NORFOLK, Va. — A sailor was fatally shot at the world's largest naval base and security forces killed the male civilian suspect, a spokeswoman for Naval Station Norfolk said early Tuesday.
The incident occurred at approximately 11:20 p.m. Monday at Pier 1 aboard USS Mahan, base spokeswoman Terri Davis said.
U.S. Navy security forces responded to the incident and have since secured the scene. One male sailor and one male civilian suspect were pronounced dead at the scene. No other injuries were reported.
Navy officials say security forces on base shot and killed the civilian suspect who was located on the guided missile destroyer. It is unclear how the civilian was able to get the weapon on base. To get on the base, civilians must be escorted or have a pass.
An investigation is now underway.
The base was briefly put on lockdown as a precaution. The lockdown lasted for approximately 45 minutes. With the exception of Pier 1, operations have returned to normal at Naval Station Norfolk.
y Lauren King
The Virginian-Pilot
© March 25, 2014
NORFOLK
A civilian was shot and killed by security officers Monday night after disarming a petty officer standing watch on the destroyer Mahan and shooting a sailor who rushed to help.
Navy officials said the man approached the Mahan's quarterdeck and was confronted by the ship's security personnel. During a struggle, he took a gun from the petty officer on watch and shot another sailor. Navy security forces then shot the man, who they said was not carrying his own weapon.
The incident occurred about 11:20 p.m. on Pier 1, according to Navy spokeswoman Terri Davis. No other injuries were reported.
The civilian was authorized to be on the base, but Davis could not provide additional details.
It's not clear whether he was authorized to be on Pier 1 or the Mahan. The Navy generally keeps check points at pier and ship entrances as well as at base gates.
The sailor who died was described only as a male. Navy officials expect to release his identity after his relatives have been contacted.
Admiral Bill Gortney, the head of Fleet Forces Command in Norfolk, opened an energy workshop on base this morning with a moment of silence "for our shipmate." He added: "We will find out what happened and we will prevent that from happening again."
A week ago, the Pentagon released a series of recommendations to improve military base security in the wake of last year's mass shooting at the Washington Navy Yard. A contractor, Aaron Alexis, killed 12 people before shooting himself. Gortney helped lead the review.
Among the recommendations was a continuous evaluation system to routinely update background checks of personnel who hold security clearances to access military installations. Navy Secretary Ray Mabus said the recommendations had already been implemented.
The base was put on lockdown for about 45 minutes after the shooting as a precaution. Officers, chiefs and duty section personnel should report to the Mahan this morning, but non-duty section enlisted personnel were being told not to report, according to a release from Davis. Counselors were called in from the Fleet and Family Support Center.
Pilot writers Dianna Cahn, Cindy Clayton, Corinne Reilly and Mike Hixenbaugh contributed to this report along with The Associated Press.
___
Wow.
this is going to cause changes in training as despite the anti stealth crowd everything says Stealth is the Way the USAF will be going for the foreseeable.B-2 fire damage made worse by firefighting shortcomings
By: JON HEMMERDINGERWASHINGTON DC Source: Flightglobal.com in 33 minutes
A US Air Force report about a 2010 fire on a Northrop Grumman B-2 bomber says that firefighting crews in Guam were unfamiliar with the aircraft’s tailpipe or with the potential for tailpipe fires.
The report, dated 26 May 2010 but only recently posted on the USAF’s website, attributes the fire to the aircraft’s design and inadequate flight manuals, but calls attention to training shortcomings with the firefighting team at Andersen AFB on Guam.
It says those shortcomings likely resulted in additional damage to the roughly $1.7 billion aircraft, which required $64.4 million in repairs over nearly four years.
Two fire chiefs at Guam told the USAF “they were unaware that a tailpipe bay existed, and they were unaware that there was a potential for fire inside it,” says the report.
asset image
US Air Force
The USAF did not immediately provide answer to questions about why fire crews were ill prepared, or about any steps taken to improve training.
The fire began on 26 February 2010, after the crew started all four of the aircraft’s General Electric F118 engines, and then shut one down following a generator problem.
During restart, “reverse airflow”, possibly caused by the adjacent running engine, drew fuel vapour into the tailpipe, says the report. The vapour ignited, which ignited oil-soaked foam in the tailpipe bay, says the report.
Firefighters contained the blaze after 26min, but applied less than 5% of 34,000 gallons of extinguishing fluid on the tailpipe. That was where the fire was hottest, at about 1,000˚F, says the report.
“There were delays in putting agent on the fire at its source in the tailpipe bay, which allowed the fire to burn longer and likely resulted in increased damage,” says the USAF. “No one in the Andersen AFB fire department was familiar with B-2 tailpipe bays.”
The USAF also recently released a report about a second B-2 ground incident, which occurred on 8 July 2011 at Whiteman AFB in Missouri. Crew error contributed to that incident, which involved overheating of the aircraft’s pitot system, says the report.
The overheating occurred because the pitot static heat switch was turned to the “on” position for 67min while the aircraft was connected to ground power during a fuel-offloading procedure, says the report.
“This action was a clear procedural error and a causal factor in the mishap,” says the report. “This switch must be in the off position prior to applying external electrical power.”
The USAF says it could not determine which crew member turned on the switch, but notes that it could have been mistaken for the adjacent windshield defog switch, which should be set to “min” while under ground power.
The overheating damaged all of the aircraft‘s 24 static port transducer units and two panels on which the units were mounted, says the USAF.
Opinions please?Locklear: Attack submarine needs going unmet in Pacific
Mar. 25, 2014 - 05:08PM |
By John T. Bennett
Staff writer Navy times
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WASHINGTON — The admiral in charge of all U.S. military forces in the Pacific says some of his needs for attack submarines are going unmet.
