Panzers in the Golan Heights

WWII After WWII has a great piece up on the use of German panzers as late as the 1960s by Syria in their wars against Israel. Acquired from Spain, Czechoslovakia and other sources, the Six Day War saw U.S.-made M50 Super Shermans and British Centurions in the hands of IDF tankers smoking Syrian Panzer IVs and StuG IIIs (some still with fading German balkenkreuzs)

Syrian Panzer IV; this one was most likely from the ex-Spanish batch. A Syrian StuG III is behind it; both captured by Israel in 1967

Syrian Panzer IV; this one was most likely from the ex-Spanish batch. A Syrian StuG III is behind it; both captured by Israel in 1967

“The last appearance by WWII German tanks on the world’s battlefields came in 1967, when Syria’s panzer force faced off against modern Israeli armor. Quite improbably, Syria had assembled it’s collection of ex-Wehrmacht vehicles from a half-dozen sources over a decade and a half timeframe.”

Some were kept in operation even years later…

“Syria had six Jagdpanzer IVs operational on 6 June 1967. One was destroyed by an Israeli tank. Surprisingly, the remaining five were retained by the Syrian army. They made no appearance during the 1973 Yom Kippur War. During the Desert Shield / Desert Storm period in 1990-1991, when Syria and the USA were briefly allies, the remaining five Jagdpanzer IVs were listed as “arsenal-level (long-term warehoused) assets” at al-Zabadani army base north of Damascus. In the mid-1990s, the late King Hussein of Jordan (an avid tank history fan) attempted to buy one or all of them for his army’s museum collection, apparently without success. During the 2014-onwards Syrian Civil War, they were likewise not seen, so apparently they had either been scrapped around the turn of the millennium, or destroyed in the warehouse during the civil war.”

Which leads me to these pictures, taken in the recent fighting in Syria:

10.5 cm leFH 18M howitzer in action with Syrian rebels, over 70 years after it was manufactured and used by German troops during the Second World War

May 2015: 10.5 cm leFH 18M howitzer in action with Syrian rebels, over 70 years after it was manufactured and used by German troops during the Second World War

10.5 cm leFH 18M howitzer in action with Syrian rebels, over 70 years after it was manufactured and used by German troops during the Second World War

10.5 cm leFH 18M howitzer in action with Syrian rebels, over 70 years after it was manufactured and used by German troops during the Second World War

Do you know anything about this oddball wheelgun?

Ian over at Forgotten Weapons takes a look at an odd European revolver that just screams steampunk.

“With no markings or provenance at all, the origins of this revolver are a mystery. Its features all point to the 1880s or 1890s, and someone clearly spent a lot of time working on it – but we don’t know who. What makes it interesting is the very unusual operating mechanism. It is similar to a ‘zig-zag’ system like the 1878 Mauser or Webley-Fosbery, but with angled splines on the cylinder instead of grooves.”

Always worth its weight

From the CIA archives:

As an attempt to control currency during the worst days of the Depression Presidential Executive Order 6102 (1933) and the Gold Reserve Act (1934) made owning or trading gold a criminal offense and required American citizens to sell their private possessions of gold (with limited exceptions— like wedding rings) to the U.S. Treasury. The U.S. Government instituted this policy to help the country weather the Great Depression and did not relax it until 1964 (and since then, investment in gold has skyrocketed).

Despite this barrier, the secret agent men of OSS acquired gold coins to cache in Occupied Europe during WWII and retrieve as needed to finance their efforts or those of the Nazi resistance. Although the coins were not legal tender, their inherent value ensured their usefulness. OSS never distributed this one, a $20 Gold Piece made in 1858, currently housed in the CIA Museum.

$20 Gold Piece made in 1858 CIA museum used by OSS agents

Photo: CIA

A mysterious, if soft spoken, Czech

The Germans in WWII were the ultimate locusts when it came to re-purposing captured weapons. Not only did they quickly turn around and put everything they found that went bang in an occupied country to good use, they also kept the local factories churning out new guns and munitions for the war machine. In Belgium, FN’s Herstal works kept pumping out Browning Hi Powers for the Third Reich just as Poland’s Radom worked around the clock to make 9mm VIS pistols.

Czechoslovakia was no different and the CZ concern in Brno was forced to keep making their pistols, rifles (which were Mauser 98 copies anyway) and light machine guns until as late as 1945– but for Teutonic use.

One of the more peculiar CZ produced guns made during occupation was a special Böhmische Waffenfabrik 7.65×17mm Browning SR (.32 ACP) CZ Model 27 pistol with an over-length 5-inch barrel, some 30.4 mm longer than normal.

