US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
The second Burke, USS Ross (DDG 71) is arrived to Rota her new homeport in june from Norfolk, two will follow in 2015 one from Norfolk, Porter and Carney from Mayport.


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Yes total of four x DDG forward deployed in Spain and all the sailors and crews with their family's I think it's going to cost $750 million per year to keep this base running and plus they paid for the upgrade of the facility
 

navyreco

Senior Member
Pretty lengthy but real good read

Confessions Of A US Navy P-3 Orion Maritime Patrol Pilot
Have you ever wondered what it is like to chase enemy subs from the air or to hunt pirates off the coast of Somalia? Foxtrot Alpha gives you an unprecedented look into the world of a US Navy Maritime Patrol pilot, a job that continues to change and evolve as fast as our increasingly complicated world does.
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Scyth

Junior Member
Pretty lengthy but real good read

Confessions Of A US Navy P-3 Orion Maritime Patrol Pilot

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Very good read! Thanks for posting.

Anyone here who have read Chinese sources about this event?
I should tell you that it has long been a Maritime Patrol Community rumor that a 'black' P-3B flown by the CIA over China shot down a MiG with a Sidewinder.
 
From the Center for Strategic and International Studies:

Posted on InsideDefense.com: July 2, 2014

It would be wrong to look at the recent defense budget analysis from the Center for Strategic and International Studies and conclude that America's best way forward in a time of fiscal austerity is to plan for a war with Russia and China, though that is what the report recommends, according to Clark Murdock, the analyst at CSIS who led the team that authored the study.

More than anything, Clark stressed, readers should take away the fact that there are existing methodologies to pick the "least bad" option in an environment where coming cuts to the U.S. defense budget are poorly understood or outright denied.

"The budgetary squeeze on the defense budget is a lot more severe than is generally appreciated," he said in a July 2 interview. "There's complete denial about the necessity to come to grips with this."

Clark explained that the defense budget is in the path of a powerful "double whammy" in the form of not only the automatic cuts mandated in the Budget Control Act -- which stand to chop the overall defense topline by 21 percent by 2021 -- but soaring internal cost growth at the Defense Department that is outpacing normal inflation.

"The topline is coming down 21 percent and the internal cost growth is hollowing out another 15 percent," he said. "So you have 21 percent fewer dollars, each of them with 15 percent less purchasing power. By itself, a 21 percent drawdown is less than previous drawdowns. But when you add to it this internal growth factor, it becomes much more severe."

The report also finds that military spending will face further hits due to the skyrocketing costs of America's entitlement programs, finding that there will be no room for defense spending by 2036 if trends continue.

"In a real sense, the debate over whether the BCA sequester-level cuts will be lifted by FY 2021 is moot, because the larger vise on the U.S. federal budget -- caused by the growing gap between entitlement programs spending and government revenue -- will result in a deep defense drawdown," the report states. "The tradespace for discretionary spending is being squeezed out by mandatory spending -- which includes spending on veteran benefits, income security, social security, Medicare, and Medicaid and interest payments. If current trends continue, including the overall growth rate of total federal spending planned for FY 2013 -- FY 2017, there will be no room for discretionary spending, either defense or non-defense, by 2036."

Clark asserts that the recent CSIS report starts from a point of budgetary pragmatism, hence the recommendation to structure a defense posture that prepares for large wars with Russia and China -- or the "Great Power Conflict" option.

"The real thing is that this is a demonstration of a methodology," he said. "We're not saying this is the only answer or the only strategy. But you have to have an appreciation for the overall loss of capacity that we are going to suffer under this double whammy and you have to make really tough decisions about must-have capabilities and who your billpayers are for must-have capabilities. We aren't even close to that."

The CSIS methodology that led Clark and his to team to ultimately pick the "Great Power Conflict" strategy as the "least bad" option places emphasis on long-range, precision strike capabilities over "short-legged aircraft and carriers because we think they have limited capacity to fight at the high end against a great power because of [those countries'] anti-access/area-denial capability," Clark said.

