Author Archives: laststandonzombieisland

Bazooka Joes

80 years ago this week. 503rd Parachute Infantry Regiment. Two soldiers of an M9 2.36-inch bazooka section blow out a Japanese pillbox at Heart Point, on Corregidor Island, Philippines on or around 19 February 1945. Note their slung M1A1 Carbines and the billowing parachute silk overhead. 

Talk about a recruiting poster! Signal Corps Photo SC 201373 by Pfc. Morris Weiner.

Some 2,050 men of the Rock Force: 503rd PIR; 462nd PFABn; and 161 Abn Engr. Bn, landed topside on Japanese-held Corregidor on 16 February 1945 to destroy Japanese gun positions and allow ground forces to close in on the facility. The unit suffered 169 dead and 531 wounded in addition to more than 210 injuries in the drop itself.

It was the 503’s third combat jump of the war, having landed at Nadzab in New Guinea’s Markham Valley in Operation Alamo in September 1943 and at Noemfoor in Operation Table Tennis in July 1944.

They wouldn’t jump again until February 1967 when elements of the 2nd and 3rd Bn, 50rrd PIR would leap out over Katum, South Vietnam as part of Operation Junction City.

They are currently part of the 173rd Airborne Brigade, based at Caserma Del Din, Vicenza, Italy.

Clothes Horse

Some 130 years ago this month, a 20-year-old Leftanant Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill, seen in the uniform of the 4th Queen’s Own Hussars.

National Army Museum. NAM. 1992-10-143-1547

Churchill, having grown up surrounded by toy soldiers (he would ultimately amass a collection of more than 1,500), flags, and castles, cut his teeth in the Harrow School’s Rifle Corps as a 14-year-old lad.

Winston Churchill as a schoolboy at Harrow showing him in the uniform of the Harrow Rifle Corps

He then passed the Sandhurst “further” entrance exam on his third attempt in June 1893, 95th out of 389, and entered the Royal Military Academy that September, graduating 20th out of a class of 130 in December 1894.

Newly-minted Lieutenant Churchill, standing 5’ 6″ in his boots, received his commission from Queen Victoria with an effective date of 20 February 1895 and promptly took up a subaltern’s position in the fine old 4th Queen’s Own Hussars, a unit that dated back to 1685.

Lieutenant Winston Churchill joined the 4th Queen’s Own Hussars in Feb 1895

Even though not one of the more fashionable Guards units, the price of uniforms and equipment cost £653, a fleshed-out charger fit for a young officer of his standing another £200.

It was all very flash, you see. 

Officer of the 4th Queen’s Own Hussars

Plus there was the inevitable “death of a thousand cuts” that came from officers club membership dues, canteen charges, retaining his batman to keep said uniforms clean and ready, retaining an enlisted groom to keep his charger shod and fit, polo outfits (he was on the regimental team) and other myriad expenses of a dashing young horseman.

This was against a paltry yearly salary of just £120.

His active military service included shipping out with the 4th to India, where he “saw the elephant” on campaign with the Malakand Field Force, earning an India Medal with a Punjab Frontier clasp.

He would then go on to be a supernumerary lieutenant attached to the pith-helmeted 21st Lancers for the Sudan campaign, where, in what could be described as the “most dangerous two minutes of Winston Churchill’s life,” he rode in the 21st’s famous charge at Omdurman outside of Khartoum in 1898, earning the Queen’s Sudan Medal and the Khedive’s Sudan Medal.

Omdurman, Charge of the 21st Lancers by Stanley Berkeley

Churchill resigned from the 4th Hussars on 5 May 1899, capping his Victorian military career…sort of. 

Lieutenant Winston Churchill, 1899.

He would go on to be a war correspondent (followed by a short stint with the South African Light Horse), author, and politician of some sort, seeing active service again in the Great War as lieutenant colonel of the 6th Royal Scots Fusiliers, in a more muddy khaki uniform on the Western Front.

Winston Churchill, Colonel of the Royal Scots Fusiliers, at Armentières, 11 February 1916 note French Adrian helmet

Perhaps dating back to his time with the Hussars, Churchill did notably still harbor a reputation as a clothes horse. As noted by Rick Atkinson in his “An Army at Dawn. The War in North Africa 1942-43” of Winston’s risky 10-hour flight to Morocco for the Casablanca conference via bomber, “As was his custom on long plane trips, the prime minister wore a silk vest and nothing else” under his RAF Air Marshal’s uniform and parachute.

