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The Green Machine War Well I thought it was funny!

Well I liked it!

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War Well I thought it was funny!

Phrases the British Army does not want to hear ever!

 

  • Your PTI for P Company is a guy named Sandy.
  • We’re from the government, we’re here to help you.
  • Relax, you’ll be home by Christmas.
  • We’re sending you to 224 Signal Squadron
  • “You know I told you I was over sixteen ? Well…”
  • You’ve got three weeks to live
  • The Americans will be providing the close air support.
  • You’re posted to Tidworth
  • Your new Troop Sgt has just done P company
  • Leave is cancelled
  • Pick up the log
  • Step to the time I call out
  • Do you accept my award
  • It’s character building
  • I’m sorry, Sir, but I’ve had to remove your penis and both your testicles
  • We’ve always done it that way!
  • You are cordially invited to the 3 Para Mortar Platoon Rohypnol Party
  • My office. Now.
  • Move to Grid 12345678 where the helicopters will pick you up at 0300.
  • Do you have anything planned for leave?
  • It’s your turn to blow the blind grenade.
  • OK, integrity question, did you do it?
  • I think it’s yours
  • Crack, Crack, Ping, Ping, THUMP.
  • Sunray is down.
  • Breaking into double time…
  • Taking you a stage further in your foot drill……… I left you in this position
  • Rifle exercises judging the time…….
  • Reveille 05 early hours and Drill until NAAFI break
  • Contact, wait..out.
  • Follow me, it’s a short cut.
  • Of course the Claymore is pointing away from us…er..which way are WE pointing ?
  • Good effort lads, outstanding entry drills, but it’s the wrong house.
  • Has anyone seen the enemy? Right, You! … Draw Fire.
  • GAS GAS GAS
  • The RMP are in the block
  • You feature rather a lot in the Christmas duty list
  • I forgot to tell you, I’ve got herpes
  • Don’t make plans for the weekend
  • The PRE team have just come through the gates
  • You’ll get it in theatre
  • Is that it?
  • We’re all out of them, fill out all these forms and we will indent for them.
  • There’s an Officer in here improperly dressed…
  • It’s your round.
  • Too slow, do it again!
  • Standby….
  • CDT are here??
  • ONE! Two, Three, ONE!!
  • Mr Vice…that’ll be a bottle of port
  • Welcome to RM Bickliegh. I hear there’s some special entertainment booked later on…
  • You’re in your own time now.
  • My wife’s ugly and my supper’s a salad.
  • Sh1t rolls down hill.
  • Bug out!!!
  • Standby your beds!
  • You’re up first. Now.
  • It’s either cancer or penile warts.
  • The RSM wants your feet in his in tray NOW.
  • Tony needs something to whip up voter support and he’s decided on another war.
  • We’re giving free lighters to Labour peers.
  • Right, lads, this one’s a silent breach.
  • Bend over. This may smart a bit!
  • We need a decoy….
  • You shure got a prurty mouth…..
  • If it ain’t raining it ain’t training.
  • Soldier, I’m the Platoon Commander, I should have the map!
  • Right-ho chaps, I know where we are, follow me!
  • Can you just have a quick look at my 432?
  • More Tea Vicar?
  • Don’t worry lads. I was in the RAF you know.
  • Has anyone actually read the manual Sgt?
  • One volunteer required!
  • Just a shandy for me please.
  • All leave is cancelled until morale improves.
  • Iraq? Is that near Catterick?
  • You’ll like Osnabruck its a great posting?
  • The alert states gone up and we need to double the guard!
  • Remove your canister and take a deep breath.
  • Can I see his Conduct Sheets Sergeant Major.
  • 14 Days Restriction of Privileges, March Out!
  • Open your lockers?
  • Report to the cookhouse/kitchen for DROs.
  • Well, we finished an hour early , and as it’s such a pleasant day…
  • AGAI 67…
  • Tony has decided to send troops to the Lebanon on peace keeping duties…..
  • ………using UN rules of engagement……..
  • ……………..with only 2 rounds each……
  • …………………which have to last you the whole tour!
  • Ok lads we’ve got a choice. Either The US Air Force A-10‘s do our close air support … or its RAF Harriers!
  • Greenie to the pan!
  • Cyprus is cancelled lads. Budget cuts from LAND I’m afraid. However, we managed to get Sennybridge at short notice for April.
  • Do you know you have glowstick on your helmet?
  • We need you to lay this comms line… if you see the minefield you’re going the right way…
  • I’m tired, you can finish yourself off…
  • For you Tommy, ze war is over!
  • Sarge, what is this stuck in my gun!
  • That’s no hill, just get up it!
  • Welcome to P Company.
  • If it’s not raining, it’s not training.
  • Civvies pay a fortune to do this! you get to do it for free and get paid for the privilege!!
  • Brecon
  • Round off line!!
  • Press-up position…Down!!
  • You’ve let me down, you’ve let the Battery down, but above all, you’ve let yourself down
  • JPA
  • Have you read this book? Brilliant innit?!
  • Otterburn
  • Lower… Raise…
  • You’re on stag
  • Prepare to double!
  • Right you cunts, reference that prominent woodline roughly 4km away? I want each of you to bring me a twig from it…
  • DOUBLE!!!!!
  • Incoming!!
  • CRACK….THUMP.
  • Auntie Karen Matthews is coming over the babysit.
  • This flu you’ve got … you weren’t in Mexico recently were you?
  • QUICK MARK TIME!!
  • Don’t bother unpacking as there has been a change of plan.
  • I’m sorry, I can’t find your name on the list.
  • Excellent idea Lieutenant.
  • Sure, take what you need from the stores. We got an excellent deal on Webtex the other day.
  • Right, that’s Sennybridge booked for October.
  • “ACTIVE EDGE, GET OUT YER BEDS”
  • Show me you wanna be here
  • Grenade!
  • Come back when the rifles clean
  • That’s not a full water bottle! Concrete hill it is