What a curious proboscis

What a curious proboscis

As you can see, the muzzle is slatted at the bottom with a notch

As you can see, the muzzle is slatted at the bottom with a notch

And is made to accommodate a coupling of some sort

And is made to accommodate a coupling of some sort

Scarce Late World War II Nazi Occupation Czechoslovakian Model 27 Pistol

Given a phosphate finish, these guns were marked “fnh Pistole Model 27 Kal. 7.65” and the barrel served as a male counterpart to the knurled female coupling of a rather large steel suppressor can.

Scarce Late World War II Nazi Occupation Czechoslovakian Model 27 Pistol with Silencer Barrel and suppressor

One of the first “quick detach” suppressor designs….

Fitted with a sight on the top of the can (as the body occluded the standard front post on the slide) the suppressor was made specifically for the CZ27.

There is at least some anecdotal evidence of a more svelte silencer design being issued as well, sans sights.

Scarce Late World War II Nazi Occupation Czechoslovakian Model 27 Pistol with Silencer Barrel

While some .32ACP is spicy enough to be supersonic, the Germans had a run of “X” headstamped 7.65 Browning rounds made by Geco and DWM Berlin-Borsigwalde which were suitably subsonic for use in these guns. Coupled with a very large baffle can, they were likely very quiet indeed.

According to Czech sources, some 5000 of these guns were ordered in September 1944 (OKH Wa JRu /Wu.G.Z G2-0161-0121 IV  44) and about 4220 were delivered. While some claim they were meant to be used in concentration camps, it is more likely they were intended for commando operations such as those run by Skorzeny which were increasingly popular in the late stages of the war (remember he went into the Ardennes with a unit illegally dressed as U.S. Army MPs in December of that very year).

Another likely use for these guns was in “stay behind” operations by Werwolf resistance units.

A silenced pistol (possibly a CZ27?) was used by an SS hit team in Unternehmen Karneval to assassinate Burgomeister Openhoff after Aachen fell to the Allies in 1945, arguably one of the only documented operations undertaken by Werwolf-style units (though they were parachuted in behind the Allied lines and not overrun in this case).

While they were not fielded in great numbers before the conflict ended, there is some rumor that intelligence agencies on both sides of the Iron Curtain used inherited examples of these pistols throughout the Cold War– with a few even popping up in North Korea of all places. After all, what is more “sterile” and deniable than a German contract Czech-made pistol that both East and West captured at the tail end of WWII and takes .32ACP, which is commonly encountered in even the most exotic third world country?

Today, the cans are a rarity, but the pistols themselves sell for about $3,000 at auction.

The gun/can design did go on to inspire others by CZ.

In 1959, Miroslav Rybář of CZ designed the .32 ACP-chambered closed-bolt blowback action vz. 61 Škorpion machine pistol which proved popular in Warsaw Pact countries throughout the Cold War, and still endures today. The suppressor designed to accompany the gun attaches by a quick attach/detach knurled collar that clamps onto the barrel in much the same was as the CZ27 that preceded it by 15 years.

vz-61-machine-pistol-and-original-vz-61-suppressor-suppressor-attaches-by-collet-that-clamps-onto-the-barrel-a-quick-attach-detach-design-going-back-to-the-1960s

Hello Blue/Gold LCS, goodbye multi-use

The littoral combat ship USS Independence (LCS 2) demonstrates its maneuvering capabilities in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Daniel M. Young/Released)

The littoral combat ship USS Independence (LCS 2) demonstrates its maneuvering capabilities in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Daniel M. Young/Released)

The Navy is ditching a couple Littoral Combat Ship concepts, specifically the 3:2:1 crewing model and the concept that all ships can be all things at all times (but actually accomplish none of them).

In the end, they are going to wind up with ships crewed like SSBNs (rotating Blue/Gold crews) and equipped to operate in dedicated mission sets (Surface Warfare, Minehunting, or ASW). The 40-52 ships of the program will be grouped in four-ship divisions (with 3 ships deployable) by mission, but no word on how many divisions will be dedicated to each mission.

From the Navy’s presser (which notably 404’d off the Navy’s site, then popped back up):

The Navy announced today it will implement several key changes to the projected 28-ship littoral combat ship (LCS) Flight 0/0+ class over the next five years that will simplify crewing, stabilize testing, and increase overseas deployment presence availability.

The projected 12 Frigates will be the next increment of LCS and will use the same manning, training, maintenance and operating concepts as those that have been approved as part of the LCS review. The decision to make these changes resulted from a comprehensive review of LCS crewing, training, maintenance, and operations commissioned in March. While a total of 40 ships have been approved for the program, the Navy Force Structure Assessment still projects the need for 52 small surface combatants that LCS and Frigate address.

