Monday, May 04, 2020
Marine Raider sporting jungle cammies...
The pic is from Marine Raider Recruiting on Instagram but my focus was on the cammies. That shit works to perfection in dense foliage (and admittedly dark conditions). What has me spinning is that the black rifle isn't what stands out. It's the coyote tan magazine. I wonder if they should perhaps pick up the olive green version for jungle conditions. Yeah I know. Added expense but when you see a pic like this and how much it stands out maybe it might be worth the investment.
Boeing Loyal Wingman (pics)
The Australian Air Force is gonna sell a metric shit ton of these birds. By their innovation they just setup Boeing Defense Australia to be a major player in the unmanned combat aircraft market and probably will win the future for systems in the West if this thing performs HALF as good as they're hoping.
Won't that be a kick in the ass?
Australia will be selling us combat aircraft! This new decade is gonna be crazy!
Carrier aviation was wild and wooly back in the day..
I really would love if one of you aviation types could verify this story...Believe it or not— Fighter-pictures (@fighterpics) May 5, 2020
The captain landed his A-6 while his Navigator hanging on the canopy because his seat was ejected halfway by mistake 😕. pic.twitter.com/C9tAiiX7ql
Damian Ratka's Twitter Page found pics of the VT-4 without bolt-on armor....thin don't describe it!
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Ok. I'm starting to get how the Commandant can be so comfortable with the risk he's taking by dumping tanks. He's obviously seen intelligence that we haven't and from the looks of this thing, competent US Marine Corps Infantry can rather easily take apart these things solo, much less with the help of the other parts of the remaining Air-Ground Team.
I don't believe some of our previous generation anti-tank weapons would have trouble ripping this thing to shreds.
You're gonna have to be prepared to maneuver on any formation coming at you, you're gonna have to hope you have arty in your back pocket to keep them buttoned up, and a little help from the wing and naval guns would always be helpful but this doesn't appear to be the beast that I once thought it was.
I wonder why the Nigerians (a pretty decent Army and one of the best on the African continent) would be so joyous about these vehicles. Is it because of the threat level or do they know something we don't about them? I believe the Brits have pretty good relations with them so maybe we'll get a second hand look-see with what the Nigerians are working with.
Ogden Dowcett's concept of a size comparison of the M1-155 Howitzer with the Boxer CRV...
I appreciate stuff like this. Helps me get a better visual of how the M1-155 SPH would have looked in comparison to other vehicles had it entered service.
It just occurred that eventually we're gonna move on from the M1 series. Eventually we're gonna start using their hulls for recovery vehicles and SPH. This concept might be dormant not dead...assuming that we continue to see weight creep which I believe we will. Metallurgy and anti-missile systems just ain't there yet.
Australian Army Drone Racing Team shows off the Aussie M1A1 MBT in new ways...
Vid for #tanktuesday: #SoundOn! @AustralianArmy #M1A1 like you've not seen before while we recently did some training with friends at @SOARMDAusArmy: sure to make #tanktwitter #tankers happy!— #AusArmy #DroneRacing Team (@AUADRT) May 4, 2020
Shot at @CATCAusArmy@HLCAusArmy @comdforcomd @keirinjoyce @FMC36864022 @FuryMovie pic.twitter.com/p7cso8QgVC
Ya know what's crazy? We've seen terrorist use small drones to drop grenades thru open hatches on MBTs.
Imagine what these guys could do on a battlefield? They could actually go after enemy leadership (small unit leaders most assuredly), target sensors and other objects of importance within range.
Additionally they're so small and agile that current anti-air systems would have trouble hitting them.
I wonder if the Aussie Army realizes the potential they're developing in this little hobby team?
Enforced social distancing is turning ugly...what would you expect in a free country?
via IheartNews.