 

Categories
All About Guns The Green Machine War

Some new shooting Irons for the USMC

H&K – The Protest is Over: USMC fields M27 IAR — SHOT Show 2018

H&K had some small announcements for SHOT Show 2018, as well as a big one. First things, first — let’s talk about the rifle.

USMC Shoots H&K

The protest period has ended, which means H&K has officially received the contract for the USMC to replace the M4 carbines.
The H&K model selected is the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle, a derivative of the famous H&K 416. The M27 features a 16-inch  barrel. This is important for the velocity needed to make 5.56 lethal at that range.
It is nice to see the Jarheads getting some nice toys, and some thought put into small arms.

SPECS:

  • Cartridge: 5.56 NATO
  • Barrel length: 16 in.
  • Weight: 7.9 lbs.
  • Gas-operated fully automatic
  • Unit price: $3,000
  • Overall length: 33 in. – 36.3 in.
  • Manufacturer: H&K

H&K Moves to GA

The biggest news is a new H&K factory being built in Georgia, not far from Fort Benning. H&K USA will be designing and building guns directly for the US market in the US now, a huge step.
H&K has always had a small but fanatical following, at least in the US. But all the guns they sold were basically military models changed to meet civilian legal requirements. It was a huge deal the first time H&K built a pistol with a US-style magazine release.
Now, we can look forward to weapons built specific to the US market, our preferred styles are taken into account. This is going to be nothing but positive for H&K, and I can’t wait to see the first one stamped “ Made in Georgia”.
For more information about H&K, click here.

Categories
The Green Machine War

The most Expensive Grunts so far!

$35 million – the cost of integration

According to the Daily Caller, the Army spent $35 million to renovate facilities at Fort Benning to accommodate female trainees going through Infantry training. So far, those renovations have produced 22 female graduates, with thirty more in the pipeline. But, hey, what’s a few million bucks when we’re able to say that we’re diverse.
The money was spent on female living facilities and video cameras for security;

As part of the effort to integrate men and women in combat arms, Fort Benning has also had to develop new laundry policies. Before, laundry was open at any time of night. Now, it’s bracketed off at certain times for women.
Initially, Fort Benning officials wanted to place female living quarters on a separate floor, but the women didn’t care for that arrangement. Instead, the women are housed in one of four main sleeping bays.
Newly installed security cameras keep watch on the bay door and the stairs leading to the bay.

That won’t be the end of costs for the Army;

Female recruits have had a higher injury rate than their male counterparts. For example, in the last class, hip stress fractures were an issue for six out of seven females injured in Charlie Company.

From the Associated Press;

And as women drop out, those remaining are moved to new companies to maintain balance within units, said Lt. Col Sam Edwards, commander of 1st Battalion, 19th Infantry regiment. More than 36 percent of Benning’s women have left — about twice the rate of men. Injuries have sidelined other women who plan to restart the training.
Army leaders are closely watching the integration to track injury and performance trends and ensure there are no problems.
“It was a boys club for a long time,” Kendrick said. “You have to be professional.”

Yeah, a boys’ club, that’s what it was. This is only training, it’s not like three or four years of living the infantry life. Show me the stats on the other end – how many women are going to take a another hitch in the infantry after living the life.
So, 35 million smackers to turn out 30 infantry-trained women doesn’t seem cost very effective to me. Especially in these times when training money is scarce.

Categories
Allies The Green Machine War Well I thought it was neat!

I have got to get a copy of this ASAP!

WWII artillery being fired. From Peter Jackson’s restored footage project.
by ininterestingasfuck

Categories
All About Guns The Green Machine War

M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle

Here is some more information from Wiki on the Marine Corps newest Toy for Its P.B.I.

