Warship Wednesday (on a Thursday) 26 March 2026: Gallic Stepping Stone

Here at LSOZI, we take a break every Wednesday to explore the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period, profiling a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

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Warship Wednesday (on a Thursday) 26 March 2026: Gallic Stepping Stone

Above we see the one-of-a-kind Croiseur d’aviation (aviation cruiser) Commandant Teste between May 1938 and August 1940 with a fat Loire 130 flying boat above her, likely from Escadrille Embarquée de Surveillance HS1.

Our subject was authorized under the French 1926 Programme some 100 years ago this year, and she was a very curious ship with a notable history.

French carrier beginnings

Before the Great War, the 6,100-ton torpedo boat tender (croiseur porte-torpilleurs) Foudre had been converted for experiments with seaplanes of a half dozen different types, minting the French Navy’s first 13 seaplane pilots, moving up to having a 33-foot flying off platform installed in early 1914.

A Caudron seaplane, being craned on La Foudre in April 1914.

During the war, while Foudre was put to use as a submarine tender and aircraft transport, the French Navy converted at least four small merchant steamers to carry a couple of light deck guns and a few Nieuport IV and later FBA C-type seaplanes for patrol purposes. Two, Nord and Pas-de-Calais, were 1,541-ton paddle-wheelers. A third, the 1,656-ton turbine-powered Rouen, was more effective. The largest, the 3,319-ton Campinas, would remain in service until early 1920. The old Foudre, used as an aviation school ship immediately after the war, was decommissioned by December 1921.

Enter: Lieutenant de Vaisseau Paul Marcel Teste. 

Born in 1892, Teste graduated from the naval academy and shipped out on the cruisers Duguay-Trouin and Vauban before WWI. By 1916, as commander of the gunboat Dragon, he was accepted to flight school by the end of the year, and was an observer on FBA seaplanes of Escadrille B101 out of Dunkirk. When his section of four lightly armed FBAs came across seven formidable German Hansa-Brandenburg W.12s on 26 May 1917, he was plucked out of the water after the clash and imprisoned first in Zeebrugge, then at Oflag Kavalier-Scharhorst in Karlsruhe. The intrepid young officer managed to escape and make his way to the Dutch border in January 1918. He earned his pilot’s license (no. 568) and finished the war as an instructor at Saint-Raphaël.

Drawing from British aircraft trials on the early carriers HMS Argus and Furious, LdV Georges Guierre was tapped to attempt to fly a wheeled aircraft (a Hanriot HD2 stripped of its floats) from a 49-foot platform on the No. 2 turret of the Courbet-class battleship Paris in Toulon on 26 October 1918.

LdV Georges Guierre battleship Paris Oct 26 1918

After Guierre’s success at Toulon, Teste moved to repeat the effort from Paris while docked at Corfu two days before the Armistice. He wound up in the water.

Following those tests, a comical 65-foot platform, some 28 feet wide, was built over the bow of the 245-foot Arras-class aviso Bapaume in March 1920. Over the next four years, Teste and others flew a series of light aircraft (Hanriot HD 2, Nieuport 21/23, and Nieuport-Delage NiD.32) from this tiny deck.

French Lieutenant Commander Teste on the Bapaume with his Hanriot

French Lieutenant Commander Teste on the Bapaume with his Hanriot, circa 1920

Then came Teste’s biggest claim to fame, becoming the first aviator to land and take off from the unfinished aircraft carrier Bearn off Toulon on 20 October 1920 in a proof of concept.

On Bearn, an incomplete Normandie-class battleship launched in April 1920 and likely bound for the scrappers due to the limits of the Washington Naval Treaty, a 148-by-30-foot wooden platform with an improvised arresting gear system that was weighted down with sandbags.

Teste trapping on incomplete Bearn 20 October 1920

Teste’s take-offs and landings using the temporary wooden flight deck were made in a two-seat Sopwith 11⁄2 strutter. During the 1921 trials, the Sopwiths were replaced by the two-seat Hanriot HD.3.

The tests a success, Bearn was sent for full carrier conversion, including hangar and elevators. She was commissioned in May 1928. However, Capitaine de Fregate Teste would never see her in her final form. He was killed in a test flight in 1925, aged just 32.

Meet the Commandant Teste

Under the 1.4 billion franc 1926 Program (up from the 1925 Program’s 1.31 billion), a 10,000-ton Treaty Cruiser with eight 8″/50 Modele 1924 guns was authorized, becoming Colbert, the second ship of the Suffren class.

Colbert was joined in the same 1926 Program by three 2,000 ton Bourrasque class destroyers, four smaller 1,500-ton L’Adroit class destroyers, seven submarines– the experimental cruiser submarine Surcouf and the start of the 630-series (Argonaute, Orion, and Diane classes)– the 6,000-ton sub tender Jules Verne, two tankers, a school ship (the 70-foot Breton yawl Mutin, which is still in service), and our Commandant Teste, named after the lost aviation pioneer.

It was thought that the Commandant Teste would act as a sort of tender to the building Bearn, and as a floating reserve from which aircraft supplies and spare planes could be drawn by the fleet’s battleships and cruisers, who were increasingly given facilities for float planes. Alternatively, she could always serve on colonial patrol and put up a decent air wing for light strike purposes (although she could not recover them very rapidly).

Still, heady stuff and on the cutting edge of modernity.

This 1931 cover of La Science et la Vie celebrates the Commandant Teste,

At 10,000 tons standard (12,000 full), the Commandant Teste was 547 feet overall length and had a very wide 88-foot beam, a roughly 6:1 ratio. She had a deep draft, some 22 feet. Powered by four mixed-firing super-heated Yarrow-Loire boilers and two sets of Schneider-Zoelly geared steam turbines, she had 21,000shp (23,230 forced) to turn her twin screws, enough for a 20.5 knot sustained top speed. On her trials, she sustained 21.77 knots for three hours. Carrying 720 tons of coal and 290 tons of fuel oil, she had a range of 6,000nm at 10 knots using coal alone.

1929 Jane’s on the new Commandant Teste, which had just been launched.

She had a cavernous hangar deck (hangar et teugue) that stood three decks high and ran 262.5 feet long and 86 wide, bisected by a central bulkhead.

This allowed at least 10 large torpedo bombers (Loire 130 twin engine flying boats with a maximum take off weight of nearly 8,000 pounds) to be stored with their wings folded or 20 smaller aircraft (e.g. the later Gourdou-Leseurre GL-812 HY reconnaissance floatplane used by Escadrille 7S2, which had a 34 foot fuselage, a 54 foot wingspan and 5,000 pound take off weight). Another half-dozen aircraft could be stowed, knocked down in crates.

