Welcome to the new normal

The LCS has gotten its feet wet in patrols near the Spratly Islands, with an as-expected Chinese remora in what the Navy terms is “The New Normal” as four of the ships will be based at Singapore manned under a 3-2-1 concept that sees three rotational crews supporting two LCS ships, one of which is deployed.

The littoral combat ship USS Fort Worth (LCS 3) conducts routine patrols on Monday in international waters near the Spratly Islands as the Chinese People's Liberation Army-Navy (PLAN) guided-missile frigate Yancheng (FFG 546) sails close behind (the dot on the horizon)-- click to big up. U.S. Navy/MC2 Conor Minto

The littoral combat ship USS Fort Worth (LCS 3) conducts routine patrols on Monday in international waters near the Spratly Islands as the Chinese People’s Liberation Army-Navy (PLAN) guided-missile frigate Yancheng (FFG 546) sails close behind (the dot on the horizon)– click to big up. U.S. Navy/MC2 Conor Minto

The littoral combat ship USS Fort Worth (LCS 3) conducts routine patrols on Monday in international waters near the Spratly Islands as the Chinese People's Liberation Army-Navy (PLAN) guided-missile frigate Yancheng (FFG 546) sails close behind - click to big up. U.S. Navy/MC2 Conor Minto

The littoral combat ship USS Fort Worth (LCS 3) conducts routine patrols on Monday in international waters near the Spratly Islands as the Chinese People’s Liberation Army-Navy (PLAN) guided-missile frigate Yancheng (FFG 546) sails close behind – click to big up. U.S. Navy/MC2 Conor Minto

Per the USN press release:

“As part of our strategic rebalance to bring our newest and most capable Navy platforms to the Indo-Asia-Pacific, LCS now has a regular presence in Southeast Asia,” said Capt. Fred Kacher, commodore, Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 7. “Routine operations like the one Fort Worth just completed in the South China Sea will be the new normal as we welcome four LCSs to the region in the coming years. Deployment of multiple LCSs to Southeast Asia underscores the importance of this ‘region on the rise’ and the value persistent presence brings.”

Fort Worth encountered multiple People’s Liberation Army–Navy [PLA(N)] warships, each time taking the opportunity to use the Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea (CUES).

“Just like our first meeting in February with a PLA(N) warship, guided-missile frigate Hengshui (FFG 572), our interactions with Chinese ships continue to be professional and CUES helps clarify intentions and prevent miscommunication,” said Cmdr. Matt Kawas, Fort Worth Crew 103 commanding officer.

The Yancheng is a Type 054A (NATO codename Jiangkai II) type frigate, a 4000-ton craft with 32 VLS surface to air missiles, 8 C-803 anti-ship missiles, and a 76mm gun. It can make 27-knots and has been something of a showcase boat for the Chinese, last year conducting anti-piracy operations in the Gulf of Aden and later escorting Syrian chemical weapons destined for destruction.

Fort Worth is a 3900-ton a Freedom-class littoral combat ship capable of breaking 45 knots but only armed with a 57mm gun, a RAM launcher and some smaller gun mounts.

While its understandable that the PLAN would be stretching its legs in the South China Sea, they are also sowing their oats in such far-flung and traditional U.S. Navy/Royal Navy haunts as the Mediterranean, where the frigates Linyi and Weifang left the Black Sea along with a Russian Navy guided missile corvette to begin the first ever round of Chinese and Russian naval exercises in that ancient sea.

The beautiful Brugger and Thomet MP9 series and why it matters

This compact family of pistols and personal defense weapons with a name that rhymes with nausea are one of the least known combat arms in the world– but that shouldn’t stop you from really digging on them.

Why the B+T?

When the first submachine gun designs popped up around the middle of the First World War, they were an interesting compromise between the large full power bolt-action rifles of the day, and smaller handheld pistols and revolvers. The concept, which gave a soldier better firepower than either (at short ranges) while being more compact than the former, proved popular in combat.

