Category Archives: asymmetric warfare

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However, last year all four of these still rather young WPBs were withdrawn from CG service, decommissioned, disarmed, and relegated to auxiliary service with the Navy and Marine Corps.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

Curious Airborne Puffer Fish

Captured 80 years ago this month.

Official wartime caption: “Japanese balloon, Fu-Go [Fugu, 河豚; 鰒; フグ]. A completed Japanese balloon is inflated for laboratory tests at a California base. It was recovered at Alturas, California, January 10, 1945. Ineffective as it is, however, the Japanese balloon is an ingenious device. The balloon itself at a maximum altitude is a true sphere, 100 feet in circumference. It is made of five layers of mulberry paper, each about as thick as cigarette paper, but strong and water-repellant when cemented together. It is filled with hydrogen. Suspended like a chandelier below the envelope by 19 shroud lines, each 45 feet long, is a device for automatic control of altitude. The bomb load is attached to the ‘chandelier’ with an automatic release mechanism. The balloon is further equipped with automatic demolition blocks which are supposed to destroy it in the air. On many of the balloons recovered the self-destroying device failed to function.”

Print received August 1945 from Publications Sec., AC/AS, Intelligence. Used in the August 1945 issue of “Impact.” Copied August 27, 1945. U.S. Army Air Corps (Air Force) photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 342-FH-3B23422

It is estimated that an amazing 9,300 Fu-Go balloons were launched from Japan against the U.S. and Canada from Coastal Honshu Island between November 1944 and April 1945.

While only 285 were documented as reaching North America, as many as 1,000 may have made it this far, meaning their wreckage is likely sprinkled over remote forests and lakes, waiting.

Surely this is something China would never consider doing again, right?

5-inchers got a Lot more use than you’d expect in the Red Sea (and an LCS got in on it)

As detailed by the head of Naval Surface Forces, VADM Brendan McLane, during the annual Surface Navy Association conference this week, warships expended some 400 pieces of ordnance in defense against incoming threats from Iranian/Houthi rebels over the past 15 months.

  • 120 SM-2 missiles.
  • 80 SM-6 missiles.
  • 20 Evolved Sea Sparrow Missiles (ESSM) and SM-3 missiles.
  • 160 rounds from destroyers and cruisers’ five-inch main guns.

The last one is great news, as the anti-air capability of the MK 45 5″/54 and 5″/62— especially when using proximity (VTF and IR) rounds– has been often overlooked. I mean they have a published effective AA range of 23,000 feet and can fire 20 rounds in the first minute of going hot.

Datasheets inbound: 

LCS Combat!

One interesting tidbit not included in the above table is that an LCS has been bloodied in battle as well, with the USS Indianapolis (LCS 17) recently earning a Combat Action Ribbon and Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal, the first for her type, “after shooting down Houthi drones and missiles in the Red Sea.”

Indy, a Freedom-variant littoral combat ship, just completed an 18-month deployment, which included two exchanges of command between LCS Crew 112 and LCS Crew 118.

While traveling as a Surface Action Group with the destroyers USS Spruance and USS Stockdale through the Red Sea, the ships “successfully detected and defeated a combined 23 Ballistic and Anti-Ship Cruise missiles and one-way attack drones fired from Houthi Rebels in Yemen” across three days from 23-25 September.

Now, unclear is if Indy got in shots on said incoming vampires, and if so was it from her 57mm gun, her Sea-Ram, or her embarked MH-60 from HSC 28. It was also recently detailed that a Seahawk downed a Houthi drone via its 7.62mm door gun last month, so that’s a possibility.

“What this team of amazing Americans achieved over the course of this deployment will pay dividends in the maintenance planning and tactics development arenas for years to come,” said Cmdr. Matthew Arndt, USS Indianapolis’ Commanding Officer. “As the workhorse of the Arabian Gulf, Indy executed the lower tier missions necessary to maintaining good diplomatic relations in the Middle East which allowed Standard Missile shooters to reposition to deal with bad actors in the Red Sea. I think it’s pretty special that we were able to provide the 5th Fleet commander with more tools and options to aid in the free flow of commerce through a contested waterway.”

An Albion & Bulwark-sized hole in the RN’s Sealift

Between 1982 and 2017, the Royal Navy’s amphibious forces enjoyed a renaissance.

