Friday, June 26, 2020

Chinese TV station explained the structure and development of the "Type 05 Amphibious Infantry Fighting Vehicle



What worries me?

China is still committed to doing the hard thing.  Amphibious assaults will be as difficult for them as it would be for us.  Yet they haven't abandoned the capability like our Commandant has.

Even worse?

The Marine Corps Officer and Staff Non-Commissioned Officer Corps has surrendered the discussion without an argument to be heard.

It rattles my soul to even think this, but we're left with freaking CONGRESS(!) to save the Marine Corps from itself.

Is this the most intriguing and "important" vehicle @ the Victory Day parade?


Yeah I said it.  It's certainly intriguing and POSSIBLY important.  Do you get the force of connection with this rig.

The author of the tweet was being tongue in cheek but he's onto something. We'll see the firepower of an IFV on a JLTV sized rig.  Enough of these on the battlefield (along with your regular IFVs and Tanks) and suddenly you have an enormous plus up of combat power. 

Give them to Airborne Forces and instead of a couple of airborne IFVs available for supporting fires you gain maybe four of these?

You might disagree but I like it.

70th Anniversary of the Korean War

India Accuses China of Amassing Large Number of Arms, Troops Near Line of Actual Control Since May

via Sputnik
New Delhi (Sputnik): On Wednesday, the Indian army claimed to have agreed to disengage its troops along the Line of Actual Control after several diplomatic and military level talks with China. However, alleged satellite images show that China has moved thousands of troops, artillery units, and armoured vehicles to a new area of northern Ladakh.

India has claimed that the “Chinese side had been amassing a large contingent of troops and armaments along the Line of Actual Control since early May”, which is not in accordance with the provisions of various bilateral agreements between the two countries. The 1993 Agreement notes that ‘each side will keep its military forces in the areas along the line of actual control to a minimum level’.

The Indian side had to undertake counter deployments and the resulting tension has thereafter expressed itself, the Indian External Affairs Ministry said, while adding that the “continuation of the current situation would only vitiate the atmosphere for the development of the relationship”.
India has also claimed that all infrastructure built by India has always been on its own side of the LAC and they have never attempted to unilaterally change the status quo, while this has not been reciprocated by the Chinese side, resulting in face-offs from time to time.
Story here. 

Things are getting spicy.


Open Comment Post. 26 June 2020


The questionable future of amphibious assault



via Brookings Institute.
The Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, General David Berger, has just declared the obsolescence of large-scale amphibious assault. It is almost as if John Madden had just said that in the NFL, it will no longer be important to run the football.

General Berger has been the nation’s top Marine, and a member of the joint chiefs of staff, since 2019. Last summer, he issued planning guidance that suggested strongly that the Marine Corps should move away from building so many large amphibious ships, citing their vulnerability to precision-guided weapons. However, that proposal will not necessarily carry the day; Congress gets to write defense appropriations bills, and ultimately all President Trump can do is either sign or veto.

But it was still probably the single most interesting new idea in last year’s defense debate, building on the earlier overall national defense strategy of Secretary of Defense James Mattis to revitalize the nation’s attention to deterrence of great-power conflict in this high-technology era — a strategy that Secretary Mark Esper has subsequently said he will continue to seek to implement.

Now, General Berger has gone a step further. In the latest Marine Corps Gazette, he writes the following:

A focus on a pacing threat that is both a maritime power and a nuclear power eliminates entirely the salience of large-scale forcible entry operations followed by sustained operations ashore. Such operations are problematic even in the case of the lesser rogue regime threats, as both of those identified in the NDS [National Defense Strategy] are also either nuclear or near-nuclear powers.
Story here. 

This!!!!! 

This right here!!!!

This is why I was so alarmed at the pronouncement by Berger.  This is why I've hit up Marine Corps Officers on Twitter to explain this new concept but got ignored instead.

The guy that leads our tribe has basically declared the Marine Corps obsolete.

Not an enemy.

Not a rival service.

But the leader of the United States Marine Corps!

How can the Corps survive when it pigeon holes itself into a mission that can be conducted by a few detachments from the US Army?

How can the Corps be considered as essential when it limits itself to being a bitched up Ranger Battalion?

This plan HOPEFULLY will not survive Congress.  If it doesn't the Marine Corps will once again be saved from itself.  BUT if it does then this generation of Generals will not only have lost three wars (Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria...we'll not grade the situation in Africa and Libya) but they'll also have accomplished Eisenhower's goal.  The destruction of the United States Marine Corps.

Iron Soldiers with the Ready First brigade conducted a live fire accuracy screening test (LFAST) and zero gunnery this week.





Thursday, June 25, 2020

Greenland Trailer #1...The perfect movie for 2020!



It would be an ok movie in any other year.  In 2020?  It's gonna be perfect!

