Monthly Archives: April 2011

Civil War meets Today’s Battlefields

“To create these pictures, photographer Gregg Segal collaborated with Civil War re-enactors to construct scenes at historic battle sites that have been compromised by modern development.

“The past is never dead,” wrote William Faulkner of Oxford, Mississippi. “It’s not even past.” In Europe, they know this. Modern apartment buildings in Rome are built on Renaissance foundations that in turn contain bits of ruins that are thousands of years old. In Germany it’s not unusual for a work site to shut down suddenly, or for a neighborhood to be evacuated, after the discovery of an unexploded bomb from World War II.

Americans, though, have always focused more on making the history of tomorrow, rather than remembering the history of long ago. And so, 150 years after the Civil War, many of the fields on which soldiers bled and died are nearly forgotten, buried beneath parking lots and subdivisions and interstate highways. Yet, at the same time, the wounds of that terrible war have never fully gone away. They live on in the mental terrain even as they are wiped from the physical landscape.
Photographer Gregg Segal decided in 2009 to try to bring the ghosts of the war back to the places they once inhabited so fearsomely. Working with the renowned re-enactor Robert Hodge and his colleagues, Segal identified battlefields from *****sburg to Nashville, Cedar Creek to Atlanta. Places where the mundane humdrum of today covers ground that was once, to borrow a phrase from historian Stephen W. Sears, “landscape turned red.”


“State of the Union is a juxtaposition of two contrastive eras,” Segal says of the finished project, “an idealized Civil War embodied by period re-enactors vs. the commercialism of contemporary life.”
“I wanted locations where actual Civil War battles had taken place — and that were now part of the commercial world,” Segal continues. “Rob was very familiar with just such locations as he’s been fighting for years to preserve battlefield land from development.”


The images, which are first of all very inviting with their bold color and dramatic lighting, pack a complex wallop. At first they are funny—proving the theory that humor arises from the unexpected collision of jarring frames of reference. But deeper lies a strong poignancy. These ancestors are all around us, if only we could see them. And what do they think of us, and of what we’ve done with the world they passed along?
These pictures ask us to remember that it happened right here—right where our car slowly drips transmission fluid onto the vast parking lot outside Staples, or where we stand and drink a beer with the neighbors while steaks sizzle on the shiny new gas grill and kids thumb their new Xbox controllers in the basement. And they tell us it could never happen again. We’re too busy shopping.
Text by David Von Drehle

Read more: http://lightbox.time.com/2011/04/12/…#ixzz1KrXSD2Zj

Need a Cheap Fighter Bomber?

With the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Cold War ending with a fizzle the newly independant and westerinsed Czech Repulic invented a new light attack trainer for cheap export.

Based on the old L39 Albatross and L59 Super albatross designs used around the world by Com-Bloc couuntries, the L 159A Alca was made with western avionics to compete against the Hawk, Pampa and other designs. It is a single-seat light multi-role combat aircraft designed for a variety of air-to-air, air-to-ground and reconnaissance missions. The aircraft is equipped with a multi-mode Doppler Grifo-L radar (a variant of the Grifo-F x-band multi-mode, pulse-doppler radar), for all-weather, day and night operations. It can carry a wide range of NATO standard stores including air-to-air and air-to-ground missiles and laser guided bombs.

it can fly 581 mph at sea level, clean and as low as 115mph before stalling which makes it perfect for CAS, COIN, air space policing against smugglers, and light attack. The crafts
range is 848 nmi with max internal fuel or a combat radius of right at 300nm carrying a gun pod, 2× Mark 82 bombs, 2× AIM-9 Sidewinder and 2× 500 L drop tanks

Armament includes provision for ZVI Plamen PL-20 2×20 mm gun pods and 7 hardpoints for up to to 2,340 kg (5,159 lb) of weapons including Sidewinder, IRIS-T, AIM-132 ASRAAM, AGM-65 Maverick, AGM-88 HARM and assorted  laser-guided and dumb bombs

Defense Industry Daily reports that the Czech government, feeling a budget crunch is moving to get rid of as many as three dozen of these craft they bought for themselves…cheap

Why buy a worn out MiG or blow your budget on a second hand F-16 when all you really need is a good trainer that can drop it like its hot, strafe a few protesters, or blast a rebel coup’s chopper out of the sky for pennies on the Euro?

All Hail Oleg Volk

A little over a thousand years ago a Varangain prince decided became something of the Russian Version of King Arthur. He is credited with moving the capital of Rus from Novgorod the Great to Kiev and, in doing so, he laid the foundation of the powerful state of Kievan Rus. He also launched at least one attack on Constantinople, capital of the Byzantine Empire. Famously he had his shield hammered to the gates of Constantinople.

This unified and greatly expanded the country that would later become Russia.