Under the Navy’s latest shipbuilding plans, as noted during a Tuesday hearing by Senate Armed Services Committee member Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., the American attack submarine fleet is slated to dip to 42 by 2029, down from today’s 55-submarine fleet.
Ayotte and other senators say they are concerned that as China increases its submarine force and overall Navy fleet, America is shrinking its attack sub fleet to dangerous levels.
“They’re not all being met,” Adm. Samuel Locklear told Ayotte when she asked if all of his attack-submarine requirements are being fulfilled.
Ayotte questioned how the Obama administration can “justify” going from 55 to 42 attack subs by 2029 while China is ramping up its fleet. She sees “a disconnect” between the requirements likely to face Locklear’s successors and current shipbuilding plans.
Locklear said that plan is “unfortunately” the best Navy leaders have “been able to do” given flattening US defense budgets and spending caps.
“It comes down to managing risk and where we can absorb risk,” Locklear said.
The matter is important to Ayotte, whose state hosts Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, which provides New Hampshire about 4,700 jobs, according to a Naval Sea Systems Command fact sheet.
The shipyard is capable of performing work on the Navy’s Los Angeles, Ohio and Virginia submarine classes, according to the fact sheet.
While hawkish and parochial-minded senators warned about shipbuilding plans and China’s military build up, Locklear poured cold water on worries of a U.S.-China war.
Locklear addressed the notion of the “inevitability” of an armed conflict between the United States and China, saying: “I don’t think it is.”
He also warned against rhetoric that might tilt the situation toward war.
On a related matter, the Pacific Command chief also doubts the onset of a China-Japan conflict over territory in that region.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., pressed Locklear about the chance of conflict between Beijing and Tokyo, but the admiral replied he does not think such a war is likely.
The two Asian powers have been feuding over the Senkaku Islands, which Japan controls and China claims.
Don't Rock the boat...Pentagon says Benghazi probes cost millions
Mar. 25, 2014 - 06:19PM |
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By Donna Cassata
The Associated Press
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WASHINGTON — Congress’ multiple investigations of the deadly 2012 attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, have cost the Pentagon millions of dollars and thousands of hours of personnel time, according to the department.
In a March 11 letter, the Defense Department outlined its cooperation with six investigations of the Sept. 11 assault that killed four Americans, including U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens, and its response to repetitive requests for information from about 50 congressional hearings, briefings and interviews.
The letter was in response to a request by Rep. Adam Smith of Washington state, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, who questioned the ongoing investigations in light of cuts to the military budget and reports, some written by Republicans, largely clearing the military of any wrongdoing.
“The total cost of compliance with Benghazi-related congressional requests sent to the department and other agencies is estimated to be in the millions of dollars,” the Pentagon said.
For example, retired Army Gen. Carter Ham, the former commander of Africa Command, has briefed or testified before congressional panels five times over two years, and yet both the Armed Services Committee and House Oversight and Government Reform have asked Ham to submit to additional interviews.
Congressional Republicans have been relentless in investigating the attack, arguing the Obama administration misled the American people about a terror attack during the heat of the 2012 presidential campaign. The GOP is determined to press ahead, especially since the assault on the mission occurred during Hillary Rodham Clinton’s tenure as secretary of state.
Clinton is a potential 2016 presidential candidate.
Smith subsequently wrote to Rep. Howard “Buck” McKeon, R-Calif., chairman of the committee, asking that the panel end its involvement with “this witch-hunt.
“More than any other committee in Congress, this committee should understand the financial strain on the Department of Defense, which is being made worse by these ongoing and ridiculous investigations,” Smith wrote.
Claude Chafin, a spokesman for McKeon, said the chairman appreciated Smith’s concerns, and added, “It is important that the committee see this oversight effort through to its conclusion.”
An independent review in the aftermath of the attack faulted the State Department and security at the Benghazi compound. A Senate Intelligence Committee report in January said the attack could have been prevented, blaming the State Department, the military and U.S. intelligence.
That report also pointed at Stevens, saying the State Department ended a deal with the military to have a special operations team provide extra security in Libya, and that Stevens twice refused an offer to reinstate the team in the weeks before the attack.
The military also is criticized in the report for failing to respond more quickly on the night of the assault.
But that report, as well as a February report by the Republicans on Armed Services, said there was no order to military personnel not to aid those in Benghazi, as some Republicans have suggested.
“There was no ‘stand down’ order issued to U.S. military personnel in Tripoli [Libya’s capital] who sought to join the fight in Benghazi,” said the GOP majority on the House Armed Services Committee. “However, because official reviews after the attack were not sufficiently comprehensive, there was confusion about the roles and responsibilities of these individuals.”
The bipartisan Senate Intelligence report said it had “reviewed the allegations that U.S. personnel, including in the intelligence community or Defense Department, prevented the mounting of any military relief effort during the attacks, but the committee has not found any of these allegations to be substantiated.”
Mexico looks to expand training with Marines
Mar. 25, 2014 - 04:01PM |
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Partnership of the America's/ Southern Exchange
Cpl James Hunt, with 3rd Assault Amphibian Battalion, teaches Mexican marines ground fighting tactics in Manzanillo, Colima, Mexico. The Mexican government and marine corps might expand the training mission with their American counterparts as they fight on the front lines of that country's drug war. (Cpl. Brian Slaght/Marine Corps)
By Gina Harkins
Staff writer
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More Marines will be tapped to deploy south of the border as their Mexican counterparts look toward expanding the training mission between the two militaries, building on their recent successes in counter-narcotics operations.
Small teams of Marines have been regularly deploying to Mexico since October 2012 as part of the reserve component’s Security Force Assistance Training Teams.
