Dynamic Mongoose 26 Snaps

How about this PhotoEx from NATO High North ASW exercise Dynamic Mongoose 26 off Trondheim, Norway, last week.

Centered around the 65,000-ton carrier HMS Prince of Wales escorted by the Type 45 (Daring) class AAW destroyer HMS Duncan (D 37), the other escorts seen are the Danish Absalon-class frigate HDMS Esbern Snare (F 342), the German frigate FGS Sachsen (F 220), and the Portuguese Bartholomeu Dias-class frigate NRP Dom Francisco de Almeida (F 334).

Submarines include the German U-35 (S 185), the Dutch Walrus-class HNLMS Zeeleeuw (S 803), and the Tridente-class NRP Tridente (S 160).

There is also a bit of an unofficial OPFOR, as NRP Francisco De Almeida and Merlin Mk2s from HMS Prince of Wales have been closely monitoring a Russian ship, Yuri Ivanov, a (Project 18280) intelligence-gathering vessel, which is getting SIGINT close to the exercise zone.

Looking back at Sandy and the 602nd

Below, we see Sandy at work, just 60 years ago.

U.S. Air Force Douglas A-1G (AD-5N) four-seat night attack Skyraider (ex-Navy BuNo 132619) nicknamed “Carolyn’s Folly” from the 602nd Fighter Squadron (Commando), call sign Firefly, flying out of Bien Hoa AB, South Vietnam, seen escorting an HH-3C Jolly Green Giant rescue helicopter during a Combat Search and Rescue (CSAR) mission in 1966.

Note the ‘Raiders” jolly roger. VIRIN: 100426-F-1234S-004

This circa 1952 aircraft began service in the Navy and was noted aboard USS Hancock (CV-19) on 21 August 1958 with VA(AW)-35 Det. D before transfer to the USAF. Struck off charge at NAS Alameda on 29 October 1964 after a 12 year Navy career, 132619 was transferred to the USAF– one of 330 Skyraiders to the Air Force including the A-1E, G, H, and J models. After flying with the 602nd and later the 1st ACS/SOS, 132619 was transferred to the South Vietnamese Air Force’s 516th Squadron in February 1971 when the USAF divested themselves of the type.

She was one of the rare ex-USN Raiders that survived USAF service in Southeast Asia, with more than 200 lost across 90,000 combat sorties in their nine-year (1963-72) stint

The aircraft is available as a Scalemates decal set.

The 602nd (designated a Special Operations Squadron in 1968) alone amazingly had 140 different AH-1E/G/H/J Skyraiders pass through their hands during Vietnam between 1964 and December 1970.

Here are a few.

USAF A-1E Skyraider (s/n 52-133885) of the 602nd Air Commando Squadron flies over a fortified hamlet in Vietnam, in 1964. In 1964-1965, USAF aircraft in Vietnam often flew with Vietnamese markings due to political reasons. This aircraft was shot down over Laos on 15 February 1966. U.S. Air Force photo scanned from Dana Bell: Air War over Vietnam. Volume IV. (Warbirds Illustrated 26). Arms and Armour Press, London 1984, p. 38, ISBN 0853686351.

USAF A-1E Skyraider (s/n 52-132423) of the 602nd Air Commando Squadron escorts a Sikorsky HH-3C Jolly Green Giant, in 1966. 132423 was shot down by small arms fire 40km north-west of Sam Neua, Houaphan Province, Laos on 6 July 1966. The pilot, Capt. J.R. Crane was able to fly about 30km north of Udorn, Thailand, and bailed out. He was rescued by a USAF helicopter. USAF Museum Photo  101117-F-1234S-104

USAF A-1E Skyraider (s/n 52-132425) of the 602nd Air Commando Squadron in South Vietnam, January 1966. Note the Douglas C-47 and the Grumman HU-16 Albatross in the background. 132425 was shot down by ground fire near Na Pho, Khammouan Province, Laos, on 19 April 1966. The pilot, Capt. Richard J. Robbins, was killed. National Museum of the U.S. Air Force photo 051123-F-1234P-016

U.S. Air Force “Tropic Moon I” Douglas A-1E Skyraider (s/n 52-135195) of the 602nd Special Operations Squadron in flight with a Low-Light-Level-Televison (LLLTV) pod on the left wing, 1 June 1968. This aircraft was later shot down on 11 February 1970 while in service with the 22nd SOS. The pilot, Colonel William L. Kieffer, was killed.