He is known and celebrated as Oleg The Great and Oleg of Novgorod. His name has often been imparted to Russian military equipment, his blessing asked for in battle, and was even given to a light cruiser of the Tsar’s navy that was one of the few Russian naval ships decorated with glory in World War One.

To me his name is ably carried onward into the present by Mr Oleg Volk.

I have followed Mr Volk and his work for several years

His work is well known in the second amendment crowd and should be held up to everyone. If you have ever been to A Human Right then you have seen his wonderful educational posters

Oleg is an amazing photographer and has had his own site for quite some time.

He recently moved his blog over to a WordPress type.

Give it a look over, you will not be disappointed

Keep up the Good Work Mr Volk.

Incendentally, one of Oleg of Novgorod ‘s other names was Oleg the Prophet.

Again….I think Mr Volk is well named. With his work for the second amendent and groups like the Hellar Foundation, I am glad we have him on our side.

Modern Military Art

Check out Michael Fay’s blog Fire and Ice

He is one of the best modern war artists and correspondents out there

And his work is so striking you feel like you need to make sure your anthrax shots are up-to-date to be able just to look at it.

In The Shadow of the Poppy Harvest, oil on canvas, 2011

Perfection

Ok, latest installment in my EDC series

My Sig Arms P229R with the DAK trigger, wood grips, night sights, Galco Royal Guard Holster.

5 polished teflon coated 13-round mags loaded with JHPs (Speer Gold Dot LE)

Of course i dont carry all five mags at once, (except when i do)

Russian Cyborg Tank Killing and Bomb Sniffing Dogs

An now, for something completely different

The Russians are now equipping their bomb-dogs with Walkie Talkies and Small cameras to serve as remote control bomb-sniffers. In the West this is done with ROV robots, however the Russians think they can do better with Dogs..

The Soviets were well known for oddball Animal experiments. It should be remembered that for more than 100 years the Russians have done this research.

The Russian scientist Ivan Petrovich Pavlov was born in 1849 in Ryazan, where his father worked as a village priest. In 1870 Ivan Pavlov abandoned the religious career for which he had been preparing, and instead went into science. There he had a great impact on the field of physiology by studying the mechanisms underlying the digestive system in mammals.

For his original work in this field of research, Pavlov was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1904. By then he had turned to studying the laws on the formation of conditioned reflexes, a topic on which he worked until his death in 1936. His discoveries in this field paved the way for an objective science of behavior.
The Soviets, always eager to find weapons to get the upper hand, created a unit of Anti-tank dogs before WWII

(Russian: собаки-истребители танков or противотанковые собаки; German: Panzerabwehrhunde or Hundeminen, “dog-mines”) were dogs taught to carry explosives to tanks, armored vehicles and other military targets. They were intensively trained by the Soviet and Russian military forces between 1930 and 1996 and used in 1941–1942 against German tanks in World War II. Although the original dog training routine was to leave the bomb and retreat so that the bomb would be detonated by the timer, this routine failed and was replaced by an impact detonation procedure which killed the dog in the process. The U.S. military trained anti-tank dogs in 1943 for use against fortifications, but never deployed them.

Creepier Still is the Russian Cyborg Dogs, apparently of the 1940s-1960s….while this has not been proven, it has not been disproved.


There is even video of a disembodied head blinking and licking its face.

Experiments in the Revival of Organisms (1940)

Russia Strong! In an homage to Yakov Smirnov, “In Russia, Dog walks YOU!”

The Legacy of German Communism

Ernst Thalmann was a German communist. He was born in 1886 and served with the Imperial German Army during World War One on the Western Front. He became involved in the violent German Red Guard groups that became involved in street fighting with German fascist Freikorps groups that were the forerunners of the Nazis. Thälmann organized and participated in the 1923 Hamburg Uprising. He became and influential communist in the Wiemar Republic and this led to his eventual imprisonment and execution at the Buchenwald concentration camp once Hitler came to power. He called for violent overthrow of Hitler’s government and when the Spanish Civil War erupted between Fascist Nationalists and Communist Republicans in 1936 his name was used as the banner for German communist who volunteered to fight for the Republican cause.

The so-called Thalmann Battalion became part of the estimated 32,000 men from 53 nations who volunteered. For the International Brigades to fight for the communists. Its commander was another German communist, the writer Ludwig Renn. The Battalion was made up of about 500 ethnic German speakers from Germany, Austria and Switzerland and was placed as a part of the XII International Brigade under command of the Hungarian communist Pavol Lukacs (mentioned under his real name Máté Zalka in several Ernest Hemingway works) in November 1936. The other units of the brigade included the Garibaldi Battalion (of Italian volunteers) and the André Marty Battalion (of French and Belgian volunteers). It saw combat at the Battle and subsequent siege of Madrid until the end of the war in 1939 when it was disbanded along with the eventual Republican defeat.

