Can we give it up for the Air Demonstration Teams?

Sure, the whole thing smacked a bit of “bread and circuses,” but you have to admit the Super Delta last weekend coming over the White House was stirring.

Who doesn’t love seeing the Blues and the Birds in one 12-plane formation?

Plus, it really shows how much larger the F-18E/F is over the F-16C/D.

Via White House.

The Navy’s Blue Angels and Air Force’s Thunderbirds fly in a 12-plane Super Delta formation over the Ellipse in Washington, June 14, 2026, ahead of the UFC Freedom 250 fights at the White House. Army Sgt. 1st Class Brittany Primavera

Similarly, the RAF’s No. 1 Group Red Arrows, tooling around in little Hawk T1As, made their appearance the same weekend over St. James during the Trooping of the Colors in London.

Pictured: His Majesty the King’s Birthday flypast over Buckingham Palace. Nine Hawk jets from the Red Arrows. The King’s Birthday Parade, also known as Trooping the Colour, is a celebration of the monarch’s official birthday in the United Kingdom.  

The Arrows have been active since 1964, making them much newer than the Blues (formed in 1946, flying F6F Hellcats) or the Birds (1953).

Speaking of demonstration teams, the Italian Frecce Tricolori (313° Gruppo Addestramento Acrobatico), which are three years older than the Arrows (they flew F-86 Sabres when formed), were recently in action over Rome with their Aermacchi MB-339-A/PAN trainers to celebrate the Festa della Repubblica.

I had just stayed in an Airbnb at the Argentina ruins, watching cats sunbathe, while in Italy visiting Benelli (more to come on that very soon!), and was sad I missed them.

Meanwhile, the Hawk Mk 132-borne Suryakiran Aerobatic Team of the Indian Air Force’s No. 52 Squadron just celebrated its 30th, and they look great.

Sadly, the RCAF’s Snowbirds, officially known as the 431 Air Demonstration Squadron, are hanging it up after 55 years as they retire their Cold War-vintage CT-114 Tutors in November.

They are supposed to be back in some form, possibly in 2030, with new Pilatus PC21s, but you know how the Labor government is with Defense spending, so don’t hold your breath.

They have like 20 more shows this season, including some in California, New York, and Ohio. After that, it will be the end of an era either way.

Pour one out for the Snows, fellas, and try to catch an airshow near you this summer. Take a kid or grandkid or three. They’ll love it.

Code word: Lariat Advance

Feel like some light reading?

Step back into the Cold War and the defense of West Germany with the Army University Press’s latest (free) publication, the 422-page Lariat Advance: Insights from the Cold War for the 21st Century, edited by Gregory Fontenot and James P. “Pat” O’Neal.

Enjoy!

Link here.

Meet Gripen F

Saab recently published a great and highly moto 17 minute video of the unveiling of the new two-seat multirole Gripen F (powered by a GE F414G) in Brazil and handing over the first logbook to the commander of the Brazilian Air Force. Interestingly, the presentation is in English, the common language of aviation, naval, and military affairs, rather than Portuguese or Swedish.

The Gripen F is type classified as the F-39 in Brazil and will be domestically produced as part of a licensing agreement.

A total fleet of 36 F39 E/Fs is planned.

This comes as Ukrainian pilots are now training on 16 older-generation JAS 39 Gripen C/Ds donated by Sweden, including IRIS-T, AMRAAM, and Meteor missiles to make them dangerous.

In conjunction with the gift, Kyiv plans to allocate €2.5 billion ($2.9 billion) from the EU’s Ukraine Support Loan to purchase 20 of the more advanced Gripen E/Fs. Ukraine hopes to operate as many as 150 Gripens at the end of the day.

Beyond that, Saab has done a great job marketing Gripen F to Canada, Thailand, and Colombia as well, and you have to admit– it is a fetching aircraft.

The Gripen’s Arexis Electronic Warfare (EW) suite.

This one could end up being the little jet that could.

Happy 251st, Big Green

Over the weekend, the U.S. Army turned 251, counting the mandate from the Second Continental Congress to begin to replace the assorted colonial militia units besieging the British in Boston with an official army in the field, just 55 days after the Battles of Lexington and Concord and less than 72 hours before the Battle of Bunker/Breed’s Hill.

Of note, the official order was to raise 10 companies of “expert riflemen” drawn from across the colonies and send them to Boston. Washington was selected to command said force the next day, on 15 June 1775.

While the uniforms, tactics, arms, and training have changed, the Army remains.