From the early Thompson M1921 of the Prohibition-era and its contemporaries the MP18 and Lanchester, to the cheaply made stamped metal M3 Grease Guns and STENs of WWII, and on to the improved Heckler and Koch MP5, British Sterlings and UZIs of the 1960s, the class evolved until, by the 1990s, they had largely worked themselves out of a job, being replaced by modern 5.56/5.45mm compact rifles with collapsible stocks and even smaller machine-pistols such as the Micro Uzi and Beretta 93R.

However, the Austrian Steyr group hit upon a concept subgun that, just slightly larger than the holsterable machine-pistol, yet much smaller than a Colt AR-pattern SMG or MP5A5. This gun was the TMP

Steyr origins

Designed by Styr’s chief engineer, Friedrich Aigner (the man who also later went on to hold several patents including those on the Steyr M and L series pistols), in 1989 the company perfected their Taktische Maschinenpistole (Tactical Machine Pistol), or TMP.

Using a rotating bolt, the gun's simple blowback action was reliable while its polymer frame kept the weight down.

Using a rotating bolt, the gun’s simple blowback action was reliable while its polymer frame kept the weight down.

This gun was hefty for a pistol, at 46-ounces, or about a half pound more than a Colt M1911, and it was a little long, at 11-inches overall, or about three inches longer than the longslide Colt with the same length barrel– but the TMP could fire 9mm rounds (which it could pack in up to 30-round detachable box mags) at up to 900-rounds-per-minute.

Say, “Abracadabra.”

Odds are, it took you two seconds to get that out– in that time the TMP could zip out 30 rounds and run dry. And a Colt 1911 can’t do that.

A TMP in action

The Austrian Federal Police’s Einsatzkommando Cobra, their specialized anti-terror team, as well as neighboring Italy’s Gruppo di Intervento Speciale (GIS) which performs a similar task for the military police there soon adopted it.

The SPP, note the flush 15 and extended 30-rounders

The SPP, note the flush 15 and extended 30-rounders

An even smaller version, without a buttstock and capable of being holstered like a standard pistol, the SPP, was designed. This gun shaved an inch and a few ounces off the standard subgun, but could still hold its full cyclic rate. Above it is shown with its flush-fit 15 rounder and extended 30s.

Nevertheless, by 2001, Steyr had gone soft on the idea of the TMP due to the country’s import/export laws on certain munitions. You see at that time a controversy erupted over the export of SSG 69 sniper manufactured by the Steyr Company and Hirtenberger ammunition of Austrian production to the embattled Croatian Army during the 1990s while the Balkan country was under embargo. With that, the company washed its hands of the TMP.

However, don’t worry, someone else eagerly picked it up.

bt9

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

The Coast Guard’s ninjas

While the Navy has the SEAL platoons that regularly deploy, and each ship frigate size and above has a multi-section VBSS team (blue jackets that have passed SRF-B and get three additional weeks training on insertion, collecting biometrics and team tactics), the Coast Guard also has similar programs.

Roughly the Coast Guard’s version of a VBSS team is a Law Enforcement Detachment (LEDET) while the nearest thing to a special operations unit is the Maritime Safety and Security Team or MSST and its counter-terror snake-eater unit, the MSRT.

Some 12 MSSTs (numbered 91101-91114) are spread around the country, co-located near high-value U.S. Navy bases (think Kitsap, Norfolk, Pearl, Kings Bay, et al) and ports. Composed of 75~ members, all they do all day is train for taking down high-risk maritime targets inside U.S.-controlled waters and hone such rare skill sets as underwater port security, and non-compliant vessel boardings. They also deploy abroad (CENTCOM, Guantanamo Bay, etc as needed). Further, all of the USCG’s canine teams are assigned to MSSTs.

They get very little press, but a lot of good training and equipment. If things ever get hot, they would be the ones looking for enemy frogmen, hijacked LNG tankers, CBRNE threats and USS Cole-style small boat attacks.