Saved from a planned gutting by the Falklands operation, the capability was preserved– and even enhanced– for a 35-year run that included very successful over-the-beach operations in 2000’s Operation Palliser in Sierra Leone and then during Operation Telic during the 2003 Iraq War– where the latter saw a full brigade-sized amphibious assault on the strategically key Al-Faw peninsula in south-east Iraq.

Royal Marine Commandoes from 42 Commando hit MAMYOKO BEACH from Sea King helicopters of 846 Naval Air Squadron, in a demonstration of amphibious power during Operation Silkman in Freetown, Sierra Leone 13 Nov 2000. MOD image by Royal Navy PO Jim Gibson (Click to big up)

By the late 1990s, the RNs phibs included 13 dedicated new vessels: a 21,000-ton LPH (HMS Ocean), two 20,000-ton LPDs– HMS Albion and HMS Bulwark, four 16,000-ton Bay-class landing ships of the civilian-manned Royal Fleet Auxiliary, and six 23,000-ton Point-class roll-on/roll-off merchant sealift ships permanently contracted to the MoD for use as needed. Basic math puts this at 263,000 tons of vessels dedicated to the ‘phib role, with about a quarter of that being RN manned and controlled.

However, this had been whittled away with the still-young HMS Ocean sold to Brazil– where she serves as that fleet’s proud flagship– and one of the four Bays (RFA Largs Bay) sold to Australia. Two of the Point-class RO/ROs have all been released from contract (while gratefully the other four have recently been retained on a new contract running until 2031).

Now, Maria Eagle, Minister of State for Defence, recently stated:

“All of the remaining crew from HMS Albion and HMS Bulwark have been reassigned: either to other platforms, to training courses, or into other positions supporting the Royal Navy’s highest priority outputs.”

Britain’s flagship HMS Albion (L-14), seen in the Java Sea, 2018. With a well deck capable of holding four LCU MK10s and another four LCVP MK5s can be held in davits, she can land 620 Marines on the beach in a single lift. Meanwhile, she can also accommodate three CH-47 Chinooks on her heli deck. 

For reference, Albion and Bulwark only entered the RN in 2003 and 2004, respectively and the latter has been in an extended major refit to add 15 years of life to her! Both ships have been effectively in reserve since 2011, swapping places in reserve/high readiness conditions over that time, meaning both are low-milage vessels. The plan had been to retain them until at least the mid-2030s, but the Labor government has scrapped that idea.

The official disposal of Albion and Bulwark cuts the two most capable British “gators” from the fleet inventory, slashing 40,000 tons of sealift in the process. Coupled with the sale of HMS Ocean and RFA Largs Bay, and the release of MV Longstone and Beachy Head from the contract, the Royal Navy only has three Bays (two of which are laid up!) and four Points left on tap, representing 140,000 tons of shipping.

Worse, all of it is civilian-manned and those mariners have not been very happy lately.

If the red button gets mashed in 2025, it looks like only one dedicated amphibious warship, the humble RFA Lyme Bay (L3007), would be able to take the call. Meanwhile, the Royal Marines have been reduced to just two deployable six-company battalion-sized units: 40 Cdo and 42 Cdo.

RFA Lyme Bay in the Mediterranean as she makes her way back to the UK after training with the Italian Navy, in November 2020. LPhot Barry Swainsbury MOD 45167525

Designed for 356 embarked Royal Marines, she can double that for short, uncomfortable, stints. Her tiny well deck can hold either a single LCU or two LCVPs while her heli deck (without hangar) can only support a limited amount of vertical lift. Her self-defense armament is limited to a pair of 20mm CIWS and a few light guns.

Besides the light battalion landed on the beach in five or six (hopefully unopposed) lifts by Lyme Bay’s sole LCU, anything else would have to be flown in by fixed-wing RAF assets to marry up with equipment brought in sometime later by the Point class RO/ROs to a seized local port. This can be alleviated a bit by the use of Mexifloat connectors– provided of course that the beach can handle the load and the deep water curve is close enough to the surfline to accommodate Lyme Bay’s 19-foot draft without grounding. 

Churchill wept.

Since you came this far, enjoy this recent interview with retired MG Julian Thompson, CB, OBE, who got the call to take 3 Commando to the Falklands in 1982– back when the RN had a proper amphibious force.