. Gourdou-Leseurre 812 of Ecadrille 7S2 is being hoisted aboard Commandant Teste, Arzew, Algeria, May 1937. The three-place GL-812 HY used a single 420hp Gnome, was good for 110kts, could range 300nm, and carry 330 pounds of bombs to augment a single forward-firing 7.7mm machine gun and two used by the rear seater.

The Levasseur PL14 and PL15 three-seat biplane torpedo bombers were seen on Teste from early in her career, flying with Escadrille 7B2 until November 1933 (PL14) and HB1 (PL15) until April 1939.

The short-lived (in service on Teste) CAMS 37 and CAMS 55 flying boats were only embarked on the ship with Escadrille 7B2 from November 1933 to July 1934.

The big Loire 130 flying boat, akin to the RN’s Supermarine Walrus, could hit 119 knots on a pair of Hispano-Suiza V12s and stay in the air an impressive seven hours. Besides its three-man crew (and four passengers in a pinch), it could carry a pair of machine guns and two 165-pound bombs. The French Navy bought 111 of these, and they served with HS1 aboard Teste.

The Loire 130 was also used on the Richelieu and Dunkerque class battleships, as well as the light cruisers of the La Galissonière and Duguay-Trouin classes, carrying as many as five of the flying boats and two catapults.

The good-idea-on-paper Loire 210 was a single-seat catapult-launched fighter seaplane that, powered by a 720hp Hispano-Suiza 9Vbs, could only make 162 knots. Armed with four wing-mounted 7.5mm machine guns, they were prone to structural failure of the wings. Just 21 were delivered, flying with Escadrille HC.1 and HC.2 for six months in 1939.

By late 1938, the new Latecoere 298B folding wing torpedo bomber floatplane was arriving in the French fleet, which purchased 177 of the type. Using the same Hispano-Suiza 12Y as the MS.406 fighter, it could make 156 knots, range 600nm, and carry a very respectable 1,600 pounds of ordnance, be it a torpedo or bombs. It had three light machine guns for self-defense (two forward, one rear). Teste would ship two squadrons of these, HB1 (formerly 7B2) and HB2. In September 1939, four land-based squadrons 298s were operational, including 1T on the Étang de Berre (a lagoon on the Mediterranean coast), 2T at Cherbourg, and 3T and 4T at Boulogne.

Aboard Teste, aircraft were shuttled around on an innovative Decauville rail system of wheeled trolleys running throughout the hangar to the quarterdeck at the rear of the ship. No deck tractors here.

When it came to launching and recovery, he had four large Penhoet compressed-air catapults amidship and five cranes– one for each cat and one over the stern to serve the aft hangar entrance.

Catapultage Gourdou-Leseurre GL-810 HY Commandant-Teste vers 1936 (musée de la Marine)

French seaplane tender Commandant Teste with Morane Saulnier MS-406s moving via rail in her hangars circa 1940 on a ferry run

She had no elevators, and instead simply used her catapult cranes to pluck aircraft from a 50×23-foot hatch, one per cat, which opened to the hangar deck below. She could reportedly launch four aircraft in seven minutes and, with recovery taking about 20 minutes per airframe, would require as long as seven hours to re-embark a full 20-aircraft wing.

After hangar doors and cranes on the French seaplane carrier Commandant Teste

The French also employed a towed beaching ramp to enable floatplane recovery while steaming.

A postcard with Teste showing one of her Loire 130s along with an Air France Breguet Br.530 flying boat, registered as F-AJOB, flying over water in the late 1930s. The 20-passenger, three-engine Br.530 was used by Air France on their Marseille-Ajaccio-Tunis route.

A tinted version of the same card.

Besides her aircraft, Commandant Teste carried a full dozen 100 mm/45 (3.9″) Modele 1927 guns, capable of firing 10 35-pound shells per minute to 16,000 yards, controlled by two directors with 10-foot optical rangefinders. This weapon was only carried by our subject, with the updated Modele 1932 variant later used on three classes of torpedo boats (Melpomène class, Chevreuil, and La Capricieuse). Her decent secondary armament (for the time), was geared toward AAA and amounted to eight 37mm/50 (1.46″) Modele 1925 high-angle guns, and six twin 13.2mm/76 (52 caliber) Hotchkiss Modele 1929 heavy machine guns.

Armor included a two-inch belt that protected most of her length from bridge to her stern hangar deck, a 1.5-inch armored deck over her machinery spaces, and just over three inches of shielding for the conning tower. During a later refit, her 3.9-inch guns received shields.

She is described interchangeably in texts as an aviation cruiser, which is probably the most correct term, or, more simply, a transport d’hydravions (seaplane transport), which is more Treaty-friendly and less likely to draw the ire of other signatories of the age.

Boats included a 32-foot and 36-foot Motor Service Boat (Canot de Service a Moteur), two 40-foot and one 30-foot fast launches (Vedette Rapides), a 36-foot lug-rigged sail chaloupe, two 10-foot punts, and two 16-foot rowboats.

Ordered in May 1927, she was laid down at the Forges et chantiers de la Gironde, in Bordeaux, on 6 September 1927 and was launched on 12 April 1929.

Our subject is the only warship to carry the name of the late naval aviator, and the largest seaplane carrier used by a European fleet.

She was a rival to the Regia Marina’s very proud 4,500-ton seaplane carrier, Giuseppe Miraglia, which entered service in November 1927 and could carry as many as 20 light aircraft. Meanwhile, on the other side of the globe, the Royal Australian Navy in 1928 welcomed its new seaplane carrier, HMAS Albatross, which hit the scales at 7,000 tons and could carry nine aircraft.

Commandate Teste’s design was considered successful, and Chantiers shopped it to Portugal, albeit in a shortened concept.

Prewar service

Seaplane tender Commandant Teste during trials, July 1931

Seaplane tender Commandant Teste during trials, July 1931. Note that her guns are not installed. 

Commissioned to active service on 18 April 1932, Commandant Teste served with the French Mediterranean Squadron opposite the Italian Giuseppe Miraglia.

Over the next eight years, she had four squadrons associated with her Flottille F1H airwing:

Escadrille Embarquée de Surveillance HS-1/7S-2, which, as 7S-2, flew Gourdou-Leseurre 810/811s until October 1935, Gourdou-Leseurre 812/813 from April 1938, then, as HS-1, switched to Loire 130 flying boats from October 1938

Escadrille Embarquée de Bombardement 7B-2/HB-1 (“Walruses”), which, as 7B-2, flew Levasseur PL14s until November 1933, CAMS 37 and CAMS 55s until July 1934, from October 1938 to April 1939, then, as HB-1, flew Latecoere 298s from March 1939

Escadrille Embarquée de Bombardement HB-2, which also flew Latecoere 298s from September 1939.