A member of U.S. Coast Guard Maritime Safety and Security Team 91101 Seattle stands watch in a ladderwell while his fellow boarding team members complete a sweep of Royal Canadian navy Kingston-class coastal defense vessel Yellowknife during a Trident Fury exercise in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, May 12, 2015. In order to complete their mission, the MSST team had to search every compartment on the vessel, subdue any potential aggressors and find a fake bomb that had been planted by a training team leader. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Katelyn Shearer)

A member of U.S. Coast Guard Maritime Safety and Security Team 91101 Seattle stands watch in a ladderwell while his fellow boarding team members complete a sweep of Royal Canadian navy Kingston-class coastal defense vessel Yellowknife during a Trident Fury exercise in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, May 12, 2015. In order to complete their mission, the MSST team had to search every compartment on the vessel, subdue any potential aggressors and find a fake bomb that had been planted by a training team leader. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Katelyn Shearer)

 

Members of U.S Coast Guard Maritime Safety and Security Team 91101 Seattle handcuff Ensign Jacob Sibilski, a crew member of U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Active, a 210-foot medium endurance cutter homeported in Port Angeles, Wash., while conducting a boarding of Royal Canadian navy Kingston-class coastal defense vessel Yellowknife as part of a Trident Fury exercise in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, May 12, 2015. Sibilski was acting as the captain of a Russian fishing vessel that had experienced a mutiny aboard. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Katelyn Shearer) Click for hi rez

Members of U.S Coast Guard Maritime Safety and Security Team 91101 Seattle handcuff Ensign Jacob Sibilski, a crew member of U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Active, a 210-foot medium endurance cutter homeported in Port Angeles, Wash., while conducting a boarding of Royal Canadian navy Kingston-class coastal defense vessel Yellowknife as part of a Trident Fury exercise in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, May 12, 2015. Sibilski was acting as the captain of a Russian fishing vessel that had experienced a mutiny aboard. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Katelyn Shearer) Click for hi rez

You have to love the Close Quarter Battle Receiver (CQBR) upper on the Mk18 rifles. We are talking 10-inch barrels here. Also note the FX Simunition marking cartridges in the clear mags (to ensure safety), blue “cold” markings and solid plastic Ring’s bluegun sidearms. Nothing like keeping it safe.

Combat Gallery Sunday: Vale, Orbik

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors, and the like that produced them.

Combat Gallery Sunday: Vale, Orbik

In this installment of CGS, we are bidding farewell to one of the modern masters of the noir comic and pulp covers, Mr. Glen Orbik, who passed this week of cancer at the untimely age of 51.

Orbik, who taught at the California Art Institute studied under Fred Fixler. Taking his ques from such other greats as past CGS-alumni Robert McGinnis and Gil Elvgren, Orbik has in the past three decades done prolific work for DC Comics, Vertigo, Marvel Comics, Warner Bros., Clampett Studios, Universal Pictures, Sony, Avon Books, Berkley Books, cRandom House, Del Rey, Hard Case Crime, and TSR / Dungeons and Dragons.

Comic Base 9 cover, showing great detail on the incoming German fighters and British tommy,

Comic Base 9 cover, showing great detail on the incoming German fighters and British tommy,

Femme by Glen Orbik

Femme by Glen Orbik

orbik

orbik

orbik

orbik

orbik

orbik

Mad Max, Orbik

Mad Max, Orbik

Silver Fox by Glen Orbik

Silver Fox by Glen Orbik

Glen Orbik, Fifty-to-One

Glen Orbik, Fifty-to-One

The Punisher by Orbik-- great UZI

The Punisher by Orbik– great UZI

Green Hornet and Kato, by Orbik

Green Hornet and Kato, by Orbik

orbik

orbik

Orbik

Orbik

Several galleries of his work are online and please visit his official site.

Glen_Orbik

Thank you for your work, sir, you will be missed.

The secret submarine blockade-runners of the PI

When World War II came to the Philippines on Dec. 8, 1941, the U.S./Philippine forces under Gen. MacArthur (land and air) and the Navy’s Asiatic Fleet under ADM Thomas C. Hart seemed mighty enough for regional defense. Hart’s fleet, however, was a paper tiger, consisting of a couple dozen seaplanes, two cruisers, 13 destroyers, and a number of gunboats and auxiliaries.

