All photos by Justin Connaher
*Note* I'm just being curious here and if any Airborne guys know then shoot me an e-mail. What is the deployment sequence of the flotation gear when fully equipped?
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
EOD gets busy down under!
All photos by Petty Officer 1st Class Jennifer Villalovos
Sikorsky S-92 Helicopter ...NH-90 Killer?
Sikorsky will move away from the S-70 Black Hawk series Helicopter sooner or later and waiting in the wind is the S-92. The NH-90's issues are well documented, the EH-101 is larger, the V-22 is expensive which leaves the S-92 as my dark horse to capture the future military helo market.
British Apache night time carrier ops.
Neptunus Lex makes a trench run on F-35 critics...
Neptunus Lex nails it.
He makes a trench run on F-35 critics with his latest post but instead of me telling you about it, just go over to his house to read it yourself. But to wet your whistle, here's a bit...
In the opening hours of Operation Odyssey Dawn, B-2 bombers flew from their base in the United States to Libya and back to provide the “unique capabilities” necessary to kick down the door for the NATO campaign. What if instead of a twenty hour mission requiring a billion-dollar asset and millions of pounds of jet fuel – you had an aircraft that could do the same mission in twenty minutes from the deck of a ship just off the coast? Whether operating in the denied airspace of an integrated air-defense system or striking fleeting targets in a failed state, the future of tactical aviation is about being readily available and flexible.
Monday, July 25, 2011
ANGLICO conducts close air support
All Photos by Cpl. Gene A. Ainsworth III
A CH-46 Sea Knight, flown by pilots from 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, unloads gear during a close-air support training event with 1st and 3rd Air Naval Gunfire Liaison companies here July 21. |
ISAF Helicopter Crashes in Eastern Afghanistan...ISAF mum.
First we had this release on the 25th from ISAF. I didn't post it because frankly I'm tired of their bullshit when it comes to information about incidents. I don't even know why they even have a Public Affairs Office. You can get more info by following the individual services websites...and when you contact a unit PAO, they're more than happy to help...regardless of the blog size. Prizes in this category go to the 101st, Rangers, 11th MEU, 13th MEU and 1st MEF.
ISAF isn't even in the top fifty. But I digress. This is the paltry information they put out....
ISAF Joint Command - AfghanistanQuite honestly, when I read that rescue forces came under fire, an eyebrow was raised but I knew better than to even ask...the bastards....but today we have this from Stars and Stripes....
2011-07-S-071
For Immediate Release
KABUL, Afghanistan (July 25, 2011) – An International Security Assistance Force helicopter crashed in eastern Afghanistan today.
As coalition rescue forces approached the crash site, they came under enemy fire. Coalition forces returned fire, with small arms, while working to secure the site of the crash. All passengers and crew members have been secured and safely transported to a nearby base.
ISAF is currently assessing the incident to determine further facts.
U.S. helo downed by RPG in Pech; none killed
Stars and StripesPublished: July 25, 2011
FORWARD OPERATING BASE JOYCE, Afghanistan — Minor casualties were reported after a rocket-propelled grenade downed a Chinook helicopter carrying U.S. and Afghanistan soldiers as it attempted to land at a coalition forces base in eastern Afghanistan early Monday.Thank God, no one was killed, but it brings me back to the ISAF PAO .... why no updated info?
The crash happened shortly after midnight when the rocket hit the rear of the helicopter on its descent into Nangalam Base in the Pech River Valley of Kunar province.
At least two soldiers suffered non-life-threatening shrapnel wounds. Some 20 people were on board, including soldiers and crew.
A rescue team that responded to the crash came under small-arms fire, drawing return fire from U.S. and Afghan soldiers. No further coalition casualties were reported.
There was no immediate word on who was responsible for the attack.
The Pech River Valley and several adjoining valleys, including the Korengal and Shuryak, are considered Taliban strongholds, and attacks on coalition forces remain a regular occurrence as the Afghanistan war approaches the 10-year mark.
A battalion of the Afghanistan National Army is stationed at Nangalam Base, formerly known as Forward Operating Base Blessing. The U.S. military handed over control of the base to Afghan forces earlier this year.
From staff reports
F-35C test aircraft validates catapult launch connections
BAE enters the LHD fray.
Think Defense gives us basically a two-fer in a post on BAE's attempt to grab some of the LHD market.
*Sidenote* I don't know whats up with your feed Think Defense but I can't for the life of me make it over to your regular website...just the Tumblr nonsense! Fix it bud.
The two-fer involves ...
1. The author is obviously concerned about the fact that once the Ocean goes away, so does the LHD concept in the Royal Navy. It remains to be seen whether a full deck aircraft carrier can fulfill the role---in my mind it cannot, but we will see.
2. The second point is that the author appears to be concerned about the lack of expeditionary potential that remains with the Royal Navy and gives a couple of options to recapture that lost capability. I like it but I doubt that it will fly with a nation that is looking to gut its military in order to pay for social programs.
Its definitely worth a read...if you can get into his website.
Bae PDF Lhd Datasheet
British Army fades away...