Escadrille Embarquée de Chasse HC-1, which existed from July to November 1939 and flew the troublesome Loire 210 floatplane fighter.

In company with the submarine tender Jules-Verne, Commandant Teste took part in naval maneuvers off Quiberon in May 1934. The exercise aimed to intercept a naval force tasked with destroying a troop convoy from North Africa, with the cruisers Dugay-Trouin, Foch, Tourville, Dupleix, and Colbert.

She then took part in other fleet exercises in the Bay of Biscay and as far off as Dakar in West Africa.

French battleship Bretagne near Brest, 1935, with Commandant Teste, a trio of CAMS flying boats, and the cruiser Foch

French seaplane-tender Commandant Teste anchored off Saint Raphaël naval air base, August 5th 1936

Both Bearn and Commandant Teste were deployed during the Spanish Civil War. This led Teste to evacuate foreign nationals and civilians from Barcelona in August 1936.

After that, she was part of the international neutrality patrol there, protecting commercial shipping from “pirate submarines.”

“Latest volunteer in the undeclared Mediterranean War” by Daniel Fitzpatrick, lampooning the Italian pirate submarines in the Spanish Civil War. St. Louis Post-Dispatch, St. Louis, Missouri, 5 Sept 1937. Via The State Historical Society of Missouri https://cdm17228.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/ec/id/11937

She was increasingly used to shuttle military aircraft from Europe to France’s overseas possessions.

Teste hauled 18 Dewoitine D.510s from GC II/1 and 5 Dewoitine D.510s to Sidi-Ahmed in Tunisia in November 1937, then repatriated 10 of the aforementioned aircraft back to France four months later.

She then brought 21 Morane-Saulnier MS.406 fighters from GC I/6 to Algeria in February 1939.

War!

Sadly, the French never seemed to take advantage of Commandant Teste in a combat capacity, just using her for patrol work for the first five months of the war.

Landing her Flottille F1H airwing in January 1941, her squadrons were reassigned to shore duty, with HS-1 flying from Oran and later Arzew, Algeria; HB-1 from Karouba, Tunisia, and HB-2 from Berre Lagoon outside of Marseille, where they flew surveillance missions until the Armistice.

Our subject, shorn of her air group, then clocked in as a transport, shuttling 26 MS.406s to Beirut in February 1940 for the I/7 fighter group based at Rayack.

With the French air force leaning into moving some muscle and training operations to North Africa, she then carried:

  • 6 Potez 63 recon/bombers and 1 Morane 406 to Port Said, Egypt in March.
  • 13 Potez 63s, 2 Loire 130s, and 11 vehicles to Beirut in April.
  • 38 Glenn Martin 167F (Maryland) light bombers of GB I/62 from Toulon to Algiers in early May.
  • 40 training aircraft (e.g. Dewoitine D.500/D.510s, Morane MS 225s, Breguet 14s) from Toulon to Algiers on May 22.
  • Another 40 training aircraft from Toulon to Algiers on 26 May.
  • And 40 more on 14 June.

French seaplane tender Commandant Teste, taking four squadrons of Morane Saulnier MS-406 fighters to North Africa, and Lebanon

French seaplane tender Commandant Teste, Beirut

French seaplane tender Commandant Teste, Beirut, with a Morane Saulnier MS-406 in the foreground.

Then came the Fall of France and the cessation of hostilities (at least with the Germans and Italians) on 25 June, ending the active six-week Battle of France and splitting the nation into an occupied north and a nominally free unoccupied France (the zone libre) in the Vichy-controlled south.

An uneasy Vichy “Peace.”

In the final days of France’s initial combat against the Axis in 1940, the French admiralty made definite moves to send their fleet outside of metropolitan France. While a few were interred in British ports (e.g., the old battleship Lorraine and four cruisers in Alexandria, the elderly battleships Paris and Courbet in Portsmouth), this saw numerous ships appear in French colonies in the Caribbean and Africa en masse.

The great naval anchorage of Mers-El-Kebir, Tunisia, by the end of June, was host to elements of ADM Marcel-Bruno Gensoul’s Force de Raid, which included the very modern 35,000-ton/29.5 knot fast battleships Dunkerque and Strasbourg, the older 26,000-ton Great War era battlewagons Provence and Bretagne, six destroyers, and our Commandant Teste.

French battleships Bretagne, Strasbourg, Provence, and Dunkerque at Mers-El-Kebir. This photo was taken from the Commandant Teste shortly before the British attack on 3 July 1940. One of her cranes can be seen in the foreground.

Then came ADM James Somerville’s Force H from Gibraltar in the Churchill-directed Operation Catapult. Backed by the battlecruiser HMS Hood, the battleships Valiant and Resolution, the Swordfish-carrying flattop Ark Royal (which dropped mines in the exit channel), and a force of cruisers and destroyers, Somerville issued an ultimatum to Gensoul: join him, sail to a British port, be interned in a neutral port, or scuttle their ships.

Long story short, Gensoul refused and, before French submarines and destroyers could arrive to reinforce him, Somerville bombarded the anchorage, leading to 1,297 French deaths. Most of these came from Bretagne, whose magazine exploded after at least four British 15-inch AP shells hit her. She rolled over and capsized with the loss of 36 officers, 151 petty officers, and 825 seamen.

Bretagne was seen sinking at Mers-El-Kébir from Commandant Teste. Note the range finder and Bachi cap.

Commandant Teste and her crew of nearly 700 men were, as noted by French naval texts, “miraculously spared” (miraculeusement épargnés) during the attack of 3 July 1940, only receiving a couple of shrapnel hits that caused minor damage and no casualties.

Bretagne sunk at Mers-El-Kébir, Commandant Teste seen with her boats in the water

The closest vessel to the lost Bretagne, Teste’s boats moved in swiftly to rescue as many survivors as could be found– 308 scarred men.

Ordered to Oran, accompanied by two destroyers, the next day with a cargo of burned and injured men, Teste was sighted by the P-class submarine HMS Proteus (N 29) that afternoon. However, before an attack could be started, the French ship altered course to the eastward and was soon lost out of sight by the British sub the French tender was able to drop off her human cargo.

Proteus sighted Commandant Teste again two days later, headed to Bizerte, on 6 July, but by then the Admiralty had ordered that no French ships should be attacked unless they attacked first, so the submarine let her be.