What Hart did have was 29 submarines–, which would have been deadly effective had their torpedoes actually run straight at the correct depths and detonated on impact.

As McArthur’s land and air forces were overwhelmed and pushed back, Hart was directed to fall back with the fleet to the comparatively safer waters of Australia and the Dutch East Indies. With the Japanese largely controlling the sea lanes around Luzon and the skies above it, it was suicide to maintain surface ships in those waters.

Yet, with MacArthur’s troops cut off, Hart endeavored to attempt a force of blockade-runners to bring in vital food, ammunition, and medicine to the PI. While huge cash bounties offered to civilian sailors brought a few desperate souls to attempt the voyage in small freighters and coasters, these attempts inevitably either ended with mutinous mariners turning around short of the islands or with burnt-out hulks adrift and riddled with Japanese shrapnel.

But what about those 29 submarines?

Well, a lot of these were small, cramped old boats including a half-dozen aging S-boats, slow 800-ton submersibles that dated to the First World War and were arguably obsolete even then. However, there were also a number of large and comparatively modern fleet boats of the Sargo, Salmon, and Porpoise classes. These went some 2,000 tons and could range up to 10,000 nautical miles on their economical diesels.

USS_Seawolf; http://www.navsource.org/archives/08/08197.htm Port side view of the Seawolf (SS-197) underway off the Mare Island Navy Yard, California, 7 March 1943. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval Historical Center. US Navy photo # NH 99549.

USS_Seawolf;  Portside view of the Seawolf (SS-197) underway off the Mare Island Navy Yard, California, 7 March 1943. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval Historical Center. US Navy photo # NH 99549.

It was with this in mind that the Asiatic Fleet’s subs started to run the Japanese gauntlet from Australia and Java into the Philippine archipelago. Over a 45-day period, at least nine made it all the way to Manila and the last U.S. stronghold in Luzon at the “Rock” of Corregidor.

Carrying antimalarial drugs, small arms and anti-aircraft ammunition, diesel for the island fortresses generators, and tons of all-important food, they unloaded these under cover of night and then evacuated the Philippines national treasury, 185 key personnel, codes, and vital records that could not fall into Japanese hands. On both the entry and exit they had to evade destroyer and aerial patrols, weave through minefields and navigate using primitive tools and often inaccurate charts, typically just surfacing at night.

Here is a brief rundown of those missions:

USS Seawolf (SS-197) a Sargo-class submarine, left Australia with 40 tons of ammo that consisted of 700 boxes of 50-caliber machine-gun bullets and 72 3-inch anti-aircraft shells. Arriving at Corregidor on January 17, she left with a cargo of submarine spare parts along with 25 Navy and Army evacuees.

USS Trout (SS-202) a Tambor-class submarine barely in service a year before the war started, left Pearl for Manila with 3500 rounds of 3″ AAA ammunition for the Army gunners and unloaded them in Manila in early February. She then took on 20 tons of gold bars and silver pesos (all the paper money in the islands had already been burned), securities, mail, and United States Department of State dispatches, which she brought back to Pearl.

USS Trout (SS-202) unloads gold to USS Detroit (CL-8), March 1942 Photo #: 80-G-45971 USS Trout (SS-202) At Pearl Harbor in early March 1942, unloading gold bars which she had evacuated from Corregidor. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives.

USS Trout (SS-202) unloads gold to USS Detroit (CL-8), March 1942 Photo #: 80-G-45971 USS Trout (SS-202) At Pearl Harbor in early March 1942, unloading gold bars which she had evacuated from Corregidor. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives.

USS Sargo (SS-188), head of her class, offloaded her torpedoes (keeping only the war shots in her tubes) and took on 1 million rounds of .30 caliber ammunition which she landed in Polloc Harbor on Valentine’s Day 1942. On her return trip, she evacuated 24 B-17 specialists from Clark Field.

