Sunday, June 13, 2021

Former Sec Of the Navy/Marine Corps Jim Webb takes apart Berger's folly point by point. MUST READ!

 Thanks to CoffeeJoeJava for the link!


via National Interest (just snippets...READ THE WHOLE THING!)

Interestingly, when citing his philosophical inspiration at the outset of his proposal, General Berger chose to ignore two centuries of innovative and ground-breaking role models who guided the Marine Corps through some of its most difficult challenges. The giants of the past—John LeJeune, Arthur Vandegrift, Clifton Cates, Robert Barrow and Al Gray, just for starters—were passed over, in favor of a quote from a professor at the Harvard Business School who never served. Many Marines, past and present, view this gesture as a symbolic putdown of the Corps’ respected leadership methods and the historic results they have obtained.


Much more important is the potentially irreversible content of the proposal itself. If authorized, appropriated and put into place, this plan would eliminate many of the Marine Corps’ key capabilities. It could permanently reduce the long-standing mission of global readiness that for more than a century has been the essential reason for its existence as a separate service. Its long-term impact would undo the value of the Marine Corps as the one-stop guarantor of a homogeneous tactical readiness that can “go anywhere, fight anybody, and win.” And after the centuries it took to establish the Marine Corps as a fully separate military service, it could reduce its present role by making it again subordinate to the funding and operational requirements of the Navy. 

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 While it is certainly useful to develop contingency plans should Marines be called upon to conduct such limited tactical interventions, building a force around this concept is not a bold leap into the future. Rather, it reflects a misunderstanding of the past, as well as ignoring the unpredictability of war itself. Such scenarios are hardly a full reflection of “what the Nation requires of the Marine Corps.” The General seems to acknowledge that when he states in his proposal, “We need better answers to the question, “what does the Navy need from the Marine Corps?”  (SNAFU! Note.  This is a fundamental failing of Berger's Concept..the question should NOT be what the Navy needs from the Marine Corps, the question SHOULD BE ... WHAT DOES THE NATION NEED FROM THE MARINE CORPS!!!!)

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 Depending on how limited one views the future responsibilities of the Marine Corps, this plan is erected on a fragile house of cards: that future Marine Corps operational commitments should be shaped by the reduction of front-line infantry battalions, whose casualties in any sustained engagement would quickly require replacements that may not be available if the battlespace expands; by subjecting Marine Corps commitments to the needs of the Navy; and by an unproved reliance on the augmentation of combat units such as aviation assets and tanks from other services that may not be available and who will not have trained with the Marine Corps.

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 The proposal was based on extensive wargaming, in which the new Commandant has great confidence. But it is axiomatic that experimental war games (like staff studies) can be biased through subtle control of the methodology decided upon by those who design the war game. There is no greater danger in military strategy than shaping a nation’s force structure to respond to one specific set of contingencies, giving an adversary the ability to adjust and adapt beforehand. Nor would it serve the country’s long-term interests for the Marine Corps to careen from two decades of overemphasis in the Middle East to a fixation with narrow naval scenarios in places like the South China Sea.

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 The most important evolution of the Marine Corps in our national security posture has been as an immediately deployable, fully capable expeditionary force, with an included mission of amphibious assault. And this has usually required “sustained land operations.” (SNAFU! NOTE...YES! YES! YES!  A Trillion times YES!)

Look.

I could basically copy and paste this whole article cause trying to grab the good parts is failing badly.

THE WHOLE DAMN THING IS SPOT ON!

I'm beyond pleased.

I'm grinning like an idiot.

The scrubs (I include myself in this) exit stage left.  The powerhouses have now entered the fray. 

This is a good thing.

Time is running out for Berger to implement this thing.  The Navy's budget is a mess that will take the strength of Hercules to unwind.  And finally the tribe is NOT sold on this madness.

We can beat it back, take the good parts (what few there are) and make them apart of the MAGTF and then jettison the rest.

There is a chance to save the Marine Corps from it's leadership...assuming we're not too late.

Read the entire article here. 

Quick Political Hit. You're being manipulated on this "Justice Dept under Trump spying on reports thing"

 Just a quickie.

You do know you're being manipulated on the "Justice Dept under Trump spied on reports thing" don't you?

Do you remember the time right after his election (and we can tell from reports of how long they extended this thing that this happened just after his election)?

Everyone in DC was leaking all kinds of stuff.  The FBI, Justice Dept, the News Media...it was obvious that they were attempting to take down Trump.

This isn't a defense of the dude just a tick tock of the time we lived thru.

I don't know how they worked it out but you saw a few select reports getting breaking news on an almost daily basis and the news media breaking arms patting themselves on the back because of it.

It was quite disgusting.

Now?

Now we discover there was a leak investigation but what has me puzzled is the fact that the only person I remember getting arrested was some chick that worked for a defense contractor in Florida(?).

I'm sure they had the goods on quite a few reporters and even a few Congress people but didn't pull the trigger.

That's the real scandal.