Buckeyes in Manila

A great moment showing in time, 80 years ago today. AP Photo caption, “During the hard street fighting against Japanese strongpoint at the New Police Station, Pandacan district, GIs of the 129th Infantry Regiment, 37th Infantry Division, climb through some Japanese barbed wire in Manila, Philippines. 13 February 1945.”

Check out this inset, with details showing a rifle grenade launcher on the Joe’s M1 Carbine to the left, what looks to be a religious medal hanging from the neck of the man to the right, large eye bale netting on the M1 helmets for attaching camo, and grim, determined faces.

A National Guard Division from Ohio, the 37th was known as the Buckeye Division for obvious reasons. Activated for federal service on 15 October 1940 under native son Maj. Gen. Robert S. Beightler, they shipped overseas to Fiji just six months after Pearl Harbor on 26 May 1942 and, from there went into combat in the Solomons at New Georgia the following year, campaigning around Bougainville through 1944.

January 1945 saw them, under Kruger’s Sixth Army, landing on the beaches of the Lingayen Gulf in the Philippines where they would race inland to Clark Field and Fort Stotsenburg, fight through Manila, and into Northern Luzon where they ended the war processing the last Japanese forces to surrender there post-VJ-Day.

The 37th Infantry Division suffered 5,960 battle casualties during WWII, surpassing their butcher’s bill for the Great War which stood at 5,387.

Meet the New Army Small Arms Ammo Facility

In WWII, the Army had 12 War Department-owned and operated plants dedicated to making small arms ammunition, around the clock.

These plants slowly shuttered post-war, with brief respites caused by Korea and Vietnam, until the Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant, which had been placed on “standby” in 1976, was finally closed in 2005, leaving only Lake City AAP in Independence, Missouri as the only remaining Army small arms plant.

Even at that, Lake City was run on contract at first by Olin-Winchester, then Northrop Grumman, and, since 2019, by Olin-Winchester once again.

Well, the Army is moving ahead with the construction of its first new small arms ammunition factory in decades, and it will be dedicated to making ammo for the Next Generation Squad Weapons.

The new 450,000 sq. ft., facility, built on the Lake City AAP campus, had its groundbreaking on Feb. 5.

It will feature modern manufacturing systems capable of producing “all components” of 6.8×51 Common Cartridge ammunition as part of the NGSW program.

The 6.8x51mm, seen in SIG-loaded 113-grain ball for the NGSW program and a .277 Fury commercial load (white tip). (Photos: Chris Eger/Guns.com)

The Army specified this includes “cartridge case and projectile manufacturing, energetic operations for loading and charging ammunition, product packaging, process quality controls, testing laboratories, maintenance operations, and administrative areas.”

Opening by 2028 (ish), it is expected to be able to make upwards of 400 million rounds a year– against Lake City’s legacy capacity to make 1.4 billion rounds of all other calibers. Until then, 6.8 is sole-sourced through SIG.

More in my column at Guns.com.

Beretta’s Salute to Marco Polo

Gentlemen, I give you the Beretta SO6 Sparviere Marco Polo, the kind of beautiful one-of-a-kind craftsmanship that I saw when I visited the storied gunmaker’s Italian headquarters last Spring.

The body of the receiver is meticulously hammered and punched to form a seamless tapestry inspired by a medieval rutter (or ‘periplus’, a “sailing-around” book), an essential guide for Italian sailors navigating the Mediterranean before the advent of nautical charts.

This intricate design preserves the history of seafaring exploration, echoing the very tools that shaped Marco Polo’s era.

On this Beretta masterpiece, every detail tells a story: the hinge pins and screws are adorned with copper-inlaid, enameled compass roses – polar diagrams elegantly displaying cardinal and intermediate directions.

On the sideplates, the artistry reaches new heights through burin-engraved scenes capturing the essence of Marco Polo’s life: the left sideplate portrays Venice, Marco Polo’s hometown, where his journey began and ended, the right sideplate transports us to the Mongolian steppes, where Marco Polo ventured into the grandeur of Asian landscapes and architecture.