More on Carney’s Red Sea Getaway

The guided-missile destroyer USS Carney launches land-attack missiles while operating in the U.S. Naval Forces Central Command area of responsibility, Feb. 3, 2024. The Carney was deployed as part of the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group to support maritime security and stability in the Middle East. U.S. Navy Photo 240203-N-GF955-1012

The early Flight I Arleigh Burke-class destroyer USS Carney (DDG 64) is not a young warship. Commissioned in 1996, the Navy has frequently deep-sixed younger greyhounds over the years.

Her epic 235-day October 2023-May 2024 deployment to the Red Sea to keep the area open in the face of Houthi attacks earned her a Navy Unit Commendation (her third) and she took part in a staggering 51 engagements against a high-low mix of everything from cruise missiles and anti-ship ballistic missiles to swarms of much simpler prop-driven one-way attack drones.

She also made the first publicly acknowledged SM-6 combat intercept, downed air-to-air targets with her 5-inch gun (!), and launched retaliatory TLAM strikes against targets ashore.

Her entire crew earned the Navy’s Combat Action Ribbon while her skipper picked up a Bronze Star and other key members of the crew received Meritorious Service Medals, Navy Commendation Medals, and Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medals– well deserved as the ship had the highest anti-air op-tempo that the U.S. Navy has seen since 1945.

An excellent 10-minute Navy film, USS Carney: A Destroyer at War, dives deeper with crew interviews:

Sub and Yippy Tie Up

“In a quiet inlet of the Bering Sea, a YP Boat gets a coat of paint and a sub ties up for fuel and provisions. The short Alaskan day is ending and lights may be seen in the barracks until total darkness requires a blackout.”

Painting, Oil on Board; by William F. Draper; 1942; Framed Dimensions 20H X 24W NHHC Accession #: 88-189-N

While the naval aspect of the Aleutians Campaign ended strong for the US, with RADM Charlie McMorris’ victory off the Komandorski Islands in March 1943 and the swansong of Operation Cottage five months later, it started rough, at the raid on Dutch Harbor in June 1942, and was a long uphill slog that, considering Nimitz’s big fleet problems in Guadalcanal, 5,000 miles on the other side of the Pacific, was always a backwater.

It was a war of the Sugar Boats, the Yippies, PT boats, Canadian armed merchant cruisers, and muddy PBYs.

About the famed ‘Niemoller Rig’

The so-called SADF Recce “Niemoller Rig” or Niemoller webbing belt kit, hailing from the Bush War era, is iconic when it comes to minimalist gear with a maximalist capability.

Sterile for deniability and everlasting– intended for use on 200-mile insertions (and 1,200-mile exfiltrations) across inhospitable terrain– it was born out of desperation. 

It’s often been cheaply imitated while historical gear, while of much better quality, also comes with political baggage and runs a fortune as it is more often bought by collectors rather than folks looking for a good, functional rig.

Niemoller webbing gets its name from its designer, SADF member Johann Niemoller, who served in deep reconnaissance and raids into enemy strongholds.

Young Johann Niemoller on the MG

Kommandostore has worked with Niemoller to reintroduce the design under their North Equipment Collection, which makes having actual made-in-South-Africa rigs made with the by-in from its inventor one of the coolest gear stories I can think of.

As detailed by the man himself in a very interesting 11-minute sit down:

Feet Wet

These recent shots of Army SF and Marines doing the small boat/frogman thing, complete with Dräger LAR rebreathers and CRRCs. (Components of images have often been blurred for Persec).

U.S. Army Special Forces, from the 7th Special Forces Group, perform an amphibious assault demonstration during the Hyundai Air and Sea Show and U.S. Army SaluteFest, Miami Beach, Fla., May 26, 2024. The events, were held throughout Memorial Day Weekend, (U.S. Army Photos by Master Sgt. Justin P. Morelli).

Coming in hot! Of course, almost any operational landing would be at oh-dark-30, and would be weapons secure until the last possible minute, but you have to show off for the crowds

The 7th SFG’s Area of Responsibility (AOR) includes Latin America, the Caribbean, the Gulf of Mexico, and parts of the Atlantic Ocean

Note the Gen 3 Glock in the Safariland holster of the SF M240 man

Yup, Gen 3 Glock. Probably a G19, which were always popular in SF

Meanwhile, he’s rocking a SIG M17– you can tell by the distinctive spare mags. Also, note the blank firing device faux suppressor

Another Glock, third-gen judging by the finger grooves on the grip

Soldiers with the 2nd Battalion, 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne) conduct underwater operations in Key West, FL from Nov. 12-19, 2024. The training was a chance to rehearse realistic missions in a maritime environment using a specialty infiltration technique.