Swordfish (SS-193), entering Pearl Harbor prior to WW II. USN photo by Tai Sing Loo, courtesy of Scott Koen & ussnewyork.com.

Swordfish (SS-193), entering Pearl Harbor prior to WW II. USN photo by Tai Sing Loo, courtesy of Scott Koen & ussnewyork.com.

USS Swordfish (SS-193), this Sargo-class sub took the Submarine Asiatic Command Staff at Manila and headed for Soerabaja, Java, at the end of December, the last submarine to evacuate the Philippines with the fleet. She then returned to the islands with supplies and evacuated the President of the Philippines, his family, and select high-ranking officers as well as some Navy codebreakers in late February. She was on her way back with 40 tons of food crammed into every space when Manila fell and was ordered to abort.

USS Permit (SS-178), a Porpoise-class submarine, in December, embarked members of Hart’s staff at Mariveles Harbor and brought them to Java. On a blockade run return trip, she surfaced off Corregidor on the night of 15–16 March, took on board 40 officers and enlisted men (including 36 precious code breakers from the vital cryptanalysts and traffic analysts intelligence station, CAST), and landed her cargo of ammunition. She endured a 22-hour depth-charge attack from three Japanese destroyers on her way back.

USS Seadragon (SS-194), a Sargo, on the night of 4/5 Feb in Manila Bay offloaded her cargo of vital radio gear and spare parts, as well as a portion of 34 tons of rations and almost 12,000 gallons of petroleum, then settled on the harbor floor during the day, then surfaced the next night and took aboard 25 high-value passengers including 17 CAST members, as well as 3,000 pounds of crypto gear to include a vital “Purple” machine capable of deciphering the Japanese diplomatic code and made her getaway.

USS Sailfish (formerly the lost submarine USS Squalus) (SS-192), another Sargo-class boat, landed 1,856 rounds of 3-inch anti-aircraft ammunition while taking a moment out to pump four torpedoes into the 6,440-ton Japanese aircraft ferry Kamogawa Maru, who she mistook for the carrier Kaga.

USS Snapper (SS-185), a Salmon-class boat, brought 46 tons of food and 29,000 gallons of diesel oil into Corregidor on April 4, evacuated 27 personnel, and weaved her way back through the blockade, the last successful cargo landed on the besieged fort.

USS Spearfish (SS-190) another Sargo-class boat, unable to reach Corregidor proper to offload anything, surfaced in Mariveles Bay on May 3, just two days before the Rock fell. She took on the last Americans evacuated from that doomed fortress: 25 personnel, including 12 Army nurses. She was the last U.S. ship out of the Bay.

As an honorable mention, USS Searaven (SS-196), a Sargo-class boat, left Fremantle in Australia on 2 April with 1,500 rounds of 3-inch antiaircraft ammunition but was also diverted and failed to deliver any of the shells to Corregidor.

For more detail on this chapter in U.S. military history, try the U.S. Naval Historical Center and the U.S. Army Center for Military History.

85 years missing

agent ray sutton

On Aug. 27, 1930, Federal Prohibition Agent Ray Sutton filed his routine daily report from his post of duty, Clayton, N.M., to the deputy Prohibition administrator of the Albuquerque, N.M., Office. That would be the last report he ever filed.

By the following evening, when officials became concerned by Sutton failing to file his daily report, a local sheriff searched his room at the Hotel Seaberg in Raton, N.M. The sheriff found Sutton’s personal effects and portfolio records, including his everyday topcoat. Sutton had not checked out of the hotel nor had he been seen.

The subsequent investigation into Sutton’s whereabouts revealed that on the afternoon of Aug. 28, Deputy Sheriff Boots Fletcher of Raton passed Sutton standing alone by his government-owned Pontiac sedan about seven miles south of Raton. The deputy gave Sutton a friendly wave, assuming that Sutton was waiting for an informant. Sutton waved back and was never seen again and his body has never been recovered.