Members of 4th Reconnaissance Battalion led the mission for a year, rotating teams to the Yucatan Peninsula in southern Mexico for about two months at a time, according to a recently published newsletter from the Marine Corps Center for Lessons Learned.
Now those commitments could expand as the Mexican government and its marines consider accelerating the mission, the newsletter states.
“Mexican and [U.S. Northern Command] military officials enjoy collaborative relationships, based on trust and confidence, which are critically important to future cooperation and mutual support,” said Lt. Cmdr. Bill Lewis, a NORTHCOM spokesman. “We have established a firm foundation for cooperation and this foundation will continue to benefit both our countries for many years ahead.”
Mexican marines have been essential to the fight against drug cartels that infiltrated the nation’s institutions and contributed to widespread corruption. They’ve taken down several high-ranking targets, like Nazario Moreno Gonzalez, leader of the Knights Templar cartel, who they killed March 9. Weeks earlier, the marines captured Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, who experts called the world’s most wanted drug lord.
As Mexican marines stepped up to that fight, the training missions with the Marine Corps has “evolved to include increasingly advanced training programs,” the newsletter states.
Marine Corps Times sought interviews with members of 4th Recon who have deployed to Mexico to train the marines, but none was available. Marine Corps Forces North referred the query to NORTHCOM, which sought approval from the Mexican embassy to discuss the mission, but the query was not approved by press time.
Lt. Gen. Richard Mills, commander of MARFORNORTH, told Marine Corps Times last year that maintaining the partnership with the Mexican marines was one of his top priorities. They were focused on helping the marines expand the capabilities and skills needed in the counter-drug fight.
“We work with them on close-quarter combat,” Mills said. “All those sorts of skills you’d need to be in a fight against a pretty well-armed, criminal, rogue element within the country.”
There are mutual benefits to expanding the program, said Dakota Wood, a retired lieutenant colonel and senior research fellow for defense programs at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington think tank. Marines deploying to Mexico can help the local military stamp out corruption and serious problems that reach U.S. borders, he said. And the positive interaction between the two services can be a conduit to open up relationships in other areas, he added.
“It’s a relatively small investment in time and money against a very big problem,” Wood said. “About $35 billion courses through the drug cartel network, so it’s a huge problem with very violent organizations. If you can have the Mexican navy, marine corps or army assist in combating that, the United States takes that is a win too.”
Most of the Marines who deployed with 4th Recon were fluent in Spanish, according to the newsletter, and Wood said that’s likely to continue.
“You’re wanting to make this as easy and effective as possible given the time that you have,” he said. “If you can overcome a language barrier by using Spanish speakers instead of having to do something through translations, that’s always better.”
Mexican marines are also likely to continue seeking training from infantry Marines because that force going after cartels is not getting into aviation or supply training, Wood said. Instead, they’re likely looking for training packages that include small-unit tactics, patrolling, marksmanship training and basic troop-leading, he said.
“It makes perfect sense understanding the culture that you’re dealing with to have U.S. Marine infantrymen — perceived as the war fighter — interacting with them,” Wood said.■
Troops left to fend for themselves after Army was warned of flaws in rifle
By Rowan Scarborough-The Washington Times Wednesday, February 19, 2014
First of two parts
Army Senior Warrant Officer Russton B. Kramer, a 20-year Green Beret, has learned that if you want to improve your chances to survive, it's best to personally make modifications to the Army's primary rifle — the M4 carbine.
Warrant Officer Kramer has been dropped into some of the most ferocious battles in the war on terrorism, from hunting Islamists in the mountains of northern Iraq to disrupting Taliban opium dealers in dusty southern Afghanistan. He was awarded the Silver Star for his bravery in Operation Viking Hammer to crush the terrorist group Ansar al-Islam in Iraq.
The warrant officer said he and fellow Special Forces soldiers have a trick to maintain the M4A1 — the commando version: They break the rules and buy off-the-shelf triggers and other components and overhaul the weapon themselves.
"The reliability is not there," Warrant Officer Kramer said of the standard-issue model. "I would prefer to use something else. If I could grab something else, I would."
Documents obtained by The Washington Times show the Pentagon was warned before the Afghanistan and Iraq wars that the iterations of the M4 carbine were flawed and might jam or fail, especially in the harsh desert conditions that both wars inflicted.
U.S. Special Operations Command in 2001 issued a damning private report that said the M4A1 was fundamentally flawed because the gun failed when called on to unleash rapid firing.
In 2002, an internal report from the Army's Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey said the M4A1 was prone to overheating and "catastrophic barrel failure," according to a copy obtained by The Times.
The test findings also carried ramifications for the regular Army. By 2002, soldiers were carrying thousands of the conventional, light-barrel M4, of which the service ultimately would buy nearly 500,000 and send them into long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The M4, at times, has been called upon to perform the same kind of rapid fire as the M4A1.
Colt Defense LLC of Hartford, Conn., which lost exclusive M4 design rights in 2009, has steadfastly defended the rifle through years of controversy. The Army contract went to another manufacturer last year.
Colt did not respond to requests for comment.
The gun manufacturer's website states that "throughout the world today, the Colt's M4 reliability, performance and accuracy provide joint coalition forces with the confidence required to accomplish any mission. Designed specifically for lightweight mobility, speed of target acquisition, and potent firepower capability, the M4 delivers. Proven in military combat operations all over the world, it is in a class by itself as a first rate combat weapon system."
Colt's monopoly on the Army's weapon ended in February 2013, when the service awarded the M4 contract to FN Herstal, a global firearms manufacturer owned by Belgium's regional Walloon government and the operator of a plant in South Carolina.
Colt had a good run. Since the mid-1990s, the Army has spent $600 million to buy more than a half-million carbines.