Remember, folks each of the 12 companies within each of the five active Special Forces Groups mans, trains, equips, and deploys a full 12-man Special Forces Underwater Operations (SFUWO) ODA, meaning there are supposed to be something on the order of 60 dive-rated “A teams.”

The 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne) (5th SFG (A)) is responsible for the Middle and Near East.

A swim with an M240 has to be a chore

Marines with 1st Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, train to conduct small boat raids as part of a course hosted by Expeditionary Warfare Training Group, Pacific (EWTGPAC) at Naval Amphibious Base Coronado, California. U.S. Marine Corps photos by Cpl. Kyle Chan

U.S. Marines with 1st Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, pilot combat rubber raiding craft during an infantry company small boat raid course hosted by Expeditionary Warfare Training Group Pacific at Naval Amphibious Base Coronado, California, Nov. 14, 2024. During the course, Marines trained to plan and execute swimmer reconnaissance for a small boat raid company in preparation for deployment. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Kyle Chan)

That view, though.

And in related news, how about this deep dive into a Recon Marine’s VBSS kit. 

Send in the Scouts!

Happy National Native American Heritage Month.

With that, how about a short look at the 20th Century U.S. Army Indian Scouts program?

While the Army used native troops going back to the Revolution, the colonials had native allies as far back as the Pequot War in 1634, and four regiments of Indian Home Guard– recruited in Kansas–  were raised in the Civil War, Congress only authorized active recruitment and enlistment of native soldiers– up to 1,000– in 1866, to act as scouts, with detachments in each active regiment, designated “Troop L” in each of 10 cavalry regiments and “Company I” in each of 25 infantry regiments, although generally not of full troop of company strength.

In addition to their role as scouts, they often proved invaluable as interpreters during negotiations, particularly with the Apache.

1870s. A group of Apache Scouts drills with rifles at Fort Wingate, New Mexico. U.S. Army Signal Corps Photo 111-SC-87797. NARA Identifier 530918

The service was not easy, and many perished while on orders. This list is just of those killed on relatively quiet “Northern” service (e.g the Dakotas, Montana, Oklahoma, and northern Texas): 

At least a dozen (some sources cite as many as 16) Scouts are listed as having earned a Medal of Honor, all during the Plains Wars in the late 19th Century.

  • Alchesay. Sergeant, Indian Scouts. Place and date: Winter of 1872-73. Entry of service date unknown. Entered service at Camp Verde, Arizona. Born: 1853, Arizona Territory. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
  • Blanquet. Indian Scout. Place and date: Winter of 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
  • Chiquito. Indian Scout. Place and date: Winter of 1871-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
  • Co-Rux-Te-Chod-Ish (Mad Bear). Sergeant, Pawnee Scouts, U.S. Army. Place and date: At Republican River, Kansas, 8 July 1869. Birth: Nebraska. Date of issue: 24 August 1869. Citation: Ran out from the command in pursuit of a dismounted Indian; was shot down and badly wounded by a bullet from his own command.
  • Elsatsoosu. Corporal, Indian Scouts. Place and date: Winter of 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
  • Jim. Sergeant, Indian Scouts. Place and date: Winter of 1871-73. Birth: Arizona Territory. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
  • Kelsay. Indian Scout. Place and date: Winter of 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
  • Kosoha. Indian Scout. Place and date: Winter of 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
  • Machol. Private, Indian Scouts. Place and date: Arizona, 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during the campaign and engagements with the Apache.
  • Nannasaddie. Indian Scout. Place and date: 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
  • Nantaje (Nantahe). Indian Scout. Place and date: 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
  • Rowdy. Sergeant, Company A, Indian Scouts. Place and date: Arizona, 7 March 1890. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 15 May 1890. Citation: Bravery in action with Apache Indians.