Army PFC Giovanni Tolbert fires a suppressed M7 NGSW-R during a Salaknib 2026 live-fire exercise at Fort Magsaysay, Nueva Ecija, Philippines, June 2, 2026. Exercise Salaknib highlights the U.S.-Philippine alliance and supports efforts to maintain stability in the Indo-Pacific. (Army Photo 260602-A-PJ082-9481 by Spc. Justin Hicks)

RN Makes a Splash in Trooping Ceremony

Last weekend witnessed the Trooping the Colors at St James’s Park, which saw 30 aircraft, 200 horses, the Massed Bands of the Household Division, and 1,400 service personnel of the armed forces mark The King’s Official Birthday.

An Army-led event staged annually since 1760, the Trooping has been in its current format since 1889, and has been held in the summer since Edward VII was on the throne.

This year saw the King’s Company, 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards, Troop their colors on London’s Horse Guards Parade while a 41 Gun Royal Salute was also held within The Green Park by The King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery.

It all makes for stirring photos.

Members of the Household Cavalry, the Life Guards (front) and the Blues and Royals (back) ride along The Mall as members of the royal family return to Buckingham Palace, London, following the Trooping the Colour ceremony in central London, as King Charles III celebrates his official birthday. Picture date: Saturday June 13, 2026.

Grenadier Guards during the Trooping the Colour ceremony at Horse Guards Parade, central London, in celebration of King Charles III’s official birthday. Picture date: Saturday, June 13, 2026.

A member of the Grenadier Guards holds the Colour flag during the Trooping the Colour ceremony at Horse Guards Parade, central London, in celebration of King Charles III’s official birthday. Picture date: Saturday, June 13, 2026.

The King’s Birthday Parade, also known as Trooping the Colour, is a celebration of the monarch’s official birthday in the United Kingdom. It is a significant event in the ceremonial season and serves as an opportunity for the Household Division and the King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery to demonstrate their loyalty and commitment to the Sovereign. 

A quiet addition this year, for what is believed to be the first time in the event’s 350-year history, was a landing force of SA80/L85 Enfield-armed 92 Royal Navy personnel who lined the Mall in front of Buckingham Palace. The force was organized in four half-companies of 19 junior ratings, one senior rate, a ceremonial instructor, and one officer, performing both a ceremonial and security role.

Pictured: The 92-strong contingent Royal Navy Street Lining Party marching out of Wellington Barracks this morning. The King’s Birthday Parade, also known as Trooping the Colour, is a celebration of the monarch’s official birthday in the United Kingdom. 

Drawn from volunteers from across the Senior Service, the scratch unit underwent two weeks of drill instruction and practice at the “stone frigate” HMS Excellent on Whale Island in Portsmouth under the Royal Navy’s State Ceremonial Training Officer.

Pictured: The 92-strong contingent Royal Navy Street Lining Party at Wellington Barracks this morning. 

Meanwhile, back at HMNB Devonport, an anti-flash swaddled firing party rocked a dramatic 21-gun salute from the quarterdeck on HMS Drake to mark the event. If you ask me, Class As, gloves, and balcalvas probably would have been enough, but eyyy…

13 Jun 2026 – Firing party at attention. Sailors from His Majesty’s Naval Base Devonport, Plymouth, commemorated King Charles III’s Official Birthday with a 21-Gun Salute fired from the Quarterdeck at HMS Drake. 

13 Jun 2026 – Firing party firing. 

SpruCan Spotting!

These via WarshipCam in San Diego, showing the much-modified and recently overhauled Spruance-class destroyer Self Defense Test Ship (SDTS) EDD-964 (ex-USS Paul F. Foster, DD-964) of Port Hueneme Division leaving San Diego on 11 June.

Commissioned in Pascagoula in 1976, she looks great at 50!

She is the only ship of her class, the cursed Sprucans, still in existence, and had some serious first salvo service in the first Gulf War.

Perhaps the Navy will donate her to a museum once they are finally through with the old girl. She already has a vibrant veterans group. 

That time (Not During the 1860s) that the War Department Bought 128,000 Sabers

“Some Cavalry weapons.” Left to right: M1913 Saber, M1903 Rifle, M1917 Browning Machine Gun, M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle, and M1911 pistol. Taken at the Cavalry and Light Artillery School, Fort Riley, Kansas, between 1919 and 1934.

Signal Corps Photo 111-SC-99216

2nd LT George S. Patton (USMA 1909) was only 27 when his saber design, the straight Model of 1913 Cavalry Sword, which took cues from French military sabers of the 19th Century, was adopted to replace the curved and polished Model 1906 “Ames” Light Cavalry Saber, the latter of which was basically just a Civil War holdover.