(Poor Bloody Infantry)

M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle
USMC-120427-M-SR181-035.jpg

A U.S. Marine armed with an M27 IAR affixed with ACOG Squad Day Optic.
Type Squad automatic weapon
Assault rifle
Designated marksman rifle
Place of origin Germany
Service history
In service 2010–present
Used by United States Marine Corps
Wars Operation Enduring Freedom
Production history
Designer Heckler & Koch
Designed 2008
Manufacturer Heckler & Koch
Unit cost US$3,000[1]
Produced 2010–present
No. built 4,153[2]
Specifications
Weight 7.9 lb (3.6 kg) empty
9.8 lb (4.4 kg) loaded weight with sling[3]
Length 36.9 to 33 in (940 to 840 mm) w/ adjustable stock
Barrel length 16.5 in (420 mm)
Width 3.1 in (79 mm)
Height 9.4 in (240 mm)

Cartridge 5.56×45mm NATO
Action Gas-operated short-stroke pistonrotating bolt
Rate of fire Sustained: 36 rpm
Cyclic: 700 to 900 rpm
Effective firing range 550 m (point target)
700 m (area target)[4]
Maximum firing range 3,938 yd (3,601 m)[4]
Feed system 30-round STANAG magazine
Sights 3.5x Squad Day Optic, flip-up rear rotary diopter sight and front post

The M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle(IAR) is a lightweight, magazine-fed 5.56mmselect-fire weapon based on the Heckler & Koch HK416. It is used by the United States Marine Corpsand is intended to enhance an automatic rifleman’s maneuverability. The U.S. Marine Corps initially planned to purchase 6,500 M27s to replace a portion of the M249 light machine guns employed by automatic riflemen within Infantry and Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalions. Approximately 8,000–10,000 M249s will remain in service with the Marine Corps to be used at the discretion of company commanders. The United States Army does not plan to purchase the IAR.[5][6][7] In December 2017, the Marine Corps revealed a decision to equip every Marine in an infantry squad with the M27.[8]

History[edit]

Background[edit]

In 1985, the U.S. Marine Corps adopted the M249 Squad Automatic Weapon, one year after the U.S. Army. Procurement was a service-level decision because the weapon was adopted by the Army with a contract method the Marines could use. While the belt-fed M249 was portable and had a high volume of fire, its relatively heavy weight meant gunners could have trouble keeping up with riflemen.[9]

IAR[edit]

In 1999, a Universal Need Statement was issued for an Infantry Automatic Rifle (IAR). Around 2000, the 1st Marine Division’s 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines Regiment conducted initial, limited IAR trials which confirmed the desirability of a light automatic rifle. Experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan resulted in formal requests for recommendations. The Universal Need Statement spent six years going through the procurement process before an official program was begun and a list of required capabilities was created in early 2005.[9]
The Infantry Automatic Rifle program began on 14 July 2005, when the Marine Corps sent Requests For Information to arms manufacturers. Characteristics desired in the weapon included: portability and maneuverability; similarity in appearance to other rifles in the squad, reducing the likelihood that the gunner will receive special attention from the enemy; facilitation of the gunner’s participation in counter-insurgency operations and capability of maintaining a high volume of fire. An initial requirement for a magazine with a minimum capacity of 100 rounds was dropped in favor of the 30-round STANAG magazine because, at the start of testing, available 100-round magazines were unreliable. Caliber was specified as 5.56×45mm with non-linked ammunition, so as to achieve commonality with existing service rifles.[9][10]
In 2006, contracts were issued to several manufacturers for sample weapons. Fabrique Nationale d’Herstal submitted an IAR variant of the FN SCAR, Heckler & Koch submitted an HK416 variant, and Colt Defense submitted two designs. Companies that attempted to compete but were not accepted as finalists for testing included the Land Warfare Resources Corporation M6A4 IAR,[11][12] Patriot Ordnance Factory,[6] and General Dynamics Armament and Technical Products with the CIS Ultimax 100 MK5 (marketed as the GDATP IAR).[13]
In December 2009, the Heckler & Koch weapon won the competition and entered into a five-month period of final testing.[14][15] In the summer of 2010, it was designated as the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle,[16] coincidentally sharing a designation with the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines, who had been testing fully automatic rifles since 2001.[17]

An M27 IAR displayed at the NDIAJoint Armaments Conference in May 2010.

While Marine Corps Systems Command was optimistic about operational testing, former Commandant of the Marine Corps General James T. Conway remained skeptical because of the reduction in firepower at the fireteam-level that would result if the M27 was adopted.[18] He felt that, while more accurate, it was unlikely that the M27 could provide fire-superiority over the M249, a belt-fed LMG. A magazine-fed rifle, requiring frequent reloading, would not be able to sustain the same rate of fire. In a firefight, squad members carrying extra magazines for the M27 might not always be in position to supply them to the gunner. Further, the SAW was already a battle-proven weapon. It was also significant that the Army had chosen not to pursue the IAR concept.[9]
After the Marine Corps Operational Test and Evaluation Activity conducted further testing at MCAGCC Twentynine PalmsFort McCoy, and Camp Shelby (for dust, cold-weather, and hot-weather conditions, respectively), limited fielding of 458 IARs began to four infantry battalions (one per each Marine Expeditionary Force, one reserve) and one light armored reconnaissance battalion, all of which deployed to Afghanistan in 2011.[19][20]
In May 2011, General James Amos of the U.S. Marine Corps approved the conclusion of the Limited User Evaluation (LUE), and ordered the replacement of the M249 LMG by the M27. Fielding of the approximately 6,500 M27 units was expected to be completed in the summer of 2013, at a cost of $13 million. Each M27 gunner was to be equipped with around twenty-two 30-round magazines of the type currently in use with the M16 and M4 carbineapproximating the combat load of an M249 SAW gunner; although the M27 gunner would not be expected to carry all 22 magazines. The individual combat load would be determined at the unit level and was expected to vary by unit, based on results of evaluations conducted by the four infantry battalions and one light armored reconnaissance battalion that participated in the Limited User Evaluation. Though program officials were aware that switching from the belt-fed M249 would result in a loss of suppressive fire capability, Charles Clark III, of the Marine Corps’ Combat Development and Integration Office, cited the substantially increased accuracy of the M27 as a significant factor in the decision to replace the M249.[21]

Suppressive fire[edit]

A U.S. Marine practices firing an M27 IAR on fully automatic fire in April 2012.