A U.S. Air Force Douglas A-1H Skyraider (s/n 52-134555) of the 602nd Special Operations Squadron sits on the ramp at Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai Air Force Base (“NKP”), Thailand, circa in 1968. This was the first USAF A-1H to be named “The Proud American”. 134555 was operated by the U.S. Navy until 9 January 1968. It was then transferred to the USAF, where it operated with the 602nd, 22nd, and 1st SOS before being transferred to the Vietnam Air Force. Here it operated with the 515th and 518th Fighter Squadrons until it was lost on 3 April 1972. 221109-F-IO108-002

U.S. Air Force “Tropic Moon I” officers and airmen of the 602nd Special Operations Squadron at Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai Air Force Base on 1 June 1968, showing the Low-Light-Level-Televison (LLLTV) pod on the wing of one of the four Douglas A-1E Skyraiders that made up the unit (s/n 52-135177, -135187, -135195, -135211).

USAF HC-130P Combat King recovery aircraft refuels a Sikorsky HH-3E Jolly Green Giant of the 40th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Squadron in flight near Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand, between 10 and 23 February 1969. Visible are another HH-3E and two Douglas A-1 Skyraider (A-1H 135314, A-1J 142023) of the 602nd Special Operations Squadron. The A-1H 135314 was later shot down by ground fire near Ban Na, Laos, on 18 June 1971 while in service with the 1st SOS. The pilot was killed. The A-1J 142023 was shot down by ground fire over Laos on 1 March 1969. The pilot was killed. 342-C-KE-60922

USAF A-1H Skyraider (s/n 52-139778, “Bubbles’n Bust”) of the 602nd Special Operations Squadron on final approach before landing at Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand, 15 March 1970. NARA 176246880

The Air Force lost 102 pilots, killed, while flying A-1s in combat with USAF Skyraider drivers earning two Medals of Honor, 14 Air Force Crosses, and many other awards for valor.

The two Skyraiders in the collection the National Museum of the Air Force, Bu Nos. 132649 and 134600 are both former Navy planes that served with the 1st Special Operations Squadron during Vietnam.

Of note, 649 was the aircraft that Major Bernard Fisher earned his MoH in in 1966, having rescued a fellow pilot shot down over South Vietnam by landing in enemy territory under heavy fire and personally flying him to safety.

Douglas A-1E Skyraider Bu No. 132649 at the National Museum of the United States Air Force. A 1952 Navy plane, she was struck off at Alameda in April 1964 and transferred to the USAF, serving with the 1st ACS in Vietnam. (U.S. Air Force photo 071030-F-1234S-020)

The aircraft on display represents Captain Ronald Smith’s A-1H The Proud American (Serial Number 52-139738) as it appeared during his SAR mission in June 1972 as part of the 1st Special Operations Squadron, Nakhon Phanom (NKP) Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand. Captain Smith was awarded the Air Force Cross for the rescue of a downed F-4 Phantom crewman near a North Vietnamese airfield. The Proud American had a long and storied record in Southeast Asia. Although many pilots flew the plane, it is renowned for three separate episodes: Lt Col William Jones’ Medal of Honor mission in 1968, Capt Ronald Smith’s Air Force Cross mission in June 1972, and for being the last US Air Force A-1 lost in combat in Southeast Asia in September 1972. This aircraft (U.S. Navy BuNo 134600) was modified and painted by the Museum’s Restoration Division to represent Capt Smith’s Air Force Cross aircraft and placed on display at the National Museum of the Air Force in 2022. It was part of OPERATION FARM GATE and flown by the South Vietnamese Air Force from 1965 to 1975. (U.S. Air Force photo 221114-F-AU145-1305 by Ty Greenlees)

Beautiful Cincy

A period photograph of USS Cincinnati (Cruiser Number 7), which served between 1894 and 1921. The image, showing the graceful 3,200-ton cruiser in gleaming white with her original ornate bow crest, would likely have been taken before 1911 when she picked up a more 20th-century haze gray.

