writers?  How about Russian, Brazilian, Catholic, Protestant or Buddhist writers?  When do they assume that all their writers are hetrosexual and then put out a call for bi, gay, or transgender writers?  What about Satanist?  Can't discriminate so what do the Neo-Nazi members have to say?  What about the Eugenics crowd?  What is the cutoff in the partitioning of military writers for USNI?

When you start focusing on writers sex/sexual preference/race/religion etc.... instead of the issues facing the Naval Services then you're no longer credible..... if you call yourself a professional military institute that is!

USNI has taken their eyes off the ball and they're crashing into the back of the ship.


Blast from the past...the Amphibious Trailer.


Everyone with even a passing interest in WW2, German armor and amphibious operations knows about the  Landwasserschlepper (above), the Nazi logistics/amphibian.

What they might not know about is the second part of the vehicle system...the amphibious trailer...Below are a few pics of the complete system....




Its actually pretty impressive.  While the Landwasserschlepper could carry approx 20 troops the trailer would add an additional 10-20 tons of cargo to each trip.

What is the lesson for today?  The AAV, follow on ACV will lose their cargo carrying ability due to blast seats being installed.  Could a few Amphibious Trailers make up for this shortfall?

I just don't know.

What I do know is that the Ground Combat Element is depending more and more on aviation for transportation, fires...and logistics.

What happens if a cunning, clever and cruel enemy decide to challenge, degrade and/or eliminate the aviation part of our combat team because they realize how reliant we are on it?  How do we supply our Marines then?  

Chinese & Russian amphibious assault exercise...




via Russia Military Technology...
August 23 - Russia and China have started the second phase of joint naval exercises from August 20-28 under the name of “Joint-Sea 2015 (II).”
The exercises will be held in Peter the Great Bay, near the Russian Far Eastern city of Vladivostok and in the Sea of Japan.
The main subject of the exercises will be “working out the joint protection of the sea and joint amphibious operations.” In light of the event there will also be open and vibrant cultural and sports activities to promote exchanges between the military vessels of the two countries.
Taking part in the drills from both sides are 23 warships, 2 submarines, 20 aircraft, 15 aircrafts, 8 helicopters, more than 400 marines and 40 armored vehicles.
This is the fourth joint naval drills between Russia and China. The drills “Joint-Sea 2015” have distinct features such as the fact that these drills will last for 10 days, making them the lengthiest exercises in the past 4 years.
So let me get this straight.  First we push the Russians into the arms of the Chinese and then second, we reduce our armed forces to the smallest size they've been in decades?

Yeah.

This will work out nicely (sarcasm).

Chinese Amphibious Assault Drills.


More pics here at China Defense Blog.

Saturday, August 22, 2015

Did BAE quietly bring back the SEP from the dead?






via Defense News.
Six defense companies have offered their vehicles for the program: US-based General Dynamics with the Piranha Class 5 design; the French GTD-Nexter with the VBCI; Italy's Iveco-Oto Melara with the Centauro Freccia; Finland's Patria with the Patria AMV; German companies Krauss-Maffei Wegmann and Rheinmetall with the Boxer; and the Swedish SEP developed by BAE Systems.
However, the prototype bid of General Dynamics is the clear favorite. Spanish Defense Minister Pedro Morenés said it clearly in the national Parliament: “All the 8x8 armored vehicles must be constructed in Spanish factories.” Only two of the five companies fulfill this requirement — General Dynamics with Santa Bárbara Sistemas factories, and Iveco-Oto Melara.
Here.

Sorry for the photo spread on this, but I've always been a big fan of the SEP.  If I had to do a list of the best vehicles never to make it into service then the SEP would be at the top (or near it) of it.

The thing that gets me though is that the people at Defense News missed this.  This is huge and makes me wonder about the strategy that BAE is about to employ.

They dusted off a vehicle that I thought long dead (don't get that part twisted either...the SEP was super advanced at the time and even if they didn't improve it in my opinion it would still be the equal if not better than any of its competition)?

BAE is about to push production over profit is my guess.  They're taking control of the pricing by now entering into production solo...no more partnerships...and will make every competition a price shootout.

This is good news for the USMC.  The price will be right for the Amphibious Combat Vehicle.  The only issue will be whether or not the Corps is serious about actually buying a replacement for the AAV.

The terrorist take down in France & the USMC's reputation...

I got tons of notes yesterday about the early (and wrong) reports of US Marines taking down terrorists on a train in France.

It just didn't sound right to me.

My thinking might be flawed but the first thing that popped into my mind was that's the Army and Air Forces territory...what would a couple of Marines be doing in France?

Ya see I was thinking about a weekend liberty.  Yeah there are more than a couple of Joint Force billets in Germany and the UK but still...it didn't feel right....and I was correct.

But the bigger issue to me is one that galls the other services and even Special Operations.

When people think about valor, courage and "doing what others won't" the first people they think of are Marines.