Once Commandant Teste returned to Toulon in metropolitan France, a deputation from her crew went to the Chapel of Notre-Dame de Bonne Garde in La Seyne-sur-Mer to place a votive offering (ex-voto) to the Virgin Mary there for having protected the ship during the cauldron of Mers-El-Kebir, where British shells rained all around her.

By August 1940, with her air wing officially dissolved, Teste was swaying at Toulon, her crew reduced and her magazines and bunkers empty. She spent the next two years as a floating schoolhouse.

French seaplane tender Commandant Teste, battleship Provence, and the accommodation hulk Condorcet, Toulon, July 1941

When the Great Sabordage came on 27 November 1942 after the German operation to seize the fleet at Toulon, codenamed “Unternehmen Lila” kicked off, within minutes, 77 French vessels– including three battleships, seven cruisers, 15 destroyers, 13 torpedo boats, 6 avisos (sloops), 20 submarines, and our Commandant Teste– were aflame or settled to the harbor docks, their crews busy wrecking everything they could.

The French suffered about 40 casualties. The Germans, only one motorcycle rider was wounded.

seaplane carrier Commandant Teste, the battleship Courbet, and the old predreadnought battleship Condorcet Toulon

Refloated in 1943 by the Italians, who hoped to use her, she was sunk again at Toulon by Allied air strikes the next year. Raised and dewatered in June 1945, it was thought she could be refitted and returned to service, perhaps with her superstructure converted to a flight deck and turned into a proper aircraft carrier.

As noted in the 1945 Jane’s:

Kept around for another 18 years, growing mold and accumulating barnacles, she was only sold for scrap in 1963.

Epilogue

Sadly, the French fleet has not reused the name of the vessel, and few relics are to be found.

The most tangible reminders are her distinctive ‘Blue T’ ship’s badges worn by her crew, which circulate among collectors.

And in period postcards.

Of course, the country went on to reboot its carrier tradition immediately post-war, operating as many as four flattops in the 1950s, and today maintains the only CVN CATOBAR carrier not in U.S. service, so there is that.

Odds are, old Paul Teste would take solace in that fact.

Thanks for reading!

Meminisse est ad Vivificandum – To Remember is to Keep Alive

***

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Army Marks 100 Years of Unbroken Guard at Tomb of the Unknowns

Army Maj. Gen. Fox Conner ordered an armed military guard for the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier on 24 March 1926, and it has been maintained with honor ever since.

The Tomb, located at Arlington National Cemetery, was dedicated on Armistice Day (now Veterans Day) in 1921, but was at first unguarded. Responding to concerns that the site was not receiving the proper respect from tourists, Conner, then the Deputy Chief of Staff of the Army, ordered a guard drawn from the 3rd Cavalry Regiment at nearby Fort Myer (now Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall). The original day guard was extended to a round-the-clock watch in 1937.

Since then, the “Old Guard” of the U.S. 3rd Infantry Regiment has performed the Tomb Sentinel duty, and the original Great War-era Tomb has been joined by an Unknown Soldier from WWII in 1946 and a Korean War Unknown in 1958.

Today, a single M14-armed volunteer Sentinel stands guard over the Tomb at any given moment, with two reliefs rotating on a 24-hour shift. The Sentinels are changed every hour (on the hour) in winter months (October through March), and every half hour during the warmer months from April through September.

U.S. Soldiers with the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard) perform the changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington, Virginia, March 18, 2026
U.S. Soldiers with the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard) perform the changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington, Virginia, March 18, 2026. (Photo: Laura Buchta/U.S. Army)

In an ode to the 21-gun salute to the Unknowns, as described by Arlington National Cemetery, “The Tomb Guard marches exactly 21 steps down the black mat behind the Tomb, turns, faces east for 21 seconds, turns and faces north for 21 seconds, then takes 21 steps down the mat and repeats the process.”

The two relief Sentinels, along with two (E-5) Assistant Relief Commanders and a sidearm-carrying (E-6) Relief Commander, are on duty in their quarters under the Memorial Room of the Tomb’s Amphitheater. The pistol is loaded with a 21-round magazine.

Since 2018, the Relief Commanders have carried specially made ceremonial SIG Sauer P320 M17 9mm pistols that carry a high-polish DLC coating and are filled with details honoring their task– while still being functional. They replaced a set of Beretta-made M9s, which were used by the guard since 1988, walking on over 11,000 consecutive days.

Each of the current four pistols bears a name — Silence, Respect, Dignity, or Perseverance— which is featured on the dust cover. The wood grip panels come from the decking of the old cruiser USS Olympia, which brought the Great War Unknown from France in 1921. The removable optics plate is engraved with a copy of the Greek Figures featured on the east panel of the Tomb, representing Peace, Victory, and Valor, repeated on the magazine floor plates. The front sight contains a vial of marble dust collected from the Tomb of the Vietnam Unknown in 1998 when he was disinterred for identification. The cocking serrations on the slide are engraved “XXI” in an ode to the 21-gun salute. Further, they all use a serial number which includes “02JUL37”, the date the guard went 24-hours.

SIG Sauer M17 P320 Tomb pistol
The four serial numbers are: LS02JUL37A21 (Silence), LS02JUL37B21 (Respect), LS02JUL37C21 (Dignity), and LS02JUL37D21 (Perseverance).
SIG Sauer M17 P320 Tomb pistol
Silence. (Graphic by Staff Sgt. Oscar Toscano/U.S. Army.) 
SIG Sauer M17 P320 Tomb pistol
Dignity. (Graphic by Staff Sgt. Oscar Toscano/U.S. Army.) 
SIG Sauer M17 P320 Tomb pistol
Perseverance. (Graphic by Staff Sgt. Oscar Toscano/U.S. Army.) 
SIG Sauer M17 P320 Tomb pistol
Respect also contains a discreet internal engraving honoring MSG Jared Van Aalst, a Delta Force operator killed in action in 2009, and subsequently laid to rest at Arlington. (Graphic by Staff Sgt. Oscar Toscano/U.S. Army.) 
SIG Sauer M17 P320 Tomb pistol
The slides of the four Ceremonial M17s use a rear “XXI” cocking serration. (Photo: Staff Sgt. Oscar Toscano/U.S. Army.) 
SIG Sauer M17 P320 Tomb pistol
The optics plate is engraved with three Greek figures. As noted by the Army, “Peace holding a dove, Victory holding a palm branch, and Valor holding a sword. Victory stands between peace and valor to reward the devotion and sacrifice that went with courage to make the cause of righteousness triumphant.” (Photos: Staff Sgt. Oscar Toscano/U.S. Army.) 
SIG Sauer M17 P320 Tomb pistol
The grips feature the crest of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Identification Badge on one side and the 4th Battalion, 3rd Infantry Regiment crest on the other. Note the engraved magazine base pads. (Photos: Staff Sgt. Oscar Toscano/U.S. Army.) 
SIG Sauer M17 P320 Tomb pistol
SIG has a fifth mock-up Tomb pistol in its museum in New Hampshire. (Photo: Chris Eger/Guns.com)

Spring 2026 Armor Magazine available online (free download)

The Spring 2026 issue of Armor magazine is now available for download. You can access your copy at the following link: https://www.dvidshub.net/publication/562/armor-magazine

In this issue, we are excited to include a “What Would You Do?” article. We present a tactical vignette from our editorial staff and invite you to write in and share how you would execute the mission. We look forward to reading your responses!