Courtesy of Mr. H.L. Chapelle, Smithsonian Institution. NHHC Photograph Collection. NR&L (OLD) 20432-A

If you note, the photo is signed by Admiral Raymond Ames Spruance (USNA 1906), who served on board between 1911 and 1913 as a lieutenant J.G, holding down an engineering officer post while deployed on the Asiatic Station.

Cincinnati, who fought in the Spanish American War and served as flagship of the American Patrol Detachment, Atlantic Fleet from 1 February 1918 to 28 March 1919 on convoy duty around the Caribbean, carried single 6-inch gun, 10 5″/, eight 6-pounders, 2 1-pounders, and four 18-inch torpedo tubes as built.

USS Cincinnati (C-7) unofficial plans, published in the Transactions of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, 1893. NH 70107

Following her 25-year career, she was decommissioned at New Orleans on 20 April 1919 and sold on 4 August 1921 for scrap so that her tonnage wouldn’t count against the U.S. in naval treaty allowances.

The Whisper of, ‘Remember’

Remember your friends, relatives, and those who gave their last full measure today, gents. It’s not about saving 25 percent on bedding.

Official caption: “USS Saratoga (CV-3), 5 November 1943, during the raid on Rabaul, New Britain. The gunner in this Navy bomber was killed by a Japanese 20mm shell from a Japanese “Zero” [Mitsubishi A6M2] during the raid from Rabaul. Upon the plane’s return to the carrier, the dead gunner’s finger was still clasped on the trigger of his 50 cal. machine gun. Saratoga also participated in the second Navy raid on Rabaul on November 11, 1943, and saw action in the bloody taking of Tarawa.”

Official U.S. Navy photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 80-G-44094

No more posts today.

The Snuff Film of the Emperor’s Final Submarines

Some 80 years ago this week, Operation Road’s End saw the U.S. Navy deep-six no less than five large, captured Imperial Japanese Navy submarines off Hawaii.

These included I-203, sunk by USS Caiman (SS-323) on 21 May; I-201 by USS Queenfish (SS-393) on 23 May; I-14 by USS Bugara (SS-331) on 28 May; I-401 by USS Cabezon (SS-334) on 31 May, and I-400 by USS Trumpetfish (SS-425).

An amazing color film exists of this operation.

Video description via NARA:

Sinking of Japanese sub I 201, 5/23/46, by USS Queenfish: 1) MS Japanese submarine exploding on surface after being hit by torpedoes from USS Queenfish, large column of smoke and water rising into air. 2) LS GV periscope shot showing Japanese submarine on surface, torpedo track in foreground. Japanese submarine exploding after being hit by a torpedo. MV. 3) MCU DA bow of US submarine, torpedo track in background, Japanese sub exploding in background. 4) LS DA AV Japanese submarine on the surface of the water exploding, a large column of water and smoke rising into the air after the Japanese sub has been hit by a torpedo from a US submarine. 5) LS DA AV large oil slick.

Sinking of Japanese sub I-14, 5/28/46, by USS Bugara: 1) MCU DA stern of US sub. 2) LS Japanese sub exploding, a large column of water and black smoke rising into the air. 3) MCU DA stern of US sub, torpedo track in background, large column of water and smoke rising into air, US flag in foreground. MV. 4) LS DA AV Japanese sub on surface. 5) LS DAAV Japanese sub exploding after being hit by a torpedo from a US sub. A large column of water and smoke rising into the air, a Japanese submarine sinking, leaving a large oil slick on the water. MV.

Sinking of Japanese sub I-401, 5/31/46, by USS Cabezon, SS 334: 1) LS Japanese sub on surface. 2) MCU DA stern of US sub as it fires torpedo, follow through of track to Japanese sub showing sub exploding, large column of water rising into air. MV. 3) LS DA AV Japanese sub on surface exploding, white spray and smoke rising from surface after Japanese sub has been hit by a torpedo from a US sub. 4) LS DA AV Japanese sub sinking, leaving a large oil slick on the water.