The forend release button bears a Chinese inscription translating to ‘Uniting Europe and Asia as two parts of a single gem’. This poetic sentiment reflects Marco Polo’s role in bridging two worlds, celebrating the unity of cultures and the shared beauty of our global heritage.

T-AGSEs Surface

An interesting addition to the Bollinger-built 87-foot Marine Protector class patrol boats for the Coast Guard in 2008 was four units– paid for wholly by the Navy– that would serve in two special Maritime Force Protection Units, assigned to the Submarine bases at Kings Bay and Kitsap, tasked to escort submarines (particularly SSBNs) heading in and out on patrol.

Each MFPU, which numbers 150-200 personnel, also has a dozen smaller craft (33-foot RIBs, etc).

In a nod to their taskings, these Navy-paid-for/assigned and CG-manned patrol boats carried the names of historic fleet boats of WWII fame:

  • USCGC Sea Dragon (WPB-87367) MFPU Kitsap
  • USCGC Sea Devil (WPB-87368) MFPU Kings Bay
  • USCGC Sea Dog (WPB-87373) MFPU Kitsap
  • USCGC Sea Fox (WPB-87374) MFPU Kings Bay

Armed with three 50 cal. machine guns (instead of the standard two for the class) these MFPUs carried their “extra” BMG in a permanently installed forward mount that was stabilized and remotely controlled.

TAMPA, Fla. – Coast Guard Cutter Sea Dog, a newly-designed 87-foot coastal patrol boat, transits Tampa Bay, Fla.,, Wednesday, May 6, 2009, during sea trials. The Sea dog is scheduled to be commissioned July 2, 2009, and is homeported in Kings Bay, Ga. (U.S. Coast Guard photo/PA3 Rob Simpson)

However, last year all four of these still rather young WPBs were withdrawn from CG service, decommissioned, disarmed, and relegated to auxiliary service with the Navy and Marine Corps.

For instance, the two Kings Bay-based boats were transferred to MCAS Cherry Point, North Carolina to be used as range/target towing boats.

Disarmed and without her racing stripe, the ex-USCGC Sea Dragon WPB-87367 at MCAS Cherry Point for target support

Their replacements?

Meet T-AGSEs

The civilian mariner crewed Military Sealift Command has a small flotilla of eight vessels tasked with “Submarine and Special Warfare Support.”

These vessels, typically oilfield supply boats operated by Louisiana-based Hornbeck Offshore Services, include a quartet of 250-foot EDF type who have been christened as U.S. Naval Ships with hull numbers.

They also carry fixed armament, something extremely rare for the MSC, namely two Mk. 38 25mm mounts, operated by a USCG Tactical Boatcrew. I wouldn’t be surprised if they had MANPADs, AT4s, and M2s stowed as well

  • USNS Black Powder (T-AGSE 1)
  • USNS Westwind (T-AGSE 2)
  • USNS Eagleview (T-AGSE 3)
  • USNS Arrowhead (T-AGSE 4)

Built by Leevac Industries of Jenerette, these four brand-new 250EDFs were operated by HOS between 2009 and 2015 on a Navy contract and then purchased outright for $152 million.

The MSC has their file pictures all still in their HOS livery:

HOS Black Powder 200819-N-IS698-0004

HOS Eagle View 200819-N-IS698-0007

HOS Arrowhead

Since 2015, these craft have been Navy (MSC) owned and operated by HOS, typically for 215 days per year at a rate of about $30,000 per day.

Arrowhead and Eagleview are out of Kitsap while Black Powder and Westwind are out of Kings Bay.

Being some 250 feet in length, they are often referred to as “Blocking Vessels” in operations.

They rarely get any attention, with the USCG operating their guns and providing an MLE team for intervention/boarding if an escort gets…weird. Why the Coasties pull the gig is that they are federal law enforcement with a pretty far-reaching jurisdiction around U.S. flagged vessels in U.S. waters. 