A Texas man was arrested after he was recorded on video shoving a Texas park ranger into a lake. The incident occurred at Commons Ford Metropolitan Park in West Austin when the ranger approached a group of people who were illegally smoking and drinking.Note that Austin is probably the most liberal city in Texas and if this is the reaction then it will be multiplied by 10 in other areas...especially the more rural ones.
Video shows the ranger telling the group to remain at least six feet apart. People in the crowd appear to dismiss his request, sarcastically saying "will do" and "I got you, man." As the ranger is talking to the group, 25-year-old Brandon Hicks runs up and shoves him into Lake Austin. Hicks also fell into the water and can be seen climbing out and running away.
Hicks was quickly apprehended and is facing felony charges of attempted assault on a public servant. If convicted, he faces up to two years behind bars and a maximum fine of $10,000.
After the officer was pushed into the water, other people in the crowd came to his aid and apologized for Hicks' actions.
"That's the Austin we know, and that's the Austin we love," the arresting officer wrote in his report.
After the incident, the rangers temporarily closed the park because it was too crowded.
Then this. Again from IHeartNews.
After Missouri issued lockdown measures due to the coronavirus pandemic, officials in St. Louis County created a website where residents could report people and businesses that ignored the stay at home orders.Just wow.
In just over one week, more than 900 people filed reports on the site, which resulted in 29 businesses receiving citations for refusing to close down. The forms required people to provide their names and contact information, and put a warning that the information could become public record under the state's Sunshine Law, which allows people to file requests for public records.
When county officials received the request, they asked their lawyers if they should redact the personal information before releasing the documents.
"In this particular instance, our county counselor's office consulted with the [attorney general]'s office on releasing the list of those who had filed complaints against county businesses. We were told all the information was public and we should not redact (except for HIPAA information). Withholding information goes against what journalists push us to be – as transparent as possible," St. Louis County executive's director of communications, Doug Moore, said, according to KSDK.
The documents were requested by Jared Totsch, who then posted them on Facebook.
"Here, ya go. The gallery of snitches, busybodies, and employees who rat out their own neighbors and employers over the Panic-demic," he wrote.
But after just a little thought we shouldn't be surprised. America claims to be a free country and the various lockdown order amount to a wide ranging house arrest, potentially illegal order to close commerce and an attempt to deprive people of their ability to earn a living (although the Feds have done a decent job of filling that gap with extremely generous unemployment checks).
The real issue from my seat?
Poor communication.
I'm talking about not only from the Feds (to a limited degree) but MOSTLY from the individual governors.
Social distancing was sold as pushing down the curve so that hospitals wouldn't be overwhelmed. We reached a point where that wouldn't happen weeks ago. The continued lockdowns seem to be based on moving targets and you can't be a moving target when you're asking people to be in jail.
Another thing that I don't think people are taking account of is the psychological challenges that some face and for others the terrible truth that home just ain't a nice place to be.
The armed protests were bad.
I think the reaction of the public if this lingers much longer will be worse.
Exclusive peek at military drills at China's Zhurihe training base...China's NTC...
Thanks to TTENG for the link!
China is gearing up for a bad coronavirus response...
Thanks to Mobeius2249 for the link!
via Reuters.The report, presented early last month by the Ministry of State Security to top Beijing leaders including President Xi Jinping, concluded that global anti-China sentiment is at its highest since the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, the sources said.----------
As a result, Beijing faces a wave of anti-China sentiment led by the United States in the aftermath of the pandemic and needs to be prepared in a worst-case scenario for armed confrontation between the two global powers, according to people familiar with the report’s content, who declined to be identified given the sensitivity of the matter.
The report was drawn up by the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations (CICIR), a think tank affiliated with the Ministry of State Security, China’s top intelligence body.
Reuters has not seen the briefing paper, but it was described by people who had direct knowledge of its findings.