Sinking of Japanese submarine I-441, 5/31/46, by US submarine: 1) LS Japanese sub exploding after being hit by a torpedo from a US sub. MV. 2) LS DA AV Japanese sub on surface exploding after being hit by a torpedo from a US sub. MV.

Sinking of Japanese sub I-400 by USS Trumpet Fish: 1) LS Japanese sub exploding after being hit by a torpedo fired from US sub; exploding. MV. 2) LS DA AV torpedo tracks showing same hitting Japanese sub, the Japanese sub exploding after being hit by torpedoes from a US sub. MV. 3) NCY DA Stern of US submarine after firing torpedoes at Japanese sub, Japanese sub exploding after being hit by torpedoes from US sub. MV. 4) LS DA AV large slicks on water about sub after being hit; also, large explosions. 5) MCU DA stern of US submarine; Japanese submarine exploding in the background.

This followed up on the sinking of 24 captured IJN boats still capable of sailing on their own power assembled at “Point Deep Six” in Japan in April 1946 by demo charges and gunfire from the sub tender USS Nereus (AS-17) and the destroyer USS Everette F. Larson (DD-830). Those boats were I-36, I-47, I-53, I-58, I-156, I-157, I-158, I-159, I-162, I-366, I-367, I-402, RO-50, HA-103, HA-105, HA-106, HA-107, HA-108, HA-109, HA-111, HA-201, HA-202, HA-203 and HA-208.

As further detailed by Combined Fleet:

General MacArthur’s Report recorded by October 1946, all captured Japanese submarines (a total of 15,1) had been disposed of. The Report quotes a June 1949 in the Tokyo “Pacific Stars and Stripes” newspaarticle per article dated that when the IJN disposal task was, stating 42 submarines had been scrapped, and a further 104 had been sunk. Thus, in addition to the disposal of the 49 IJN submarines that surrendered, some 100 other submarines were subjected to the disposal process as outlined in the Potsdam Protocol.

New and Beautiful: Meet the Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT

Beretta and Ernest Langdon have teamed up on what could be the penultimate Model 92 series defensive pistol.

The new 92G Elite Combat LTT is just stacked with competition-grade features. Standard is an Elite LTT slide and frame, LTT G10 grips, and a chrome trigger with an ambidextrous G-series slide-mounted decocking lever. Then comes the Toni System improvements in the form of a single-port compensator and flared magwell, along with a trio of Toni System +4 magazine extensions to give the user three 22-round magazines out of the box.

But as the man says, “wait, there’s more.”

Additional features include a black threaded barrel, a fiber-optic front sight, an extended disassembly lever, and DLC-coated hammer and sear. Lots of attention is put to updated ergos, with enhanced frame beveling and front strap checkering, some very aggressive front slide serrations, an extended mag release, and an accessory rail.

Roll those images.

The overall length of the new Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT is 9 inches with the Toni comp installed on the 5.1-inch barrel, giving it a sight radius of 6.1 inches.

Weight is 36.2 ounces, unloaded.

Grip width is 1.3 inches, while overall height is 6.45 inches.

The compensator and flared magwell work together with Toni System +4 magazine extensions to enhance recoil control and increase reload speed.

The Toni System comp is removable, leaving an extended threaded barrel that is suppressor-ready

The new Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT ships in a clamshell plastic box with three magazines, each with TS +4 extensions.

So how much does all this functional beauty cost?

The MSRP on the new Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT is $1,299, closer to $1,198 at dealers.

That’s actually a screaming deal when you consider the much more vanilla 92G Elite LTT II has an MSRP of $1,249 and does not come with the three Toni System mag extensions (which run $45 a pop), the TS comp runs another $100, and the magwell another $100.

Just saying.

Nice to see this as a factory option.

Tales of the Crazy Y

The humble 2,800-ton modified Type 12 (Rothesay Class) frigate HMS Yarmouth (F 101) was the oldest of the 24 escorts sent to the South Atlantic to retake the Falklands in 1982.