Watching the coverage of the event you could hear the intense pride and almost giddiness of the reporters every time they said the words "our Marines" took down a terrorist.  When it soon became apparent that the heroes were an Airman and an Army National Guardsman the pride remained but you could sense a little bit of air coming out of the balloon.

THIS IS WHAT THE USMC MUST SAFEGUARD.

The reputation of the Corps has been paid for in blood.  The American people EXPECT hardened warriors that will defend the nation.  That is something that we cannot squander.

The USMC's reputation is stellar.  That's why I bitch and blog.  We can't let anyone...even misguided leadership (whether in the Pentagon or White House or Congress) to ruin it.

Sidenote:  I don't know who is pushing out these guys names in the news media but where are the Force Protection folks?  Pushing this up and posting names to the news, and having the President call them only makes them and their families targets!  I'm just a blogger with an attitude and I can see this so why can't the intel people?  Don't be shocked if some lone wolf decides to go after these guys families.  If they went after an arts festival and a news office then they certainly go after people that thwarted an attack and became famous for it.

Israeli jet shot down over Syria?

via Sputnik
The Israeli fighter jet was targeted over the city of Al-Quneitra on Friday, Iran’s Fars news agency reported on Saturday.
Israel regularly violates the Syrian airspace and launches missile attacks against the country.
On Friday, the Israeli Air Force resumed airstrikes on Western Syria, targeting a government army base at Khan Al-Sheih in Damascus province and another in the al-Quneitra province after a six-hour halt in attacks that followed their multiple air raids over the Golan Heights.
Both Syrian army installations have been under siege by the al-Qaeda-linked group of al-Nusra Front and their allies from Ajnad al-Sham and Jeish al-Islam groups.
Is it wrong for me to hope that the pilot didn't survive the shootdown?  If he was captured he's in for a horrifying existence....before they kill him.

F-35 to be tested against the A-10 in CAS.


via IBD.
The Defense Department is working on tests that would determine if Lockheed Martin's (NYSE:LMT) F-35 has the ability to fully replace the A-10 Warthog attack jet. The tests will be conducted in late 2017 or early 2018, says a spokesperson from the Pentagon's Office of Operational Test and Evaluation cited by Politico.
The F-35 hasn't fared well against older jets in prior tests. According to a report in the military blog War Is Boring, an older General Dynamics (NYSE:GD) F-16 outmaneuvered the expensive F-35 in an air combat test in January.
But the F-35 Joint Program Office has said the report was misleading, that the F-35's technology is designed to work best at long range and not necessarily in dogfights.
The upcoming tests vs. the A-10s would be a key consideration for Congress as the Air Force looks to retire the Warthog fleet to save money.
But if the F-35 can't provide the close-air support needed, the Air Force might need to invest in a follow-on jet.
Here.

This is where credibility comes into play.

With all the games and scheming that is part of the F-35 program, do you really believe that they will release information that doesn't say that the airplane shits diamonds, gives its pilots blowjobs and is better than the A-10 in every way?

Didn't think so.

Which means that for outside consumption any info we get that is released by the program is useless.  We can only hope that some patriot decides to leak the real report.  Its irrelevant though.  The stock market is taking a huge hit.  The phony recovery is finally being seen by even the mainstream media as being fake.

The plane MIGHT make it into service but the numbers will be cut so dramatically that we WILL have to come up with a plan B.  Don't believe me?  Check this out from Army Magazine.
...the Army is not only being told to shrink—it announced a reduction of 40,000 more active-duty personnel in July—it is also being asked to accept a reduced state of readiness, defer maintenance of its physical infrastructure, and delay major modernization initiatives into the distant future. Other services are being asked to live with less too, but none of them is taking the kind of cuts the Army must absorb. Its share of the Pentagon’s base budget has fallen to less than a quarter—23.7 percent, actually, if President Barack Obama has his way in fiscal year (FY) 2016—and modernization plans have been pared by roughly half.
And that’s assuming budget sequestration doesn’t happen in FY 2016. If it does, Army leaders will have to contemplate draconian reductions in force structure, readiness and modernization. The only reason senior Army leaders have signed up for this Olympic-scale mismatch between resources and requirements is that the entire joint force is subject to congressionally mandated budget caps, and the caps are set to expire early in the next decade.
What if the threat of sequestration goes away and the Army still gets no relief? What if after stretching and straining for two decades to meet its obligations, it discovers national strategy and the political culture are more inclined to channel budget resources to the other services? That is what the balance of this article is about. More precisely, it is about the very real possibility the military department with the smallest budget share—the Army—will end up footing much of the bill for new Air Force planes and Navy warships.
Yeah.

I've been on my soapbox about the ground components being shrunk and complained that the US Army is getting too small and was shouted down by some in the Army that said it was to be expected.

Now.  Almost too late.  They see my point.

The USMC is destroying its own ground component to pay for the F-35.  It seems that the US Army is realizing the other services are doing to it what Marine Air is doing to the Corps.

Long story short?

The fight about the F-35 is FAR from over.