The report described to Reuters warned that anti-China sentiment sparked by the coronavirus could fuel resistance to China’s Belt and Road infrastructure investment projects, and that Washington could step up financial and military support for regional allies, making the security situation in Asia more volatile.----------
Three decades ago, in the aftermath of Tiananmen, the United States and many Western governments imposed sanctions against China including banning or restricting arms sales and technology transfers.
China has been accused by the United States of suppressing early information on the virus, which was first detected in the central city of Wuhan, and downplaying its risks.Here
Beijing has repeatedly denied that it covered up the extent or severity of the virus outbreak.
China has managed to contain domestic spread of the virus and has been trying to assert a leading role in the global battle against COVID-19. That has included a propaganda push around its donations and sale of medical supplies to the United States and other countries and sharing of expertise.
But China faces a growing backlash from critics who have called to hold Beijing accountable for its role in the pandemic.
Juicy! I'll just leave this here and wait for the China supporters to roll in...
Defense News Nigeria makes bold claims for their recently acquired Chinese VT-4 MBTs...
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400 Foxhounds have been delivered to the British Amy
Foxhound. In-service since 2012, 400 Foxhounds have been delivered to the British Amy. Take a closer look here... #Onthemove #GDUKStories #Foxhound pic.twitter.com/Izaw3NLzsw— General Dynamics UK (@gduknews) May 4, 2020
Hmm. I always thought the Foxhound was the ideal MRAP. Its got a smaller profile than most, is more agile and seems to provide an almost identical level of protection.
Quite honestly I've wondered why the Marine Corps didn't jump on board. To my knowledge the Brits are to soon phase it out of service. Don't quite get that thinking but they're still working on a Warrior Upgrade while buying new Ajax so I don't get alot of the things they do.
Brahmos underwater launch..
Brahmos underwater launch.. pic.twitter.com/9xiZxkJQjo— All thing Indian Navy (@ThingNavy) May 3, 2020
This.
This right here!
If this missile does what it says on the tin then I consider it the most formidable anti-ship in existence. Is this the real pacing threat? I would think so. In yesteryear the Sunburn was the threat. In the 2020's its the Brahmos.
Sunday, May 03, 2020
Late Sunday Funny. That's got to hurt!
I don't know if this would work but to my layman's eye it would. If it does work then that's got to hurt! Definitely a wakey wakey moment!
82nd Combat Aviation Brigade operating aboard US Navy Expeditionary Transfer Dock...
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Hmm. So if the US Army starts putting Paratroopers on non-standard amphibious ships. If the US Army starts conducting operations from the sea. If the US Army (especially with their next gen tiltrotor) are capable of conducting long range raids from the sea, then HOW is the new concept making us more unique?
Reality?
The reality is that the US Army has been trying to duplicate Marine Corps capabilities and the Stryker Brigade is the last in a long line of failures. Instead of enhancing the already fabulous Air-Ground Task Force we're taking it apart and making ourselves ordinary.
The 2030 concept is a mistake. A terrible mistake.
WTF!!!! ILW PAPER: RUSSIA COULD DEFEAT U.S. ARMY
Russia could “physically defeat and logistically exhaust” the U.S. Army in a European war, concludes a new Institute of Land Warfare paper that examines the Battles of the Donetsk Airport in the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War. https://t.co/xWPxIJ66nh— Franz-Stefan Gady (@HoansSolo) May 3, 2020
Jesus H. Christ!
The physically defeat part I don't believe in a minute but the logistically exhaust gives me pause.
They're studying us hard. Have been since Gulf War 1. Have been taking a hard look at our allies in Mali, N. Africa and other hotspots.
They're taking our measure and I know they're working countermeasures.
We got to get harder, faster, stronger and more agile. We've got to be to a point where no one even contemplates challenging us.
Oh and if you have doubts this paper is from the Association of the US Army website.
Rockwell XFV-12, a Mach 2, BVR-capable V/STOL fighter for the proposed Sea Control Ships (essentially small aircraft carrier for convoy escort, ASW, etc.) in 1970s
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