Sgt Rowdy, standing, with his MoH loaned to a comrade, was a member of Co A, Indian Scouts, & received the Medal of Honor for a March 7, 1890, action, during the Cherry Creek Campaign in the Arizona Territory. His citation reads, “Bravery in action with Apache Indians.” He was the last of 16 Scouts who earned the MoH. He passed in 1893 and is buried in Sante Fe National Cemetery in New Mexico.

After Geronimo laid down his arms in 1886 and the Cherry Creek Campaign in 1890, the Scouts’ active use declined, and they were withdrawn from other districts to the Arizona Territory.

Authorized at no more than 275 men in 1889, this was trimmed to 150 in 1891 and just 75 Army-wide by 1898.

The reduced force was consolidated at Arizona’s Fort Apache and, after 1913, Fort Huachuca, which was just 15 miles from the Southern Border. Their peacetime role was to patrol the isolated forts’ boundaries, and they lived as a self-contained unit on the campus with their families.

Patrolling the Huachuca Mountains for trespassers, typically smugglers coming up from Mexico, they also constructed fire trails and breaks. They further cared for the post’s livestock and performed odd carpentry and blacksmithing duties, helping to maintain some 60 miles of post fencing.

Of note, their quarters were off-limits to non-native personnel. 

From Huachuca, at least some Scouts were utilized as “trailers” in the tense border region during the Mexican Revolution and Civil War, followed by the 1916-17 Punitive Expedition against Pancho Villa. 

Apache members of the U.S. Scouts assigned to the Punitive Expedition in 1916

Photograph of Apache Scout, Mexican Punitive Expedition, May 13, 1916. Note the traditional head and footgear, relaxed grooming standards, and regular GI blouse, trousers, and web gear. 111-SC-102733. NARA 329589935

On 3 June 1916, the Scouts were folded into the Army proper, with their members carried on the rolls as regulars and not auxiliaries.

From muster rolls in the National Archives, the Jan. 31, 1920 roster for the Detachment of Indian Scouts at Huachuca lists a 1SG, Eskehnadestah, two corporals, and 18 privates. An 1893 enlistment, Eskehnadestah retired to Whiteriver, where he lived to the age of 95, dying on February 3, 1955.

Follow the names on these rosters, and you will quickly see this small detachment would endure for years. 

Fort Apache was deemed surplus to requirements in October 1922, and the few remaining Scouts were consolidated at the Huachuca det, the unit’s last home. At the same time, recruitment of new Scouts was discontinued, but those in good standing and of good health could continue to reenlist until they reached the mandatory retirement age.

This bumped the Huachuca force from 21 to 23 by August 1924, led by SGT Askeldelinney, who was listed as a private on the 1920 roster.

Note this September 1924 roster with eight scouts, a corporal, and seven privates, detached for maneuvers with the 10th Cavalry.

In early 1925, a retired Kiowa Scout, 1SG Tahbonemah (I-See-O), who had logged at least 42 years in the service, mostly with the Seventh Cav, visited the White House with a tribal delegation in uniform, complete with four long service stripes on his left sleeve, where he met the Secretary of War and President Coolidge.

SECWAR John Weeks is seen on the left, and Coolidge to the right

By October 1931, there were only 12 Scouts, a sergeant (the long-serving Charles Bones, seen in the roster as a private in both 1920 and 1924), two corporals, and nine privates.

Around this time, the Scouts and their families, who had lived in tents and traditional dwellings at a camp near the Old Post, were moved to new-built adobe structures at Apache Flats. Wired for electricity and furnished with Army cots, tables, and desks, each dwelling consisted of two rooms– a large living room and a smaller sleeping room in the back. 

The move met with mixed results. 

As related by Colonel Allen C. Miller, former Huachuca commander:

The scouts remained rugged individualists to the end. Only one of the last twelve scouts spoke English. All were very large, well-built men. Not only were they excellent horsemen, but foot marches of up to 85 miles in a single day are recorded. Individually and as a unit they were fine soldiers, but they never gave up many of their tribal ways. Until the mid-thirties, they lived with their families in tepees which were located in an area of the garrison some distance apart from the other troops. When the WPA (Works Projects Administration) offered to improve their housing conditions, the post commander at Fort Huachuca enthusiastically set about building adobe houses for the Indians. An impressive dedication was held to celebrate the movement of the Indian families into their new quarters. Great was his consternation to find soon thereafter that all the families had moved back into tepees and that the scouts’ horses were the only occupants in the new quarters

The Army also deeded them other land, in small parcels.