The notion that the M27 represents a reduction in suppressive fire has spawned considerable debate between proponents of the M249 SAW within the infantry and those who advocate that a lighter, more maneuverable, and accurate weapon is sufficient to support offensive operations at the squad level. It is debatable, in fact, that program officials actually concede a loss of suppressive fire capabilities, as the only statements of concern over this concept were made by General Conway.
With a SAW, the doctrine of fire suppression is the sound of continuous fire with rounds landing close to the enemy. While the M249’s volume of fire may be greater, it is less accurate. Experienced troops who have dealt with incoming fire are less likely to take cover from incoming rounds if they are not close enough. With an IAR, the doctrine is that lower volume of fire is needed with better accuracy. Fewer rounds need to be used and automatic riflemen can remain in combat longer and in more situations.[9]
Another benefit of the M27 over the M249 is that in many respects it resembles an M4 rifle as used by the rest of the squad. This makes it harder to identify by enemy troops.[9]

Combat reviews[edit]

The IAR was initially fielded in December 2010.[2] 1st Battalion 3rd Marines were deployed to Afghanistan in April 2011 with 84 IARs. Former SAW gunners initially did not like the M27, but appreciated it as time went on. It weighed 9 lb (4 kg) loaded, compared to 22 lb (10 kg) for an M249, which was a significant difference when on 5-hour long missions. Gunners said it was “two weapons in one,” being able to fire single shots accurately out to 800 meters and have fully automatic fire. It also blended in with standard M16-style service rifles, making it difficult for enemy forces to identify the machine gunner. The battalion leadership also saw the M27 as better at preventing collateral damage, as it is more controllable on fully automatic than the M249. Concern of volume of fire loss was made up for through training courses developed in December 2010. With the M249 SAW, the idea of suppression was volume of fire and the sound of the machine gun. With the M27 IAR, the idea of suppression shifts to engaging with precision fire, as it has rifle accuracy at long range and fully automatic fire at short range. Shooters transitioned from long-range precision fire at 700 meters to short-to-medium suppressive fire at 200 meters, both while in the prone position. Some gunners in combat have been used as designated marksmen. An M27 gunner with one aimed shot has the effect of three or four automatic shots from the SAW, and still has the option of a heavier volume with an accurate grouping.[22]
Marines issued with the M27 enjoy its familiarity with the M4-style weapons in service. It is friendlier to troops due to its cleaner, lightweight system having fewer moving parts and jams. IAR gunners consider the rifle-grade accuracy to be a huge improvement over the SAW, despite the loss of sustained firing. With a shrinking budget, the Marine Corps is looking at ways to implement the IAR as a multipurpose weapon. Suggestions included use as an automatic rifle and as a designated marksman rifle,[23] a role where it replaced the Squad Advanced Marksman Rifle.[24] Additionally, the free-floating barrel offers improved accuracy at approximately 2 MOA compared with 4.5 MOA for M16A4 rifles.[25]

Design[edit]

A U.S. Marine armed with an M27 fitted with a Harris bipod and a 3.5x Squad Day Optic covers his team in Afghanistan in March 2012.

The M27 is based on the Heckler & Koch HK416.[26] It features a gas-operated short-stroke piston action with a rotating bolt and a free-floating barrel. The handguard has four MIL-STD-1913 Picatinny rails for use with accessories and optics. The simpler gas-piston rifle system reduces the amount of time it takes to resolve malfunctions on the IAR compared with the M249.[17] Alternate calibers other than 5.56 mm are being considered for the M27.[9]

Use[edit]

The IAR is distributed one per four-man fireteam, three per squad, 28 per company, 84 per infantry battalion, and 72 per Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion,[27] with 4,476 total for the Marine Corps. The M249 was not completely replaced by the M27, and six of the machine guns are still issued to rifle companies.[28]
In December 2017, the Marines revealed they would be equipping every Marine in an infantry squad with the M27, which would increase the number of rifles procured by at least 11,000. While not every Marine in a battalion will receive the weapon, others outside of squads are also being considered.[8]

Magazine[edit]