The plan also considers active Army force structure to be a "billpayer" for other capabilities. "In our baseline force we increase Army reserves as a hedge against the pretty drastic cuts to active Army strength you have to take to make the caps," he said.

Murdock pointed to Congress' resistance to allow the Air Force to divest its fleet of A-10 aircraft or plan for a round of base closures as evidence of ongoing budget denial.

"You really need a different approach to how we think about the defense budget in this era of austerity," he said. "The first thing you have to ask is how much can you afford?"

Murdock acknowledged that crafting a resource-driven U.S. defense posture (rather than one that is "strategy-driven") would be politically unpopular, but argued that someone needs to do it.

"I start with budgetary realism because that's where there's so little realism right now," he said. "What I did in this particular study was start with the budget caps. Why? They're in the law and everyone says on both sides of the aisle that they ain't goin' away."

So what message should Congress take away from the report given that the automatic budget cuts triggered by sequestration remain the law of the land?

"This is what you guys voted into law, you've got to understand the implications of it," Clark said. "This is going to be a deep defense drawdown."
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
From the Center for Strategic and International Studies:

Posted on InsideDefense.com: July 2, 2014

It would be wrong to look at the recent defense budget analysis from the Center for Strategic and International Studies and conclude that America's best way forward in a time of fiscal austerity is to plan for a war with Russia and China, though that is what the report recommends, according to Clark Murdock, the analyst at CSIS who led the team that authored the study...
Jura, please post a link to the news you post.

I know InsideDefense is a subscription site...but you can normally Google the title and come up with another source.

When we can only read whay you cut and paste (which probably violates your subscription agreement and could open SD up to legal issues) we cannot read the articles ourselves.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
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nimitz73-01.jpg


Augusta Free Press said:
U.S. Senators Mark R. Warner and Tim Kaine today applauded the U.S. Navy for moving forward to begin work on the refueling and complex overhaul of the aircraft carrier USS George Washington – a top defense priority for the Virginia delegation.

“Navy sources confirm that a $182 million contract could be awarded soon to Huntington Ingalls Industries’ Newport News Shipbuilding, the only shipyard capable of building and refueling the world’s largest warships,”Defense News reported today. “The Navy had planned to cancel the ship’s mid-life, $3.5 billion refueling and complex overhaul and instead decommission the George Washington…” but “congressional displeasure with the inactivation plan is widespread. Three of the four Congressional oversight committees have provided funding for the GW in their 2015 defense bills, and Senate appropriators are expected to follow suit in their markup, scheduled for July 17.”

“This is terrific news. When we learned that the Pentagon was considering de-funding the overhaul of the George Washington, we convened the whole Virginia congressional delegation and worked together to put the money back into the budget,” Sen. Warner said. “It was an ‘all hands on deck moment,’ and this affirms Virginia’s strong partnership with the Navy. It’s also a great tribute to our shipbuilders in Hampton Roads to have this clear signal that the 11-carrier fleet remains a top Navy priority.”

“I am very pleased that the Navy is moving forward with the refueling and complex overhaul of the USS George Washington,” said Kaine, a member of the Armed Services Committee who spent months advocating funding for the CVN 73 refueling and complex overhaul in the Committee’s defense bill, which passed out of Committee in May. “It’s critical that we maintain the 11 aircraft carrier fleet to meet requirements around the globe. Supporting the 11 carrier statutory mandate has been one of our top priorities this year. With more than 60,000 jobs linked to shipbuilding, Virginia leads the nation in supporting the industry’s ability to meet strategic needs and global presence.”

Senators Warner and Kaine have worked tirelessly to urge the administration and their congressional colleagues to fully fund the carrier. Their first success was to persuade the administration that the carrier funding should be put back into the administration’s budget, and numerous administration officials subsequently testified that the carrier should be refueled. The Senators also sent a letter to Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel in January urging the administration to include funding. “No other American asset has the capability to launch kinetic strikes against terrorists, deter aggression of rogue nations, maintain the freedom of trade across the seas, and deliver humanitarian support to our allies in distress,” they wrote. And as the Chief of Naval Operations said last month, “When I look out into the future, we need at least 11 carriers.”
 