Indian Scout Cemetery in North Dakota 75-FB-603

By 31 December 1939, with the war on the horizon, the Scouts numbered only eight men: SGT Riley Luke Sinew, two corporals (one on furlough), and five privates. Sinew, a 1921 enlistment, is shown as a private in the 1924 rosters above and seen again as a corporal on the 1931 roster. 

Carl Gaston, working with the Army Signal Corps, ventured to Huachuca in April 1942 and took a series of images of the last of the Scouts. Their age is apparent, as the Army ceased recruiting new scouts 20 years prior.

Note that the quoted captions are period captions, not mine. 

SC131140 – “Sgt. Sinew L. Riley is receiving reports on the activities of the day from his scouts.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #16 by Carl Gaston

SC131141 – “Private William Major and Private Andrew Paxson patrol the southern border from a peak of the Huachuca Mountains.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #17 by Carl Gaston

SC131142 – “Sergeant Sinew L. Riley is serving his 21st year as a scout in the Army and is the 3rd generation of his family to serve as such. Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942).” Note the “USS” device on his cap. Riley died of appendicitis in 1958, and the Army later named an enlisted barracks at Huachuca in his honor. Signal Corps Photo #18 by Carl Gaston

SC131143 – “Sergeant Sinew L Riley is teaching his son, Larrie H., Indian wood lore.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #19 by Carl Gaston

SC131144 – “These Indian scouts are shown filing up the side of a mountain on patrol.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #20 by Carl Gaston

SC131145 – “Private Andrew Paxon is shown scaling a peak for a better view.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942). Note the slung M1903 Springfield. Signal Corps Photo #21 by Carl Gaston

SC131146 – “These grizzled Indian features make a very interesting picture.” L to R: Corporal Jim Lane, John Rope, and Kassey Y-32.Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #28 by Carl Gaston

SC131147 – “Private Andrew Paxson is shown leaving his Army tent on outpost to start his scout duties.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #50 by Carl Gaston

SC131150 – “Corporal Jim Lane is shown here after having quenched his thirst from a spring.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #76 by Carl Gaston

SC131151 – “Sergeant Sinew Riley, US Army scout, listens to John Rope, (Black Larriet) retired US Army scout, relates the many battles he fought as an Army scout.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #37 by Carl Gaston

The Scouts remained activated, dwindling in number until only four remained, and the detachment was deactivated in 1947, when they were honorably retired.

In the end, only a single member of the final contingent of seven Scouts, a Private Kessay (Y-32), had served less than 25 years in uniform– having just 24 on his file. Two other privates, Jim Lane and Jess Billy, had 32 and 33 years on the books. Riley, Cpl. Antonio Ivan and Pvt. Andrew Paxson all had 26. Pvt. William Major had 25.

Talk about a recruiting poster…

 Alto Tu Barco!

You can almost feel the sea spray on your eyelashes in this one.

U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Munro (WMSL 755) crews interdict a vessel suspected of smuggling drugs in international waters of the Eastern Pacific Ocean, October 2024. Munro is the sixth Legend-class national security cutter homeported in Alameda, California. U.S. Coast Guard courtesy photo.

U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Munro (WMSL 755) crews interdict a vessel suspected of smuggling drugs in international waters of the Eastern Pacific Ocean, October 2024. Munro is the sixth Legend-class national security cutter homeported in Alameda, California. U.S. Coast Guard courtesy photo.

Of note, Munro just offloaded 29,000 pounds of cocaine, with an estimated value of $335.8 million, Tuesday in San Diego.

The nose candy came from a series of nine separate suspected drug smuggling vessel interdictions or events off the coasts of Mexico and Central and South America by Munro, USCGC Vigorous, USCGC Hamilton, and the USS St. Louis (LCS-19), during September and October– the mix showing you just how crowded it is getting in 4th Fleet (USNAVSOUTH) in the East Pac, and how much of a white hull operation it is. 

Speaking of recruiting, the USCG just established its first Hawaii-based JROTC, the 14th in the nation. Enrollment nationwide is expected to be 1,200 cadets.

Coast Guard JROTC instructors are hired and employed by the school district and certified by the service. Instructors must be Coast Guard retired, selected reserve, or qualified veterans with at least eight years of service. 

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