If you are curious, the ATF, who inherited the Prohibition Agency, has the rest of the story

Hey buddy, got a half million to spare? I’ll give you the change

Last month’s Rock Island Auction Company’s Premiere Firearms Auction had a buttload of really neat old guns and militaria. I got to roll around in some of it they brought to Nashville when I was up there and thoroughly enjoyed myself. The high dollar piece? Check it out:

Engraved Colt Pocket Model Paterson Revolver No. 1 (Baby Paterson)

Engraved Colt Pocket Model Paterson Revolver No. 1 (Baby Paterson) Click to big up

Engraved Colt Pocket Model Paterson Revolver No. 1 (Baby Paterson) a Engraved Colt Pocket Model Paterson Revolver No. 1 (Baby Paterson) b

Drawing top dollar in this auction was this diminutive Highly Documented, Cased, and Earliest Known Factory Engraved Colt Pocket Model Paterson Revolver No. 1 (Baby Paterson) with Accessories.

Per RIA:

These pocket pistols are the earliest offering from the legendary manufacturer and this example is particularly early with its serial number of 98.  Therefore not only is it one of the first one hundred Colts ever made (in quantity), it is also the earliest known factory engraved Colt and the earliest known to be fitted with pearl grips.  Only 500 No. 1 Model revolvers were ever made.  Its mother-of-pearl grips, special 1 3/4 inch barrel, hand-engraved frame, backstrap, & barrel, six German silver band inlays, backstrap inlaid with a German silver escutcheon, case-hardened frame & hammer, and six German silver stud inlays to secure the grips are, in the opinion of Colt expert R.L. Wilson, evident that this was used as a sample piece by Samuel Colt himself.  This revolver has been in numerous prominent collections and documented in several books.

The final price? $414,000

Can we put this’ Glocks are unsafe’ myth to bed please?

Through the years, almost every time you hear of a negligent or accidental discharge with a Glock, you inevitably hear the resulting noise about how Glocks have no (active) safety and a very light/short trigger that contribute to causing accidents, thereby making them poor choices for law enforcement (and then by extension civilian) use. Well, let us talk about that.

KaPow!

In recent articles we have brought you tales of police chiefs that have accidentally shot themselves due to jacket drawstrings, officers who have had accidental and tragic gunplay at barbeques and in bathrooms, as well as Glocks that mysteriously go off when officers are cleaning them. These instances, with trained law enforcement officers, often come back to statements about how the Glock has no external safety– thus blaming the gun and not the training.

For example, when the police chief of Connersville, Indiana accidentally shot himself when his jacket drawstring caught the trigger, the mayor, Leonard Urban, defended the chief and “It was just a little accident. Dave is an excellent marksman,” Urban said. “Apparently the Glocks don’t have the trigger safety that they should have.”

As noted by Town Hall in a piece about the U.S. Capitol Police leaving guns behind them in a bathroom, the publication took pains to point out that this was especially dangerous, “as the Glock system has no external safety… thus making it easier for children who have no experience handling firearms susceptible to egregious harm–even death–from this negligence.”

But, even if you contend that many of these instances reported in the media are dropped by anti-gun publications, you are only partially correct. Even pro-gun websites throw rocks sometimes

Noted pro-2A writer and blogger Bob Owens over at Bearing Arms wrote a piece for the left-leaning LA Times slamming Glocks as a poor choice for law enforcement (even though some 60 percent of agencies voluntarily chose the guns) that he largely republished on his site.

“The underlying problem with these pistols is a short trigger pull and the lack of an external safety. In real-world encounters, a short trigger pull can be lethal, in part because a significant percentage of law enforcement officers – some experts say as high as 20 percent – put their finger on the trigger of their weapons when under stress. According to firearms trainers, most officers are completely unaware of their tendency to do this and have a hard time believing it, even when they’re shown video evidence from training exercises,” wrote Owens.

However, two of the instances that Owen’s cites occurred in New York– an agency that uses Glocks, but also orders them modified with extremely heavy ‘NY’ triggers. These increase the pull from the factory-standard 4-ish pounds to a downright double-action revolverish 12-pounds to help prevent negligent discharges by amped-up officers.