Critics say the SoCom and Army reports should have prompted the Army to pursue a better design in the early 2000s. The Army periodically improved the rifle, but did not conduct a comprehensive upgrade until a senator pressured the top brass years later.
In 2011, a decade after the Sept. 11 attacks, the Army announced that it was converting M4s to the commando version with a heavier barrel and automatic trigger firing.
Some of the problems uncovered in 2001 and 2002, such as stoppages or jamming, became evident in the conventional firearm, most infamously in the 2008 Battle of Wanat in Afghanistan in which nine U.S. troops lost their lives.
"Realistically speaking, there's been loss of life that is unneeded because there was a dumbing-down of the weapon system," said Scott Traudt, who advised the Army on how to improve the M4 a decade ago.
Today, he is a special adviser at Green Mountain Defense Industries of Strafford, Vt., a Colt competitor that is manufacturing a new rifle that it hopes to sell to special operations.
Replaced by SCAR
In an independent overall survey of soldiers back from Iraq and Afghanistan, 20 percent reported that the M4 jammed during battle, and one-fifth of those said the stoppages made a "large impact."
Faced with inaction by the Pentagon, soldiers such as Warrant Officer Kramer have taken matters into their own hands, even at the risk of discipline.
"There are enhancements you can do to your weapon to bring that reliability level up. While we're not authorized to change our weapon or modify them in any manner, obviously there are some guys out there, including myself, we'll add some things to our guns to bring that reliability level up," he told The Times. "I'd rather face six of my peers in a court martial versus being 6 feet down."
The M4 has brought consistent complaints about at least three shortfalls: At a 250-yard effective-kill distance, it lacks range; its 5.56 mm round lacks killing power; and the gun requires constant maintenance — cleaning and lubricating — in sandy conditions or is prone to jamming. Soldiers also complain that the magazine dents easily and the springs break.
The short-barreled weapon was suited for house-to-house fighting in Iraq. But in Afghanistan, its lack of range meant that the Taliban could operate at a safe distance.
Mr. Traudt said there are M4 failures in battle that do not get publicized. The fact that M4s broke down at Wanat was not known publicly until Army historians chronicled the battle and released their narrative in 2010. Even the general in charge of buying the gun said he had not heard of the problems until the press reported on the Army history.
There does not appear to be a comprehensive assessment of the M4 by any oversight agency — even though the weapon is the ground warrior's most critical asset. The Government Accountability Office, Congress' auditor, has not assessed the M4 since it entered service in the mid-1990s. Likewise, the Pentagon's top operational tester has not conducted live-fire tests of the M4 or the commando M4A1.
Alarmed after the 2001 test, SoCom developed its own gun, the Special Operations Forces Assault Rifle (SCAR), and handed it out to Army Rangers, Green Berets and Navy SEALs. Delta Force, the Army's elite counterterrorism unit, bought a German-designed rifle. Sources say SoCom is not entirely happy with either gun and still relies on the M4A1.
"The 5.56 [caliber] SCAR was a failure from the viewpoint of the men," said Ryan Zinke, a former member of SEAL Team 6, the elite terrorist-hunting unit.
A questionable standard
The M4 carbine's Iraq-Afghanistan history is replete with spotty tests and performance, but also with praise from a devoted cadre who took it to war. The M4, a lighter, shorter-range version of the M16 rifle, is generally popular among the majority of combat-savvy soldiers who completed questionnaires, Army surveys show.
The Times interviewed two active-duty special operations troops who noted flaws but expressed love for the Colt-developed gun.
"The reality for all armies is that governments cannot afford to purchase a perfect assault rifle. It is simply cost-prohibitive," said an Army Green Beret who is not authorized to speak on the record. "For its cost, I consider the M4 to be an amazing assault rifle. Between the M16 and M4, I've carried weapons from that family for nearly 30 years and would not trade them for any other fielded families of assault rifles."
A Marine commando who served in Afghanistan praised the firearm but noted that it requires constant cleaning or becomes vulnerable to jamming. "The first thing you do back at camp is clean the gun," he said.
Mr. Zinke, the former SEAL, said the M4A1 improved as its flaws were worked out.
"The M4 has become the standard special forces weapon system," said Mr. Zinke. "The rail system has greatly improved over time and can easily accommodate advances in optics, illumination and targeting. The 5.56 mm M4 provides an appropriate trade-off between range and firepower. Improvements and diversity in ammunition types has also improved its versatility."
Mr. Traudt, of Green Mountain Defense, said the military paid his company a decade ago for ideas for fixing the M4. He produced his company's product, a 2001 technical report titled "Carbine extended life barrel and selected reliability improvement components identification."
"The M4s were substandard," he said. "The Army paid us to find a way to improve them, improve them cheaply with a little bit of extra engineering and metallurgical changes to make a gun that was markedly more reliable than the Colt weapon. The Army took our advice and did nothing with it."
'It's virtually useless'
Retired Army Maj. Gen. Robert Scales, an artillery officer who earned the Silver Star in Vietnam, is a prominent M4 critic.
He said its 5.56-caliber bullet is too small and the gas-piston firing system is prone to stoppage. He said better weapons — the German Heckler-Koch G36 and Russian AK-74 (a version of the venerable AK-47) — use superior firing systems.
"Frankly, this whole thing is scandalous," Gen. Scales said. "We send soldiers into close combat with lousy weapons and we've done it since World War II and nobody complains. It's a national outrage.
"It has no penetrating power," he said of the M4. "It's ineffective against vehicles, against bunkers. It's ineffective against virtually anything except a man in the open. Put a flak jacket on the enemy and it's virtually useless."
The Army believes it is answering critics such as Gen. Scales with a 5.56 mm round — the "green" lead-free M885A1 introduced in 2010. The ammunition, the Army contends, has more penetration power and longer effective range to kill the enemy.