Fast forward to 1972 and the state visit to Berlin, East Germany by the cigar chomping illustrious leader of Cuba, Fidel Castro. On this occasion Castro took the opportunity to commemorate communist solidarity by renaming the small uninhabited island known as Cayo Blanco del Sur off the south coast of Cuba as Cayo Ernesto Thaelmann (Ernst Thalmann Island) and formally ceded it to East Germany. A large bust of Ernst Thälmann (ala Lenin and Stalin) was placed on the beachfront and was visible from offshore. A curious quirk of history is that the island still technically belongs only to East Germany as it was not included in the reunification with West Germany in 1990.

Therefore even though Hurricane Mitch toppled the bust in 1998, a small part of Thalmann and his communist inspired country of the People’s Democratic Republic of Germany (the DDR) still exist.

Albanian Ammunition Follies

Albania, former bastion of Maoist Communism in Europe, has an ammunition problem. You see the former beloved ruler for life, Enver Hoxha, was just a tad paranoid. He was born in what was part of the old Ottoman Empire, and saw at one time or another Austrians, Serbs, Italians, Germans, Greeks, and Soviets occupy or pass through his country. Little Albania, home to just about three million people, was a non-aligned Communist country for a large part of the Cold War. This meant it was alienated and possibly threatened by both NATO and/or the Warsaw Pact, not to mention a very finicky Yugoslavia led by Marshal Tito to the north. Taking a page from Switzerland’s book, Hoxha decided to build over 700,000 bunkers all over the country (i.e. one for every four or five citizens) and stock them with an absolutely immense amount of small weaponry.

Well Hoxha died in 1985, the Cold War ended roughly a dozen years later and today Albania is a democracy looking to join NATO. The problem is they still have all of the bunkers and weapons. In 1997 no less than 839 million rounds of ammunition (about 300 bullets for each inhabitant) simply walked away from its arsenals and into the hands of local citizens. Another 46,000 tons of ammo and 130,000 assault rifles have been simply destroyed by the government. Thousands of Albanian SKS rifles (the last SKS’s made for an armed forces, manufactured at the Umgramsh Factory from 1967-1980) are showing up all over the world as bargain surplus guns. The country is even looking into giving away its old Whiskey class submarines to the land-locked Czech Republic.

Now the country has hit on the idea to simply donate its surplus ammunition to Iraq and Afghanistan…where it will undoubtedly be used.

Missing Army Ranger returns from Korea

he Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) announced today that the remains of a serviceman, missing in action from the Korean War, have been identified and returned to his family for burial with full military honors.

Army Cpl. John W. Lutz, 21, of Kearny, N.J., will be buried tomorrow at Arlington National Cemetery.  From May 16-20, 1951, Task Force Zebra, a multinational force made up of Dutch, French, and U.S. forces, was attacked and isolated into smaller units.  Lutz, of the 1st Ranger Infantry Company, part of Task Force Zebra, went missing while his unit was attempting to infiltrate enemy lines near Chaun-ni, South Korea, along the Hongcheon River Valley.

After the 1953 armistice, surviving POWs said Lutz had been captured by enemy forces on May 19, marched north to a POW camp in Suan County, North Korea, and died of malnutrition in July 1951.

Between 1991-94, North Korea gave the United States 208 boxes of remains believed to contain the remains of 200-400 servicemen.  North Korean documents turned over with one of the boxes indicated the remains inside were exhumed near Suan County.  This location correlates with the corporal’s last known location.

Analysts from DPMO developed case leads with information spanning more than 58 years.  Through interviews with surviving POW eyewitnesses, experts validated circumstances surrounding the soldier’s captivity and death, confirming wartime documentation of his loss.

Among other forensic identification tools and circumstantial evidence, scientists from the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command and the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory also used dental comparisons and mitochondrial DNA – which matched that of his niece—in the identification of the remains.

More than 2,000 servicemen died as prisoners of war during the Korean War.  With this accounting, 8,001 service members still remain missing from the conflict.  For additional information on the Defense Department’s mission to account for missing Americans, visit the DPMO web site at http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo or call 703- 699-1169.

New Ruger 1911 45 photo leaked!

Over at the Firearms Blog, They have just recently posted pictures of the new Ruger 1911. It looks awesome, hattip to Firearm Blog!

 

With the 100th anniversary of the classic John Moses Browning design and its adoption as the offical firearm of the State of Utah, timing as they say is Perfect.

The classic colt has been a long serving weapon all over the world and is still used today by any number of competition shooter, SRT members and those who just want a classic and usable handgun.

The old line, why use a 45…because they dont make a 46! always brings a smile to my face…

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