The M27 draws ammunition from a standard 30-round STANAG magazine. The improved STANAG magazine with the tan-colored anti-tilt follower is favored over the previous version with the green follower because it can be inserted more easily and the anti-tilt follower can handle high rates of fully automatic fire with less chance of malfunction. While a rifleman normally carries seven 30-round magazines, an IAR gunner has to carry up to 16, and may carry as many as 21, due to its role and fully automatic rate of fire. The magazine well has a flared opening that aids in magazine insertion, but a PMAG 30 GEN M2 magazine cannot be inserted due to the frontal plastic bevel on the PMAG.[4] Because the M27 cannot be fed from the widely used M2 PMAG magazines that M4s or M16 rifles in the squad could take, the Marines banned the polymer PMAG for issue on November 26, 2012 to prevent interchangeability issues.[29] In response, Magpul began the process of arranging verification and official testing for their improved PMAG 30 GEN M3 magazine, which is compatible with both the M27 and M16-series rifles.[30] After Marine Corps testing of the M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round with the M27 showed reliability problems from feeding issues from standard magazines,[31] the PMAG 30 GEN M3 Window, which had better reliability with the EPR, was approved for use by Marines in December 2016 so that M27 gunners who receive M855A1 rounds do not face such issues.[32] Due to its role, high capacity magazines of between 50 and 100 rounds are being explored.[17]

Accessories[edit]

The M27 is essentially an HK416 with accessories required by the Marine Corps.[33] The standard optic is the Trijicon ACOG Squad Day Optic (SDO), officially designated the Sight Unit, SU-258/PVQ Squad Day Optic. It is a 3.5×35 machine gun optic that has a Ruggedized Miniature Reflex (RMR) sight screwed on top for close-quarters engagements under 100 meters. Created for the SAW, the day optic offers slightly less magnification, but longer eye relief than the ACOG Rifle Combat Optic (RCO) on M16s and M4s. The longer relief helps reduce injury risk from recoil.[4][22] It is issued with the Vickers Combat Applications sling and rail sling mounts, AIM Manta Rail Covers, Harris bipod, KAC backup iron sights, a foregrip, and bayonet lug.[34] The M27 initially had a Grip Pod, which is a foregrip with bipod legs inside, but it was later replaced by a separate foregrip and bipod.[9]
In January 2017, a USMC unit deployed with suppressors mounted to their M27 rifles as part of a concept to suppress every weapon in an infantry battalion. Exercises showed that having all weapons suppressed improved squad communication and surprise during engagements; disadvantages included additional heat and weight, increased maintenance, and the greater cost of equipping so many troops with the attachment.[35]

M38 DMR[edit]

In late 2017, the Marine Corps began fielding the M38 designated marksman rifle. Although certain M27s were employed as marksman rifles since 2016, the M38 version outfits the M27 with a Leupold TS-30A2 Mark 4 MR/T 2.5-8x36mm variable power scope, the same optic fitted on the Mk 12 Special Purpose Rifle. The naming of the M38 followed a similar convention to the M27, being named after the 3rd Battalion, 8th Marines unit that tested the rifle out.[36]

Categories
All About Guns The Green Machine War

M27s and 'Head-to-Toe' Gear Overhaul on the Way for Marine Grunts

A member of 3rd Battalion, 8th Marines, fires the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle during a live-fire weapons exercise on Camp Lejeune, N.C., on Dec. 8, 2017. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Michaela R. Gregory)
A member of 3rd Battalion, 8th Marines, fires the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle during a live-fire weapons exercise on Camp Lejeune, N.C., on Dec. 8, 2017. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Michaela R. Gregory)
After more than a year of speculation, the word comes straight from the commandant of the Marine Corps: Grunts, including those outside the squad, are getting the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle — and a whole lot of other goodies to boot.
Military.com first reported in November 2016 that the Marine Corps was eyeing the idea of fielding the weapon more broadly within the infantry, and had issued M27s to members of 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines, the service’s experimental infantry battalion, to observe how it improved their effectiveness.

Currently, the M27 is carried by only one member of each infantry fire team: the automatic rifleman.
With the battalion’s deployment to the Pacific at an end, Marine leaders are considering a list of 41 different recommendations generated by the unit, and M27s are at the top of the list.
Related content:

In an interview with Military.com in late December, Commandant Gen. Robert Neller confirmed that a decision had been made to move forward with fielding the M27 more widely within the infantry.
Every Marine in an infantry squad, he said, will receive the high-end rifle. And while not every Marine in a grunt battalion will carry the IAR, others outside of the squad will also be issued one.
“I don’t think mortars and javelin guys need the M27,” Neller said. But, he added, artillery forward observers, fire support teams, and even engineers might be good candidates for the weapon.
“I’m going to wait and see,” he said. “It’s not that much [money].”
The exact number of weapons needed has yet to be determined. In February, the Marine Corps put out a request for information for 11,000 new infantry automatic rifles, enough to equip every squad. But in August, the service published a pre-solicitation for up to 50,800 M27s, to ensure that manufacturer Heckler & Koch was up to the task of meeting an order that large.
Neller has in the past expressed reservations about investing in new weapons and technology for Marine grunts. The IAR, based on the Heckler & Koch HK416, offers a longer effective range and better accuracy than the M4 carbine currently fielded to infantrymen, but it also has come with a steeper price tag: about $3,000 a piece compared to less than $1,000 for the M4.
That may no longer be the case.
Chief Warrant Officer 5 Christian Wade, the gunner for 2nd Marine Division out of Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, told Military.com that competition and economies of scale have pushed the cost of the M27 down significantly.
“The price for that rifle is comparable to what we paid for the M4s the riflemen currently have,” he said. “These companies are competing against each other. And we now have bought the finest infantry rifle for the same price the current infantry rifle is.”