Gen. Scales also asks why the Army issues only one model of conventional carbine.
"More soldiers are killed because of small-arms engagement than air-sea battle, air-to-air combat," he said. "There is a difference between breaking down doors in Baghdad and fighting in the open, flat terrain of Afghanistan. One deserves a heavy bullet with longer range. One deserves to be light and nimble and maneuverable inside of buildings."
In 2009, eight years into the war, an Army officer wrote a study making that point.
"Open source reports from Afghanistan since 2001 reveal that soldiers are engaging the enemy at ranges from contact distance to beyond the maximum effective range of the M4 carbine," wrote Maj. Thomas P. Ehrhart, who at that time was attending the School of Advanced Military Studies at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. "Many comments focus on the ability of the soldier to hit his intended target or a failure of the bullet to achieve the desired effect."
He summed up his findings by concluding that the M4 is not the best weapon for America's longest war: "Operations in Afghanistan frequently require United States ground forces to engage and destroy the enemy at ranges beyond 300 meters. While the infantryman is ideally suited for combat in Afghanistan, his current weapons, doctrine, and marksmanship training do not provide a precise, lethal fire capability to 500 meters and are therefore inappropriate."
Troublesome test reports
The first second-guessing on the M4 occurred inside the military in 2000, when U.S. Special Operations Command, in conjunction with gun specialists at Naval Sea Systems Command, conducted an exhaustive evaluation of its version — the heavier-barrel M4A1. At the time, SoCom had no idea it was testing a critical weapon on the eve of two major land wars that would thrust commandos into constant combat.
With SEALs and Green Berets in mind, testers subjected the carbine to the kind of constant barrel-burning fire in harsh conditions that would erupt in Iraq and Afghanistan.
SoCom's private study called the M4A1 carbine "fundamentally flawed." Upon firing, the bolt opened and attempted to extract a cartridge case that was stuck to the chamber because of pressure from the fired round. The gun can be kept at "reasonable levels of reliability" if subjected to "intense maintenance," the report said.
The study also mentioned "alarming failures of the M4A1 in operations under harsh conditions and heavy firing." It blamed six factors, including spare parts shortages and a "decline in quality control along with mass production."
The report said that at a conference of joint special operations forces — SEALs, Rangers and Delta Force — the warriors "identified multiple operational deficiencies inherent to the M4A1" including reliability, safety and accuracy."
Barrels can become loose and "become inaccurate."
Still, the SoCom report said, the M4A1 "essentially meets the needs of conventional Army users."
Months later, the Army's Armament Technology Facility, part of the Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey, conducted its own study of the M4A1.
The 2002 report sent by the facility's chief to Special Operations Command told of "reliability problems related to the failure to extract and eject casings, broken bolts, failure to function in arctic and over-the-beach (surf zone, surface and subsurface swimmer) environments," according to a copy obtained by The Times.
"The M4A1 has also experienced cook-off [premature ammunition explosion] after a relatively few numbers of rounds have been fired at a high rate of fire," it said. "Catastrophic barrel failure has also been experienced after a relatively low number of rounds have been fired."
Preventing jamming
The Times asked Special Operations Command why it continued to distribute the M4A1.
"The M4A1 and M4 Carbines have served our forces well during more than a decade of sustained combat," said Navy Capt. Kevin Aandahl. "The Army has improved the M4A1/M4 significantly over the past 12 years. The Army developed a heavy barrel and placed it in production in 2002. In addition, the M4 and M4A1 have received improvements to the trigger assembly, extractor spring, recoil buffer, barrel chamber, magazine and bolt. These upgrades addressed the issues raised in the 2002 report."
Capt. Aandahl said the command on its own has fielded new gun parts to "improve the M4A1 capability to meet USSOCOM requirements for close-in, urban operations and room-clearing types of engagements that require this type of weapon."
The same year Picatinny weighed in, the Marine Corps conducted its own testing of the conventional M4. The Corps infantryman's main rifle was then, and is today, the longer-range, heavier-barrel M16.
The Army Times, an independent Gannett newspaper, later reported that the "M4 malfunctioned three times more often than the M16A4."
To Mr. Traudt and other M4 critics, the testing should have prompted the Army to rethink the design as thousands of the carbines were about to be shipped overseas.
Mr. Traudt said he thinks the jamming problems encountered by a significant segment of troops over the past decade could have been avoided if special operations continued developing Green Mountain's Reliability Product Improvement Kit.
The kit was tested at the Naval Surface Warfare Center in Crane, Ind., in 2001 and at Picatinny in 2002. It included replacing the extractor spring, ejector spring, gas tube and gas plug with more heat-resistant ones, and moving to a one-piece, four-coil system that was engineered from more thermally durable materials to make the gun function better.
"An M4A1, when equipped with those parts, will fire continuously on full-automatic magazine after magazine until its barrel disintegrates," Mr. Traudt said. "In our tests, M4A1 barrel failure occurred at 1,375 rounds. A normal Army M4A1 is out of action at 840 shots fired when equipped with its standard, metallurgically and technologically antiquated parts — and this isn't even barrel failure. It's gas system or bolt failure."
At the time of the tests, internal reports by SoCom and Picatinny said the M4A1 was terribly flawed and not suited for commando missions.
One person on Capitol Hill eventually took notice. By 2007, enough anecdotal evidence had poured in from the wars to prompt Sen. Tom Coburn, Oklahoma Republican, to launch a campaign for the Army to find a new rifle.
"Considering the longstanding reliability and lethality problems with the M16 design, of which the M4 is based, I am afraid that our troops in combat might not have the best weapon," Mr. Coburn wrote to the Army in April 2007. "A number of manufacturers have researched, tested and fielded weapons which, by all accounts, appear to provide significantly improved reliability."