The Brits have finally decided.
Social programs win out over the defense of their nation. Pity. The Brits have always held themselves apart from mainland Europe. I would call it being European without being European. Those days are apparently over.
via Defense Management....
In a memo, the head of the army revealed that an extra 5,000 redundancies are to come by 2015 on top of the 7,000 redundancies announced in last year's Strategic Defence and Security Review.
The cuts are said to form part of plans to reduce the size of the regular armed forces and increase the number of reserves.
Chief of the General Staff General Sir Peter Wall revealed the cuts in a memo to officers, the Daily Telegraph has reported.
"Regular Army manpower will be cut more steeply, with an additional reduction of 5,000 over and above the 7,000 already in progress as a result of the SDSR," wrote General Wall.
"This takes the Army to around 90,000 by 2015. The additional manpower cuts are now being scoped but will inevitably require a further redundancy programme.
Sunday, July 24, 2011
24th Marines train at Bridgeport...
Trimble decides to participate in APA stupidity.
Trimble has lost it.
Instead of playing it straight, he instead decides to be a shill for the Dark Lord, Bill Sweetman and post tripe like this!
Notice the photo above? What do you see? PL-9 air to air missiles and PL-12 air to air missiles in the J-20's internal weapons bay. What else do you notice? How about the fact that the PL-9 is physically larger than the PL-12 in this mock up!
But in his story, Trimble conveniently ignores the obvious and instead tries to play a game with his readers, by misdirecting them to the "not a pound for air to ground" when he's really attempting to highlight the "supposed" weapons carriage of the J-20.
Obvious.
Contrived.
Silly.
And beneath his dignity. When we have journalist that know better doing SHIT like this then no wonder they're losing respect.
Saturday, July 23, 2011
MultiCam vulnerable to a $120 uv filter?
Check this out from Military Photos. Amazing.
The reddish image is the uv filtered photo and the greenish one is the unfiltered one. Against a first tier enemy, multicam is trash when it comes to preventing detection.
The reddish image is the uv filtered photo and the greenish one is the unfiltered one. Against a first tier enemy, multicam is trash when it comes to preventing detection.
Friday, July 22, 2011
2 articles from DEFESA Global that you should check out.
First up from DEFESA Global is a write up on the Piranha 3 with a new turret. Interesting. They then have an article on a multi-purpose modular maritime action ship there version of our LCS. To be honest, I like there version better.
Tarzan Assault Course
More abuse of authority by police.
Hot button issue guys. No I haven't had contact but I see what's happening and it infuriating. I despise the leakage of police tactics into the military and military tactics into policing. Go to this website for the story but take the time to watch the video in full (he starts at 6:30)
Thursday, July 21, 2011
And even more from Talisman Sabre...
All Photos by Lance Corporal Jerome Reed.
Photos by Maj. Timothy LeMaster
Photos by Maj. Timothy LeMaster
McCain finally gets called out on his F-35 nonsense!
About freaking time!
McCain has been like a drunk sailor on shore leave in Thailand...
But finally the Weekly Standard has called him on his recent rash of foolishness. Read the whole thing here but a highlight....
A think tank in Australia with a vested interest in its demise....a writer with the desire to preserve the European defense industry....the "cool" thing to do if you're a defense blogger....but the days of simply allowing the dis-information has passed. The F-35, the US defense sector, high tech US manufacturing and our alliances world wide require this program to progress.
It would be beyond a shame for a few guys with axes to grind, along with a few Congressional staffers to determine the fate of US defense for years to come.
McCain has been like a drunk sailor on shore leave in Thailand...
But finally the Weekly Standard has called him on his recent rash of foolishness. Read the whole thing here but a highlight....
Terminating the F-35, or simply terminating the F-35B short take off vertical landing (or STOVL), would be fatal for the Marine Corps as a serious war fighting service. The modernization of the Marines is already at risk; the V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor transport turned out to be more difficult and more expensive than anticipated, and last year the Obama administration cancelled the Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle, which would have given the Marines both enhanced amphibious assault capability but, even more important, more firepower and mobility ashore. The Marines’ AV-8B Harriers – a development of the original British jump jet – are at the end of their service life, and the Marines’ F-18s cannot operate from Marine amphibious assault ships. And there’s hardly reason to have the big-deck amphibs without the F-35B. Conversely, operating a fifth-generation aircraft would give the Marine Corps a new viability in small-scale contingencies – think Libya – and allow them to contribute to more challenging “anti-access, area-denial” contingencies in East Asia or in an Iran-type operation. Similar challenges face the Navy; without a fifth-generation aircraft, its own aircraft carriers are increasingly irrelevant to high-end strike campaigns.I know how the "hatred" of the F-35 started.
A think tank in Australia with a vested interest in its demise....a writer with the desire to preserve the European defense industry....the "cool" thing to do if you're a defense blogger....but the days of simply allowing the dis-information has passed. The F-35, the US defense sector, high tech US manufacturing and our alliances world wide require this program to progress.
It would be beyond a shame for a few guys with axes to grind, along with a few Congressional staffers to determine the fate of US defense for years to come.
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