KITTING OUT THE GRUNTS

But with major Marine Corps investments for new rotary-wing and fixed-wing aviation platforms well underway, cost may not be the obstacle it once was for the service. The commandant signaled his plan to invest heavily in the infantry when speaking with deployed Marines during his yearly Christmas tour.
The Marines’ new 5th-generation fighter, the F-35B Joint Strike Fighter, costs roughly $100 million per copy, Neller told troops at one of a dozen town hall-style addresses he gave in the span of seven days in late December.
“I could kit out every grunt in the Marine Corps with the coolest s*** head-to-toe for $100 million,” he said. “And I intend to do that.”
For what else may be coming for the infantry, look to the “Über Squad,” an experiment started this year by Wade.
This summer, the 13-Marine unit from 1st Battalion, 6th Marines, was kitted out with M27s, suppressors, and high-tech Ops-Core helmets borrowed from Marine Corps Special Operations Command that feature built-in hearing protection, but also magnify other sounds to improve situational awareness.
The Marines used light MARSOC body armor and advanced AN/PVS-31A night vision devices. They also got 60-round Magpul drums, allowing them to increase the amount of ammunition they carried.
Wade said that the high-end night vision equipment had proved its worth recently during a nighttime exercise at Marine Corps Air-Ground Combat Center 29 Palms, California.
“That rifle squad moved faster at night than the live fire-safety chaperones,” he said. “[The Über Squad moved too fast for them to keep up because they had better night vision goggles.”
The squad is expected to deploy to Europe sometime this spring to continue testing out gear, but Wade is already working on requirements documents as a starting point to get some of the equipment to every infantry squad.
He said he’s ready to begin writing requirements for a helmet with all the features of special operations gear, including hearing enhancement, communications infrastructure and ear protection.

SUPPRESSORS AND SCOPES

Early efforts to pursue suppressors are also underway.
In September, the Marine Corps published a request for information about a commercially available suppressor that could be used on the M4, the M4A1, and the M27– effectively covering all service weapons used by the infantry. While an early effort, the document instructed prospective suppliers to be ready to supply in large numbers.
“Future procurement quantities of suppressors could span between 18,000 and 194,000,” the RFI reads.
Wade said he’s not yet happy with the suppressor currently in use by the Marine Corps for specialized jobs. He plans to start tests on a flow-through design that reduces signature, he said.
Add to all that one more key piece of gear: a variable power optic that, combined with the M27 and a suppressor, would essentially kit out every Marine in the squad as a designated marksman. Wade said he wants to equip infantry squads from different platoons with various optics and compare their performance to make the case for more powerful equipment.
Currently, Marine grunts carry a 4X power rifle scope; Wade said the idea capability would be a 1-8X power scope.
An RFI published in September described such a scope, the “squad combat optic,” that would work on the M4, M4A1, and M27, and be able to identify and acquire targets at a range of 600 meters or more.
Some of this gear carries with it a sizable price tag. The AN/PVS-31A NVGs, for example, cost about $13,000, compared with about $4,000 for the AN/PVS-14 NVGs currently in use. And all of it isn’t guaranteed to end up with the squad.
But Neller said he’s likely to approve a lot of it, and soon.
“The money to buy all that other stuff, the suppressors, the ear protection enhancement, the different helmets, it’s not a lot of money in the aggregate,” he told Military.com. “So I’m just waiting for them to come back, and I’m ready to say yes.”
And it’s possible all these items are just the start of a full-court press to equip the infantry for future fights.
In an address to Marines with the Black Sea Rotational Force in Romania, Neller hinted at future developments.
“Helmets, [ear protection enhancement], lighter body armor, boots, utilities, everything on the infantry from head to toe is probably going to get changed,” Neller said. “Every Marine’s a rifleman, but not every Marine’s a grunt.”
The infantrymen in the room roared.
— Hope Hodge Seck can be reached at hope.seck@military.com. Follow her on Twitter at @HopeSeck.

