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  • Exclusive: U.S. Drone Fleet at ‘Breaking Point,’ Air Force Says – The Daily Beast

    The U.S. Air Force’s fleet of drones is being strained to the “breaking point,” according to senior military officials and an internal service memo acquired by The Daily Beast. And it’s happening right when the unmanned aircraft are most needed to fight ISIS.

    The Air Force has enough MQ-1 Predator and MQ-9 Reaper drones. It just doesn’t have the manpower to operate those machines. The Air Force’s situation is so dire that Air Combat Command (ACC), which trains and equips the service’s combat forces, is balking at filling the Pentagon’s ever increasing demands for more drone flights.

    via Exclusive: U.S. Drone Fleet at ‘Breaking Point,’ Air Force Says – The Daily Beast.

    On the one hand, this is quite clearly an opening salvo in the budget wars. On the other, properly manning the MQ-1/MQ-9 fleet has been a persistent problem.

    One issue is, the Air Force insists that they be flown by rated pilots. They have some good reasons for that. But no qualified pilot wants to fly a drone. They want to fly something besides a screen and a joystick. On the other hand, the Army uses NCOs to operate drones.
    For the most part, we’re talking about smaller assets, but not always.

    Does a drone operator really need to be a rated pilot, one the Air Force has spent two years or so putting through a training pipeline in the T-6 and T-38 and then whatever platform/pipeline training they originally competed for, only to then learn to fly a drone? Could it devise a dedicated unmanned flight training pipeline that could more rapidly put bodies in the seats? Maybe it might be time for the Air Force to consider reinstating Warrant Officers. Select quality NCOs, train them to fly the Predator and Reaper, and grant them a warrant. A limited number of commissioned officers to round out the squadrons, in a manner similar to Army Aviation, might be a workable solution.

    Of course, for a commissioned officer in the Army, Aviation is a defined career path. It would be unlikely to be so in the Air Force, though they ought to consider such a path.

    The other obvious challenge is reducing the demand signal from the Combatant Commanders, a challenge that will also apply to our next post.

  • Egyptian President Calls for ‘Religious Revolution’ in Islam | Washington Free Beacon

    JERUSALEM—In a speech on New Year’s day, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi called for a “religious revolution” in Islam that would displace violent jihad from the center of Muslim discourse.

    “Is it possible that 1.6 billion people (Muslims worldwide) should want to kill the rest of the world’s population—that is, 7 billion people—so that they themselves may live?” he asked. “Impossible.”

    via Egyptian President Calls for ‘Religious Revolution’ in Islam | Washington Free Beacon.

    Al-Sisi is calling for exactly the kind of religious reformation Islam needs to join the modern civilized world.

    I predict he’ll either “clarify” his comments or be assassinated shortly.

  • AirAsia QZ 8501 and BOAC 911

    We’re not going to speculate on the cause of the recent crash of AirAsia Flight QZ 8501. It’s simply too early in the investigation to make any informed judgment.

    On the other hand, we will admit that among possible causes, the inclement weather in the area might well have been either a causal or contributing factor.

    Oddly, one of the most horrific weather related air disasters I can think of actually took place during what was an essentially beautiful day.

    BOAC Flight 911 was a Boeing 707 departing Tokyo bound for Hong Kong. Shortly before take-off, the crew had requested a visual departure that allowed them to fly in the vicinity of Mt. Fuji before they would enter the controlled en route airways. As the doomed plane taxied out to its departure runway, the crew and passengers actually passed the wreckage of a Canadian Pacific DC-8 that had crashed on landing the night before, killing 64 passengers and crew, with only 8 surviving.

    http://www.aswetalk.org/bbs/forum.php?mod=attachment&aid=Mjk1MjZ8MTJmNzQxMDN8MTQxOTcyMzI0MHwwfDIwNjc3&noupdate=yes

    As BOAC 911 neared Mt. Fuji shortly after takeoff, the vertical stabilizer sheared off and  struck the port horizontal stabilizer. The loss of the vertical and port horizontal stabilizer induced a sudden, strong yaw movement in the aircraft, which lead to all four engine pylons failing and shearing off. In the resulting flat spin, eventually one wingtip and the forward fuselage failed and separated from the aircraft.

    The aircraft plummeted to the ground. All 124 souls aboard were lost.