WHO does not rule out COVID-19 pandemic may have been caused by lab leak

Just gonna leave this right here. They called those of us that believed this thing got loose "conspiracy theorists". They called us that on days when they were being kind. Most of the time they called us looney toons...

Open Comment Post. 13 June 2021

Italian Navy Special Ops exit a sub...

UNIFIL PeaceKeepers on exercise...

So now the ACV is a deep attack vehicle?

via National Interest
The ACV, in development for several years, is replacing the existing Corps AAV and configured

with 8 x 8 wheels for greater speed, maneuverability, and survivability on land. As a tracked vehicle, the legacy AAV is not as mobile for land attack, and the new ACV is engineered for long-range sea-land attack operations. 

The ACV can travel roughly thirteen miles through the water at speeds up to six knots and reach 60 miles per hour on land for hundreds of miles inland. The wheeled configuration of the ACV removes torsion bars, a design feature which can add new possibilities such as the addition of a V-shaped hull. The ACV is able to carry up to 200 gallons of fuel for a 365-mile mission and weighs 30 tons. It is built with a digitized drivers instrument panel, unmanned turret able to integrate a 30-millimeter gun and 700 horsepower engine, more powerful than the AAVs 400 horsepower engine. The ACV uses ocean water to cool the engine and is armed with a .50-Cal machine gun.

The plus-up in ACV numbers is quite significant as well, as it appears to align with the Marine

Corps’ transforming amphibious assault strategy based on training for more cross-domain, dispersed attack concepts. With 5th-Generation air support, and manned-unmanned teaming and vastly more capable networking technologies, amphibious attack tactics continue to measurably expand.

Added cross-domain functionality not only means air-power coordination but a commensurate ability to advance and fight on land, which appears to be part of the reason the Marine Corps is both looking for larger numbers of ACVs and also building them for more extended land assault.

Here 

I am gobsmacked by this article.  Extended Land Attack?  In Berger's Marine Corps?

Either this thing has evolved behind the scenes OR he's trying to quiet the tribe with friendly articles.

I don't know.

I do know this is the first time I've heard of "extended land assault" used in the same sentence with Berger's Littoral Marine Corps.

Friday, June 11, 2021

Cutting Infantry/Tanks but 8th&I will have a Reinforced Ground Keeping Crew!

Navy receives first TH-73A helicopter

via Press Release
The first operational TH-73A helicopter was presented to the U.S. Navy June 10 during a ceremony at the AgustaWestland Philadelphia Corporation (Leonardo) plant in Philadelphia.

“The TH-73A will be instrumental in providing higher fidelity training to our future rotary-wing and tilt-rotor aviators for the Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard,” said Vice Adm. Kenneth Whitesell, Commander, Naval Air Forces. “The cutting-edge technology and advanced avionics within the Advanced Helicopter Training System (AHTS) will enable a more seamless transition from the training aircraft to fleet aircraft, this in turn allows more focus on high end warfighting development and training.”

Eventually, the Navy will have 130 TH-73A helicopters total, with deliveries continuing through 2024. The new helicopters will meet the capability and capacity gaps of the aging TH-57 Sea Ranger training platform.

The TH-73As are fully Federal Aviation Administration certified prior to delivery, thus bringing a ready-made solution that will transition the TH-57 platforms out of service by 2025. The TH-57 is scheduled to begin sundown in fiscal year 2022.

“This delivery signifies a new era for Naval Aviation training," said Rear Adm. Robert Westendorff, Chief of Naval Aviation Training. “By using current cockpit technologies and a new training curriculum, the TH-73A will improve pilot training and skills, and ensure rotary wing aviators are produced more efficiently at a higher quality and are ready to meet the fleet’s challenges.”

In addition to new helicopters, the full AHTS includes aircrew training services that provide availability on new simulators, a modernized curriculum and a new contractor logistics support contract for the maintenance and flight line support requirements of the new helicopter.

Using the first TH-73A, the team will train the cadre of instructor pilots and validate the modernized curriculum efforts, which is a requirement prior to training Student Naval Aviators with the new curriculum in the new system. The helicopters will ensure the Navy has capacity to train several hundred aviation students per year for Chief of Naval Aviation Training (CNATRA) at Naval Air Station (NAS) Whiting Field in Milton, Florida.

The AHTS accounts for the training needs of all of the Fleet Replacement Squadrons, thus students will be highly trained and fully capable of succeeding, regardless of which platform they select.

“The combined government and contractor team set new standards to meet much needed requirements in the fleet,” said Capt. Holly Shoger, Undergraduate Flight Training Systems Program (PMA-273) program manager. “We are proud to develop and provide these new capabilities that will improve pilot training for many years to come."

The aircraft is scheduled to arrive at Naval Air Station Whiting Field, Florida, following final DOD inspections. A total of 32 TH-73As are scheduled for delivery to the U.S. Navy this calendar year and 130 total over the contract period. The new TH-73As will be housed in a temporary hangar at NAS Whiting Field, Florida, with construction to begin in 2023 on a new helicopter maintenance hangar.

Polish Borsuk IFV...more pics!

French Army training up new officers