Categories
War

Another reason on why you don't mess with Putin

How to Fight Terrorism the Russian Way

Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2017/12/how_to_fight_terrorism_the_russian_way.html#ixzz52segaRYe
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Some are aware of the terrorist bombing in a St. Petersburg, Russia shopping center December 27.
The subsequent comment by Russian president Vladimir Putin, that terrorists should be “liquidated on the spot” if they pose “an immediate danger to others,” underscores the different attitude with which Russians pursue their “war on terror,” at least until Donald Trump took office.
Trump has followed through with his promise to “bomb the [s—] out of ISIS,” leaving ISIS with only 2 percent of the territory it once held in its so-called “caliphate,” and its fighters left in Syria and Iraq number now only about 1,000.
Trump effected this set of circumstances by changing “rules of engagement,” saving American lives and costing more enemy lives.
While American forces can now engage the enemy with greater latitude, not having to wait for approval from Washington bureaucrats, the United States can still learn from the ruthless ways in which Russia conducts war.
A case in point is the September 2004 hostage-taking at a school in Beslan, Republic of South Ossetia, located in the long troubled north Caucasus region.
The attack, by 32 armed terrorists linked to separatists in the nearby republic of Chechnya, resulted in the taking of over 1,000 hostages, including family members attending a celebration of the opening day at the primary and secondary school.
The attack resulted in the deaths of more than 330 people, mostly children.  Following reports of explosions within the explosives-rigged gymnasium, Russian forces responded with heavy machine guns, antitank rockets, and T-72 main battle tanks, as well as flame throwers and small arms.
The Beslan attack was one of many terrorist activities by a Chechen liberation group led by a notorious warlord, Shamil Basayev, that included the takeover of a Moscow theater in 2002 that ended in the deaths of 130 hostages; the 2004 assassination of Akhmad Kadyrov, the pro-Russian president of Chechnya; two suicide bombings on Russian airliners; and countless other acts of terrorism.
Besides the seemingly heavy-handed immediate response to the Beslan school hostage-taking, a number of political changes were made as measures of counterterrorism.
Most importantly, regional governors were to no longer be popularly elected, but appointed by the Russian president.  Ramzan Kadyrov, the son of the assassinated Akhmad Kadyrov, was appointed president of the Chechen republic in February 2007, a post he still holds.
That Kadyrov has ruled Chechnya ruthlessly would be an understatement, but he has popularized himself on social media, posing with kittens small and large, with nearly one million followers on Instagram.
Abductions and killings have been routine, even of relatives of known terrorists.  At minimum, relatives have their property destroyed or are banned from Chechnya.
In a January 2015 video, Kadyrov describes an anti-terror operation on December 4, 2014 in Grozny, the capital of Chechnya, in which he delayed the operation for three hours so he could personally lead it, as well as his thoughts on terrorism, the terrorists as individuals, the role of families in watching their children, and what the families can expect if they do not turn in their children as terrorism suspects (beginning at the six-minute mark).

This is to recommend not such tactics in the United States, but a revaluation of current policy.
Perhaps debate should commence on the internment and mass deportation of selected Muslims, as had been conducted by France since 2012 and Norway since 2014.
Crime in Norway dropped 31 percent in less than a year after deportations began.  Hungary, Poland, and the Czech Republic have restricted immigration so completely that the E.U. has opened legal cases against them, as reported June 12, 2017 by Reuters.
In the United States and most of the rest of Europe, immigration continues, unabated in Europe and slowed by evolving legal requirements in the United States.
No action has been taken against the families of terrorists, however, even in the case where the June 26, 2016 Pulse Nightclub shooter’s wife admitted to the FBI prior knowledge of the impending attack, as reported by the Orlando Sentinel on December 21, 2017.
Noor Salman was not arrested for seven months after the shooting, despite admitting prior knowledge of the planned attack to the FBI the day after the killing of 49 people at the gay nightclub.
She does now face charges of aiding a foreign terrorist organization and obstruction of justice.  Her attorneys argue that her admission should not be admitted as evidence.
In Russia, she would already most likely have been convicted and in Chechnya probably killed, as would be members of her family, and their property destroyed.
That kind of policy makes would-be terrorists think twice and their families more likely to alert authorities of suspicions regarding their children.
Trump’s policies are a good first start in realism in the war against what amounts to a Muslim invasion, with a few violent and the majority passive supporters or enablers in their silence.  More thinking and debate appear needed, however.
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2017/12/how_to_fight_terrorism_the_russian_way.html#ixzz52sf6qA5W
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Which of these U.S. Presidents has the highest I.Q.?
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Categories
All About Guns War

Why we stiil need to know how to shoot

Image result for the battle of Lexington and Concord, 1775
During the whole affair, the rebels attacked us in a very scattered, irregular manner, but with perseverance and resolution, nor did they ever dare to form into a regular body. Indeed they knew too well what was proper, to do so. Whoever looks upon them as an irregular mob, will find himself very much mistaken. They have men amongst them who know very well what they are about…
-Brigadier General Hugh Percy (British), quoted after the battle of Lexington and Concord, 1775
Image result for the battle of Lexington and Concord, 1775
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Hugh Percy, 2nd Duke of Northumberland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
His Grace
The Duke of Northumberland
FRS
2ndDukeOfNorthumberland2 cropped.jpg

The 2nd Duke of Northumberland.
Personal details
Born Hugh Smithson
14 August 1742
Died 10 July 1817 (aged 74)
Resting place Northumberland VaultWestminster Abbey
Nationality British
Political party Whig
Spouse(s) Lady Anne Crichton-Stuart
m. 1764; div. 1779
Frances Julia Burrell
m. 1779
Parents Sir Hugh Smithson
Lady Elizabeth Seymour
Military service
Allegiance  Great Britain
 United Kingdom
Service/branch  British Army
Years of service 1759–1777
1798–1806
Rank Lieutenant general
Unit 85th Regiment of Foot
Commands Colonel of the 5th Regiment of Foot (1774)
Percy Yeomanry Regiment (1798)
Colonel of the Royal Horse Guards (1806)
Battles/wars Seven Years’ War

American War of Independence

Lieutenant General Hugh Percy, 2nd Duke of Northumberland FRS (14 August 1742 – 10 July 1817) was an officer in the British army and later a British peer. He participated in the Battles of Lexington and Concord and the Battle of Long Island during the American War of Independence, but resigned his command in 1777 due to disagreements with his superior, General William Howe.
Born Hugh Smithson, he assumed the surname of Percy by Act of Parliament along with his father in 1750 and was styled Lord Warkworth from 1750 until 1766. He was styled Earl Percy from 1766, when his father was created Duke of Northumberland. He acceded to the dukedom in 1786.