    What could have caused the sudden failure? Post crash analysis determined that the structure had been in good repair* and that an outside force had acted upon it.

    When fast moving air hits a mountain like Mt. Fuji, some will flow around the sides of the mountain. But some will move directly over the mountain, and down the far side. Indeed, a “rebound” wave will form further downwind. The determination of the investigation was that BOAC 911 had encountered this mountain wave, or lee wave and the sudden gust had exceeded the structural strength of the aircraft.

    https://i0.wp.com/upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/58/Vol_d%27onde.svg/369px-Vol_d%27onde.svg.png

    Though one wasn’t present on the day of the incident, one tell tale sign of a strong mountain wave is the lenticular cloud.  The air flowing over the mountain accelerates, causing lower pressure, and the resulting lower pressure often results in cloud formation. Though lenticular clouds themselves are relatively stationary, they’re indicative of high wind speed.

    https://i0.wp.com/strangesounds.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/lenticular-clouds.jpg

    In the wake, no pun intended, of this accident, procedures were changed to minimize the exposure of transport aircraft to possible mountain wave risk.

    Still, before the rudder actuator fault was located in early model 737s, it was at one time suspected in the crash of United Flight 585, and is still suspected in the in flight loss of an engine and pylon of an Evergreen International cargo 747 in Alaska in 1993.

    *Mostly. There were some stress cracks found in the vertical stabilizer structure, but not sufficient to cause the failure. The rest of the 707 fleet was inspected, and similar cracks were repaired.

  • Load HEAT- Hayley Atwell

    Hayley’s series, Agent Carter, premiers this week on the 6th on ABC.

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  • Civilians try MREs

    Actually, these aren’t *really* MREs. They’re civilian products mimicking MREs. The main entrée is pure MRE, but the rest is a cheaper variant.

    MREs aren’t bad, per se. For a day or two, they’re not bad at all, especially now that they have the flameless ration heater. But after more than a few days, they become very monotonous. That’s part of why the Army puts so much effort into making hot meals, such as the UGR series, available to deployed troops.

    Youtube being Youtube, there’s actually a small community of channels with people who do very indepth reviews of just about every combat ration around, both the various MRE menus, and their foreign counterparts.

    Gschultz9 has over 23,000 subscribers!

  • M9 Armored Combat Earthmover

    The three primary missions of the Engineers in combat are mobility, counter-mobility, and force protection. Rather obviously, this means ensuring our freedom of maneuver, by improving roads and reducing obstacles, both natural and man made; emplacing obstacles to slow, channel or turn an enemy force; and digging or building positions for friendly forces.

    As you might expect, a large portion of this can be accomplished by earthmoving. As a mechanized Infantryman mounted on a Bradley, my most common interaction with the Engineers was when we had a D7 bulldozer dig fighting positions for our vehicles.

    Merely pushing a berm in front of the position does little to offer protection for fighting vehicles. While it might defeat HEAT rounds, kinetic rounds hardly notice a dirt berm before passing through the frontal armor, engine block, turret basket and troop compartment and then exiting the rear ramp armor. So the position is dug deep enough to fully conceal the vehicle. But the vehicle also has to be able to fight from the position, so there is a step on the front half of the position that the Bradley can drip up on, exposing only the turret, giving it a field of fire. Pop up, shoot, scoot back, scan for the next target. In gunnery terms, this is known as a “berm drill.”

    While the D7 bulldozer is very, very well suited for digging said positions, it is not without its drawbacks.

    https://i0.wp.com/media.dma.mil/2013/Apr/17/2000016071/-1/-1/0/080708-A-YG824-020.JPG

    First, it is completely unarmored. If the position isn’t completely secure, the operator is at an unacceptable risk. But failing to construct the positions then places the fighting vehicles at a completely unacceptable risk.

    Secondly, the D7 is rather slow, with a maximum speed of around 7 miles per hour. That means it has to be transported from location to location on a heavy equipment trailer. That also means the trailer is restricted to relatively good terrain. The truck and trailer also are unarmored, and add an additional logistical, manning, and maintenance burden.