Yet the department, the largest police agency in the country, still has the occasional problem with premature discharges. Owens does not offer what magic gun that when the trigger was pulled on a loaded chamber would not have fired up as an example, however.

Could this all be solved by…Training?

G17g2 on the right, g17g4 on the left glock

Read the rest in my article at Glock Forum

Russian Seals at play

The Soviets have always had a penchant for oddball weapons systems. Determined to never lose the underwater battlespace for lack of heavily armed frogmen, they have some of the most neat-o waterguns.

I’ve covered these in the past for gun sites to include the the Avtomat Podvodnyj Spetsialnyj better known in the west as the APS underwater assault rifle and the Spetsialnyj Podvodnyj Pistolet (Russian for ‘Special Underwater Pistol,’ apparently to differentiate it from the plain underwater pistol) model 1, its moniker is commonly shortened to SPP-1 when written.

With that being said, the below video, posted by Russian media in the Crimea (which is now being beefed up to remain a hard Putin enclave in a very anti-Russki Ukraine), showing Russian Naval Spetsnaz getting down with both of the above weapon platforms, made me squeal like a prepubescent girl at a One Direction concert.

“Combat Swimmers from Russia’s Black Sea Fleet took part in drills in Sevastopol, Thursday, focused on defending the fleet from underwater saboteurs.”

Watch out for those guys, they are pretty hardcore.

Seals dressed in military uniforms swim during a show marking the 70th anniversary of the end of World War Two, at an aquatic park in the Siberian city of Irkutsk, Russia, May 9, 2015. (Photo by Evgeny Kozyrev/Reuters)

Seals dressed in military uniforms swim during a show marking the 70th anniversary of the end of World War Two, at an aquatic park in the Siberian city of Irkutsk, Russia, May 9, 2015. (Photo by Evgeny Kozyrev/Reuters)

The rock and roll Marlin: The M1918 BAR

Today each Army and Marine fire team contains at least one hard charger who is designated the squad automatic weapon man. This position, first conceived back in 1918, was until the disco era composed of a Joe or Leatherneck armed with a BAR. What’s a BAR you ask?

Officially designated “Rifle, Caliber .30, Automatic, Browning, M1918,” this 16-pound light machine gun was revolutionary when it was introduced in the tail end of the First World War. At the time, the US Army grew from 200,000 to over 4-million in the span of about 18-months. Far outstripping all of the arsenals of weapons, the new Doughboys needed a machine gun capable of being mass-produced, then carried into the field in huge numbers.

Looks comfy, no? This was the rig to help carry the BAR for the WWI-concept of "walking fire."

Looks comfy, no? This was the rig to help carry the BAR for the WWI-concept of “walking fire.”

It was to be used along with such wonder weapons as the Thompson submachine gun, Pedersen-device equipped Springfield rifles, armed airplanes, and modern field artillery to scour “No Man’s Land” of the Kaiser’s Imperial storm troopers.

Capable of full-auto fire, the gun, usually just referred to as the BAR, could fire 30.06 rounds as fast as 550 rounds per minute, which meant it could drain its 20-round detachable box magazine in as few as two seconds if set to rock and roll (or we should say, the Charleston).

However, with the magazine change in there, typical effective rate of fire was between 40-60 rounds per minute. Although a beast, it was designed to be carried and operated by a single solider, which gave squad-sized units an incredible boost in firepower.

In September 1917, the Army ordered some 25,000 of these weapons from Winchester. With the prospect of having to put one in every squad in what was projected to be the world’s largest military, Uncle called up Connecticut manufacturers Colt and Marlin-Rockwell to help army the boys “over there.”

A 1918-made Marlin-Rockwell BAR that was reworked for WWII service as a M1918A2. Image via RIA

A 1918-made Marlin-Rockwell BAR that was reworked for WWII service as a M1918A2. Image via RIA

Read the rest in my column at Marlin Forum

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