USNS Black Powder and USNS Westwind. Note the 25mm Mk 38 Mod 2 mounts, and the MSC blue and yellow stripes around Westwind’s pilothouse. Wiki commons

Ohio class USS West Virginia (SSBN-736) USNS Black Powder

U.S. Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft from Moody Air Force Base, Ga., escorted ballistic missile submarine USS Wyoming (SSBN 742), July 15, 2024. The aircraft conducted a live fire exercise and U.S. Coast Guard Maritime Force Protection Unit Kings Bay, USNS Black Powder (T-AGSE-1), and USNS Westwind (T-AGSE-2) also participated in the escort of the submarine. Joint operations, such as this one which involved the Air Force, Coast Guard, and Navy, ensure the U.S. military is ready to meet its security commitments at home and abroad

Being three times the size of the 87s, they can also help serve as mini-tenders and, during Covid, were used to swap out Blue/Gold crews on SSBNs at sea, as well as replenishment for parts and stores transfers via a moving brow.

Note the USCG ensign on Black Powder’s mast and her USNS designator on her bow. 

ATLANTIC OCEAN (Jan. 24, 2022) Sailors assigned to the Blue Crew of the Ohio-class ballistic-missile submarine USS Wyoming (SSBN 742) prepare to execute an exchange of command and crews at sea. This regularly scheduled exchange of command at sea demonstrates the continuity and operational flexibility of our sea-based nuclear deterrent operations and our ready, reliable ballistic submarine force. The efficiency of exchanges of crews at sea allows Sailors to reunite with their families and provides a ready, resilient submarine force. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Aaron Xavier Saldana/Released)

ATLANTIC OCEAN (Jan. 24, 2022) USNS Black Powder supports the Ohio-class ballistic-missile submarine USS Wyoming’s (SSBN 742) exchange of command and crews at sea. This regularly scheduled exchange of command at sea demonstrates the continuity and operational flexibility of our sea-based nuclear deterrent operations and our ready, reliable ballistic submarine force. The efficiency of exchanges of crews at sea allows Sailors to reunite with their families and provides a ready, resilient submarine force. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Aaron Xavier Saldana/Released)

ATLANTIC OCEAN (Jan. 24, 2022) Sailors assigned to the Blue and Gold Crews of the Ohio-class ballistic-missile submarine USS Wyoming (SSBN 742) execute an exchange of command and crews at sea. This regularly scheduled exchange of command at sea demonstrates the continuity and operational flexibility of our sea-based nuclear deterrent operations and our ready, reliable ballistic submarine force. The efficiency of exchanges of crews at sea allows Sailors to reunite with their families and provides a ready, resilient submarine force. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Aaron Xavier Saldana/Released)

They just popped up in a DOD Contract list this week, as noted below, with the current daily rate being more like $50K per vessel including operation and maintenance:

Hornbeck Offshore Operators, Covington, Louisiana, is being awarded a $48,360,544 firm-fixed-price contract (N3220525C4134) for the operation and maintenance of four government-owned Transportation Auxiliary General Submarine Escort (T-AGSE) vessels. The vessels under this award include USNS Arrowhead, USNS Eagleview, USNS Westwind, and USNS Black Powder. The contract includes a six-month base period with a six-month option. The contract will be performed in Kings Bay, Georgia; and Bangor, Washington, beginning March 1, 2025, based on the availability of funds clause at Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 52.232-18 and will utilize fiscal 2025 working capital funds (Navy), and will conclude Feb. 28, 2026, if the option is exercised. This contract is a Sole Source Bridge and was not competitively procured, under the authority of 41 U.S. Code 3304(a)(2), as implemented by FAR 6.302-2 Unusual and compelling urgency. Military Sealift Command, Norfolk, Virginia, is the contracting activity.

The Tropical Rainforests of Hampshire

80 years ago this month, 2 February 1945.

“Trainees in a wooded area with their faces painted with camouflage paint, wearing American fatigue caps and gaiters and Carrying American ‘Tommy’ guns, during training at the Royal Marines Eastern Warfare School at Brockenhurst, Hampshire where they learn jungle tactics for the Pacific War. Thickly wooded hills, with some live palms and bamboo, gave a good imitation jungle in which tropical bridging work, bivouacking, patrolling, sniping, and booby-trap lessons could be learned.”

Of note, the weather in Hampshire in February typically runs 40-50 degrees F. 

IWM A 27308. Photograph by LT DC Oulds, Royal Navy official photographer

IWM A 27306. Photograph by LT DC Oulds, Royal Navy official photographer

IWM A 27307. Photograph by LT DC Oulds, Royal Navy official photographer

“These men are learning to give themselves all-round protection when forced to keep to a narrow track in the ‘English jungle’ at the Eastern Warfare School at Brockenhurst, Hampshire where they learn jungle tactics for the Pacific War.”