The senator fought a lonely battle the next five years. No other lawmaker joined his campaign for a better basic rifle, but in the end, he forced the Army to change.
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Cover-up? Army historian says report on deadly Afghan battle was altered to absolve faulty gun
Survivors of bloody battle report M4 jams
By Rowan Scarborough-The Washington Times Thursday, February 20, 2014
Army 1st Lt. Jonathan P. Brostrom, 24, was killed in Afghanistan in 2008 in the battle of Wanat. Critics of the M4 have long pointed to that battle as evidence that the rifle's design is flawed. (U.S. Army)
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Army 1st Lt. Jonathan P. Brostrom, 24, was killed in Afghanistan in ... more >
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Conclusion in Battle Report Changed to Hide Gun Fault
Second of two parts.
A former Army historian who chronicled the infamous Battle of Wanat in Afghanistan, where nine U.S. soldiers died after their M4 carbines jammed, tells The Washington Times that his official account was altered by higher-ups to absolve the weapons and senior officers.
M4 critics have long pointed to the Afghanistan battle on July 13, 2008, as evidence that the rifle's design was flawed. They cite reports from soldiers on the ground that their guns overheated and jammed that day.
But the gun's supporters have pointed to a single sentence in the official Wanat history issued in 2010 by the Army's Combat Studies Institute at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. It blamed the gun's sustained rapid fire that day, not its design, for the malfunctions.
"This, not weapons maintenance deficiencies or inherent weaknesses in weapons design, was the reason a number of weapons jammed during the battle," the sentence read.
Higher-ups inside Army command edited that sentence into the history, the report's author says.
"That was not my conclusion," said Douglas R. Cubbison, a former Army artillery officer and principal Wanat history author. "That was the Combat Studies Institute management that was driven from the chief of staff's office to modify findings of that report to basically CYA [cover your ass] for the Army. You know how that works.
"Other soldiers have informally told me of similar problems they had with the M4 at high rates of fire," said Mr. Cubbison, who is now curator of the Wyoming Veterans Memorial Museum.
Higher-ups made other changes, such as removing much of the historian's criticism of senior officers for not better preparing the outpost for an attack.
"The Army tried to manipulate that study after it was basically done. They significantly changed things to a classic CYA," Mr. Cubbison said.
Lt. Col. James Lowe, a spokesman at Fort Leavenworth, said the Army sticks by the changes it has made.
"The way that our studies are done, it's a staff process," he said. "And they disagreed with some of his conclusions about the weapons, and they firmly believe that the analysis supports what's actually in the report."
M4 critics say exonerating the M4 at Wanat follows a pattern: The Army vigorously defends its front-line rifle in public; behind the scenes, it works to correct its flaws.
The Times reported Thursday that documents it obtained show the Pentagon was warned as early as 2001 and 2002 that the M4A1 carbine — the commando version — had flaws that made it more likely to jam in desert conditions.
The editing to absolve the M4 was important because Sen. Tom Coburn, Oklahoma Republican, was waging a campaign to convince the Army that the gun was faulty and needed replacing.
Critics said Mr. Cubbison's history showed the gun was not designed for America's longest war, in which triggers, magazines and pistons must withstand sand and be called on to unleash rapid fire.
An interesting footnote is that, until the history was first leaked in 2009 and published a year later, no one had reported publicly that multiple M4s failed soldiers that day. A lengthy TV documentary on Wanat never broached the subject.
Mr. Cubbison said the history spoke for itself and did not need changes by managers.
"It was also not the assessment of numerous soldiers at Wanat," he said.
Unlike Desert Storm, a war fought mostly with planes and armor, counterinsurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan put rifles to the ultimate test in a series of fire fights, year in, year out, making the M4 the soldier's most important weapon.
Failure in the heat of battle
The history recounts in detail the day a Taliban force assaulted a combat outpost in Wanat in the Nuristan province of northeastern Afghanistan. Manned by 49 U.S. soldiers, including 40 paratroopers of the 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team, the outpost sat in a bowl surrounded by mountains from which the soldiers predicted in homemade videos that they would be attacked one day like sitting ducks.
Staff Sgt. Erich Phillips, a seasoned combatant who had been awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, burned out three M4s trying to defend a mortar position.
"In particular, the M4s experienced difficulty maintaining such a rate after the barrels got excessively hot. When that occurred, the weapons would jam, as happened to Phillips," the history said.
These soldiers were experiencing the types of weapon failures found by testers in 2001 and 2002.
"Six years later, we can't fix a known problem in the middle of a war," Mr. Cubbison told The Times.
Spc. Chris McKaig told of firing from a crow's nest as a comrade, its only other inhabitant, was gunned down.
"My weapon was overheating," he said. "I had shot about 12 magazines by this point already and it had only been about a half-hour or so into the fight. I couldn't charge my weapon and put another round in because it was too hot, so I got mad and threw my weapon down."
The historians wrote that "most of the weapons that jammed at Wanat were M4 carbines."
Still, they concluded it was not the M4's fault.
In the official Army history, the full management edit — not performed by the authors — reads: "The M4 was the basic individual weapon carried by U.S. Soldiers in Afghanistan and was not designed to fire at the maximum or cyclic rate for extended periods. Enemy action and weapons dispositions forced the defenders to use their M4s in uncharacteristic roles. This, not weapons maintenance deficiencies or inherent weaknesses in weapons design, was the reason a number of weapons jammed during the battle."
Rescinded punishments
Scott Traudt, a small-arms specialist whose company, Green Mountain Defense Industries, is manufacturing its own assault rifle, called the finding a whitewash.
"Fielding a battle rifle whose barrel blows up in sustained fire after only 490 rounds is criminal negligence," he said. "[The] weapons failed because they were designed around some arbitrary, 'average' combat situation by somebody oblivious to the present and future high consumptive, mobile, asymmetric wars and insurgencies we face."