Beginning this fall, the Navy will start to phase out the 3:2:1 crewing construct and transition to a Blue/Gold model similar to the one used in crewing Ballistic Missile submarines, patrol craft and minesweepers. The LCS crews will also merge, train, and rotate with mission module detachment crews, organizing as four-ship divisions of a single warfare area – either surface warfare (SUW), mine warfare (MCM), or anti-submarine warfare (ASW). Though organized this way, the LCS class will retain the technological benefits of modularity and the ability to swap mission packages quickly if needed. Aviation detachments will also deploy with the same LCS crew, but will remain assigned to their respective squadrons when in home port.

To facilitate these changes across the class, the Navy will eventually homeport Independence-variant ships in San Diego and Freedom-variant ships in Mayport, Fla. 24 of the 28 LCS ships will form into six divisions with three divisions on each coast. Each division will have a single warfare focus and the crews and mission module detachments will be fused. Each division will consist of three Blue/Gold-crewed ships that deploy overseas and one single-crewed training ship. Under this construct, each division’s training ship will remain available locally to certify crews preparing to deploy. Few homeport shifts will be needed since only six LCS are currently commissioned while the rest are under contract, in construction, or in a pre-commissioned unit status.

The first four LCS ships (LCS 1-4) will become testing ships. Like the training ships, testing ships will be single-crewed and could be deployed as fleet assets if needed on a limited basis; however, their primary purpose will be to satisfy near and long term testing requirements for the entire LCS class without affecting ongoing deployment rotations. This approach accommodates spiral development and rapid deployment of emerging weapons and delivery systems to the fleet without disrupting operational schedules.

Implementing these changes now and as more LCS ships are commissioned over the coming years will ultimately allow the Navy to deploy more ships, increasing overall forward presence. With the Blue/Gold model in place, three out of four ships will be available for deployment compared with one out of two under 3:2:1. The Blue/Gold model will also simplify ownership of maintenance responsibilities and enhance continuity as the same two crews rotate on a single ship. Single-crewed training ships will complement shore-based training facilities and ensure crews have enough time at sea before deployment. The findings and recommendations of the LCS review will allow the LCS program to become more survivable, lethal, and adaptable as the LCS become regular workhorses in the fleet.

The cost of keeping Yorktown in business

The Post and Courier has an excellent article on what it costs to keep a large maritime museum with floating relics in operation.

Built around USS Yorktown (CV/CVA/CVS-10), one of 24 Essex-class fleet carriers built during World War II,  Patriot’s Point has gone through a lot of ups and downs since it was established in 1976, near the bustling NAVSTA and Naval Shipyard in Charleston. At it’s peak in 1989, the museum included not only Yorktown but the WW II destroyer USS Laffey, Cold War era submarine USS Clamagore, nuclear-powered merchant ship NS Savannah and the Treasury-class cutter USCGC Ingham.

Since then, both Savannah and Ingham have been towed to Baltimore and Key West, respectively, Clamagore is set to be sink as a reef in a couple years, and both Laffey and Yorktown have received millions in repairs and need millions more.

The Navy pulled out of Charleston in 1993. Of the 450 acres of state land the park started with 40 years ago, there has been some leased to Charleston Harbor Marina and Beach Club, the College of Charleston, the Patriots Point Links gold club, more to the Medal of Honor Society for a museum, and now a portion along the river in a 99-year lease to a developer.

The hopes: generate $6 million a year to keep the park open, and raise $60 million to refurb Yorktown.

If not…

yorktown

Falcons and Crows

A lot of people hate colorized monochrome images. I happen to like them, however, what you see here are historical Autochrome images, an early color process (sourced from here).

The images are a stunning time capsule.

Here we see a 1927 shot by Edwin L. Wisherd of three men standing in front of a plane on the Crow Reservation in Montana.

Image: Edwin L. Wisherd/National Geographic Creative/Corbis

Note the early rubber doughnut suspension tires, similar to those used by the Curtiss Carrier Pigeon and Lark mail delivery aircraft. Image: Edwin L. Wisherd/National Geographic Creative/Corbis

The visiting biplane was evidently part of a U.S. Army commemoration at Little Big Horn, which saw its 50th anniversary the previous summer.