Jura, please post a link to the news you post.

I know InsideDefense is a subscription site...but you can normally Google the title and come up with another source.

When we can only read whay you cut and paste (which probably violates your subscription agreement and could open SD up to legal issues) we cannot read the articles ourselves.

Jeff, I'm not going to argue ... I like the SDF ... just remove my posts with copy-pasted text if you think they shouldn't have been posted the way they were. Thank you, and I apologize.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
He's not accusing you Jara he's asking for a link.
DoD Grounds Entire F-35 Fleet; Plane Might Not Make UK Debut
Jul. 4, 2014 - 10:28AM |

By Marcus Weisgerber
Staff writer Air force times
FILED UNDER
News
Military Technology
WASHINGTON — The European debut of the Lockheed Martin F-35 joint strike fighter is now in question after the Pentagon grounded the entire fleet late Thursday based on the initial findings of an investigation into a fire that broke out on one of the jets last month.

The Defense Department says it is still making preparations to send the jet to the Farnborough International Airshow and Royal International Air Tattoo in the UK, but would not make a final decision until “early next week.”

The Pentagon says it is still investigating the cause of the June 23 fire the broke out in the rear of an Air Force F-35 during takeoff at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.

DoD temporarily grounded the F-35 fleet and ordered inspections of all jets before returning the aircraft to flight testing.

“The root cause of the incident remains under investigation,” DoD said in emailed statement late Thursday.

“Additional inspections of F-35 engines have been ordered, and return to flight will be determined based on inspection results and analysis of engineering data,” the statement reads. “Defense Department leadership supports this prudent approach.”

“We are working closely with the Air Force Safety Investigation Board to determine root cause and to inspect all engines in the fleet,” Pratt & Whitney spokesman Matthew Bates said in a company statement. “Safety is our top priority. Since the incident is the subject of an investigation it is inappropriate to comment further.”

A spokesman for Lockheed was not immediately available for comment.
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Unique brigade part of successful missile defense test
Jul. 4, 2014 - 09:42AM |
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A ground-based interceptor missile launches June 22 from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., as part of a successful joint ballistic-missile defense test, the first of its particular kind since 2008.
A ground-based interceptor missile launches June 22 from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., as part of a successful joint ballistic-missile defense test, the first of its particular kind since 2008. (Michael Peterson/Missile Defense Agency)

By Kevin Lilley
Staff writer
FILED UNDER
News
Soldiers with the 100th Missile Defense Brigade man stations in Colorado, California and Alaska. ZOOM
Soldiers with the 100th Missile Defense Brigade man stations in Colorado, California and Alaska. (Courtesy of 100th Missile Defense Brigade)
In one sense, the 100th Missile Defense Brigade is one of the military’s more isolated units — 300 soldiers, mostly members of the National Guard, some of whom are posted in Alaska, all of whom are on watch for ballistic-missile threats they hope never arrive.

In another, it’s a teamwork-oriented model for the future force — highly trained soldiers, active duty and guardsmen, working across service lines and employing all types of technology.

Also, like any good portrait of the future, they have rockets.

All three of these traits combined June 22 over the Pacific Ocean, when the brigade joined multiple military units in a successful test of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense element — the first success since 2008, after three failed efforts. A Navy destroyer and the Sea-Based X-Band radar system tracked the target from its launch in Hawaii, while five members of the Army brigade, stationed at an Air Force base in Colorado, ran the fire-control system, launching an interceptor missile from another Air Force base in California.

The process took six minutes from target launch to interceptor launch, according to a Defense Department news release, and was the first hit for the new interceptor, known as the “second-generation Exoatmospheric Kill Vehicle.”

“They replicate as close as they can a real threat that we might see from a country like North Korea,” said Col. Ted Hildreth, commander of the 100th Missile Defense Brigade. “From our director’s perspective, it’s real.”

