Category Archives: War On Terror

The Face of War

The Dutch Marines, known as the Korps Mariniers  is the marine corps and amphibious infantry component of the Royal Netherlands Navy and has been such since 1665– predating the USMC by a tad more than a century. They have been known for being salty sea dogs and hard fighters for over three hundred years in dozens of wars. The Japanese found out as much in the Pacific in World War Two.

Slate has an interesting article about a photo essay of 20 Dutch devil-dogs showing a close-up face shot of them before, during, and after a 12-month stint in Afghanistan.

I think the ‘during‘ is the most telling.

Just When FEMA wasnt that creepy anymore

File this under the ‘just a little bit creepy’ category…….231 recent high school seniors just graduated from the first ever FEMA Corps program. A slice of the successful Amer-Corps program (itself a Peace Corps model) these young citizens will volunteer to work for FEMA for ten months in exchange for a stipend of about $1000 a month and a $5500 college fund. Translates to about $9/hr which is actually a bargain compared to the price for a regular federal employee

The wierd  thing is that they will wear Department of Homeland Security uniforms doing it….

Kinda odd, just saying….

Frank Castle Uses Woolite

Not a real big comic-book-tuned movie guy, but I really dug the Thomas Jane version of the Punisher. Well, it looks like he is at it again with a ten-minute short called Dirty Laundry.    A little darker, but more Frank Castle…

“”I wanted to make a fan film for a character I’ve always loved and believed in – a love letter to Frank Castle & his fans. It was an incredible experience with everyone on the project throwing in their time just for the fun of it. It’s been a blast to be a part of from start to finish — we hope the friends of Frank enjoy watching it as much as we did making it.” — Thomas Jane”

 

 

Park Police vs Zombies

The US Secret Service and US Park Police just had a dress rehearsal for the Zombie Apocalypse in the form of repelling a group of zombie costumed shamblers (paid for by AMC)

Things got tense….

“Almost immediately, they were accosted by the Secret Service. You can see the Secret Service guy’s point, the square being right across the street from the White House and the zombies being, well, blood-spattered.

“I’m going to need some more information,” said the officer, clearly not up to speed on the AMC vs. Dish situation.

The apparent leader of the zombies conferred briefly with the Secret Service guy, assuring him they were just passing through, and he allowed them to go on their way.

The U.S. Park Police, however, are made of sterner stuff, and stopped the zombies again, almost immediately, demanding to see a permit. ”

Read the rest at the Washington Post

A High Tech Technical

Have a surplus Soviet Bloc machinegun and no way to use it to shoot down government helicopters coming to strafe your band of freedom fighters? Well, here is a lesson in battlefield ingenuity. Yes, the Syrian rebels are at it again and CJ Chivers of the New York Times details a surplus 14.5mm heavy machine gun used on a rebel Technical (commercial pickup truck used as a combat vehicle, more on those below.)

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

The Ponce Still Serves

The USS Ponce, now over forty years old and officially Afloat Force Service Base (Interim) AFSB(I), still serves as a floating base for NSW, MCM, and other activities in the very warm standoff between the West and Iran in the Persian Gulf.


From a recent article about the old girl, ” Although it is under the command of a Navy captain, most of the Ponce‘s  crew are civilians. It has more than 155 civilian crew members from the Military Sealift Command and 55 Navy sailors, according to the ship’s commanding officer, Capt. Jon Rodgers. The number of civilian crew can fluctuate depending on who is onboard.

The MSC is normally responsible for running about 110 supply ships and other non-combat vessels for the Navy, but the Ponce‘s hybrid crew is unusual.

Visitors arriving by helicopter are met on the flight deck by some crew in uniform and others in civilian coveralls. Civilian employees keep the floors and toilets clean, and dish out corned beef hash and French toast on the mess deck. Some of the MSC crew members have dreadlocks — a no-no for enlisted sailors — and many are in their 40s or beyond. A handful are older than 60.

It’s not just the civilian crew that’s showing its age. The Ponce is among the Navy’s oldest ships. Construction began in 1966, and it was commissioned during the Nixon administration in 1971.

Rust is prevalent throughout the ship, and many of the fittings retain a Cold War feel.”

Read more here

Future Rifles that Could Be Deadly Past Two miles

Will a man-portable rifle ever be able to take a target at the 2-mile mark? There are 5,280 feet in one mile. When you double this and convert it to yards, you are looking at 3520-yards (3218.69m) needed to cover in a two mile shot.  No matter how you cut it, that is a long way. However, right now teams of firearms engineers are burning lean muscle tissue into the night over pots of coffee as black as your soul—to figure out a 2-mile rifle.

Read more in my column at GUNS.com

West Point Should be at least as good as ROTC

Tom Ricks takes a look at the military training accorded to college ROTC units, whose officers get reserve commisions, to the United States Military Academy at West Point, whose members get regular commisions and the lineage of the ‘long grey line.’

“Sir, West Point is the only place in the country where it is not only legal, but mandated, that 18 year old boys hide their dirty underwear … and 30 year old men go looking for it.” (For the record, he was referring to barracks inspections conducted by the “tactical officers” who oversee the cadets.) Of course, all of this is belied by the nearly instantaneous sentiment of nostalgic gilding applied by 95 percent of new Lieutenants the moment they see Highland Falls disappearing in their rear-view mirrors. But the bottom line about military training at USMA came as a shock to me…there is practically none, and what there is, is limited.

The rest of the article here

University of TN ROTC combat training….

A Gun’s Role in your Prepper’s Kit

When the first caveman decided to keep a little more food or fuel for his fire than what he needed to get through the week, he became a prepper. Odds are this first prepper decided he needed a good-sized club or rock to help make sure he could hold onto it. Today’s Preppers are the same way. Shelter, food and fuel are stockpiled and a weapon (usually a gun) is obtained to be able to protect it from those that did not.

Read the rest in my column at GUNS.com

Doug Groat, CIA Plummer extrodainare

A really interesting read over at the Smithsonian

“The six CIA officers were sweating. It was almost noon on a June day in the Middle Eastern capital, already in the 90s outside and even hotter inside the black sedan where the five men and one woman sat jammed in together. Sat and waited.
They had flown in two days earlier for this mission: to break into the embassy of a South Asian country, steal that country’s secret codes and get out without leaving a trace. During months of planning, they had been assured by the local CIA station that the building would be empty at this hour except for one person—a member of the embassy’s diplomatic staff working secretly for the agency.

But suddenly the driver’s hand-held radio crackled with a voice-encrypted warning: 

“Maintain position. Do not approach target.” It was the local CIA station, relaying a warning from the agency’s spy inside: a cleaning lady had arrived.
From the back seat Douglas Groat swore under his breath. A tall, muscular man of 43, he was the leader of the break-in team, at this point—1990—a seven-year veteran of this risky work. “We were white faces in a car in daytime,” Groat recalls, too noticeable for comfort.  Still they waited, for an hour, he says, before the radio crackled again: “OK to proceed to target.” The cleaning lady had left.

Groat and the others were out of the car within seconds. The embassy staffer let them in the back door. Groat picked the lock on the code room—a small, windowless space secured for secret communications, a standard feature of most embassies—and the team swept inside. Groat opened the safe within 15 minutes, having practiced on a similar model back in the States. The woman and two other officers were trained in photography and what the CIA calls “flaps and seals”; they carefully opened and photographed the code books and one-time pads, or booklets of random numbers used to create almost unbreakable codes, and then resealed each document and replaced it in the safe exactly as it had been before.
Two hours after entering the embassy, they were gone.”

Read more here:

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