-
No Kill Like A Guns Kill
Two TOPGUN F-16s tangle with fleet F-14s.
Putting Pipper to People.
-
Wire Strike
Wire strikes are one of the greater dangers to helicopters. And external sling operations are as well. Combine the two…
No one was seriously injured, incredibly.
-
You learn something new every day- F-14 Landing Gear Side Brace
How did I never know this?
-
Daily Dose of Splodey
Let’s blow up Tennessee!
-
Sunset for the Phrog
http://www.dvidshub.net/video/embed/356786
Originally designed for the Army, and first flown in 1962, over 500 would be built in the next 11 years. Think of that. The last Phrog rolled off the line 43 years ago. That’s some loyal service.

It would serve with the US Marines, the US Navy, Canada, Sweden, Japan, and Saudi Arabia, in addition to several civil operators.
On a personal note, the only aircraft I actually remember seeing my dad fly was a Sea Knight.
-
Hook Down, Wheels Down
Grab a cup of coffee, this is a long one.
-
The Revolt of the Generals
We’ve been unimpressed with the senior leadership appointed to four star rank by Obama, virtually without exception.
But civilian control of our military is one of the bedrock principles of our nation. As it should be. Senior officers get their orders, and execute them to the best of their ability.
But one other role, by custom and law, is for the senior leadership to provide to the Secretary of Defense and the Commander in Chief their best advice on how operations should be conducted.
Having given that advice to the CinC, and seeing it rejected, the generals are getting a might touchy. They have a vested interest in keeping the military going strong, both as a budget issue, and as an esteemed institution in the nation.
And so they’re pushing back against the White House.
Even as the President is telling anyone and everyone that there will be “no boots on the ground”* in our fight against ISIS, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, GEN Martin Dempsey, testified before Congress that he thought it should be a viable option. Such a clear break in policy positions between the White House and the CJCS is rare. And there’s not a lot that Obama can do about it. His options are either downplay the pushback (which is what he’s doing now), or fire Dempsey.
But Dempsey is hardly the only one that’s letting the rest of the government, and the people, know how the military feels about being tasked with a mission, but no reasonable means to accomplish it.
“I did not say we need U.S. divisions and brigades on the ground to do this,” he said. But “if sometime, someday, that means U.S. forces [and] we think that’s the right thing, it might be something we recommend.”
So, that’s the two top guys in Army Blue.
Make that the three top guys in Army Blue.
That doesn’t even touch on GEN James Mattis’ testimony Thursday.
Mattis is probably one of the most respected general officers around, even if he is retired.
Another recently retired senior leader, ADM James Stavridis weighed in:
“Without question we will see our young men and women engaged in combat. I don’t think they’ll be given a primary, direct, combat assignment initially, but I think it’s entirely possible that as events change and morph, the situation may ultimately require that,” said former NATO Supreme Allied Commander Adm. James Stavridis.
“If we’re going to be honest, we ought to start by saying we’ll send in troops and they’re going to advise, train, ,mentor, and they’ll stiffen the Iraqi security forces and they’ll stiffen the Peshmerga in the north, and we’ll do the bombing in the west and initially no combat mission,” he said.Stavridis might not enjoy the personal popularity of Mattis, but he’s a deeply respected strategic thinker. Obama isn’t.
Coupled with Congressional skepticism over Obama’s response to ISIS, I don’t know how much, if any, effect this will have on policy going forward. I tend to think Obama’s “no boots” promise is like every other promise of his. It comes with an expiration date.
We’ll see.
But to my recollection, this is the loudest disagreement with a President that the uniform leadership has shown in a generation.
-
Finally! Solid Proof!

Stolen from Scott R on FB.
-
Bezos Unveils New Engine for Military Rockets | Defense Tech
Jeff Bezos, founder of the online retailing giant Amazon.com, has unveiled a new commercial engine design for legacy military rockets.
Bezos, who also heads up the private spaceflight company Blue Origin LLC, was on hand with Tony Bruno, the new chief executive officer of the Lockheed Martin Corp.-Boeing Co. joint venture, United Launch Alliance LLC, on Wednesday at the National Press Club to announce an agreement to jointly fund development of the BE-4 engine.
The engine is designed to provide 550,000 pounds of thrust and replace the Russian-made RD-180 propulsion system currently on the Atlas V rocket, one of two boosters used by the Air Force’s Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle program to lift military and spy satellites into space.
via Bezos Unveils New Engine for Military Rockets | Defense Tech.
I just need to convince the Air Force to buy the motor through my Amazon link in the right sidebar.
The BE-4 has something I’ve never seen before. I’ve seen LOX/kerosene engines. And I’ve seen LOX/Hydrogen cryo engines. But I’ve never seen a proposal for a LOX/LNG engine.
-
Don't Buy Your Aircraft Carrier from Russia | RealClearDefense
Like a lot of countries, India wants the best weapons it can afford. But ideological and financial concerns mean there are a lot of things it won’t buy from the United States or Europe. That pretty much leaves, well, Russia.
India has been a big buyer of Russian weapons for 50 years. Those haven’t been easy years for New Delhi. India’s defense contracts with Russia have consistently suffered delays and cost overruns. And the resulting hardware doesn’t always work.
Of all India’s Russian procurement woes, none speak more to the dysfunctional relationship between the two countries than the saga of INS Vikramaditya. In the early 2000s, India went shopping for a new aircraft carrier. What followed was a military-industrial nightmare.
via Don’t Buy Your Aircraft Carrier from Russia | RealClearDefense.
Back when this deal went down, a lot of smart Navy blogs like NepLex and CDR Salamander (and the plethora of commenters there) suggested the Navy should have cut a deal with India. Gift them one of our decommissioned oil-fired carriers, and then pr0fit from the almost inevitable sale of F-18s to India.
Given how poorly India came out of this deal with Russia, that idea looks better and better.
India would have benefited, and the US could have gone a long way to forging stronger ties with the second most populous country in the world, which, oh, by the way, happens to be a nice counterbalance to China.