Brockenhurst, the largest village by population within the 140,000-acre New Forest in Hampshire, is about 15 miles from Southampton in southern England.

In early 1944, the forest served as the (somewhat secret) home for the 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division, the core of Allied Assault Force “G”, tasked with storming Gold Beach on D-Day, and once the Army moved out in June 1944, the Royal Navy moved in.

As elaborated by a local journal for the New Forest:

Carey’s Manor Hotel in the village was requisitioned for the Eastern Warfare School where Royal Marine trainees were taught basic jungle warfare tactics along the Lymington River and Roydon Woods in preparation for what they might encounter against the Japanese forces. Booby traps and ambushes in common use among the Japanese were reproduced in this area of the New Forest. They also learned how to take care of themselves and what to carry in the way of medical supplies in remote inhospitable locations

As further detailed in By Sea, By Land: The Authorised History of the Royal Marines by James D Ladd:

Apart from such schools for specialists as the Signals School at Saundersfoot (Pembrokeshire) and the MT School, the Corps also set up an Eastern Warfare School, Brockenhurst, where officers and senior NCOs did a 10-day course ‘on the special form of warfare . . . in the Far East Theatre.’ In addition, in the UK and abroad, there were “jungle warfare” schools.

The standards for “physical efficiency tests” as they were called, were also raised to the following: 10-mile march in 2¼ hours, before firing five rounds, three of which must be hits at 30 yds; leopard crawl 45 yds in a minute followed by pitching two out of three grenades into a 10 ft circle; running two miles on roads in 18 minutes; jumping a 9 ft ditch; and various climbing feats.

All these were aimed at making every Marine fit – not only those serving in Commandos – and for detachments in the Pacific Fleet: such applied physical training was a routine. This aimed at not only keeping men fit but also enabling them to pass these battle efficiency tests.

The School was staffed by a cadre of NCOs and officers drawn in part from the 3rd Special Service Brigade, which included a trio of three Royal Marine Commando units (No. 5 Cdo, No. 42 Cdo, and No. 44 Cdo). These men had been sent to India in November 1943 to fight in the Burma campaign and had picked up some tricks.

Lieut General T L Hunton, KCB, MVO, OBE, General Officer Commanding the Royal Marines, and Major General R A D Brooks, CMG, DSO, watching a demonstration of Japanese Booby traps by Capt Kenneth Pammenter, No.5 Cdo, [2nd from right] and Capt. Bennett, RM, at the Eastern Warfare School, Brockenhurst. IWM A 27300

In the end, the Royal Marines in the CBI and the Pacific were involved in the campaign to recapture Arakan, as well as staged for Operation Zipper– the planned amphibious operation to recapture the Malayan peninsula.

Finally, they reoccupied Hong Kong in September 1945, cheated out of seeing more jungle fighting by the A-bombs and the resulting Japanese capitulation.

There, things looked a lot different than in Hampshire. 

“Royal Marine W E Sebly making the acquaintance of young and old Chinese folk after the re-occupation of Hong Kong, Sept 1945. IWM 30527

Fuzzy ‘Phib math

140910-N-UD469-180 PHILIPPINE SEA (Sept. 10, 2014) Marines, assigned to the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit (31st MEU), depart the well deck of the amphibious dock landing ship USS Germantown (LSD 42) in combat rubber raiding crafts during amphibious operations. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Amanda R. Gray/Released) 

The Navy has a Congressionally set 31-ship big deck Amphibious warfare ship requirement, which is good because 31 are listed on active duty with the fleet.

However, the GAO did some checking as to their actual readiness and found the “go to war in 96 hours” capability to be far less.

In fact, just 15 are in what the Navy would consider to even be in “satisfactory” material condition.

  • Nine of the 10 LSDs are now classified by the Navy as in poor material condition.
  • Five of the nine remaining LHAs/LHDs are now classified as in poor material condition.
  • Two of the 12 LPDs are now classified as in poor material condition.