Mr. Cubbison said there was talk inside and outside the Army that the soldiers were to blame for not maintaining their M4s.
"I can tell you, I guarantee you, weapons were cleaned in that platoon," he said. "I've talked to just about every guy who was there. They knew it was a bad location. They expected to get hit and get hit hard. Nobody was going to neglect weapons maintenance when they're expecting to be in the soup at any moment. Weapons cleaning wasn't an issue."
Mr. Cubbison said he has a contact inside a small-arms unit of Program Executive Office Soldier, the Army command that equips warriors.
"I know that those guys have done a lot of work on reviewing and evaluating the weapon and trying to figure out what the problem is with it," he said.
Retired Army Col. David Brostrom lost his son, 1st Lt. Jonathan Brostrom, that day in Wanat village. After reading early post-action reports, he became convinced those soldiers were let down by superiors who failed to take basic steps to protect the outpost and heed intelligence reports. He pushed for further investigation, which led to an extensive U.S. Central Command report in June 2010.
It found that the company, battalion and brigade commanders were derelict in their duties. A four-star general disciplined three officers but withdrew the punishment after they provided additional information.
Col. Brostrom says today he should have pushed the inquiry to focus more attention on performance of the M4.
"Maybe it was my mistake. I didn't focus on the jamming," he said. "I knew about the gun, and I knew it wasn't great. It took a lot of fire discipline among your soldiers to keep the gun working.
"Because they were so close to the enemy, some were just sticking their weapons above the sandbags and spraying and praying. Putting the weapons on automatic and letting it go.
"A little bit of dirt in that thing, it won't sustain that high rate of fire at all. The barrel gets hot and everything melts in the dang thing. They were firing their weapons trying to save their lives and just about everything jammed."
Magazine malfunctions
Col. Brostrom said he does not know whether some M4s jammed after limited fire while others quit after rapid automatic rounds. He does know that by the time his son made his way to the outpost under intense fire, virtually all the weapons had shut down. A corporal had no working gun when Lt. Brostrom arrived.
The corporal "jumped down to the lower step and tried to go after them with his bare hands. They shot him point-blank in the chest," he said.
The Taliban shot his son multiple times.
"I know now if the weapons were better and they would not have jammed, there would be more soldiers alive, maybe even my son," Col. Brostrom said.
Chief Warrant Officer Tyler Stafford knew the M4 had drawbacks months before a wave of rocket-propelled grenades hit the Wanat outpost that day.
Then-Spc. Stafford had experienced two gunbattles during which his M4 jammed because of what he considers a substandard 30-round magazine.
He contends that, while Army higher-ups say soldiers pushed the carbines beyond their firing capacity that day and burned out the barrels, faulty magazines could be the culprit in some of the stoppages.
"The Army never looked at the type of magazines that were used," he said. "That's what we found would cause a lot of failures. If you used the standard old Army tin magazines that had been used in a couple of deployments, they really wore down and would cause a lot of jams just because of failure to feed and the springs were worn out in them.
"They just don't get replaced readily, and when they do, they still get replaced by a standard-issue magazine that just isn't a very good magazine at all."
To improve the M4 on the run, Chief Warrant Officer Stafford said, "A lot of us went out and bought our own magazines. They worked far better."
Defending the carbine
Chief Warrant Officer Stafford has left the gritty job of infantryman for the world of Army aviation, flying AH-64 Apache helicopters.
Since the 2008 battle, he took the time to research the M4's history — the spotty tests, the soldier surveys, the attempts to improve it — and compared the data with his own experiences.
His assessment: "It is my personal belief that the M4 is a substandard front-line weapon and lacks the reliability and firepower that many infantrymen are in need of.
"Everybody's biggest problem with the M4 is that it's such a high-maintenance weapon, that continually you have to keep it very, very clean, very well-oiled," he said. "In the infantry world, that's tough to do, especially when you're living in the dirt and fighting every other day."
Whatever the internal discussions, the Army has defended the rifle in public for more than a decade.
Lt. Col. Donald Peters, a spokesman at the Pentagon, said the service has made 41 improvements since 2001 that were among 90 engineering changes to the M4 and commando M4A1 since the gun was in development in the early 1990s.
The plan now is to revamp M4s into higher-performance M4A1s beginning this winter.
"The M4A1 the Army is currently producing has a slightly heavier barrel than the M4, which increases the weapons system's ability to withstand heat and therefore gives it a greater sustained rate of fire," Col. Peters said. "The M4A1 also has full auto capability and more consistent trigger pull, along with ambidextrous fire control."
The Army often cites surveys to defend the M4. It questions every unit that returns from combat and finds that eight out of 10 like the gun.
The Center for Naval Analysis found the same results in a 2006 independent survey of 2,600 soldiers who had been in Afghanistan and Iraq.
But soldiers did complain about a lack of lethality. One of the major gripes was from retired Army Maj. Gen. Robert Scales, a highly decorated artillery officer.
Perhaps more important, 20 percent reported that the M4 had jammed during a firefight. Of those, 18 percent said the stoppage had a "large impact" in battle.
Put to the test
Gen. Scales said the problem with such surveys is that they do not focus on the soldiers who engaged in the most intense combat during which the M4 is fired and relied on the most.
"The people who use the M4 seriously, the close-combat soldiers, when they use it seriously for a Wanat, their vote is the same in these surveys as the kid who is a computer operator at Camp Victory," he said. "So when you lump it all together, the whole thing seems to be perfectly fine."
As for Chief Warrant Officer Stafford's firsthand experience with M4 magazines, Gen. Scales said: "If my son were in the infantry, for his birthday I would buy him about 50 [German] Heckler and Koch magazines, not just for him, but for his buds. Why do we die for a dollar-and-seventy-cent item when a fighter plane costs $550 million?"