Crow Indian Reservation, Montana - Men stand at the site of the monument to the Seventh Cavalry.Image: Edwin L. Wisherd/National Geographic Creative/Corbis

Crow Indian Reservation, Montana – Men stand at the site of the monument to the Seventh Cavalry–the proposed Custer battle memorial site. (from left) Col. J.M.T. Portello, former field adjutant to Gen. Miles, White Man Runs Him (grandfather of Joe Medicine Crow) , E.S. Godfrey, lieutenant under Custer (by 1927 he was a general), and Curley, one of Custer’s scouts. Curley is in the biplane photo as well. Image: Edwin L. Wisherd/National Geographic Creative/Corbis

The plane pictured was cutting edge at the time– what seems to be a very early variant of the Curtiss Model 37 Falcon.

On 2 July 1926, legislation backed in large part by the Morrow panel–the Air Corps Act (44 Stat. 780) came into law under the not too impressed administration of President Calvin Coolidge. It established the Corps, stopped the bleeding that had gone on since 1919, and began a five-year plan to revamp the service. This meant replacing legacy WWI Spads, Jennys, JH-6s and P-1s with more modern aircraft, up to 1,800 of them in fact, nearly doubling the number of squadrons in the country.

One of these new types was the Curtiss factory’s Falcon, powered by a beefy 435hp Curtiss V-1150 (D-12) engine. Built in two main variants, an A3 attack model mounting as many as 6 machine guns and capable of carrying 200lbs of bombs, and the O1/O11 two-seat observation plane with twin Lewis guns in the backseater spot, deliveries started IOC in 1927– meaning the O1 shown above was brand spanking new and, in the vernacular of the time, the Bee’s Knees.

curtis falcon
The Army wound up with 338 total variants which they used through 1937, some of which were gifted to the Philippine Army Air Corps, operating out of Zablan Airfield, and subsequently lost in the opening stages of WWII.

The Navy and Marines picked up another 150 in A3/A4 Helldiver, F8C Falcon (a greatly modified design with a Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp engine that was the the first purpose-built dive bomber to be produced for the US Navy) and O2C Helldiver variants for observation, attack and light bombing. They could carry two 116lb bombs under the wings or one 500lb bomb under the fuselage. Although some made up “Bombing Two” on Saratoga, they largely passed to the Navy Reserve in the 1930s.

curtiss helldiver

Notably, they appeared in a couple of Hollywood “Wings” follow-ons, Flight (1929) and Hell Divers (1932), the latter a talkie with Clark Gable (without his iconic mustache)– who went on to serve in the USAAF in WWII, rising to the rank of Major.

The King of the man caves

sea-king-2_3595127b

With the retirement of the last Wessex-built Sea Kings and Junglies from the RN and RAF, they are up for sale to the highest bidder.

From the Telegraph:

More than 20 are airworthy and expected to continue flying with commercial firms, private pilots or foreign nations, but six or seven are empty hulks that were stripped of parts.

While working helicopters could fetch £150,000 each, the hulks can be bought for between £10,000 and £20,000 said Paul Southerington, the managing director. All the money goes to the MoD.

He said: “They are being sold for upmarket gardens sheds or ‘man caves’. One guy was going to put a bedroom in and siting room in it.

The Biggest Yank of WWI

Len Dyer of the National Armor and Cavalry Restoration Center discusses the World War I era Mark VIII Tank, of which just two are still in existence, both in the possession of the U.S. Army.

The Mark VIII was more advanced than the planned British Mark VI, though it was larger, male only (as in gun mounts, with 6-pounder 57 mm gun on each side), had a central crew compartment, and used a Liberty V12 aircraft engine for power. Designed as a joint Anglo-American project, the French were in on it as well. As such, it was called the Liberty or International at the time and some 1,500 were planned to swamp the German lines and tweak the Kaiser’s mustache in 1919.

A beast with a 10 man crew, the two aforementioned Hotchkiss 6-pounders (with 208 shells)  and five Browning M1917 water-cooled machine guns (with 13,848 machine gun rounds), it weighed 38 tons, a figure not soon seen again in a main battle tank.

In comparison, the WWI British “Flying Elephant” super heavy tank weighed 100 tons but never left the drawing board while the German’s Großkampfwagen or “K-Wagen” 120-ton leviathan was only a non working prototype when the war ended. Only 10 experimental French Char 2Cs, at 75-tons each were built in 1921, leaving the Mark VIII as the heaviest production tank in the world until the Soviets put the 45-ton T-35 into regular production in 1935)

In the end, just 100~ Mark VIIIs were made by Rock Island before production was halted, and they never saw combat. The Army did, however, maintain them for training use until WWII.

Some things never go out of style

U.S. Army photo by John Pellino

U.S. Army photo by John Pellino

What an aesthetic, and no, it’s not budget cuts.

Cadets from the West Point – The U.S. Military Academy participate in the USMA’s  Department of History’s 2016 Historic Weapons Shoot at West Point, N.Y., April 23, 2016.

« Older Entries Recent Entries »