Laid down in 1957, she entered service in March 1960, and the only surface warship older than her in the 43-vessel task force was the light carrier HMS Hermes, which had commissioned just four months earlier in November 1959.

The Type 12 Frigate HMS Yarmouth (F101), photographed shortly before the Falklands Conflict. IWM (FKD 590)

When the orders came to join Operation Corporate in April 1982, Yarmouth was in the Mediterranean, headed to the Far East, and many of her crew’s wives and families had gone ahead to Singapore to greet them there.

Singapore would have to wait.

HMS Hermes (R12), HMS Broadsword (F88), and HMS Yarmouth (F101) anchored off Ascension Island and conducted VERTREP on April 17th, 1982, while en route to the Falkland Islands.

Nicknamed the “Crazy Y” and “The Rubber Duck,” Yarmouth was seemingly everywhere in the Falklands theatre over the next four months and did everything.

She conducted anti-submarine patrols, naval gunfire support for troops ashore (she fired 1,441 rounds from her twin 4.5″/45 Mark 6 turret at Argentine positions), and anti-air warfare (her Seacat launcher is credited with a kill against A-4C Skyhawk C-319, flown by Teniente Tomás Lucero, over “Bomb Alley” in San Carlos on 25 May).

Yarmouth lobbed 58 warshot Limbo mortar rounds against sonar contacts, including at the ARA San Luis on 1 May

Photo taken from HMS Yarmouth (F101), a Type 12 Frigate, at San Carlos. An Argentine A4 Skyhawk flies by during an attack on the British ships.

She landed SBS and Royal Artillery observers who promptly sneaked ashore to call in fire.

Yarmouth famously came to the assistance of the Exocet-stricken destroyer HMS Sheffield and took her under tow, only to have to cut the line.

HMS Yarmouth attempts to tow the damaged HMS Sheffield to South Georgia for repairs. During the voyage, the weather worsened, and early in the morning of 10th May, Sheffield had to be abandoned – 1982 (IWM)

She also came alongside the bomb-stricken frigate HMS Ardent and the Exocet-damaged Glamorgan.

HMS Yarmouth (right) comes alongside the sinking HMS Ardent to take off her crew. HMS Broadsword is behind HMS Ardent while a Sea King 4 helicopter approaches her starboard side. IWM (FKD 69)

Survivors of HMS Ardent wearing “once-only” survival suits, on the flight deck of HMS Yarmouth after abandoning ship in San Carlos Water on 21 May. HMS Ardent had been damaged in two Argentine air attacks. Note Yarmouth’s Seacat launcher over her hangar, credited with shooting down an Argentine Seahawk four days later. IWM (FKD 145)

Yarmouth also fought a surface action against the Argentine armed coaster ARA Monsunen, engaging the 300-ton vessel with her 4.5-inch guns west of Lively Island until the latter ran aground in the shallows in a failed escape attempt in what is now remembered as the Battle of Seal Cove.

She usually conducted NGFS at night. Among her fire missions were 300 4.5-inch shells in the hills around Port Howard on 27 May, 187 shells into Argentine positions in the mountains and around Stanley and Moody Brook on 7 June, 124 on 8 June, and another 164 the next night. On the final push for Stanley on 13/14 June, she supported the assaults on Mounts Harriet by 42 Commando and Tumbledown by the Scots Guards with 261 rounds of 4.5inch.

She fired the last angry shots of the war, being sent 1,200 miles further south as the “muscle” of Operation Keyhole with the guard ship HMS Endurance, oiler RFA Olmeda, and the tug Salvageman to the South Sandwich Islands, where Argentina had established a small military base in South Thule in 1976, the week after the liberation of the Falklands.

Following a demonstrational bombardment among the icebergs by her 4.5s, the 10-member Argentine naval detachment threw in the towel on 20 June without firing a shot, taken into custody by Royal Marines.