Hard copies will be available during the Sullivan Cup.  If you are in the Fort Benning area during Armor Week, be sure to pick up the latest issue.

Standing Departments

Chief of Armor’s Hatch: ATP 3-20.96, Cavalry Squadron, is Changing the Fight by BG Chad C. Chalfont

This article announces the upcoming publication of the new Army Techniques Publication (ATP) 3-20.96, Cavalry Squadron, and explains the significant evolution in U.S. Army cavalry doctrine. It details the shift from a doctrine focused on the cavalry’s functions to one centered on its purpose for the force it supports.

From the Gunner’s Seat: Forging the Future of Armor Leadership – Modernizing NCO PME by CSM Ryan W. Roush

This article announces a fundamental overhaul of the training and education for U.S. Army Armor non-commissioned officers (NCOs). The new approach aims to create more lethal and adaptive leaders by delivering shorter, more focused, and specialized Professional Military Education (PME).

From the Boresight Line: From Proficiency to Lethality – The Framework for Continuous Improvement in Armored Crews by SFC Chas D. Ward and SFC Kenneth L. Shelton

This article argues that to prevent stagnation in proficient armored crews, leaders must shift from training for qualification to training for combat by using advanced simulations, focusing after-action reviews on combat-relevant metrics, and implementing complex challenges. For new crews, the focus should be on providing stability and sufficient time to master foundational skills, ultimately creating a cycle of continuous improvement for the entire unit.

From the Combat Training Centers: Data Overload – Observations on Data and Mission Command From JMRC by LTC Jordan Bradford, MAJ Edwin den Harder, and COL CJ Kirkpatrick

This article discusses the paradox of “data overload” in modern military operations, where the sheer volume of information from numerous digital systems overwhelms commanders and staffs, impeding timely and effective decision-making. It analyzes the causes observed at the Joint Multinational Readiness Center (JMRC) and proposes concrete best practices for managing this data deluge.

From the Doctrine Corner: Winning the First Fight – Modernizing Armor and Cavalry Doctrine by MCOE Directorate of Collective Training and Doctrine (DCTD)

This article outlines the U.S. Army’s comprehensive effort to modernize its doctrine, focusing on providing practical tactics for currently available equipment. Key updates include reframing the cavalry squadron’s purpose, integrating sUAS and electronic warfare, and overhauling gunnery manuals to enhance lethality, all while soliciting feedback from soldiers to ensure relevance.

What Would You Do?

This article presents a tactical scenario from ARMOR magazine’s “What Would You Do?” column, challenging readers to devise a plan for an armor company to seize a chokepoint from a modern, drone-capable enemy. The task requires a 500-750 word response detailing an operational concept that integrates combined arms, electronic warfare, and unmanned systems.

Book Reviews: Brothers in Arms, One Legendary Tank Regiment’s Bloody War From D-Day to VE-Day, reviewed by RETIRED COL Chris R. Willis

Features

Data-Enabled Assessments: What Factors Correlate with Gunnery Excellence in ABCTs? by LTC Brian W. Bilfulco

This article uses statistical analysis to identify the key factors influencing the gunnery performance of tank and Bradley crews, moving beyond anecdotal evidence to provide data-driven insights for leaders. The study finds that individual crewmember attributes, prior experience, and unit-level support systems are significant predictors of success, allowing for more targeted and effective training.

Learning the Wrong Lessons: The Influence of Tanks in the Spanish Civil War on the U.S. Army by Maj Micheal Hanson

This article argues that the U.S. Army drew the wrong conclusions about tank employment from the Spanish Civil War, stunting its armored doctrine by favoring an infantry-support role. In contrast, the German Army correctly identified the need for powerful, massed tank formations, leaving the U.S. unprepared for the blitzkrieg tactics of World War II.

Creative Maintenance Solutions in a Fiscally Constrained Environment by MAJ Jordan L. Woodburn, 1LT Trevor N. Stanley, and 1LT James A. Puls

This article details how the 1-64 Armor Regiment used innovative, cost-effective maintenance solutions during a deployment, such as 3D printing replacement parts and leveraging the fabrication skills of allied forces. These methods allowed the unit to rapidly correct dead-lining faults, improve vehicle readiness, and save money in a fiscally constrained environment.

From Contact to Overmatch: Redefining Armor Fundamentals Through Transformation in Contact by COL Bryan Bonnema, MAJ Aram Hatfield, and MAJ David Strum

This article explains how the U.S. Army’s Armor branch is adapting its fundamental tactics to the modern battlefield of ubiquitous drones and sensors by introducing a new operational framework called Isolation–Exploitation–Regeneration (IER). The IER model prioritizes using unmanned systems for initial engagement, followed by a decisive strike with traditional armored forces, and a rapid reset for subsequent operations.

Steel Meets Sustainment; Key Takeaways from the 12-Day War by CPT Ben Kusinski

This article, written from the perspective of an Armor Officer, details the critical strategic and logistical lessons learned during a fictional 12-Day War in 2025. It emphasizes how sustainment operations are paramount to success in modern, large-scale combat operations against peer adversaries.

The Army’s New Maintenance Skills Test Program in the ABCT by CPT Gabriel Liranzo

This article advocates for the implementation of the Maintenance Skills Test (MST) program to standardize maintenance training at the operator level within Armor units, arguing that lessons from the Russo-Ukraine conflict and current manning challenges necessitate more self-sufficient crews. The author stresses that company commanders must prioritize the MST to foster a culture of ownership and enhance fleet readiness for large-scale combat operations.

Ukrainian Combat Employment of the Bradley Fighting Vehicle by 1LT Jack Lynch

This article argues that the Ukrainian Armed Forces’ tactical innovations with the Bradley Fighting Vehicle (BFV), which often diverge from U.S. doctrine by emphasizing decentralized, autonomous operations, offer valuable lessons for the U.S. Army. By examining how Ukraine uses the BFV for mobile fire support and ambushes, the author highlights the need for U.S. doctrine to prioritize adaptability and empower small-unit leaders.