The Patton:

Patton saber M1913 compared to officers’ sword of 1902/03 165-WW-392B-003

The 19th-century standard:

Union trooper with stocked Colt pistol carbine, Remington revolver, and cavalry saber identified as Private Amos Reese of Company E, 10th Kentucky Cavalry Regiment (Johnson’s), circa 1862. Liljenquist Collection, LOC, LC-DIG-ppmsca-32685

While the saber in American service wasn’t typically used on campaign after 1865, the Plains Wars being more an affair of carbine and revolver backed up by the occasional Gatling gun and mountain howitzer, cavalry regiments duly stocked and practiced with the “long knives.”

For example: Saber Exercises, Troop “L,” 1st Cavalry, Ft. Custer, Montana, 1892. Note that Troop L was typically the Indian Scout section in U.S. Cavalry regiments from 1866 onward.

Signal Corps Photo 111-SC-104128

The Patton Saber was carried on-horse, rather than the Civil War-era blades mounted on the body.

3d U.S. Cavalry Officer and trooper, equipped for the field. Horse is “Reno,” a four-year-old officer’s charger. Note the M1913 on the saddle and the “3” regimental marked saddle pad. Photo taken at Army Carnival, Washington, D.C., September 1928. 111-SC-95373

Cavalry horse with full pack. Fort Myer, Virginia, 1920. Note the Patton saber 111-SC-68811

26th Colonel of the 3d U.S. Cavalry Regiment, Col. Kenyon A. Joyce, mounted portrait taken at Fort Myer, Virginia, 1933. Note his Patton Saber.

Some horse officers, especially on parade, elected to carry their 1902 pattern officer’s sword instead, or 1906 Ames sabers, a right allowed by command and an easy nod to the fact that officers typically purchased their own swords. A Mess Cape/Boat Cloak kind of thing.

Example: “Draw Saber”, Machine Gun Troop, 10th Cavalry, Ft. Meyer, Va. 1931, with rank and file using Patton sabers and the two officers with 1902s

111-SC-96745

Inset

Note the M1902 officer’s sword. Review of the Cavalry and Field Artillery at Fort Myer, Virginia. A well-trained cavalry horse “Ditto” ridden by Captain Thayer, 3rd Cavalry, 30 April 1920. 111-SC-68437

As detailed by Dieter Stenger in AH90, the Army’s Springfield Armory manufactured at least 35,000 Patton model sabers between 1913 and 1918– a number which seems quite a stretch for the 17 regiments of regulars (two of which had only been formed in 1916) and the National Guard’s three cavalry regiments, 13 separate cavalry squadrons, and 22 separate cavalry troops, a force that, when mobilised, would be only around 18,000 troopers.

All these initial Pattons were stamped “SA,” with the Ordnance stamp (flaming bomb), and date on one side of the ricasso, with the other side stamped “US” and serialized. SA No. 1 is currently in the Army’s Museum system.

An additional 93,000 wartime production sabers were contracted to the firm of Landers, Frary and Clark of New Britain, Connecticut, in 1917 and 1918. These are marked LF&C and were delivered through 1919, with the latter date the most commonly seen.

An LF&C Patton, as seen in a July 1918 Ordnance Corps photo:

That’s a lot of sabers, especially when it is considered that U.S. cavalry troops on the Mexican border did not use the saber in the field, and only two regiments, the 6th and 15th U.S. Cavalry, served in France in 1918, and were sent to the trenches as dismounted infantry.

Nonetheless, post-Versailles, the Army soon formed 20 full National Guard horse cav regiments (101st to 123rd, skipping the 111th and 118th) in four divisions (21st, 22nd, 23rd, and 24th) while the Army Reserve amazingly had 24 brand new horse cavalry regiments, numbered 301st through 324th, in six divisions (!) numbered the 61st through 66th, all established between 1921 and 1927.

Wyoming National Guard’s 115th Cavalry Regiment in its final format, circa 1940, with jeeps and trucks augmenting the regimental band and horse soldiers

If ever fleshed out (pun intended) to their full wartime strength, these 10 Army NG and Reserve cavalry divisions would amount to 47,960 cavalrymen in the field (not counting support units such as artillery and engineers), joining the regular Army’s 1st, 2nd, and 3rd (paper) Cavalry Divisions.

It was almost as if the War Department felt that, since they had 93,000 new sabers on hand, they needed to find 93,000 troopers to hold them!

Nonetheless, the Army officially retired the Model 1913 Cavalry Sword as a standard-issue U.S. military weapon in April 1934, and thereafter were deleted from the TO&E.