Family

He was the son of Sir Hugh Smithson and Lady Elizabeth Seymour, heiress of the House of Percy. In 1750, upon the death of his maternal grandfather Algernon Seymour, 7th Duke of Somerset, his father became Earl of Northumberland and changed his name to Percy.

Early career

In 1759, he joined the British Army as a teenager and was a captain of the 85th Regiment of Foot by age 17, an achievement that demonstrated the power of wealth and family standing. He was, nonetheless, a good soldier and fought with distinction in 1759 at the battles of Bergen and Minden. In 1760, he went up to St John’s College, Cambridge.[1]Afterwards, he married Lady Anne Crichton-Stuart, daughter of Lord Bute, on 2 July 1764.[2] In 1766, his father was granted a dukedom and he was styled Earl Percy. As a Member of Parliament and the son-in-law of Lord Bute, Percy was promoted to full colonel and appointed an aide-de-camp to the King in 1764, having barely reached his majority. Percy was in chronically poor health from gout and had poor eyesight. He was physically unattractive, being overly thin and having a large nose. Yet, “He was honorable and brave, candid and decent, impeccably mannered, and immensely generous with his wealth.”[3]

American War of Independence

In 1774, he was sent to Boston with the local rank of brigadier general, colonel of the 5th Regiment of Foot. His views on the military discipline were ahead of their time. “He detested corporal punishments. At a time when other commanders were resorting to floggings and firing squads on Boston Common, he led his regiment by precept and example.”[3] Politically a Whig, he at first sympathized with the colonials, but he soon began to despise their behavior. He led the relief column at the Battle of Lexington and Concord. Percy’s intelligent actions probably saved the British forces from complete disaster that day.
When his brigade relieved Francis Smith’s demoralized troops at Lexington, Percy carefully organized his forces so as to provide all-around protection. He also used his two 6-pounder field guns to break up large formations of American militia. Even so, William Heath, who led the colonials, managed to surround the retreating British column with fire during a grueling forced march. When the British found that the bridge over the Charles River in Cambridgewas blocked, Percy turned his column down a side road and led them west to Charlestown. “This sudden change of direction, and the brilliant use of an obscure and unexpected road, took the New England men by surprise. It broke the circle of fire around Percy’s brigade.”[4]When a final colonial force tried to block British progress at Prospect Hill, “Percy advanced his cannon to the front of his column, and cleared the hill with a few well-placed rounds. It was the last of his ammunition for the artillery.[5] Percy’s attitude towards New Englanders turned from contempt to grudging respect. He wrote:

During the whole affair, the rebels attacked us in a very scattered, irregular manner, but with perseverance and resolution, nor did they ever dare to form into a regular body. Indeed they knew too well what was proper, to do so. Whoever looks upon them as an irregular mob, will find himself very much mistaken. They have men amongst them who know very well what they are about, having been employed as rangers against the Indians and Canadians, and this country being very much covered with wood, and hilly, is very advantageous for their method of fighting.[6]

He was absent from the field during the Battle of Bunker Hill, perhaps due to a quarrel with General Howe, a man with whom Percy could not get along. The following year, Percy commanded a division during the Battle of Long Island and led the storming of Fort Washington. By 1777, he had achieved the rank of lieutenant general, but grew so disgusted with the conduct of the war by General Howe that he resigned his command and left America in 1777 after a dispute over a quantity of hay.[clarification needed]

Second marriage

The Children of the Second Duke of Northumberlandoil on canvasGilbert Stuart, 1787.

Percy was granted a divorce in Parliament from Lady Anne in 1779 on the grounds of her adultery and immediately married Frances Julia Burrell on 23 May 1779,[2] with whom he had six daughters and three sons, with three daughters and two sons surviving him.[7]
In 1786, he acceded to the title upon his father’s death and continued his father’s agricultural improvements. For example, when corn prices fell after 1815, he reduced his rents by twenty-five percent. He held twice-weekly gatherings at Alnwick Castle, inviting tenants and local tradespeople. He also assumed command of the Percy Yeomanry Regiment in 1798 and as colonel of the Royal Horse Guards in 1806.
Notorious for a bad temper as well as for being one of the richest men in England, the second Duke of Northumberland died suddenly of “rheumatic gout” in July 1817.[citation needed] He was buried in the Northumberland Vault, within Westminster Abbey, and was succeeded by his son Hugh Percy, 3rd Duke of Northumberland.[8] Percy’s illegitimate half brother was James Smithson, whose bequest founded the Smithsonian Institution.

Categories
The Green Machine War

The Wonderful Friend of the US Grunt – The A-10

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