A Rapidly Changing Operational Environment: Cavalry Scouts Need to Be Painfully Light and Disproportionately Lethal by SSG Matthew Watson

This article argues that the modern battlefield, characterized by pervasive drone surveillance and rapid sensor-to-shooter links, demands a radical reinvention of Cavalry Scout tactics. The author, a Staff Sergeant, contends that scout sections must become “painfully light” through extreme signature management and dispersion, while also being “disproportionately lethal” by integrating organic loitering munitions and networked fires to survive and remain effective.

Just being irregular in irregular kinda places

Some 75 years ago.

Sometime between 29 March and 18 April 1951, in French Indochina. Two wildly different irregulars were both on their way out in French colonial service.

A Moroccan Goumier of the 17e Tabor and a barefoot Thai (also seen as Tai or T’ai) partisan of the regiment-sized 1er Groupement Mobile de Partisans Thaïs (GMPT 1) observe the village of Chieng Nuoi opposite the Nam Na River in the Lai Chau province in the far northwest of what is now Vietnam.

Réf. : TONK 51-42 R16, Guy Defives/ECPAD/Défense

While we have often covered the Goum units– who suffered more than 8,000 casualties fighting in Europe during WWII and had 26 unit citations to prove it– and nine tabors (1er, 2e, 3e, 5e, 8e, 9e, 10e, 11e, and 17e) would go on to fight in Indochina, noted in their performance in the battles RC4 and at Diên Biên Phu (they would leave no less than 4,120 Moroccans behind in Southeast Asian soil, including 611 still listed as MIA), the French Thai partisans have been neglected in our pages.

The mountainous and mist-shrouded Lai Chau province, then as now, has a significant Thai minority, making up just under half of the population. It is from this 600,000-strong minority that the French recruited, starting in 1948 with the help of the local clan leader, Deo Van Long, president of the Tai Federation, for both integration into standing units and fully separate irregular outfits. The latter included two companies of ethnic Thai Blancs (Tai Don), the three-company strong Groupement Wième (with CSM 431, 432, and 434 under WIÈME group), the above-mentioned GMPT 1, and three battalions of Thai auxiliaries (BT1, BT2, and BT3), amounting to roughly 30-40 very light companies depending on the time frame in addition to those serving in non-ethnic Thai units.

Each company was typically made up of about 60-70 men under the command of an ethnic Thai (reserve) officer, generally a trusted chau doan (canton chief) who could speak French, with individual partisans earning 20 Indochina trade piastres per day (equivalent to a bit less than $1 USD at the time). Said Thai officer had, as an advisor, a French soldier, typically an NCO cross-trained as a radio operator.

Uniforms were, well, irregular, with a mix of black civilian attire augmented by assorted web gear with the occasional beret or canvas Chapeau de Brousse (bush hat).

Indochina Moroccan Goumier of 17e Tabor and Thai partisans on shore at Chieng Nuoi, March-April 1951

Thai partisans in Indochina

8e bataillon de parachutistes coloniaux (8e BPC), officer (center) and partisans, April 1951

Thai partisans stopped near Mao Tsao Pin’s post in April 1951

Thai partisan and officers from the duck hunter camo-wearing 8th Colonial Parachute Battalion (8e BPC) in April 1951. Note the M1A1 Carbine with folded stock and the Tang suit of the partisan. 

By January 1953, there were nearly 10,000 ethic Thais officially under French command in the Autonomous Zone of the Northwest (ZANO)– which even awarded its own military decorations. More than half of these (6,088) were rank and file in regular units (283 non-commissioned officers, 5,805 enlisted men), the remainder (2,964) constituted auxiliary/partisan units (44 officers, 11 non-commissioned officers, 2,909 enlisted men).

By November 1953, the GMPT counted some 3,200 of these partisans, advised by 62 Europeans, and were prized as rearguards, scouts, and in counter-guerrilla operations.

They fought at Diên Biên Phu down to the bitter last moments, and many of the partisans never came home from that cursed place.

Once the Communist North took over Lai Chau province, and the ZANO ceased to exist, those associated with the partisans lost their oxygen privileges and, if they could, fled to the south with many, Deo Van Long included, eventually winding up in metropolitan France, where they spent their final days. His sons killed while leading partisan units during the war, the old Van Long passed the leadership of his clan to his daughter.

Those left behind fought a guerrilla war against the NVA for several years, aided by a few French burnouts who fell in love with the people and their cause.

French going big with new 80,000 ton CATOBAR CVN

As any navy expert will concede, having just a single aircraft carrier in your fleet is essentially having a carrier in name only, as the prospect of keeping it continuously ready to deploy is a farce. A carrier strike force “in-being.” An exercise in carrier theory. A headquarters float for a naval parade.

Sure, there have been many countries that tried the single-carrier concept during the Cold War —Argentina, Brazil, Spain, Thailand, the Netherlands —but they all decided that the money would be better spent on more escorts, submarines, and perhaps an LPH/LPD or two.

The juice just wasn’t worth the squeeze. At best, a sole carrier allowed them to go to sea for a few week-long workups one year and a short 4-6 month deployment the next, then have to go totally offline for most of a year every six or seven years for refit and refurbishment in a pretty big dry dock that they may not have. Then there is the problem of keeping a carrier air wing operational, sans carrier.

A few other navies briefly operated two (even conceptually three) carriers then downshifted to a single flattop due to budgetary reasons (Canada and Australia), but, as witnessed by the Royal Navy’s ups and downs when it comes to keeping two-three CV/CVLs since the 1970s (albeit with a zero carrier gap from 2014 to 2017), the Soviet’s four 40,000-ton Kiev class (Project 1143 Krechyet) Yak-38 carriers in the 1980s, Italy’s own two-top policy since 2009, and India’s decision to operate at least two since 2013, that figure is the bare minimum to ensure that, maybe, there would be one ready when needed.

France was an early adherent to this rule, having operated 2-4 carriers almost continuously from 1932 to 1997, 65 years (with a gap from November 1942 to April 45).

Pre-WWII, they had the 12,000-ton cruiser-armed seaplane carrier Commandant Teste (which could carry 26 aircraft and had four catapults) and the small (598-foot, 22,000 t) carrier Bearn, the latter of which was really just a Treaty-era use of an incomplete Normandie-class battleship hull. Two planned 35,000-ton Joffre-class carriers never made it off the drawing board before 1940.