Exactly one year after Wanat, the Army began fielding what it said was an improved M4 magazine.
The survey numbers on jamming alarmed Mr. Coburn. He took on a large group of Army supporters — its huge following of lawmakers and staffers in Congress and retired top brass who sit on the boards of various munitions manufacturers — to advocate a better rifle.
By December 2007, the Army was testing the M4 against competitors at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland.
The competition matched the M4 against three European-designed assault rifles, all firing 6,000 rounds in sandstorm conditions. The three interlopers recorded 233 or fewer stoppages. The M4 racked up more than three times as many: 882, according to the Congressional Research Service.
The Army and manufacturer Colt Defense LLC later said the M4 had much fewer shutdowns and blamed the high count on M4s that were not combat-ready.
Next came the Army's most extensive M4 review to date: a small-arms capabilities-based assessment. By January 2009, the Army was telling Congress that its rifles and machine guns, including the M4, had 25 "capability gaps," including a need for greater lethality and for a gun that did not need constant cleaning and lubrication — in other words, what critics had been saying about the M4.
With the report completed, the Army embarked on a major M4 upgrade, though it contended the gun's basic design remained sound.
Critics persisted. One was Sgt. Charles Perales, at the time stationed at Fort Bragg, N.C.
He wrote a letter published in Defense News:
"My unit — B Company, 2nd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment — was deployed to Afghanistan from April 2005 to March 2006. While there, we were attached to Special Forces at Camp Tillman on the Afghan border. I saw first-hand what happens when your weapon jams up because of the harsh environments we have to call home there. An 18B weapons sergeant was shot in the face due directly to his weapon jamming. I just can't believe that after things like this happen, the Army is still buying more M4s. Soldiers' lives are on the line. Why is it a hassle to make an improvement that could save lives? The M4 isn't a bad weapon; it just needs improvements. It's about time people stop fighting to keep things the same and start moving toward a better weapon system."
After the shootout
Green Berets have a method to prevent a "Wanat" from happening: They upgrade the rifle themselves.
Senior Warrant Officer Russton B. Kramer, a 20-year Green Beret, said he realized during training that the M4 was subject to malfunctions. Shells would not extract. Overheating. The gun got too dirty.
"It's a maintenance queen," he said. "It's an incredibly finicky gun. You have to run it with the right amount of lubrication. You have to keep it clean. You've got to be kind of delicate with it to make it function right."
But he never experienced jamming in battle because he took precautions — by performing unauthorized upgrades on the gun himself.
Senior Warrant Officer Kramer recalled the five-day battle of Operation Siege Engine. The military dropped five Special Forces teams into Afghanistan's Helmand province in 2008 to take down a Taliban opium lab. While one group destroyed components, the others defended a perimeter against waves of Taliban.
"I don't have time to perform maintenance," he said. "I don't have time to pull back to a safe perimeter and clean my gun. I may not have time to pull a little bottle of oil out of my pocket and fix my gun.
"If we don't make these changes to our guns out there, I don't feel like it's going to be a reliable weapon," he added.
Gen. Scales said he wants to see a debate in Washington on "Why does the world's greatest superpower have less capable small arms than the enemy? For whatever reasons, we are perfectly happy to give soldiers and Marines crappy small arms and not pay any attention to it."
Mr. Coburn tried to spark such a debate. He sent letters, gave interviews and delayed Pentagon appointments — all over the M4. The Army appeared to be on the edge of moving toward a more advanced carbine.
To find the next light, short-barreled rifle, the Army started a grand shootout in 2011 pitting some of the world's most renowned rifle makers: Colt, which designed the M4, along with Beretta, Fabrique Nationale, Adcor Defense, Heckler & Koch, Remington and Lewis Machine & Tool.
By March 2103, the Army got a blunt warning from the Pentagon's top fraud and waste investigator. Lynne Halbrooks, principal deputy inspector general, told a House panel that the Army could not guarantee the gun would be any better than the M4. She also said the service wanted to buy thousands of new rifles as its soldier force was shrinking.
The Army apparently got the message. When the smoke cleared in June, it scheduled a press conference to update the competition. The winner: no one. The M4 remained the champ, by default.
After the Army called off the competition, the Defense Department inspector general scolded the Army again — this time in a written report — for conducting the shootout. It said the service's 2009 small-arms assessment did not identify a need for a new carbine, just an improved one.
"The final report stated that none of the solutions for meeting small-unit effectiveness, lethality, and survivability start with replacing the M4," the report said. "As a result, the Army wasted $14 million on a competition to identify a source to supply new carbines it does not need."
In the end, Mr. Coburn, who declined to be interviewed for this report, did not get soldiers a new gun. But he did prod the Pentagon to improve what it had.
"The senator fought a long battle to get the soldiers a better gun," said Mr. Traudt. "The Army is powerful. It can close bases and send jobs elsewhere."
© Copyright 2014 The Washington Times, LLC.
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Wow.
So a civie gets on base, goes over to the docked USS Mahan, an AEGIS Arleigh Burke Destroyer, approaches the watch and struggles with a PO there...disarms him, and then shoots another sailor rushing to help the first.
Then, apparently other members of the watch gunned him down right there on deck.
Who was this guy? What were his motivations? NCIS will figure it all out.
This is really crazy stuff. Glad those guys were alert at 11:20 at night and up to doing their duty. No telling what the perp was up to.
Prayers and condolensces for the sailor who died defending his ship, and his country, and for his family and friends.
this is going to cause changes in training as despite the anti stealth crowd everything says Stealth is the Way the USAF will be going for the foreseeable.
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Opinions please?
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