Homeland security
Hildreth, like most of the unit’s members, serves in the Active Guard and Reserve. Of the soldiers under his command — described on the unit’s website as “300 Soldiers defending 300 Million” — only about 5 percent are on active duty, all assigned to the unit’s headquarters.

It’s a mission many wouldn’t associate with the National Guard, but brigade members see it as a perfect fit.

“In the Army, we seem to do a lot around the world, helping other people. In this particular mission, we’re helping Americans,” said the unit’s operations officer, a major who formerly served on active duty. (A unit spokesman asked that names of operators not be used, citing security concerns.)

“Every day, you can kind of reflect on what you’re doing, and how important it is on potentially a massive scale. ... Every day you come into work, you instantly have a high level of job satisfaction,” the officer said.

Landing the job isn’t easy: Initial training for missile-defense operators can run 14 weeks, followed by seven weeks of GMD-specific training, then another six weeks of gunnery-table certification, according to information provided by the brigade. To pass the last two elements, soldiers need 90 percent scores or better.

“It’s one of the most rigorous, demanding curriculums I’ve been a part of,” said Hildreth, whose 25-plus-year career included a deployment to Afghanistan in 2010, leading a National Guard team providing support to the 82nd Airborne Division. “You really have some outstanding soldiers with technical acumen manning the system. It’s a no-fail mission.”

In addition to the air defense jobs (MOS 14 series), the unit also has billets from the military police specialty — sometimes with the Alaska-based 49th Missile Defense Battalion — as well as support positions. Openings generally come through the National Guard vacancy listings; a recent opening with the 49th for an MP, for example, required soldiers to be eligible to join the Alaska National Guard.

In addition to tests and training, brigade soldiers monitor missile tests held by other nations, a key part of the unit’s mission since it was stood up in 2003.

“We’re a one-of-a-kind unit,” Hildreth said. “There is no sister brigade in GMD.”

Unique teamwork
The 100th is without siblings, but not without teammates. Hildreth said the constant joint operations mirror statements made by Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno about the importance of multiservice missions to the force.

“In terms of his vision of the future, we really are a microcosm of what the Army will look like,” Hildreth said. “We’re joint, more diverse — we already fit that mold. We’re somewhat of a model for what the Army, I think, will look like.”

He pointed to a PowerPoint slide showing the arc of the June test, involving multiple Air Force bases, a ship, a sea-based radar component and satellites — not to mention his brigade.