French Aircraft Carrier Béarn, in exile in Martinique, Feb 1941, LIFE David E. Scherman

During WWII, the Free French picked up the U.S.-built escort carrier Dixmude (A609) (ex-HMS Biter, ex-Rio Parana) in April 1945, then soon added the 18,000-ton British Colossus-class carrier Arromanches (R95).

French Douglas SBD Dauntless au-dessus du porte-avions Arromanches.

The French carrier force grew to four with the loan of two 15,000-ton Independence-class light carriers in the early 1950s: Bois Belleau (R97) (ex-USS Belleau Wood) and La Fayette (R96) (ex-USS Langley), and would operate through 1960.

By 1961, the first of two 32,000-ton French-built Clemenceau-class CATOBAR carriers, Clemenceau (R98) and Foch (R99), entered service, while a larger 45,000-ton CV, Verdun, was only canceled later. From 1963, when Foch entered the fleet through 1974 when Arromanches was decommissioned and returned to the British, the French had two brand new fleet carriers and a third legacy training/commando carrier on hand.

French aircraft carriers Foch (R99) and Clemenceau (R98) in 1977

It was only in October 1997 that the French reduced to a single carrier (something they hadn’t done since Commandant Teste joined Bearn back in 1932) when Clemenceau struck. The worn-out Foch herself was retired in November 2000, leaving France with zero carriers for six months until the 42,000-ton CVN Charles de Gaulle commissioned in May 2001.

Charles de Gaulle at Goa, December 2025

Since then, France has been the only country in history to run a CVN other than the U.S. (even the Chinese and Russians have only operated conventionally powered flattops), which is an accomplishment. She has had several gaps in her career, leaving France sans carrier aviation, including a 15-month refit in 2007-08 (just six years after entering service) and an 18-month midlife upgrade and refit in 2017-18.

Still, she has conducted at least 11 extensive overseas deployments to the Indian Ocean/Pacific, the latest being Clemenceau 25.

Curiously, Charles de Gaulle was at sea when the latest combat in the Middle East broke out earlier this month, off Sweden, and has now been redeployed to the extended region (Cyprus), even while both British flattops (which are much newer) are sidelined for months.

So, surprisingly, Paris is moving forward with a sort of super-Charles de Gaulle as a replacement for the now 25-year-old CVN, rather than two smaller ships (ala HMS Queen Elizabeth), which arguably would be more capable of providing continuous coverage.

At least the new French carrier will be a big one. A super carrier by any post-1945 definition.

At 78,000 tons with two K22 nuclear reactors, the planned France Libre (Free France), pennant R92, is set to replace CDG in 2038ish, with the first steel plate being cut in 2031. Like CDG and the Clemenceaus, she will be CATOBAR and will be able to carry a 70-80 aircraft CVW.

The sizzle reel from Nava Group:

Colt Bags $198 Million Canadian Modular Rifle Contract

Colt is the winner of the Canadian Modular Rifle, or CMAR, program, to replace the current C7/C8 service rifle fleet, which has been in service for more than 35 years in the land of the Blue Jays and Silver Medal Olympic hockey teams. The contract is valued at CAD $273 million ($198 million USD).

As part of the contract, which requires at least 80 percent domestic production, Colt will deliver up to 30,000 General Service (GS) rifles between 2026 and 2029 from its Kitchener, Ontario, factory. The contract includes provisions for a possible increase in the volume of deliveries with a Phase 2 option including 19,207 GS rifles and 16,195 “Full Spectrum” rifles, the latter outfitted with optics and other accessories. The full award covers a maximum of 65,402 rifles.

The Canadian Armed Forces contains approximately 68,000 active and 32,000 reserve personnel, with about one third of those– 44,000– being in the Army.

Canadian Modular Rifle, or CMAR, with MFMD
The 5.56 NATO caliber Colt CMAR, type classified as the C25 in the above image, uses a monolithic upper receiver, chrome-lined free-floating barrel, ambidextrous controls, and a full-length STANAG 4694 top rail with M-LOK slots on the forearm. Accessories include a Magpul MOE grip and CTR adjustable stock. Photos: Department of National Defence/Ministère de la défense nationale 

An interesting factor on the CMAR is its use of an all-in-one combination flash hider/muzzle brake/flow-through suppressor, the Multi-Function Muzzle Device, or MFMD. Designed by Utah-based Strategic Sciences, the modular MFMD is billed as delivering in terms of sound (sub 140dB for all systems), flash (99 percent reduction), and recoil (60 percent faster follow-up shots) with a durability comparable to the barrel’s life cycle.

Canadian Modular Rifle, or CMAR, with MFMD
Initial production will be for 30,000 rifles between now and 2029, with as many as 35,000 additional rifles to follow. 
Colt C8A4 optics
What optics the new CMAR will carry is probably TBD at the moment, with the Canadian Army trialing several dots and LPVOs by Steiner and SIG on the interim C8A4 in the past year. The current standard day optic in Canadian service is the 3.4x fixed power Elcan C79 (M145 in U.S. service), which was adopted in 1989.  

As for what will happen to the country’s soon-to-be surplus C7 rifles and C8 carbines, which are based on the Colt M16A3 and M4, respectively, it is likely they will be retained in arsenal storage as the Canadian Armed Forces is seeking to expand its Primary reserve forces from the current 23,561 part-time members to 100,000 and beef up the current force of 4,384 inactive or retired Supplementary Reserve members to 300,000, figures not seen under the Maple Leaf flag since World War II!

Canada adopted the license-built C7 series in 1984, replacing semi-auto inch-pattern FN FAL pattern C1A1 rifles in 7.62 NATO, which entered service in the 1950s.

Soldiers of the Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada training at CFB Gagetown with C1A1s, circa 1974 (Library and Archives Canada MIKAN 4235794)

The Realm of the Valkyries

Official caption: “A sailor assigned to the USS Thomas Hudner attaches chains to an MH-60R Sea Hawk helicopter during flight deck operations as part of Operation Epic Fury in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility, 16 March 2026.”

Note the four-pack of AGM-114 Hellfires, which entered Navy service in 1998.

VIRIN: 260316-N-NO146-1066M (Released).

CENTCOM officials claim to have destroyed, sunk, or seriously damaged over 100 and possibly as many as 130 Islamic Republic of Iran Navy (IRIN) and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy (IRGC-N) naval vessels since the beginning of Epic Fury. I wouldn’t be surprised if some of the smaller vessels were bagged via Hellfire.

An Atlantic Fleet Flight IIA Burke, USS Thomas Hudner (DDG-116), has been seen with MH-60s from the Jacksonville-based Valkyries of Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron (HSM) 50 aboard, with a big .50 cal on the starboard side and a four-pack of Hellfires to port.