Operation Keyhole 19-20 June 1982, recapture of disputed South Thule Island by RM and SBS, bringing the Falkland campaign to a close

Sea King helicopter from oiler RFA Olmeda, Operation Keyhole 19-20 June 1982, landing Commandos on South Thule Island

June 20th 1982: Lieutenant Enrique Martinez, Argentine Navy, signs the formal act of surrender of South Thule on board HMS Yarmouth.

On the way back, the short-legged Yarmouth was refueled at sea by Olmeda (her 50th of the campaign!) noted as perhaps the most southernly such evolution in Royal Navy history, performed just two days sail from the Antarctic coast.

In the end, she fired more shells than any of the 14 British frigates and destroyers that released their main battery during the conflict.

Yarmouth, “The Fighting 101,” returned to her home port of Rosyth on July 28 after 120 days at sea, a bit rusty but unscathed and with no casualties to report.

The frigate was decommissioned in 1986 and disposed of in a SINKEX the following year.

Her skipper during the epic Falklands deployment, Capt. Antony Morton, DSC, passed recently, aged 84.

Originally a pilot with the Fleet Air Arm, Morton was a Buccaneer driver and c/o of 809 Naval Air Squadron aboard HMS Ark Royal, then went to Yarmouth after his carrier was decommissioned, the Royal Navy out of the Buccaneer game.

Post-Falklands, he went on to be naval attaché in Paris and captained the Broadsword-class frigate HMS Beaver (F93) in the Persian Gulf, where he was remembered as “a calm presence but also demanding in terms of the standards he set and expected from others.”

As noted of his time on Yarmouth in the Falklands, he said it was all a matter of good fortune:

“A lot of ships were hit around us. We had seen quite a lot of disasters, and obviously, people were worried, but generally, morale was amazingly good.”

Pour one out for Capt. Morton, and the ghost of the Crazy Y, an example to frigates and frigatemen eternal.

That Rich Flattop Shellback Tradition

As the grand old carrier Nimitz is on the tail end of her final cruise, drawing an epic 51-year career to a close, she held court for one last group of Shellbacks upon Crossing the Line (equator).

Neptunus Rex, the Royal Barbers, and company held sway once again, with Poseidon, the ship’s Expeditionary Facility Dog, included. Knot work and baptisms for all.

It should be noted that the Shellback ceremony on Nimitz comes roughly 90 years to the day that USS Lexington (CV-2) held her 1936 line crossing ceremony.

From the latter’s cruise book:

Embrace that tradition, swabs.

Echoes of Hiram Percy Maxim

Something recently seen at NRAAM that I just got around to sharing with you guys. A new suppressor from Inland Manufacturing, the guys who make assorted M1 Carbines and GI 1911s in Ohio.

They basically made a modern Maxim (as in Hiram Percy Maxim) 1910 suppressor.

Thus:

Compared to the new Inland 1910:

The Inland 1910 is an offset or nonconcentric suppressor; the hole is not in the middle, which allows the use of irons without the suppressor being in the way.

It’s a bit in its own class because the fully serviceable monocore stays on the gun when you take the outer jacket off, which eliminates the chance of a change in impact from the on and off process. This is perfect for lever guns/ most rimfires, and anyone wanting to use a non-scoped rifle

The “other” NATO MANPADS

The Argentinian Army recently posted some interesting images of the Swedish-made Saab RBS-70NG MANPAD system at play with its companion new RPA 200-M 3-D radar.

You know, the principal Western alternative to Stinger and the French Mistral.

If interested, the units involved are the Mar del Plata-based Grupo de Mantenimiento de Sistemas de Artillería Antiaéreos 601 (GMSA 601) “Mayor Marcelo Sergio Novoa,” and the Grupo de Artillería Antiaérea Mixto 602 (GAA Mix 602), with the latter having a history that includes the Falklands, where it had Tigercats, Rolands, and Oerlikons and is generally credited with shooting down an RAF Harrier GR.3 near Port Stanley on 30 May 1982.

Speaking of the RBS-70 system, it is pushing 50, first fielded in 1977, but is supposedly better than ever and has chalked up numerous kills in Ukraine in recent years.

It has an interesting backstory as detailed in this 15-minute video from Saab:

It seems very easy to use.

 

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