    And so, starting in the late 1980s, the Army began fielding a lightweight vehicle known as the M9 ACE or Armored Combat Earthmover. A relatively lightweight tracked vehicle with a bulldozer blade on front, it was proof against small arms fire and artillery fragments. The driver was protected. The hydropnuematic suspension allowed it to travel cross country, and on roads at a respectable 30 miles per hour or so. Maybe not enough to keep up with Bradley’s and M1 Abrams, but enough that the wait for ACE shouldn’t be too long.

    Light weight is a disadvantage for a bulldozer, though. The tracks need significant weight on them to increase the dozing ability. So the M9 can actually also act as a grader/scraper, and load a ballast compartment just behind the blade with earth to improve its earthmoving ability. When it is done, it can also eject that earth. In between missions, that space can be used to carry cargo or engineer supplies.

    My experience with the M9 is very limited. I have heard that some dozer operators didn’t like it, and felt it was a rather poor earthmover, especially those who had previous experience with the D7. It has also had a long, long history of maintenance issues, primarily associated with its complex suspension system.

    What’s especially interesting is the long development time of the M9. As I mentioned, the Army didn’t start buying the M9 until the late 1980s. But that doesn’t mean it was a new design. Its design actually dates back to the early 1960s.

    With a few minor changes, the UET would become the M9. So why the 20 year gap between design and fielding? First, just as the Army was finishing development, Vietnam happened. And the money that would have gone for the UET instead went to fighting that war. In the years after Vietnam, the Army’s funding priorities were on the Big Five, the M1, M2/M3, UH-60, AH-64, and Patriot missile. It wasn’t until those programs were well in hand that other priorities could be addressed.

  • Army Dive School Quietly Changes 'I Can't Breathe' Unit Motto

    KEY WEST, Fla. — The U.S. Army has quietly forced the Special Forces Underwater Operations School to change its unit motto of ‘I Can’t Breathe’ after fifteen years, Duffel Blog has learned.

    “To drown-proof combat divers, we make them pass out underwater from lack of air,” said Master Sgt. Chuck Tandory, an instructor at the school. “Mentally, it’s the most important part of the SCUBA course. ‘I Can’t Breathe’ sums it all up.”

    Since the same motto has now been adopted by supporters of Eric Garner and civil rights activists, Army leadership has directed the Dive School to step aside to avoid criticism.

    “Dive School had it first,” noted Sgt. 1st Class James McMillan, also an instructor. “Civil rights activists should be forced to change their motto. Our guys just went through the same slogan battle with Combatives school last year.”

    via Army Dive School Quietly Changes ‘I Can’t Breathe’ Unit Motto.

  • Bambi Meets Godzilla

    Yes, it’s real.

  • Signal Communication within the Infantry Regiment- 1933

    George C. Marshall’s tenure as Deputy Commandant of the Infantry School was marked by many innovations in the training of Infantry officers of the inter-war years. One of his innovations was the use of training films. They’re ubiquitous now, but were a rather radical idea at  the time. There is certainly no substitute for actually training on a given learning objective. But before the “doing” part, it certainly helps to give an overview of how a certain task should be done. Yes, of course the doctrinal manuals are the authoritative resource. But the dramatic enactment of doctrinally sound operations makes it easier for the student to grasp the fundamentals of the learning objective.

    The 29th Infantry Regiment was (and still is, for that matter) the “schoolhouse” regiment at Ft. Benning, providing troops upon which officers at career schools can practice the roles and missions they’ll assume at ever higher levels of responsibility.  Having studied a particular task on paper (or film) in the classroom, the students go to the woods of Ft. Benning’s various training areas and put into practice that which they’ve learned.

    Marshall was famous for making such learning exercises as difficult as possible through various means, such as providing inadequate maps, or simply no maps at all! Other times, he would issue orders with deliberate ambiguities. The goal wasn’t merely to create officers who could execute the steps of a learning checklist, but rather determine which officers could thrive in the confusion of war, those who could discern the wheat from the chaff.

  • The Art of Carving

    I love old films. Not so much old movies. But cheesey stuff like this short put together by Swift (you know, the meatpackers?) showing how to carve various cuts of meat.

    And I’ll fess up, I had to learn the hard way how to carve a turkey. I wasn’t very good at it. In fact, one of the first useful things I learned from youtube besides how cute kittens are was how to carve a turkey.

    Also, I’m insanely hungry now.