With so many M1913s on hand in Army armories in the 1940s, many were cut into sections and converted into a wide variety of fighting knives made by Anderson, San Antonio Iron Works, and others, while the OSS purportedly had some converted for their own use in dropping behind the lines.

Each Patton Sword could make three blades: tip, middle, and handle.

M1913 Patton sabers made into fighting knives. Souce

Thus, if you find an intact M1913 saber on the collectors market, keep in mind the use it has on it likely came after it hit the surplus market in well-cared-for, gently used condition.

As for fighting knife conversions, well, buy the knife, not the story.

CVW-8 Has the Bomb Marks to Prove it

Carrier Strike Group Twelve just posted some great images of the mission symbol nose art applied to some of the birds of Carrier Air Wing (CVW) Eight as they returned on USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) following an historic and successful 11-month (326 day), 57,713 nautical mile, deployment to the Central Command, European Command and Southern Command across U.S. 2nd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Fleet AORs.

During the cruise, the wing made 11,500 cats from EMALS, 12,200 flight launches when the rotors are included, logged more than 5,760 flight hours, and took part in NATO Exercise Neptune Strike and Operations Southern Spear, Absolute Resolve, and Operation Epic Fury.

For reference, when it comes to Modexes on CVW-8 during this epic cruise, 100s are the Ragin’ Bulls of VFA-37, 200s are the Black Lions of VFA-213, 300s are the Felix-the-cat carrying Tomcatters of VFA-31, 400s are the Golden Warriors of VFA-87, and 500s are the Growler-riding Gray Wolves of VAQ-142.

With tallies for what look to be four missions on tankers. Note that HSC-9 are the Tridents.

VFA-37 loaded with bombs and JASSM marks

VFA-37

Black Lions color bird

Tomcatters Rhino with both bomb and JASSM marks

Golden Warriors of VFA-87, showing spears and a tomahawk, which is a unit thing that is doubtless open to interpretation

Nice

As this is a Growler, those should be for HARM missiles.

Somebody in VFA-37 has been busy!

And now in the Indian Ocean…

The Pakistan Navy yesterday welcomed “home” the first specimen of the 249-foot/2,800-ton S26 class submarine, PNS Hangor, an export derivative of the Chinese Type 039A SSK, which is currently operated by the PLAN.

Built at CSOC in China, it is a very modern boat with a double-hulled design and powered by AIP, which means she can remain submerged virtually every minute of an entire 40-50 day patrol if needed. It is roughly equivalent to a German Type 209 and superior to a Kilo-class SSK.

The Chinese are rapidly building the first four of the class at CSOC, with the future Shushuk, Mangro, and Ghazi already launched and fitting out for delivery next year. Then, with technology sharing, the next four will be built by KSEW in Karachi, with the future Tasnim and Seem Maai already laid down.

The eight new boats will replace the trio of French Agosta 90B-class submarines (Khalid, Saad, and Hamza) that are now in their 20s, and a pair of much older Agosta 70s (Hashmat and Hurmat), the latter two originally built for South Africa but not delivered due to sanctions on the Apartheid government, so the Pakistani Navy well knows how to run modern SSKs.

The Agostas replaced a trio of Daphnés, one of which sank an Indian frigate in 1971. Before that, the Pakistanis operated a leased Guppy Tench-class boat, ex-USS Diablo, as PNS Ghanzi, which was lost during the 1971 war, so they know the game well.

By comparison, the Indian Navy has 16 boats, three small 6,000-ton domestically built (with Russian help) Arihant-class SSNs, six brand new French Scorpènes, six cranky Kilo (P.877) class boats, and four German Type 209/1500s.

Magazine Depth Concerns are Real

Pushing 15 weeks into Operation Epic Fury, with over 1,000 TLAMs, 1,100 JSSAMs, and 1,400 Patriots burned up (and more launching every day), coming on the heels of firing untold SM-2/3/6s expended during Operation Prosperty Guardian to counter 470 Houthi/Iranian recorded one-way drone events, 70 ballistic missiles, and 155 multi-use drone sorties in the Red Sea, not to mention $61 billion in military aid to Ukraine, you have to worry just how empty is the Arsenal of Democracy.

The Center for Strategic & International Studies has done the open-source math and has the tally sheets.

It is not good, but there should still be a good bit left, and, on the bright side, if nothing else happens in the next four or five years, and expanded production goals on these extremely complex devices that require advanced chips, exceptionally skilled labor, and clean rooms are met, the numbers should return to pre-OEF levels.

Fingers crossed.

Here’s to 2031 without a war.

The full report here. 

« Older Entries