While the Navy, on paper, maintains they will “have” 30-to-32 big deck ‘phibs in service every year between 2025 and 2042, due to the currently very low shipbuilding rate that only happens if the LHA/LHDs serve for over well over 40 years, the equivalent of having a WWII-era Essex class carrier still on unbroken active service in the mid-1980s. Sure, Lady Lex did that, but she was relegated to low-impact/limited availability training duties for the last 25 years of her career.

Oooof.

Ballistic Art in a Cerakote Medium

Some of the coolest guns I saw at SHOT was a wall at the back of the IWI booth of amazing firearm creations from Pro 2 Customs.

Pro 2, of Tempe, Arizona, is a 07 FFL and 02 SOT licensee that crafts some seriously good work in the medium Cerakote. Teaming up with IWI, the shop brought a slew of great guns to the show.

You dig the Flying Tigers? How about this P-40 Warhawk-themed Galil Ace, complete with Vortex LPVO? It even has rivets.

It uses H146 Graphite, H732 Magpul OD Green, M214 Bullshark Grey, H144 Corvette Yellow, H140 Bright White, and H167 USMC Red.

This “Call of Duty MW”-themed Polyatomic camo’ed IWI Carmel rifle uses H146 Graphite Black, custom purples, and Gun Candy Majesty.

And our favorite: a Cel Shade anime IWM Carmel in 5.56, complete with an EoTech XPS3.

It is crafted with H128 Hunter Orange, H144 Corvette Yellow, and H214 Bullshark Grey for the shading.

Just check out that detail. Looks like a celluloid sheet for sure. That’s gun art.

More in my column at Guns.com

 

Black Widow On Deck

80 years ago this week, a USAAF 421st Night Fighter Squadron Northrop P-61B-20-NO Black Widow (SN 43-8317) seen landing at recently liberated and expanded Puerto Princesa Airfield, Tacloban, Leyte, 8 February 1945. Official caption: “One of the first 13th AAF Black Widows to arrive at Puerto Princesa buzzes the strip preparatory to peeling up, dropping his wheels, and landing.”

Check out that luxurious control tower! While I cannot find the ultimate end of #317, Baugher notes that of the 83 P-61B-20-NOs produced, at least 22 were lost or written off, with the leading causes primarily due to accidents while landing or mid-air accidents. Night fighters were tough on crews. Of note, this photo was published in the August 145 issue of Air Force magazine. (U.S. Air Force Number 58348AC) National Archives Identifier 204949312

Constituted as 421st Night Fighter Squadron on 30 April 1943, the 421st stood up stateside at the Kissimmee AAFld in Florida– the future home of Disney– with troublesome Douglas P-70 Havoc night fighters before shipping out to Milne Bay, New Guinea just after New Year’s 1944. Flying from Nadzab, Wakde, and Owi during the New Guinea/Bismarck Archipelago campaign, the unit ditched their P-70s for P-38Js (without radar!) before finally getting some Widows.

On 7 July 1944, a P-61 crew in the 421st NFS based in New Guinea shot down a Japanese twin-engine Mitsubishi Ki-46 Dinah reconnaissance airplane, only the type’s second air-to-air “kill” in the with their Saipan-based sister squadron, the 419th, bagging a moonlit Betty a week prior. 

They then shifted north to the PI, operating from San Marcelino and then to Tacloban (as seen above) until 23 March when Clark Field on Luzon became their next stepping stone to Okinawa, operating from Ie Shima beginning on 24 July 1945. They ended their war occupying Itazuke Air Base, Japan, with 16 confirmed aerial victories to their tally sheet and 7 campaign streamers.

Inactivated on 20 February 1947, they reformed 15 years later as the F-105-equipped 421st TFS and soon took their show on the road, flying out of Incirlik during the Cold War as well as some serious Southeast Asia time on five deployments as Phantom Phlyers between 1969 and 1973 (DaNang, Kunsan, Takhli, and Udorn), earning three Presidential Unit Citations.

Stationed at Hill AFB in Utah since 1975, they flew F-16A/Cs during numerous trips to the sandbox in the 1990s and 2000s before upgrading to F-35As in 2017.

They still wear the “Widow” as their official patch. 

210421-F-EF974-2024

And they are no doubt still ready to mix it up after dark.

Two F-35 Lightning IIs assigned to the 421st Fighter Squadron from Hill Air Force Base, Utah, sit on the flight line during a thunderstorm at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, July 25, 2021. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Zachary Rufus)

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