AN MH-60R Seahawk helicopter, assigned to Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron 50, departs Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Thomas Hudner (DDG 116) during flight operations while underway in the Caribbean Sea, Dec. 27, 2025. U.S. military forces are deployed to the Caribbean in support of the U.S. Southern Command mission, Department of War-directed operations, and the president’s priorities to disrupt illicit drug trafficking and protect the homeland. (U.S. Navy photo)

A U.S. Sailor, assigned to Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron 50, performs clear and safe checks on a .50 caliber machine gun on an MH-60R Seahawk helicopter aboard the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer, USS Thomas Hudner (DDG 116), while underway in the Caribbean Sea, Dec. 27, 2025. U.S. military forces are deployed to the Caribbean in support of the U.S. Southern Command mission, Department of War-directed operations, and the president’s priorities to disrupt illicit drug trafficking and protect

A U.S. Sailor, assigned to Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron 50, refuels an MH-60R Seahawk during flight deck operations aboard the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Thomas Hudner (DDG 116), while underway in the Caribbean Sea, Dec. 26, 2025. U.S. military forces are deployed to the Caribbean in support of the U.S. Southern Command mission, Department of War-directed operations, and the president’s priorities to disrupt illicit drug trafficking and protect the homeland. (U.S. Navy photo)

Pascagoula ship spotting

On my most recent trip back to the old childhood stomping grounds in Pascagoula, I made my regular pilgrimage to The Point (the rough site of the old USCG station and Pascagoula River Lighthouse) and gazed out upon HII’s Ingalls Shipbuilding to see who is in the water.

Looking out to the Ingalls West Bank, which was created in the 1970s for the Spruance class DDs, Tico class CGs, and Tarawa class LHAs. Photo: Chris Eger

In the water at the mouth of the Pascagoula River under the big bird crane is PCU USS Jeremiah Denton (DDG 129), a Flight III Burke, which launched on 25 March 2025 and is fitting out. Note another Burke behind her, perhaps the future USS George M. Neal (DDG-131), which is nearing launch later this year. Photo: Chris Eger

Next, afloat in the Pascagoula River proper, is the future USS Bougainville (LHA-8), the first Flight I America-class Lightning carrier. There has been a building LHA or LHD in this stretch of the river my entire life, and I am in my 50s! Photo: Chris Eger

The big 45,000-ton ‘phib began construction in 2018, has been in the water since 2019, and is expected to be delivered to the Navy in August 2026. Needs lots more topside work on that island before then. Photo: Chris Eger

Then there is the future USS Harrisburg (LPD 30), the first Flight II San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock. Laid down in 2022, she took to the water last January and is fitting out. Photo: Chris Eger

Further upstream is the scratch-and-dent old spaceship, USS Zumwalt (DDG-1000), looking very rough just months before her 10th birthday as a “commissioned” warship. Note, her forward Advanced Gun Systems house has been removed to clear space for four launchers intended for the Dark Eagle Intermediate-Range Conventional Prompt Strike (IRCPS) missile, with each canister capable of holding three missiles. Photo: Chris Eger

And in the old WWII-era East Bank, in one of the circa 1960s submarine berths, is the future USS Ted Stevens (DDG 128), a Flight III Burke scheduled to be commissioned this Fall in Whittier, Alaska. Photo: Chris Eger

Also, Kevin’s Corner is still making great burgers.

Hellion’s Big Brother Spotted in the Wild on NATO Front Lines

Images captured on a shooting range somewhere in Lithuania have captured a familiar bullpup 5.56 at play in the snow.

Panzerbrigade 45 “Litauen” recently released a photo essay on social media with troops qualifying in the Baltics, a region of NATO allies that share a tense border with Russia in Northeast Europe.

Seen prominently is the HS Produkt VHS-2 rifle in its full-flavor select fire variant. Over on this side of the pond, the Croatian-made VHS is better known as its NFA-compliant sporting variant, the Springfield Armory Hellion. 

Patches seen in the photos point to the troops as belonging to the 565-member 6th Croatian Contingent (6. HRVCON), a battalion of Cold War classic towed 122mm D30 RH M94 (2A18) howitzers, which is part of the NATO Multinational Battlegroup Lithuania (MN BG LTU), an outfit composed of troops from not only Croatia but also Belgium, Czechia, Germany, Norway, and the Netherlands.

The VHS, introduced in 2008, was adopted by the Croatian Army in 2016. In addition to Croatia, the VHS is standard issue to military and police units in a half-dozen countries.

More than 20,000 VHS series rifles are in service in Croatia. (Photos: Croatian Army)

Over here, the Hellion debuted on the commercial market in 2022 and is now available in several variants across numerous barrel lengths and colorways. We reviewed the 16-inch carbine model and found it to be exceptional in testing.

Despite its short length, the Hellion has a 16-inch CMV barrel with a 1:7 twist and a Melonite coating. Its overall length makes it ideal for CQB-style shooting, and the adjustable stock —you just don’t see that on bullpups —makes the gun modular for a wide range of shooters. (Photo: Chris Eger)

Welcome back KGV!

Some 80 years ago this month.

The class-leading fast battleship HMS King George V (41) returns to Portsmouth after the war on 6 March 1946, having steamed a total of 73,722 miles since sailing to join the British Pacific Fleet from Scapa on 28 October 1944, and having burned 61,077 tons of oil fuel in the process.

KGV had earned battle honors during the war for Atlantic (1941), Bismarck Action, Arctic (1942-43), Sicily (1943), Okinawa (1945), and Japan (1945), attending the surrender ceremonies in Tokyo Bay on VJ Day.

In the sinking of the Bismarck, she fired 339 main (14-inch) shells and 700+ secondary (5.25-inch) shells at the German leviathan, and in targeting Japanese industrial areas around Hitachi delivered another 2,000 14-inchers ashore.

Japanese Surrender, Tokyo Bay, USS Missouri, HMS Duke of York, HMS King George V, by Charles David Cobb via National Museum of the Royal Navy, Portsmouth

After her arrival back home, she became the flagship of the Home Fleet until 1950 (only missing Korea), when she was placed in Reserve, her class a fleet in being in the rare case they should ever have to fight the few remaining Soviet battleships or deliver NGFS during a large amphibious assault.

King George V class battleships listing, Jane’s 1946

Laid up in the Gareloch, she was never recommissioned and was placed on the Disposal List in 1957.

Sold to BISCO for demolition by Arnott Young, she was towed to Dalmuir on the Clyde to be de-equipped on 20th January 1958. Demolition was completed at Troon, where she arrived during May 1959.

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