China's J-15 fighters take off from and land on the country’s first aircraft carrier Liaoning. (Video: CCTV)

Note.  I've heard my readers and now I see it for myself.  Those big fighters have to launch with basically a bare bones payload.  They might be "forward" deployed in a fight but they won't have much staying power in a fight.  Now I understand why those artificial islands are so important.  Their carriers are more for show than go in a naval engagement.

The first two prototypes of the automated ground reconnaissance device UGV-Pz were delivered to the Czech Army.





SU-57 @ Victory Day Parade...




Carelessness with a piece of history...



Hope the driver is court martialed over his careless operation of a piece of history.  I'm sure the Russians will shrug it off but damn it, how many pieces of WW2 history are still in driving condition?  I consider this a human history relic, not just Russian.

UGCV-Carrier...


How long before the US military decides that it needs a Unmanned Ground Combat Vehicle Carrier?  As wild as the above drawing is, I can actually see it coming into existence.  A UGCV Carrier could serve as a mothership for these vehicles and act as a refueling (recharging?) and/or reloading point as well as a mobile repair depot...especially if we move towards deploying swarms of them.

Once again the mix of Sci-Fi and Gaming is leading the way in weapons development (I think).

Contract Authorized for the First Production Batch of the VCR 8x8 Combat Vehicle



Story here.

Israeli Navy Dolphin class SSKs surfacing




Open Comment Post. 25 June 2020


Major James Capers: Marine Recon Legend...Mr. President get this man a well deserved Medal Of Honor!


via SOFREP.com
In 1966, Capers’s team, which called themselves “Team Broadminded” conducted more than 50 classified missions in Vietnam. Some of them sound like a Hollywood action film; among them, a Top Secret recovery operation. Its purpose was to recover the contents and pilot remains from a USAF B-57 Bomber that had crashed in enemy territory. The plane is rumored to have highly sensitive materials that included a nuclear bomb. The five-day mission was successful and the Top Secret materials were recovered. 
----------
Another mission was “Operation Doubletalk.” Capers and a 12-man team was tasked to go deep into Viet Cong territory and rescue four Americans, two Australians, and 26 South Vietnamese allies that were being held prisoner in a jungle POW camp. The CIA provided intelligence and the mission was personally approved by President Johnson.

But what transpired was much like what would happen to U.S. Green Berets in Son Tay about 10 miles outside of Hanoi four years later. The captors had moved the prisoners before the raid. “Our intelligence was bad back in those days,” Capers said sadly.

“I thought we had a good shot at it,” Capers added. “We had a pretty good battle at the camp, we had to fight our way out. We destroyed the prison, killed all the guards, and they were pursued by popular forces all the way to the LZ.”

“It was a difficult time for us,” he said. “Psychologically, we worked so hard to prepare for the mission and we had a Chieu Hoi, (a South Vietnamese VC) who came over to the South Vietnamese government and personally knew where the camp was and led us there.”

The problem for the team was getting back to the LZ. Capers held off the enemy while his men were boarding the choppers and finally, he too was picked up. “It wasn’t about heroism,” he pointed out. “It was just doing your job and making sure we didn’t leave anybody behind.”

“I was the last man on the chopper and got my first Purple Heart and my first Bronze Star on that mission. I was being lifted up by the hoist, about 70 feet off the ground, and I got hit just before they were able to pull me into the chopper.”

Capers’ team, the small 3rd Force Recon detachment, was soon assigned another mission. This one would take them to Phu Loc. Their mission was to locate a large Viet Cong base camp. Capers’ 10-man team had a dog named King with them on the mission.

After some sporadic fighting on the first day, the unit ran into large concentrations of enemy forces. On the second day, his team accounted for 22 kills. While trying to call in artillery fire and F-4 Phantom airstrikes on a hill, the Viet Cong sprang an ambush.

His men were getting wounded and the team set out Claymore mines to keep the enemy at bay. The enemy had been reinforced by NVA (North Vietnamese regular forces), but Capers’ team managed to drive him back. All of his men were wounded. King was killed. Capers was wounded 13 times; his leg was broken.  
Story here. 

I knew about Major Capers but alot of it I DIDN'T know.  Definitely need to read up on the guy.  He did some wild and wooly stuff.

Medal of Honor?  Yeah.  Get it done Mr. President!

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

K-17 Bumerang armored vehicles had an engine fire @ victory day parade.



No other way to say it.  This is rather embarrassing.  Not a good sign for a relatively new vehicle.

China setup a camp at the site of the recent hand to hand combat...



Signs of goodwill and diplomacy while reinforcing a position?  If the Indian military did not expect this then should all be canned.

The burning question now is WHAT WILL THEY DO ABOUT IT!

British govt says all F-35's purchased might not be upgraded to Block 4 standard because of COST!