“It describes the jointness,” he said. “$200 million and thousands of people.”
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Army Wants a Harder-Hitting Pistol
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Army M9
Military.comJul 03, 2014 | by Matthew Cox
The U.S. Army is moving forward to replace the Cold War-era M9 9mm pistol with a more powerful handgun that also meets the needs of the other services.
As the lead agent for small arms, the Army will hold an industry day July 29 to talk to gun makers about the joint, Modular Handgun System or MHS.
The MHS would replace the Army's inventory of more than 200,000 outdated M9 pistols and several thousand M11 9mm pistols with one that has greater accuracy, lethality, reliability and durability, according to Daryl Easlick, a project officer with the Army's Maneuver Center of Excellence at Fort Benning, Ga.
"It's a total system replacement -- new gun, new ammo, new holster, everything," Easlick said.
The Army began working with the small arms industry on MHS in early 2013, but the effort has been in the works for more than five years. If successful, it would result in the Defense Department buying more than 400,000 new pistols during a period of significant defense-spending reductions.
Army weapons officials maintain that combat troops need a more effective pistol and ammunition. But experts from the law-enforcement and competitive shooting worlds argue that tactical pistol ammunition -- no matter the caliber -- is incapable of stopping a determined adversary without multiple shots in most cases.
One of the major goals of the MHS effort is to adopt a pistol chambered for a more potent round than the current 9mm, weapons officials said. The U.S. military replaced the .45 caliber 1911 pistol with the M9 in 1985 and began using the 9mm NATO round at that time.
Soldiers who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan have complained that the 9mm round is not powerful enough to be effective in combat.
"The 9mm doesn't score high with soldier feedback," said Easlick, explaining that the Army, and the other services, want a round that will have better terminal effects -- or cause more damage -- when it hits enemy combatants. "We have to do better than our current 9mm."
The MHS will be an open-caliber competition that will evaluate larger rounds such as .357 Sig, .40 S&W and .45 ACP.
The FBI and several major police departments recently decided to return to using the 9mm round after finding that .40 caliber ammunition was causing excessive wear on its service pistols. The heavier bullet and greater recoil over time resulted in frame damage to well respected makes such as Glock and Beretta, according to Ernest Langdon, a shooting instructor and respected competitive pistol shooter who has worked for gun makers such as Beretta, Smith & Wesson, and Sig Sauer.
"Most of the guns in .40 caliber on the market right now were actually designed to be 9mm originally and then turned into .40 calibers later," Langdon told Military.com.
Langdon served 12 years in the Marine Corps where he was the chief instructor of the Second Marine Division Scout Sniper School and the High Risk Personnel Course. He's been a competitive pistol shooter for 15 years where he has won competitions in the International Defensive Pistol Association and two World Speed Shooting titles.
Larger calibers, such as .40 S&W, have significantly more recoil than the 9mm making them much harder for the average shooter to shoot accurately, he said.
"I don't think anybody would argue that shot placement is the most important for terminal ballistics," Langdon said. "Even though you say a .45 is better than a 9mm, it's still a pistol caliber. Chances are if it is a determined adversary, they are going to have to be shot multiple times regardless of the caliber."
Many law-enforcement shooting incidents have shown this to be reality, he said.
"I talked to a Chicago cop that shot a guy eight times with a .45 to kill him and that was a 230 grain Hydra-Shok," Langdon said. "And that guy now carries a 9mm …he realized that handgun bullets suck. "You have to shoot people a lot with a handgun."
Langdon has trained numerous personnel from all branches of the U.S. military, FBI, Secret Service and other federal agencies as well as state and local law enforcement.
As part of the joint requirement process for MHS, Army weapons officials did a "very thorough cost-benefit analysis" that showed supported the effort, Easlick said.
"We have got an old fleet of M9s right now; it's costing us more to replace and repair M9s than it would cost to go get a new handgun," he said.
The Army spent years on an effort to search for a replacement for its M4 carbine, but ended up adopting the improved M4A1 version used by special operations forces.
Beretta officials maintain that the company has offered to upgrade M9 many times.
"We have submitted numerous changes or product improvements that really address a lot of the shortcomings that are either perceived or real," said Gabe Bailey, Business development manager for Beretta's military division.
The Marine Corps adopted the M9A1 in 2006 that features a rail for attaching lights or lasers, checkering on the front and back of the grip and a beveled magazine well for smoother magazine changes.
Some of the improvements Beretta offered included an enhanced sight system, changing the angle of the slide-mounted safety to avoid inadvertent safety activation and a threaded barrel, Bailey said.
Army officials, however, say the M9 does not meet the MHS requirement.
"The M9 doesn't meet it for a multitude of reasons," Easlick said. "It's got reliability issues; the open slide design allows contaminates in. The slide-mounted safety doesn't do well when you are trying to clear a stoppage -- you inadvertently de-cock and safe the weapon system."
-- Matthew Cox can be reached at [email protected].
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Other Features that should be included are A option for mounting a Suppressor, Extended magazine and option for mounting a optical sighting system... wait a second.. that sounds
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that's Right! All HAil Megatron!... JK this is one of the Original Prop Walther P38's gun form the 60's spy TV show "The Man From Uncle". the Transformers Toy would be made by a Japanese maker turning the Pistol /Carbine into a robot. And latter this toy would be animated into the Decepticon.
I bring it up because Today optical sighting is becoming a realistic want on a combat pistol.
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The FNX45 Tac pistol for example
 
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